C Shivakumar
Chennai:
In a shocking case of callousness that
exposes the lack of coordination between various government
deparments, a 10-acre piece of government land in Chengalpattu has
gone to a private real estate developer, apparently without the
knowledge of concerned officials.
This has prompted the State Housing
Secretary Dharmendra Pratap Yadav to shoot off a letter to the member
secretary of the Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority asking
how the land in Potheri Village in Chengalpattu Taluk of Kancheepuram
district that was acquired by the CMDA for Marimalai Nagar
Neighbourhood Housing Scheme was acquired by Lancor Holdings.
The official has asked the member
secretary to examine how planning permission was accorded to the
private developer on the land belonging to CMDA, which has not yet
been reconveyed to the original land owners.
The agency has maintained that it has
not given any planning permission to construct buildings, pointing
out that Potheri village does not come under Chennai Metropolitan
Area over which it has jurisdiction. Other areas come under the
Directorate of Town and Country Planning. However, when Express
contacted, DTCP officials said they will have to check on who gave
the planning permission. “We have not given planning permission to
construct any structure in the last one year,” an official said.
It is not just the CMDA and the
directorate who seem to have erred. Top officials are puzzled as to
how the revenue department could could issue patta in the name of a
private developer when the land acquired decades ago is yet to be
reconveyed to the original owners.
It is said that the private developer
had purchased the land in 2012 at a cost of Rs 40 crore.
Shocking as this is, it is not the lone
case where the government land has changed hands without the
knowledge of the concerned deparment. Insiders allege that there are
several such cases, putting the blame on estate managers – a post
specifically created to monitor the land acquired for projects. These
officers have failed to alert CMDA about the encroachments or about
any development taking place in the land. “They sit in CMDA
headquarters in the city, unaware of any development on the ground
level,” said sources.
The CMDA is currently struggling to get
back the land to an extent of 178.87 acres, which was acquired to
develop satellite town at Marimalai Nagar in 1972 to regulate
population growth of city as suggested by the First Master Plan. This
figure is based on a survey carried out by CMDA in 2010. Some of the
land acquired has also been returned to its former owners by the High
Court, as the land has not been put to use.
Sources charged that the current value
of the land encroached could be more than Rs 1,000 crore in the
current real estate market.
The whole project has been a big
headache for the CMDA, even as it has cost the State exchequer a
substantial amount of money that has been spent on litigation to get
back the land. It is learnt that allotments could not be made to 36
allottees in government approved plots in 2006 as their land have
been encroached by ex-owners and encroachers in Marimalai Nagar.
In 2010, CMDA had begun a drive to
clear encroachments in its 37 acres of land acquired more than three
decades ago in Keelakaranai village in Marimalainagar. But after the
encroachments were cleared under heavy security, the land is again
being encroached upon due to lack of proper estate management.
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