Land acquisition bill in Lok Sabha tomorrow
New Delhi: The land acquisition bill is being brought in Lok Sabha on Friday with the government seeking to give another push to the controversial measure despite not having the numbers in the Rajya Sabha. The bill, which was passed by Lok Sabha in March, could not be taken up in the Rajya Sabha following which the related Ordinance had to be repromulgated after proroguing the Upper House.
A copy of the repromulgated ordinance was placed in the Lok Sabha on April 20 and in Rajya Sabha on April 23, the opening days of both Houses in the second phase of the budget session. As part of the plan, government has extended the session of Lok Sabha by three days today after a meeting of Cabinet Committee on Parliamentary Affairs. Sources in government said that they will make an attempt to get the bill passed in both Houses.
The decision to bring the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (Amendment) Bill, 2015 to the Lok Sabha was taken in a meeting of the Business Advisory Committee (BAC) on Wednesday, the sources said. The bill was earlier cleared by the Lok Sabha on March 10 during the first half of the budget session to replace an Ordinance which had brought sweeping changes in the ealier land bill brought by the previous UPA government in 2013.
Following massive opposition to the new bill, government could not introduce it in the Rajya Sabha then. To prevent the land acquisition Ordinance promulgated on December 31 last year from lapsing on April 5, the government got it Ordinance repromulgated. The re-promulgated ordinance carried all the nine official amendments that were incorporated when the bill was passed by the Lok Sabha.
While the Opposition, mainly Congress, has been saying that the government should not make the passage of the bill a prestige issue, the government is keen that the bill becomes a reality but wants to dispel the "anti-farmer" tag, which the Opposition has sought to label it with over the issue. There has been a talk that the government could suggest referring the bill to a joint committee of Parliament in order to evolve a consensus on it.