Acquiring land for a 'public purpose' is claimed as a right by the state under its powers of eminent domain, but it accepts no duty to resettle and rehabilitate all the affected citizens. Instead, rehabilitation is presented as an act of benevolence Read complete article
This piece has been used extensively in a critique of the R&R bill by the NGO Equations
Also extensively quoted in Draft report of Committee on State Agrarian Relations and unfinished task of land reforms. Reproduced below.
Shortly before the winter session of Parliament ended, the government tabled the Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill, 2007. The bill seeks to "provide for the rehabilitation and resettlement of persons affected by the acquisition of land for projects of public purpose or involuntary displacement due to any other reason". The bill comes at a time when concerted efforts are being made by both the central and state governments to increase economic activity through the deployment of domestic and foreign private capital on a gigantic scale in new infrastructure and industry.
04 January 2008
This piece has been used extensively in a critique of the R&R bill by the NGO Equations
Also extensively quoted in Draft report of Committee on State Agrarian Relations and unfinished task of land reforms. Reproduced below.
Right to displace, but no duty to rehabilitate
Shortly before the winter session of Parliament ended, the government tabled the Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill, 2007. The bill seeks to "provide for the rehabilitation and resettlement of persons affected by the acquisition of land for projects of public purpose or involuntary displacement due to any other reason". The bill comes at a time when concerted efforts are being made by both the central and state governments to increase economic activity through the deployment of domestic and foreign private capital on a gigantic scale in new infrastructure and industry.
Land as an
incentive
Various models
of engagement have been proposed by Governments to attract large investors
including the 'Special Economic Zones', 'Private-Public partnerships' and
'Build-Operate-and-Transfer'. These models provide incentives that may include
tax and duty concessions, simplified regulations and provisions for
infrastructure facilities, but most importantly, land made available by the
state at desirable locations and low prices. To make the proposition more
attractive, land is promised not just for the requirements of the planned
economic activity, but also for other uses such as developing residential
townships, business districts or entertainment hubs. Examples of such projects
are the Bangalore Mysore Infrastructure Corridor, the proposed Reliance Haryana
Special Economic Zone and the recently announced Ganga Expressway.
The process of acquisition
of large tracts of land in different parts of the country has brought hundreds
of village communities face to face with the threat of imminent displacement
and loss of livelihood. The past history of the treatment meted out to displaced
people does not inspire any confidence among the targeted communities. There is
widespread and determined resistance to land acquisition and it is in this
context that the Government has come out with the R&R bill along with a
companion bill to amend the Land Acquisition Act.
Displacement
and the land acquisition law
The history of
large scale land acquisition and consequent displacement goes back to the
1950s, when the newly independent republic embarked on large state owned
projects for irrigation, power, steel and heavy engineering that were meant to
occupy the 'towering heights of the economy'. As an illustration of the scale
of displacement, just the reservoir of the Hirakud dam, India's first major
river valley project, whose foundation stone was laid by Jawaharlal Nehru in
1948 and which was completed in 1957, occupied an area of 727 sq km.
Land for even
such gigantic projects was (and continues to be) acquired using the coercive
powers provided by the colonial Land Acquisition Act. It narrowly defined
persons affected by an acquisition to be either land owners or occupiers
(tenants), and limited compensation to purely monetary terms. However, large
scale acquisition covered entire villages and their common property resources -
tanks, grazing lands and village forests. The typical Indian village consists
of many categories of persons other than landowning peasants and tenant farmers
- agricultural labourers, artisans and others servicing the farmers' needs -
who, even while not owning land, depend on it directly or indirectly. The law
did not recognize their rights as affected parties.
Nor did it
recognize or compensate for the expropriation of common property resources that
played a major role in supporting the livelihood of the villagers, specially
the poorer ones. Returning to the example of Hirakud, official figures that
counted only land title holders put the number of people displaced at 110,000;
figures from academics, that also accounted for people providing services and
those who lived off common property resources, put the number at 180,000.
The Land
Acquisition Act, when applied to large scale acquisitions resulted in
displacement and deprivation of means of livelihood for the affected people,
but did not give them the right to resettlement or rehabilitation. Even those
who were compensated monetarily were hard put to replace their lost land assets
and regain their means of livelihood. In the absence of any rehabilitation
plan, people displaced by Hirakud occupied whatever open lands they could
locate. These lands were not legally theirs, making them vulnerable to constant
harassment by officials.
Limitations of
policy
While Hirakud
illustrates the situation that prevailed in the 1950s, the Narmada Sardar
Sarovar project is illustrative of how things have changed over the last five
decades. The project, when completed, is expected to create a reservoir over
400 sq km submerging 245 villages. The government's estimate of the number of
families affected by the project has continuously changed with time - from
around 12,000 in 1988 when the Planning Commission looked at the investment for
the project, to over 40,000 by 1994. The Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) estimates
that the figure is higher and points to the non inclusion of petty traders, village
shop-keepers and fishing families as well as families affected by canals and
other subsidiary works in the Government figures.
The Narmada
Tribunal, in its award, decided the sharing of waters between states also
specified a rehabilitation policy. Construction work on the Sardar Sarovar
Project on the Narmada started in 1987. The Narmada Control Authority (NCA),
with representation from central and state Governments, was charged with
overseeing the rehabilitation and resettlement of project affected people. The
project itself was given conditional clearance by the Government, one of the
conditions being that construction of the dam would keep pace with
rehabilitation and resettlement.
Despite the existence of
R&R policies and packages and a machinery for ensuring its implementation,
rehabilitation measures were inadequate. After protests by the affected people
gained international attention, the World Bank, which had planned to finance
the project, appointed an expert committee - the Morse committee - to provide
an independent assessment of the project. After extensive investigations, the
committee stated in its report in 1992: "We think that the Sardar Sarovar
Projects as they stand are flawed, that resettlement and rehabilitation of all
those displaced by the projects is not possible under the prevailing
circumstances ...". The World Bank subsequently withdrew from the project.
