Brackish Waters

They were the salt of the earth once. An ossified Act has taken their land, left them worthless.

Brackish Waters
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So, where's the problem? Every court has judged in the landowners' favour. But Dandi March be damned, the government refuses to pay and has also found a convenient excuse. The SC said that it wasn't its jurisdiction or job to look into each individual case separately and transferred the cases to the HC. The cases still linger there. Each case is supported by documents running into thousands of pages. One petitioner shows you a heap of 37,000 pages of documentation. There are 79 cases in all. Hearings are supposed to come up between Monday and Wednesday every week. But typically, there are always too many cases to be heard by too few judges so it all moves at a lame snail's pace. Few petitioners expect a culmination in their lifetimes. The original petitioners have all died. Their sons and executors, at it today, are also in their middle years. Fewer than a quarter sustain the continuous court visits for it costs money and time. Take Lata Tajo Makarane, who owned an acre of land. She, like many others from 12 neighbouring villages, lost their livelihood from the first fateful day. Or even a better off Noorjehan Yusuf Nerekar, whose family owns 37 acres. With no other income, even these families live a hand-to-mouth existence.

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Some of the affected families have lived amazing riches-to-rags lives. Like the Bhaiji family, who was among the most educated and respected in the region. A family member was even the official translator to the royal Saudi family. Their father was an mla in the erstwhile Bombay Presidency. Having spent his early years living in a virtual palace, Alim Bhaiji, 36, now drives a rickshaw to make ends meet. Or meet Mohammed Ataullah Tungekar. At 71 years, he has little hope of seeing a reprieve. Owner of 100 acres along with his brother, he remembers "living like a king". Today, it's a far harsher story. Then there is Noor Mulla, an ncp politician and a voice of sorts for the local people. He owned 50 acres and has been in the forefront of finding the people representation, trying to get political figures involved. But it has all been in vain.

The government gave everyone bank guarantees of roughly Rs 8,500 per acre. Only the interest on this can be used. Families can barely sustain themselves today. Another proverbial sword also dangles over their heads—if for any reason they lose the case they will have to return every paise of the interest accrued to them over the years. Elders estimate legal expenses of an average of Rs 3,000 per acre so far with more spent on court visits and so on. Several families have sold off homes and jewellery. The smaller landowners are mostly resigned to the fact that they may never ever get anything like the current value for their land. Incidentally, the JNPT (JN Port Trust ) today leases out the same land to companies at Rs 1.5 crore for 30 years. The respondents would be happy with a Rs 30,000 settlement per acre, along with the interest given to agricultural land acquired at the time. But even this adds up to over Rs 600 crore. Maharashtra is Rs 1.1 lakh crore in the red. Where will it find the money? But, argues a petitioner, if the government has money to increase mla salaries and pay for free electricity, it can very well find the funds to pay up some rightful dues.

While running from pillar to post, the petitioners have met politicians of every hue, from Rajiv Gandhi downwards, but with little success. All of them sympathised but nobody came forward to resolve the matter. "Political parties are all of the same colour," says a landowner. "Right from the start, the government never challenged any documentation we presented regarding ownership," says Dosu Bhiwandiwala, a 'large landowner'. "The government has no choice, the records are completely transparent and unambiguous." The JNPT has a World Bank grant and must have hypothecated the land as an asset. How did the port trust place land which doesn't belong to it as collateral? It's a question the WB should well ask.

Meanwhile, a local goon continues to make salt illegally on a part of the land while the rightful owners watch helplessly.His temporary labour tells you the "sahib" can do so, having paid a JNPT official hafta. Most of the land acquired lies unused even after 30 years. And the once-wealthy landowners of Uran sit back in their ramshackle homes and contemplate this bizarre twist of fate. And ponder over the celebration of the 75th anniversary of the Dandi March.

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