Many slums disappear from Indian capital ahead of G20 summit
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[September 05, 2023]
By Sunil Kataria and Adnan Abidi
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - When residents of a slum cluster in New Delhi's
Janta Camp area heard that the G20 summit was to be held in the Indian
capital, barely 500 metres (yards) from their homes, they expected it
would benefit them as well.
Instead, they were rendered homeless.
Dharmender Kumar, Khushboo Devi, and their three children were among
scores of people across Delhi whose homes were demolished over the past
few months - action that both residents and activists say is part of
beautification work for the summit on Sept. 9 and 10.
Some of those living in the slum approached the Delhi High court to stop
the evictions but the court ruled the settlements illegal. Then city
authorities ordered them to vacate by May 31.
Officials of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, responsible for
the demolitions, say the houses were built illegally on government land
and their removal was "a continuous activity".
Homes in slums like the one in Janta Camp are built over years, like
patchwork. Most residents work nearby and have lived for decades within
the confines of their small homes.
The demolitions started four months ago. Bulldozers rolled in on a hot
May morning, with video images of the demolition showing temporary homes
made of tin sheet being razed, as former residents stand watching, some
of them in tears.
The camp near Pragati Maidan, the summit’s main venue, is emblematic of
much of the landscape in Delhi, as many of the city's 20 million people
live in largely unplanned districts that have mushroomed over the years.
In 2021, housing minister Hardeep Singh Puri, told parliament that 13.5
million people lived in the city's unauthorised colonies.
"The government is demolishing houses and removing vulnerable people in
the name of beautification without any concern about what will happen to
them," said Sunil Kumar Aledia of the New Delhi-based Centre for
Holistic Development, which works with the homeless.
"If this had to be done, residents should have been warned in time and
places found where they could have been rehabilitated."
Last month, the Supreme Court ruled that squatters have no right to
occupy public land, and can at best, seek time to vacate it and apply
for rehabilitation.
RECLAMATION, NOT BEAUTIFICATION
At least 49 demolition drives in New Delhi between April 1 and July 27
led to nearly 230 acres (93 hectares) of government land being
reclaimed, the junior housing minister, Kaushal Kishore, told parliament
in July.
"No house has been demolished to beautify the city for the G20 summit,"
he said.
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Srishti Devi, 5, daughter of Dharmender
Kumar, who works as a clerk at Pragati Maidan which houses the main
venue of G20 Summit, plays with her 9-month-old sister Anokhi, near
their belongings after their house was bulldozed during a demolition
drive by the authorities at a slum area near the upcoming summit
venue in New Delhi, India, June 1, 2023. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
The demolition of the Janta Camp shanties was a rude shock for
Mohammed Shameem, another resident, who said he thought the "big
people" attending the G20 summit would "give something to the poor".
He said, "The opposite is happening here. Big people will come, sit
on our graves and eat."
For Kumar, who works as a clerk in a Pragati Maidan office, the
demolition of his home and his family's eviction spells larger
implications.
"If we relocate from here, my children's education will also
suffer," he said. "Here they are able to study because the school is
nearby."
Two of Kumar's children - five-year-old Srishti and 10-year-old
Eshant - go to a government school nearby. His younger daughter,
Anokhee, is nine months old.
The family, which also includes Khushboo Devi's father, had lived in
their shanty for 13 years until being told to vacate as "the area
had to be cleaned".
"If they have to clean, that does not mean they will remove the
poor," Devi told Reuters. "If the poor are looking so bad, they can
make something nice, put a curtain or a sheet so that the poor are
not visible."
As the bulldozers left after reducing their homes to rubble, Kumar
and his wife began gathering up belongings strewn by the road.
Afterwards, they piled these into a three-wheeler to go to their new
accommodation - a single room 10 km (6 miles) away, for which they
paid a monthly rent of 2,500 rupees ($30.21).
Their daughter carefully lifted a peach-coloured dress that had been
thrown to the ground, along with everything else her parents owned,
and dusted it off.
Two months later, in August, the family returned to a part of the
area that had escaped the bulldozers, paying a higher rent of 3,500
rupees for a room.
"It was difficult for my children to go to school everyday from the
place we were staying in earlier," Kumar said. "I want them to study
and do well. We returned for their sake."
($1=82.7483 rupees)
(Additional reporting by Sakshi Dayal, Anand Katakam, and Arpan
Chaturvedi; Writing by Sakshi Dayal; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan
and Clarence Fernandez)
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