Friday 15 May 2015

A Good Looking Empty Shell : New Land Acquisition Bill

New Bill is not what it is being made out to be; it will not address any of the major problems in land acquisition

A Good Looking Empty Shell: The New Land Acquisition and Resettlement and Rehabilitation Bill

The new draft Land Acquisition and Resettlement and Rehabilitation Bill, announced by the Ministry of Rural Development, is a classic example of a law that looks good on paper but that will produce a very different result. This is true not only because of internal flaws or drafting mistakes, but because of its very character and spirit.
Most commentators have been relying on the introductory material produced by the Ministry without reading the Bill itself; but a close reading of the Bill shows that the reality is different from what is being presented. In a few cases the presentation says things that are not in the Bill at all, while in most cases the law contains far more loopholes and dangers than the presentation reflects.

The major problems in land acquisition today include the following:
 1.Profiteering by private interests taking advantage of government acquisition (e.g. NOIDA,   Bhatta Parsaul);
2.Non-existent or inadequate rehabilitation and compensation for displaced people;
3.Affected people have no recourse for enforcing their rights, which are often ignored both during land takeover (e.g. POSCO) and during rehabilitation;
4.As the central cause for all of the above, a decision-making process that is totally controlled by government officials, with no democratic or public involvement.

How will the draft Bill in this form respond to these problems? The short answer is:
Problem 1 - contrary to what is being projected, this will probably get worse.
Problem 2 - with the exception of increased compensation for some, this may not change a great deal.
Problem 3 - Recourse will in fact become more difficult.
Problem 4 - The decision making process, despite some gestures towards change, will remain entirely state-controlled.

In short, the draft Bill will not significantly improve things and may make them worse. Public purpose has been so widely defined, and then so many loopholes provided, that there are ways to get around the supposed safeguards. The only two real positive measures are 1) the restrictions on invoking "urgency" and 2) the increased compensation for some landowners. However, increased compensation will not address most of the existing conflicts, and in any case the compensation will still be below what may actually be just.
Below we explore some of the major issues (we have not included all points here). We present some alternatives at the end.

Consulting People and Taking Their Consent for Projects

This Bill will supposedly open the process of decision making on projects to public input. In
particular, the most significant stated advance is that 80% of the affected people have to consent for acquisition for a private company.
But the Bill contains so many loopholes that it will be very easy for almost any project to get around the 80% consent clause.
Witness the following:
Section 1(2)(b), to which the 80% clause does not apply, permits the government to engage in "partial" acquisition of land for a private party. The term "partial" is not defined. So if a private party acq
uires 100 acres and asks the government to acquire 3000 acres, 80% cosnent is not required, so long as the project is for "industrialisation or urbanisation" (a public purpose under s. 2(y)(ii)) and can be considered a project of the government. Even the area to be acquired is decided by the private company (as implied by proviso to s. 1A(2)). All such projects, it should be remembered, are typically pursued as part of one or the other government scheme or plan. More importantly, many private infrastructure projects are done under "Build Operate Transfer" contracts, under which - after a period of 30 or 50 years - the government is supposed to receive full ownership. But in the interim the private company makes all the profits it wishes.

Suppose the private party wants the government to acquire the entire land. Then, section 1A(1)(a) permits the government to acquire land for "its own use, to hold and to control" without taking 80% consent; crucially, it also permits the government to later change the public purpose. The way the section is phrased, what matters is the intent of the government at the time of acquisition. Therefore, all that is required is a notification that stat
es the government is acquiring the land for its use and control for purposes of industrialisation / urbanisation (a public purpose under 2(y)(ii)); then there's no need for 80% consent. Then, since the public purpose can be changed, the government merely declares that it has changed its mind later and transfers to a private party (contrary to what the presentation says, the Bill nowhere states that transfer can only happen between government departments). This can of course be challenged in court, but the burden comes on the person who is making the challenge to prove what the actual intent of the government was.

Finally, as happens routinely today, the law provides enough space for someone to simply break it. Who decides if a project has got 80% consent? How, in fact, is this "consent" to be taken? There is no procedure for obtaining the consent in the law itself. Indeed, as per section 7, 80% consent has to be "ascertained" (not obtained) by the Chief Secretary's committee - implying that it may well be the private developer who will be obtaining the "consent." Even if that is not the case, such a committee is totally unaccountable, and it can easily lie or accept forgeries (this has happened in several cases where consultation was required under PESA, including Polavaram and Nagarnar).



