Land Acquisition Bill passed in Lok Sabha, Rahul Gandhi says he is 'quite happy'
- The Bill was passed through a division of votes - out of the
235 members who voted on the bill, 216 backed it while 19 voted against
it. "I am quite happy," said Congress Number 2 Rahul Gandhi, who has
championed the legislation, which replaces a more-than-century-old law.
- The
BJP, which supported the Bill with certain amendments, in an unusual
move, praised Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh while the bill
was being debated earlier in the day. "Like the way he has pursued this
Bill," senior leader Sushma Swaraj said to thumping of desks by BJP
members.
- Mulayam Singh Yadav, whose Samajwadi Party lends
crucial external support to the central government, had earlier
stridently opposed the legislation, and said during the debate that the
consent of the farmer was key to any land acquisition move. His party,
though, voted with the government.
- The proposal
establishes new rules for compensation for land acquired for
infrastructure projects and industry, a move seen as raising costs but
potentially reducing protests that have plagued India's
industrialisation drive.
- The most important feature of
the bill is that it requires developers to get the consent of up to 80
per cent of people whose land is acquired for private projects. For
public-private partnerships, the approval of 70 per cent of landowners
is mandatory.
- Land acquisition in states like Haryana and
Uttar Pradesh for factories, roads and housing projects has sparked
bitter clashes between farmers and state authorities, resulting in huge
project delays.
- The proposal asks for compensation of up
to four times the market value of land in rural areas and two times the
value in urban parts.
- Business lobbies say they welcome
land acquisition reform but fear the measure could push up property
purchase costs by at least 40 to 60 per cent, making industrial projects
financially unviable and sharply escalating housing costs.
- A
broad consensus was reached at a meeting between the government and the
opposition on the main features of the bill in April. The government
agreed to the BJP's demand that land could be leased to developers so
its ownership could remain with the landowners and give them a regular
income.
- Activists say the bill does not go far enough, and offers no safeguards about the protection of vast areas of common land.
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