Who are the landless, houseless people? This is the raging debate in Kashmir after the UT administration came out with the decision to provide homes and land to thousands of homeless, landless people in J&K.
To own land in J&K, nativity used to be the only criteria. Hence those who came from outside could not become land owners. And there was this clear distinction between a 'local' and an 'outsider' that was deeply ingrained over the decades with the 'separatist' kind of politics covertly and overtly played by Kashmir-based parties invoking Articles 370 and 35A.
It took 75 years for refugees from the erstwhile West Pakistan living in J&K to get land rights and be able to vote in the local elections. The Valmikis living in J&K were among the worst victims of human rights violations in the old state. Sixty-three years after their arrival as 'sanitary workers' on the request of the then state government, members of the community were given their dignity only after the abrogation of the Article 370 in August 2019.
National Conference vice-president and former J&K chief minister Omar Abdullah has asked the government "to clear the doubts" and identify the homeless.
"Who are homeless? How are they categorised? Those who came here after Article 370's (reading down) should not be included,” he said.Reacting to her, the J&K government said that the former Chief Minister's statements "are factually incorrect" and added that she had "no understanding of the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) scheme".
Doing away with the special status of the state has not only opened it, but also ensured that central schemes come directly to the UT. After surveys, the government has established the extent of poverty and detected lakhs of homeless and landless people.
"Per unit assistance of Rs 1.30 lakh is provided per house by the Government of India under the scheme. Minimum size of the house prescribed is 1 marla. The government conducted Awaas+ survey during January 2018 to March 2019 to identify those beneficiaries, who claimed to have been left out under the 2011 SECC," said a detailed press statement from the government.
The statement also says that the survey was based on the following criteria to determine who were the houseless: those living in zero-, one- or two-room kachha houses; those houseless persons who did not have land or a clear title to a plot of land, or own land where construction is not permitted.
Based on the field survey, out of 1,99,550 respondents, 2,711 were identified as those who don't have clear land title. The government has gone a step further and allotted five marlas of land to these poeple so that they can get houses.
Such schemes were unheard of in J&K before the abrogation of Article 370. As hundreds of central schemes never found their way into the erstwhile setup, the people, especially the poor, did not have access to development schemes. Now, post the abrogation of Article 370, several sections in the UT benefit from these schemes.
The government has made its intentions clear, but the political parties are accusing it of settling outsiders in the garb of the scheme.
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div class="gmail_quote">The Kashmiri Pandits, who have lost their homes and land in the valley, meanwhile, are also asking about their rehabilitation.
(Deepika Bhan can be contacted at deepika.b@ians.in)
Source: IANS
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