Aside from the 80% consent clause, there is supposed to be a social impact and public hearing process, which is advertised as another step forward for transparency and checking if projects are actually beneficial. Consider:
The entire SIA process is modeled on the Environment Impact Assessment process, which the current Minister Jairam Ramesh described - as the then Environment Minister - as a "farce", with almost 99% of projects receiving approval. The reason was that the assessment process was done by private parties and decided by a centralised body with no time to check facts. This mechanism is almost identical.

The law says nothing about who will do the Social Impact Assessment and how.
There is a public hearing required by section 4; but the results of this hearing are never mentioned. What happens if people object? What happens if most oppose? Who is accountable for deciding on these objections and who will answer for them? Under this draft, no one.
At three different places, the law says "gram sabhas will be consulted." What happens if they object? There is no procedure.
The decision on whether a project is a public purpose will be taken by a Chief Secretary's committee consisting almost entirely of serving State-level government officers. In what way is this different from the current procedure, where this decision is made by the State government?

In short, most of the provisions for public consultation amount to essentially formalities, without any impact on the final decision. The final decision making is done by the same people who do it at present, with or without any additional inputs.

 

Will R&R Actually Happen Alongside Land Acquisition?


The second claim to fame is the idea that land acquisition and R&R will be "integrated."
But this is also far from the truth. In particular, note that:
Both the presentation and the Bill state that the R&R package will not even be drafted until after the acquisition process is set underway. People are expected to assess the impact of the project (social impact assessment), give objections to the impact assessment, object or accept the supposed public purpose being served, etc. - all without knowing what kind of rehabilitation is to be done. Would this not be the first question asked of them?
Can land be taken before R&R is complete? Presentation and section 29(3) say no; section 53 says land can be taken before compensation is paid, so long as interest is added. Even s. 29 leaves it to the Collector to decide when rehab is complete.

As for "integration", consider what the Bill actually does:
the number of affected / interested people will be determined sep any land acquisition and rehabilitation law arately three times (s. 3 for SIA; s. 11(2) for acquisition; s. 12(1) for R&R), without any mechanism for deciding which is correct;
there are three separate public hearings / invitations for objections to be held at various times, none of which feed into each other, and none of which can lead to the cancellation of the project;
There is an R&R committee (s. 33) with various people on it whose sole job, as per the law's terms at least, is to sit with the Collector once and review the proposed R&R package (s. 13(1));
The Act contains no provisions for enforcement of the R&R package or for its monitoring and grievance redressal during implementation (this in a situation where the biggest complaint about R&R is that it is simply not done as promised). The seriousness of monitoring can be taken from the fact that, once again, there is no monitoring process, and instead three separate authorities are all given the same responsibility for monitoring R&R (the Administrator under 31(3); the Commissioner under 32(2); the R&R Committee under 33(1)), an arrangement that by definition will fail.
The dispute settlement authority that is supposed to settle all disputes under the Act, including R&R (s. 38(1)), is only empowered to give orders on compensation (s. 44); it cannot direct any authority to do anything, nor can it change the R&R package in any way.

The result in practice will be that R&R will not occur and affected people with sufficient support will be sent into PILs and endless court battles; those without will be left with nothing. This is just what happens at present.

Can People Actually Enforce the Positive Provisions of this Law?

Having provided this confused mass of loopholes and complex provisions, the law finally lets people down on the question of enforcement. Witness the following:

Anyone with a dispute cannot approach a civil court; they have to go to a Dispute Settlement Authority in the State capital, or, in case of Central projects, in Delhi. Is this feasible for most project affected people?
Moreover, no one can approach the authority directly; they have to get a reference from the Collector (s. 38), the very person against whom they are most likely complaining.
The dispute settlement authority is only given the power to award compensation, as noted above, and not to direct any authority to do anything or to change the R&R package.
A government official who violates any provision of the Act is at most punishable by disciplinary action (s.58(3)), which is already the case, and which is entirely controlled by the concerned government.

The effectiveness of such a system can be imagined.

 

Tribals and Forest Dwellers


The Minister's presentation states that the Bill will be in compliance with the Forest Rights Act and the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act. Yet, despite lip service, this Bill complies with neither.

Forest dwellers are covered as "interested parties", but they are not merely "interested persons" but rights holders with particular rights and powers - in particular over natural and forest resources. This Act treats them as if their rights can simply be taken over in exchange for a fixed R&R package,
when:
the range of rights extends to such rights as grazing areas, water bodies, habitats of "primitive tribal groups", ownership of minor forest produce, etc., which cannot be simply be compensated or replaced, and which require a different procedure; and
more importantly, the Act ignores the powers of forest dwellers to decide on use and protection of forests, under which the decision to create the project in the first place requires their consent.
As for the PESA Act, excepting some ritualistic statements to the effect that "gram sabhas will be consulted", there is nothing in the Bill. This is meaningless when the law does not say by whom, in what manner, and with what result these consultations will be done. Further, as said above, the key question is what happens when gram sabhas object; but the Bill assumes this will never happen, defeating the entire purpose of consultation.

