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How Delhi homes turned to rubble before the G20Breaking

September 05, 2023

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 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 in India's national capital whose houses were demolished over the past few months - action that both residents and activists say is part of the beautification work for the Sept. 9-10 summit. Officials from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s federal government, which has been carrying out the demolitions, however, say the houses were built illegally on government land and their removal "is a continuous activity".

Houses in slums like the one in Janta Camp are built over years like patchwork. Most of the residents work in nearby areas and have lived within the confines of their small homes for decades. The demolitions started four months ago. Bulldozers visited Janta Camp on a hot morning in May and video footage of the demolition shows temporary houses made of tin sheets being razed to the ground as people who once called them home stand watching, some of them breaking down in tears. The camp, which sits near Pragati Maidan - the summit’s main venue - is emblematic of much of Delhi’s landscape. In 2021, Hardeep Singh Puri, the minister for housing and urban affairs, said in parliament that 13.5 million people reside in unauthorized colonies in Delhi. "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, executive director and founding member 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," he added. India's Supreme Court ruled last month that squatters cannot claim the right to occupy public land. At best, they can seek time to vacate the public land and apply for rehabilitation, it said. At least 49 demolition drives were conducted in New Delhi between April 1 and July 27, with nearly 230 acres of government land being reclaimed, Kaushal Kishore, the junior minister for housing and urban affairs, said in parliament in July. "No house has been demolished to beautify the city for the G20 summit," he said.

 
Credit: Independent News Pakistan (INP)