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LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Draft land acquisition bill diluted to make it industry-friendly

Draft land acquisition bill diluted to make it industry-friendly

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published Published on Sep 8, 2011   modified Modified on Sep 8, 2011

-The Economic Times

 

The government has defended its new land acquisition bill as industry-friendly, refuting criticism that provisions contained in the legislation were retrograde and would push up costs for state-run and private companies.

Industry groups had slammed the new Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill (LARR) 2011, cleared by the cabinet earlier this week and tabled in parliament on Wednesday, saying it was "burdensome" and "anti-development".

But Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh, whose ministry drafted the bill, said: "There were concerns by industry associations and some of my colleagues and these have been reflected in the bill. Some of the provisions in the earlier draft were felt to make land acquisition very costly. It is a difficult law, aims at a difficult balance but I feel now we have struck the right balance."

However, Geetamber Anand, Managing Director of ATS group and Vice-President, Credai said: "The changes in the rehabilitation will help but we still maintain that where private sector acquires land, they do so at prevailing market prices wherein the land seller's rehabilitation is taken care of already."

The minister pointed to the relaxed rehabilitation and resettlement provisions which make the annuity entitlement an alternative to providing employment or offering Rs 5 lakh per family. The provision of annuity of Rs 2,000 per month per family for 20 years was earlier a mandatory clause, along with provision of employment for one person per affected family.

Another key change is that in every transfer of land on which development has not taken place 20% of the appreciated value will have to be shared with the original owner. In the draft this clause applied to developed land as well.

The cabinet had earlier scaled down compensation for acquired rural land to four times of the stamped value, instead of six times, while maintaining the compensation for urban land at two times the stamped value.

The controversial blanket ban on acquisition of multi cropped irrigated land has also been tweaked by the cabinet to allow acquisition of up to 5% such land in a district as a "last resort", with the rider that an equal area of wasteland within the district will have to be developed.

However, there will be no riders for acquisition of such land for linear infrastructure projects such as railways, highways, district roads, power lines and irrigation canals. The bill does not specify the role of state and the private sector in land acquisition and has given states the freedom to formulate their own land acquisition laws within the framework of the central legislation.

However, the central legislation will set up the minimum limit for compensation. The provisions will be applicable to private purchase of land of over 100 acres in rural areas and 50 acres in urban areas.

The bill, which seeks to replace the law dating back to 1894, seeks to put in place a central legislation for rehabilitation and resettlement for the first time.

The Economic Times, 8 September, 2011, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics/nation/draft-land-acquisition-bill-diluted-to-make-it-industry-friendly/articleshow/9905999.cms


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