NEW DELHI: With the passage of the land bill, cost of acquiring land will go up, Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh today said but dismissed as “exaggerated and overblown” the industry’s fear about the measure.
Ramesh, the architect of the path-breaking legislation, justified the stringent provisions in the bill saying any measure that empowers farmers, livelihood losers, tribals and Dalits is in the interest of nation.
“Will the cost of acquisition go up? Yes. Will the time taken for the acquisition go up? Not necessarily. Will acquisition be more humane? Yes. Will acquisition prevent long-term agitation? Yes,” he said and asked the industry to judge the bill in totality and not from sectional point of view.
He was reacting to certain queries a day after Lok Sabha cleared “The Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill, 2012”.
“Fears (of industry) are largely exaggerated and overblown. Any bill that protects the interest of farmers, livelihood losers, tribals and Dalits is in national interest.
Any bill that closes the door on forcible acquisition (of land) is also in the interest of the nation,” Ramesh said.
The bill, which will replace over a century-old act, is likely to be taken up in the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday for its consideration and passage.
“The 119-year-old Act was draconian, and led to immiserisation of farmers, and pauperization of the livelihood losers. We need to recognize the historical injustices that resulted from 1894 Act,” the minister, who often faced flak from the industry over the bill, said.
“Farmers will benefit, tribals will benefit, Dalits will benefit livelihood losers will benefit and India will benefit,” Ramesh said when asked about the benefit of the law.
Elaborating how farmers will be beneficiaries of the legislation, he said, they will get four times compensation in rural areas. “A few people pay a higher cost… that will benefit a larger number of people. I don’t think that anybody should grudge…frankly,” he said. . Describing the legislation as a “transitional measure”, Ramesh said, “20-25 years from now we should move to a situation where if industry wants to buy the land, then go and buy.
“Ultimately 20 years from now, you shouldn’t have a Land Acquisition Act. Twenty years from now, our land records should be good. Our farmers should be better educated and there should be direct transaction between the buyer and seller of the land.”
Without referring to Trinamool Congress’s opposition to the bill, the minister said it was the agitation in West Bengal’s Singur during Left rule that led to the “inclusion of livelihood losers” in the Act.
“For the first time, livelihood losers are recognized, their rights are recognized… So far we give compensation only to farmers, we now give compensation to livelihood losers. In fact, it is Singur which led to the inclusion of livelihood losers in this Act,” he said.
When asked what revolutionary changes the new law will bring in the society, Ramesh said, “Tribals will be more empowered and gram sabhas will be more empowered to take decision.
“That it is wrong to think that they don’t want economic development. They also want economic development. They want development on their terms. Not on terms that we decide it is good for them.”
Industry certainly is one important stakeholder, he added.-PTI