Alternatives and Demands

How can such a mess be avoided? The need is to go back to the purpose of land acquisition is in the first place. The only way such acquisition can be justified in a democratic society is if it is 1) in accordance with the overall social goals of that society and 2) decided by a democratic process. More details on this alternative will be presented later, but at present, we reiterate that this process has to have the following basic features:
A democratically decided land use plan: Without an overall land use and development plan, decided from the level of the village up to the State and decided in a democratic manner, such acquisition will continue to be destructive and exploitative.
Any significant change in land use should require resettlement and rehabilitation and a demonstration of public purpose being achieved: This would cover both private parties and the government.
A democratic process of deciding on whether any change of land use achieves a public purpose: This should be through an open process of public decision making from the gram sabha level upwards.
The consent of the gram sabha to any major change in land use: Finally, the consent of the village assembly should be required.


In the absence of this basic procedure, the current problems are likely to continue.

Wednesday 4 March 2015

India's Daughter


Politics was being played
Game was her Torturous end
She was still wringling in pain
For somewhere her perpetrator smiled.


British Filmmaker Leslee Udwin adressess a press
Conference on her documentary film, India's Daughter.
A revolution was being seen once
When she breathed her last here
Unleashing cries to have no repeats
For Change that maybe her fate brings.


The men who did it still shamelessly smile
Many like her, are still afraid to step out
Ones who borne her are still awaiting justice
And you all are still blaming her for no fault ?


Humanity died when brutal faces she saw
Nothing changed with her tears and jitters
We tried acquiring the night, we sped up things
Yet patriarchy is winning again, she still lost



Power seeks to ban the female, not change
Power is afraid to hear or see what's right
Power is bringing no transformation in worst
Power is still playing at the cost of her plight


We need to know, we need to see
We need to hear, we need to punish
We need to Conquer, we are the people
She died, many suffer, we can't have more of her. 




