C Shivakumar/ ENS
Chennai:
Rights
activists have linked the slum evictions to the alleged increasing
invasion of the private forces on the urban paradigm and questioned the
role of Tamil Nadu Urban Development Fund (TNUDF) and public-private entities in the development of cities and environmental social framework (ESF).
A
report of People’s Union of Civil Liberties Fact-finding Team and
Citizen Rights Forum on forced eviction and rehabilitation of
slum-dwellers in Chennai states that since the initiation of various
externally aided projects like the World Bank funded Tamil Nadu Urban
Development Project (TNUDP), affected-citizens of the city have had
little say in the course of events and development projects that have
been planned in the very sites that they have been living in for many
generations.
However, the report states that “The current funds for urban development is managed by TNUDF,
established under the Indian Trusts Act 1882 by state government,
ICICI, Housing and Development Finance Corporation and IL&FS with a
line of credit from the World Bank to develop urban infrastructure of
the state.”
“The role of TNUDF,
established in 1996, was to attract private capital into urban
infrastructure and to facilitate better performing urban local bodies to
access capital markets. Despite the fact that the state is the highest
stakeholder in TNUDF (72 per cent), it is being
administered by a corporate trustee Tamil Nadu Urban Infrastructure
Trustee Company Limited and a fund manager in Tamil Nadu Urban
Infrastructure Financial Services limited with Tamil Nadu holding a
minority stake of 49 per cent,” the report alleged.
“These
public-private entities are making all decisions with regard to
development of the city including preparation of feasibility study and
the environmental and social impact of study of the project,” it
alleged.
Questioning
the role of private players in determining the Environment Social
Framework, the report also castigated the state saying it is moving away
from the welfare approach and catering towards the vested interests of
the powerful.
But highly placed government sources dismissed the report and said TNUDF
is a unique model and it only generates ideas for the government. “No
consultant has been appointed for commercial development of the slum
lands and government has to take a decision in this regard,” the sources
added.
Interestingly, a survey entitled “Identification of Environmental Infrastructure
Requirement
of Slums in Chennai Metropolitan Area” under the World Bank funded
TNUDP II (Tamil Nadu Urban Development Project) identifies 122 slums as
‘Objectionable Slums’ and 120 slums as ‘unobjectionable slums.’ “The
people who are mapping the slums are the ones who have done the ESF. The
same private entities are the ones who have a huge stake in the urban
infrastructure financing,” said CRF member Vanessa Peter while linking
the private entities with TNUDF.
Quoting
a mid-term project review report of 2001 by Rutul Joshi, a Faculty of
Planning and Public Policy, CEPT University, Vanessa said, “TNUDF has performed the role of both a financial intermediary and a strategic advisor”. The report also claims that TNUDF as an institution has developed a market for municipal infrastructure in the state, she said.
Surprisingly, Tamil Nadu Urban Infrastructure Financial Services Limited (TNUIFSL) have proposed
‘Integrated Development in Foreshore Estate’, pitching for eviction of
10,000 families living in Srinivasapuram. Interestingly, this has been
mapped by the same TNUIFSL as objectionable in the survey.
No comments:
Post a Comment