Meanwhile, the construction of the dam continued with scant regard to
rehabilitation issues.
After
exhausting avenues of working with the authorities, the NBA went to the Supreme
Court with a Public Interest Litigation in 1994 asking for a suspension of
construction pending a comprehensive review of the project on various grounds
including serious failures in rehabilitation and consequent hardship and
suffering of project affected people.
The Supreme
Court granted an interim stay on construction in 1995, but in its eventual
judgement of October 2000, coming after 6 years, rejected the NBA petition and
allowed the construction to proceed. The Court expressed satisfaction with the
machinery of the Government for rehabilitation and saw no reason to doubt the
independence of this machinery. It also held the view that the machinery was to
be presumed to be working: "there is no reason now to assume that these
authorities will not function properly. In our opinion the Court should have no
role to play." It reiterated that construction should keep pace with
implementation of the relief and rehabilitation and take place only on the
clearance from the NCA.
The above
judgement and subsequent orders of the Supreme Court relating to this dispute
seem to derive from the understanding that policy implementation is the
prerogative of the executive, with the courts having no role to play.
The Narmada
Bachao Andolan continues to hold that R&R lags behind construction and does
not conform to even the declared policy, and this view is supported by many
writers, academics, former civil servants and others.
The experience of
the Sardar Sarovar and many other projects over the last 60 years reveals the
inadequacy of policy - at the project, company, state or even national level -
to address the legal neglect of displacement and the rights of the affected
people, particularly those without land or tenancy. Policy is not enforceable.
Will the courts provide relief when the promises contained in a policy are not
adhered to? Explaining how courts look at policy as opposed to statute law,
Usha Ramanathan writes: "Statute law where it defines (or denies) rights
is binding. Policy on the other hand, has at best a persuasive value. Courts
are bound by statements in the law, but are free to be guided by policy or to
ignore it."
There has been
general recognition among those concerned with displacement that the law must
look at the entirety of loss of rights of the affected, not just the loss of
ownership and tenancy rights and that resettlement and rehabilitation should be
as much the consideration of law as the land acquisition that necessitates
them.
The proposed
R&R legislation
These are,
then, some of the issues under debate as the Rehabilitation and Resettlement
bill 2007 is being introduced.
The bill seeks
to establish an R&R administration at the central and state levels. This
administration will be responsible for planning for and implementing R&R.
The bill describes the process to be followed while planning and implementing
R&R and prescribes how 'affected areas' and 'affected families' are to be
identified and the quantum of benefits for different categories of the latter.
Civil courts are barred by
the bill from entertaining suits on matters that are the responsibility of the
R&R administration. Identification of 'affected families', the resettlement
plan including land and amenities to be provided, and the implementation of the
plan are under the R&R administration. What happens if benefits described
in the bill are not forthcoming? Grievances may not be taken to courts but only
to an ombudsman appointed by the government. In this respect, the situation
will be no different from what prevails today - beneficiaries and benefits of
R&R will be determined solely by the Government.
Perhaps the
only recourse to courts allowed by the bill is in case of violation of the
R&R process that it specifies.
Conditional
benefits
The bill
prescribes conditions for project affected families to qualify as beneficiaries
and makes the benefits themselves conditional on external circumstances.
An area will be
notified as an 'affected area' "where the appropriate Government is of the
opinion that there is likely to be involuntary displacement of four hundred or
more families en masse in plain areas" (the number is less for hilly and
tribal areas). R&R planning is mandated by the bill only for families living
in such 'affected areas'. A family that neither owns nor occupies (tenants)
land such as that of an agricultural labourer, artisan, small shop keeper, etc
will be considered to be an 'affected family' and entitled to any R&R
benefits only if it is displaced from a notified 'affected area'.
Thus the
opinion of the Government on the scale of the displacement will decide if there
will be planned R&R of the displaced. The scale of displacement will
determine if families who neither own nor occupy land (who are the poorest)
will be entitled to any benefits at all - unconscionable from the standpoint of
justice. Other conditions also apply to these families in particular, such as
the need to prove residence for 5 years in the affected area in order to claim
benefits, revealing the distrust of the Government towards this section of
society.
There are many
other conditions attached to the benefits. Land will be allotted to 'affected
families' whose agricultural land has been acquired "if Government land is
available in the resettlement area". Preference will be given in jobs to
'affected families', "subject to the availability of vacancies and
suitability of the affected person for the employment".
The bill also
talks about a 'social impact assessment' that will be required when there is
large scale displacement, an idea similar to the 'environment impact
assessment' that is now mandatory for projects. The details of how this will
work are not clear from the bill and it is early to comment if and how this
will benefit people affected by a project.
Conclusion
While acquiring
land for a 'public purpose', with its attendant displacement and denial of
livelihood, is claimed as a right of the state under its powers of eminent
domain, the R&R bill does not accept that it is the unconditional duty of
the state to resettle and rehabilitate all the affected citizens so that they
are able to maintain, if not improve, their current standard of living.
Instead, rehabilitation is presented as an act of benevolence of the state, a
measure to mitigate the suffering of the affected citizens to the extent
permitted by the external circumstances and subject to various conditions.
By this stance,
involuntary displacement caused by the planned exercise of the coercive powers
of the state is equated with displacement caused by chance natural calamity,
both deserving of the same response from the state. Also, the discretionary
powers vested in the Government, the numerous conditions associated with
rehabilitation and resettlement and the un-enforceability of various provisions
all reduce the proposed legislation to little more than a statement of policy.
04 January 2008
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