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Business News/ Politics / Policy/  Land bill changes a smokescreen to help industrialists: Congress
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Land bill changes a smokescreen to help industrialists: Congress

Congress leader Jairam Ramesh also questioned the claim that defence and security related projects were being delayed due to the 2013 Act

A file photo of Congress leader Jairam Ramesh. Photo: Pradeep Gaur/MintPremium
A file photo of Congress leader Jairam Ramesh. Photo: Pradeep Gaur/Mint

New Delhi: Hitting back at Prime Minister Narendra Modi on land acquisition bill, Congress on Sunday said the government’s move to bring changes was a “smokescreen" to benefit industrialists and he was “lying" by claiming to have done favour with amendments in 13 Acts.

After Modi, in his “Mann ki Baat" radio programme, said that lies were being spread on the issue of the bill, the opposition party said amendments in 13 Acts were part of the mandatory provisions of the 2013 Land Acquisition law.

Congress leader Jairam Ramesh also questioned the claim that defence and security related projects were being delayed due to the 2013 Act. “Modi has claimed in his Mann ki Baat today that he has brought amendments to 13 laws. He has not done anyone a favour," he said at a press conference at the All India Congress Committee headquarters in New Delhi.

He said that it was stipulated in Section 105 (3) of the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act 2013 that amendments will have to be made within one year in the 13 Laws that Modi had spoken about. “His Mann ki Baat was full of lies. He has tried to spread myth," the former environment minister said.

Arguing that it was a lie that United Progressive Alliance (UPA) forgot to amend the 13 laws, he said his government could not because there was less time and elections were approaching. “But the Act stipulated it had to be done within one year. The Modi government slept for nearly eight months and suddenly woke up to the ordinance as a smokescreen to benefit industrialists," he said.

In his programme on Sunday, Modi said, “biggest lacuna" in the 2013 Act was that 13 aspects of government activity, like railways, national highways and mining, for which maximum land is acquired, were kept out of its ambit, meaning that compensation for acquiring land for these purposes would be paid on the basis of the 120-year-old law.

“Tell me, isn’t it a lacuna? Isn’t it a mistake?...We corrected this and in the new bill, these activities have been covered and as a result, four-time compensation will be given for the land acquired," he said.

Ramesh said compensation was also not a favour as the 2013 Act stipulated for four times compensation in rural area and double in urban areas. Describing the Modi government’s amendments to the 2013 Land Acquisition law as “anti-farmers, pro-rich", Ramesh said the proposed amendments does away with social impact assessment completely.

He reminded the government that the 2013 law was passed after two years of discussions and after many amendments including three and two by Sushma Swaraj and Ravi Shankar Prasad respectively.

“The 2013 law already stipulates that land acquisition can take place for national security and defence projects under ‘urgency clause’ without going through the consent and social impact assessment procedures.

“Modi’s amendments merely repeats it and uses this as a smokescreen to extend benefit to industrialists," he said.

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Published: 22 Mar 2015, 10:19 PM IST
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