Sunday 1 February 2015

Globalism Vs Nationalism

                     
            Survival of the fittest. A familiar term to most, and more importantly, a phrase Lived by all existence. It is Nature s MOST basic ideally That reside in all Living Beings. From the ancient times of the dinosaurs to the modern generation of the human being. According To Charles Darwin, Natural-through the process of selection, nature ensued That only physical posses characterĂ­stics Those Who Were That suited to Their environment would survive. All Those Who not, die. A homogeneous species of any kind would not likely survive for a very long duration. If a single trait That a race needed to survive Were not present,: such as resistance to cold temperatures, estate group of living organisms would all die off. Diversity Makes Un certain groups inherit various characteristics and life will just thus preserved for another generation. If there is a wider range of attributes, then a there is a more resistance to failure. In fact, Un certain adaptation over the course of millions of years Have Contributed to the survival of species. The present day alligator has-been around since the Jurassic time period. Through fossils, Numerous studies Have Showed the structural adaptations That Proceeded to support the species. Such things as the tail and webbed tendrils to help swim faster, sharpened teeth to devour prey and more Easily heightened, and elevated Also developed a nasal cavity to aid in hunting them.
This same concept can be Applied to Human Beings. As we all know, the human race is all but one whole. There are Hundreds of Thousands of divisions amongst itself. Things: such as race, creed, color and region all Which Affect the classification of a human is put under. The question of Reviews having a more universal, homogenous race of humans or to more melting pot humanity is yet to be answered. Under a government movement Towards a universal system Provides Between differenciallity less people and just thus a more harmonious state is achieved. Major problems: such as
racism, genocide and inequality are eliminated if society is to be Placed center under one leader. But there is a price to pay if only one dominant figure rules the human race. Diversity, variety and room for change is lost and forgotten. Identities of oneself is lost, there is not I but rather we Replaced With. Also, a balance of power is shifted radically under a global government system due to the power That is held in the hands of a few, or to oligarchy. As one can see Clearly, there is more disadvantage into Moving towards a more universal government system.
Undoubtedly, human kind is naturally very. There are many aspectos to life in Which We can not control but rather controls us. Compassion for one another, the longing for love and the need to belong are all natural necessities That all humanity needs. Critics Have Said Repeatedly over the course of time variety is the spice of life. Taking esta quotation and Applying it to this issue, we can see That under one rule, things would simply fall apart. Just like how mankind is genetically created to be different in order to preserve life, one must live in distinct lifestyles in order for a balance to occur. We all learn from one another and That is how life is preserved for another generation. The fall of communism opened doors for democracy to move in Because there was no longer fixed the vote and forced political views. It is from the mistakes That are THROUGHOUT That Makes Things Learned stronger. If diversity in the world is not present, then a Greater understanding can not take place. Communism would still rule over the land and life would be wretched With no end in sight. China is a prime example of this. For most of it ITS existence, China has kept ITS borders closed to the rest of the world. Influences Have not ever seen the land of China and it Remained unchanged and untouched. In These Times, there were great problems faced and Were not That Could Be brought` acerca solutions due to the solitude of the country. In Recent times, China has opened up borders and now STI is not a solitary country anymore. Trades With The rest of the world economically and it has Helped new information on how to do things more Efficiently has-been Introduced. Ideologies eleven With Its was one sided view and communistic ideas, but are now spreading in other Ideologies That area. Still, prosperity can not Occur without room to improve increase and equality can not Occur without full perfection, balance and harmony With The state.
It is true That Moving towards a single government system more equality will be established due to the fact That Their leader is one and everyone is under That rule. But in actuality, equality will not be established. If a group of countries are to join together as one whole, it would encompass a wide spectrum of political views, Ideologies, religion, race and color. Instead of one whole body, there is many minority groups present. This transfers an unequal balance of power THROUGHOUT the state. Minority groups present would want a bigger voice in the crowd and get upset. Majority groups present would not want to bow down to the minority groups and just thus Also get upset. Currently esta can be seen world wide. Headlines on every morning papers around the globe are splashed With Kosovo related topics and the Tremendous up-rises occurring there. After World War II was ended, there was many Changes THROUGHOUT the area of Europe, many country clubs and boundaries FORMED Have Been altered. One country, Yugoslavia was formed. In This nation, races of all kinds Were put together to live as one. There are very many clashes Between the Citizens de este state due to the cultural and religious expats. One minority group, the Serbs, are fighting for independence and Currently Their own territory. In Recent Times They Are slaughtering Hundreds of Thousands of Ethnic Albanians to get Their Way. By combine combining groups of people all with very distinct caracterĂ­sticas and Placing them under one order, it is only passable That violence will only outcome. There are too many barriers to Overcome That at one point it only leads to frustration.
And even though That everyone is under one command, the minority group will want more say in matters, and the majority group will not want to bend down over to them. This is always going to be a reality Because a minority group will always be present. The majority of the population will be accustomed to Being the elite group of society and THEREFORE Should Have The most power, Critics would argue esta That would enrage the minority group and give them more power. There would be a constant Struggle for power That would be never ending and results May be devastating. The French Revolution can be used as a great example for this. In the 1780 s, bankrupted by His support of rebellion in the British colonies, the French king was forced to levy taxes on His people. The people in turn revolted Against the king and Reached out for a monarchy for the people. The end result Was That the people, minority, won the Struggle and Received what was needed. The absolute monarch (elite) was toppled and prosperity was on the way up once again on.
In fact, encompassing a Enormous amount of people are into one and under one rule would be disastrous. One would encounter a variety of opinions on Which type of government system Should be used. But the twist comes here, there is not an actual perfect system in society today of running a country one hundred percent efficient. All the different political and economical Ideologies correct each other and fixes some of each other s problems. For example, communism equality corrects the problem of democracy, and democracy corrects the problem of efficiency of communism. By choosing one method over the other Could and will cause up-risal and discontent from the people. In China, a primary example would be found by focusing on the Tiennamen Square incident. Were there many student protesters marched into the square That and wanted a change from the present day form of communism. In the end, many of the protesters Were Were shot and even more injured or killed.
Human nature is a delicate balance and must be kept in check always. In all areas and Aspects of life, there must be diversity and variety to life so preservation May occur. From good and evil to politics and economics, all must be Numerous in number. From the mistakes and failures That Occur to the Triumphs and tribulations That transpire. All of These are a direct result of the ladder of learning providing That there is a room for growth. A homogenous culture would Prevent Such learning from happening. Ideas and thoughts would be one sided and many disasters would occur. Events: such as Tiennamen Square, World War II, The French Revolution and the Kosovo crisis, would be an
everyday thing if a global government Were to be ADOPTED. Balance of power would be disrupted, and an endless feud would be Fought over Who is more superior. Equality and tranquility can only be Accomplished-through at the price of identity. If at esta point there is no identity of one s self, then a Becomes life is irrelevant.

Sunday 4 January 2015

New Year Resolution

Top Resolution's



New Year resolution's are more like New year Illusion's , 
Nobody follows them because ,
my goal for 2015 is to accomplish the goal of 2014 ,
Which I should have done in 2013 because ,
I promised them in 2012 and planned them in 2011


Happy New Year