|
In
a brutal eviction drive, to uproot nearly 6000 slum
dwellers in the vicinity of Eastern Bypass, Kolkata and
demolishment of their 1200 shanties for a suggested
‘beautification’ and ‘development’ programme took place by
the personnel of Bidhan Nagar Police Station and Rapid
Action Force (RAF) on 04/10/2009 from 6 to 10 a.m., the
drive not only made them homeless but posed serious
challenges to their life and livelihood.
The affected faced ruthless physical
assaults and even women, pregnant women and children were
not spared from police atrocities and many of them
sustained injuries during this heinous displacement drive
without the mandatory provision of a court order for the
same. The dwellers are mainly daily wage labors from
socially marginalized sections with a sizable number from
religious minority community.
The composition of the populace is again
common to this metropolis as they were victims of internal
displacement from their rural natives and came to Kolkata,
the nearest metropolis for a better pasture and sustain
their life. In this course their families settled
alongside a stinking sewage just adjacent to the place of
affluence; Salt Lake.
The age of the said inhabitation is nearly
30 years and by that only the residents having adversary
possession rights over their living place, according to
the domestic law of the country. Again it should be
emphasized by the civil society that the people were not
migrated by their own wish but under compulsion as state
failed to provide them basic livelihood option at their
natives. The whole eviction drive was done without prior
and proper R&R (rehabilitation and resettlement) package,
what was against the basic justification and legal
validation.
Our fact finding over the issue revealed
that on 3/10/2009, Saturday, State Urban Development
Authority announced the eviction through public address
system without proper information on the time and date for
the proposed eviction and in very next day on 4/10/09,
Sunday, a large posse of police from Bidhan Nagar (south)
police station with Rapid Action Force personnel;
numbering in 7 to 8 hundreds with lathis and firearms with
empty trucks and bulldozers reached at the place. The
raiding party totally ransacked the slum. The personnel in
uniform demolished every earthly belongings of the
community and not even spared cooked food. Having the
prior assumption about the eviction, some residents hided
few materials of emergency need at different adjacent
place but the Policemen forced the affected people to
unhide the same and burnt those in front of them,
thereafter. There were four tube-wells, bored by the slum
dwellers by their own money. Police destroyed those
sources of drinking water. The raiding party
indiscriminately lathi charged on the dwellers without any
provocation or resistance by these marginalized
population.
The eviction drive was purposefully done on
a Sunday, when all the offices & courts are closed
restricting the dwellers to make any complaint before
administration or court of law.
All the material belongings were snatched
from the people and looted by the police personnel. Not a
single seizure list were made out by the police.
The
eviction drive compelled the people to leave the slum. And
few of them were spending their days little far from the
place under plastic sheets. But every night they were
threatened by the police and ultimately on 12/10/2009
police again torn apart those sheets and forced them to
live under the bare sky.
On 16/10/2009 a street corner meeting was
organized by some Civil Society Organizations (CSO) and
their network, named as GRIHA ADHIKAR MANCH (GAM). On
21/10/2009 a team consisting representatives of this
network and the victims met with the officer in charge of
Bidhan Nagar South Police Station. He referred them to
meet with Mr. Ashok Das, the Sub Divisional Officer (SDO)
of Bidhan Nagar. While the representatives met Mr. Das and
demanded for proper rehabilitation, Mr. Das shirked off
and said the whole responsibility is upon Kolkata
Metropolitan Development Authority (KMDA) but he did not
utter anything about the brutal treatment committed by the
police and thus he washed his hands.
The incident not only
tarnished the basic tenets of fundamental rights as
guaranteed under Article 21 of Indian Constitution. But
also bared the anti people act of the state with complete
apathy for socio- economically marginalized community.
Here I want to recall the state actors that international
right to adequate housing is enshrined in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights as well as the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and our
State has international obligation to obey as a party. |