Forcible acquisition of land is on in Modi's Gujarat
Rukmini Shrinivasan, TNN | Sep 7, 2011, 01.34AM IST
SANAND (GUJARAT): Gujarat's industrialisation story is well known, but what is 
less clear is how exactly the land to house these industries is being acquired. 
The situation in the state's showpiece region shows that Gujarat is undoubtedly 
compensating its farmers better than others, but forcible acquisition is 
certainly taking place.

The Tata Motors decision to shift its Nano plant from Singur in West Bengal to 
Sanand, a block in Ahmedabad district, has pushed this agricultural area on to 
the industrial map. The Nano factory was allotted 1,100 acres of government 
land (which formerly housed farmland belonging to the state's agricultural 
university) in Sanand, 25km from Ahmedabad.

The Gujarat Industrial Development Corporation (GIDC) then decided to set up an 
industrial estate in the same neighbourhood, which in its first phase will 
cover 2,400 hectares, 1,500 of which have already been acquired. "It will be an 
engineering and knowledge hub with a focus on auto," says B B Swain, 
vice-chairman and managing director, GIDC. The statutory body charged with 
overseeing Gujarat's industrialization has already allotted 450 acres near the 
Nano factory to Ford, and another 150 to Ford vendors. Names of other auto 
majors - Maruti, Peugeot - are in the air.

None of this can take place without the acquisition of agricultural land from 
Sanand's farmers. Undoubtedly, GIDC is offering farmers in this area an 
attractive price - Rs 1,200 per square metre, or Rs 1.2 crore per hectare. To 
use the local measure, this works out to Rs 28.53 lakh per bigha, and the 
smallest landholding that TOI came across was of nine bighas.

Many farmers are certainly more than happy to sell their land. Bol village, 
closest to Tata's Nano motorcar plant, was the first to sell its land. Nearby 
Hirapur is, in small bits, coming round. "Farming is hard work with low 
returns. Ours is a joint family of 17 members, and with nine bighas, we would 
have no savings at the end of the year," says Hirapur resident Raghubhai Patel 
(25), as he watches his brand new flatscreen TV in a one room of his 
two-floorbungalow that is under construction.

However, beyond these much-reported stories of Sanand farmers who got rich 
overnight are those of the farmers who don't want to. For, even though GIDC is 
paying over four times the price per bigha that the Greater Noida authority 
offered farmers, the fact remains that Sanand's farmers too do not have the 
option not to sell. "What we are doing is en bloc acquisition. Most farmers are 
happy to sell, and in these cases there is a 'consent award' in which we pay Rs 
1,200 per square metre. However, if for some reason the land cannot be acquired 
by consent, GIDC has to go for a 'regular award' which is a substantially lower 
price," says Swain. What this means is that farmers who do not want to sell 
their land will find it deemed acquired at the end of an as-yet-unspecified 
period of time, after which they can claim compensation from the court at a 
rate far less than they would have got if they hadn't held out.

It is not that such farmers do not exist. Some, like Hirapur's Jalabhai Patel, 
say that they are waiting for a higher price. Others, like sarpanch Kantibhai 
Rathod, say they simply do not want to sell their land. "This is land irrigated 
by the Narmada. It is rich and we can count on it. I am my own boss. I don't 
want to lose it," says Rathod. His son Kiran is in Class X. "I want to study 
ahead but I also want to keep farming. I don't want the money," he adds.

Kantibhai Prajapati, who is taking his buffalo out to graze with his son 
Prateek, points to his seven bighas of land where rice stalks poke through the 
submerged fields. "What will I do with money? I want to feed my children, and 
for that I need my land. I am not going to sell it," he says.

The new draft Land Acquisition Bill, which governs all land acquisition, does 
not protect farmers from the government acquiring land for such "public 
purposes" as industrialisation, as in the case of the GIDC hub. While a 
previous draft said that multi-crop irrigated land, as all of Sanand's land is, 
would not be acquired even for public purposes, the draft cleared by the 
Cabinet allows such acquisition too. 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Forcible-acquisition-of-land-is-on-in-Modis-Gujarat/articleshow/9889797.cms

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