Special courts to try land grabbers

The government is fully committed to evicting illegal occupants of its land and reclaiming it

Update: 2015-01-10 05:37 GMT
A recent protest against land grab led by freedom fighter H.S. Doreswamy

Bengaluru: With the President approving  the Karnataka Land Grabbing (Prohibition) Bill, 2011, the government is now gearing up to take on those who have encroached on its properties across the state by setting up  special courts to try them.

"The Centre has agreed to our proposal for setting up of the special courts . The revenue department has sent another  proposal to Delhi to set the ball rolling for  clearing encroachments from its land," law and parliamentary affairs minister,  T B Jayachandra told the  Deccan Chronicle.

The special courts will have on board deputy commissioners and judicial officers like retired or serving judges of any court, according to him.

Two posts of special deputy commissioners have been created in Bengaluru urban district to collect details of the  encroachments to help the government  file criminal cases against the landgrabbers.

And deputy commissioners of all  districts have been asked to prepare a complete list of encroachments of revenue land in their respective districts before preparing to book criminal cases against the encroachers.

Asserting  that prompt action would be taken to evict encroachers however  influential they may be, the minister declared,  "There is no question of showing any mercy to the encroachers.

The government is fully committed to evicting illegal occupants of its land and reclaiming  it".

Already, around 800 acres of encroachments had been cleared over the last 18 months and steps would be taken  to reclaim another 8,000 acres soon, he promised. "The time has come to put a stop to land grabbing cases," he added.

The A T Ramaswamy Committee  constituted by former Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy had found that as much as 8,834 acres of revenue land had been encroached upon in Bengaluru alone.

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