Hyderabad: Slum-dwellers protest razing of structures in Jubilee Hills
The Hindu
Housing project fails to take shape years after being announced
Officials from the Revenue, GHMC and Police departments launched a demolition drive against unauthorised constructions in Jubilee Hills on Friday morning, sparking angry protests from slum-dwellers.
According to eyewitness accounts, residents from the nearby Ambedkar Nagar slum on Road No. 46 of Jubilee Hills had raised illegal structures on a two-acre government land allotted for a double bedroom housing scheme for the urban poor.
They were incidentally among the 150-plus residents of the slum who had been given allotment letters seven years ago, with a promise of construction of 2BHK units in the two-acre site abutting the slum.
A total of 168 units were planned to be constructed at the location in three blocks, with each block containing 56 housing units. However, little work has been done on the site in the seven years since, except for slabs raised for one block.
Miffed with the years of delay, a few slum-dwellers began to occupy the land and raise structures all by themselves, leading to the action by the Revenue Department. Residents staged demonstrations and tried to stop officials from demolishing the structures.
There have been reports of the agitation turning violent occasionally, with protesters pelting stones at officials and smashing the shields of the excavator vehicles.
In the wake of the incident, opposition leaders from the Congress and BJP visited the spot and staged a demonstration seeking a solution for the residents.
Around 440 MBBS graduates of 2021 are not required to undergo one year of compulsory rural service as per the bond signed by them while joining the medical course through government-quota seats in 2015 as the High Court of Karnataka has said the law, enacted in 2012 for mandatory rural service, remained unenforced for 10 years as it was published in the official gazette only in July 2022.