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Slum free india in five years

RPK

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New Delhi, Sep 12 (PTI) To ensure a slum-free India in five years, the Centre today asked the states to contribute fully in this regard.

Housing and Poverty Alleviation Minister Kumari Selja said states should set up regulatory authorities for this.

At a press conference, she said a bill will be drafted soon and tabled in the winter session of Parliament.

She said before finalising the bill, consultations will be held with various stakeholders.

Her ministry is also working on in-situ rehabilitation of slum-dwellers by building houses at the same spot under the flagship Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission.

"We are also encouraging public-private-partnership and the ministry will provide viability gap funding, wherever required," she said.

Selja said under JNNURM, 1.4 million houses have been sanctioned "though we are aware, needs are much more".
 
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lol 60 yearz of Poverty finish in 5 years o my god!! these indians and thr bollywood movie style dreams :rofl:
 
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lol 60 yearz of Poverty finish in 5 years o my god!! these indians and thr bollywood movie style dreams :rofl:

Shhhh chup, u dont know Indians they can do everything....
@ article
Wase it was a stupid joke & day dreaming at its best...
 
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good for the people if this happens....but i have very serious doubts about this
 
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hamare gujarat(India) me kahavat hain.
"Nishan chuk maaf, nahi maaf nichu nishan"- "missing target(aim) is forgivable but aiming 'lower' target(aim) is never forgivable."

Don't you think if we reduce slums to even 20% by this plan will be a great achivement.
 
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Its good that the Govt of india is thinking to provide its citizens with proper place to live. Its really not possible to finish slums in 5 years not even in one city. It requires really good planning management and most of all the will to be clear of slums. Sometime people dont want to leave the area because finishing slums sometimes mean moving them out of main city which they are not willing to do.
 
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The Slum Rehabilitation Authority’s (SRA) tender inviting bids for the ‘Redevelopment of Dharavi’ project which began on June 1, 2007, has drawn a huge response. Leading international developers from 40 cities across the world including the US-based Hynes, Far East-based Capitaland, Ascendas, Ayala, the UAE-based Emaar, Nakheel and Limitless have started lobbying strongly with local developers such as Hiranandani Constructions, Rahejas, Kalpataru, Lokhandwala Infrastructure, Akruti Nirman to form joint ventures for bidding jointly. By July 15, 2007, international developers will submit their JV patterns to SRA, followed by the final bidding process by July-end 2007.

The key question is: will these international builders in association with local developers be successful in bringing about necessary redevelopment within Dharavi (where 55% of its residents live in the squalid slums and over 57,000 families are squeezed into an area of 535 acres) necessitating structural changes at the entry and exit levels of Dharavi.

According to Ghulam Zia, National Director of Research and Advisory Services, Knight Frank, “Builders will have to plan and develop high-rise buildings within the periphery of Dharavi in a manner that should enhance the value of the real estate property on the outskirts of the Dharavi also. Otherwise, the redevelopment of the Dharavi project will place a burden on existing infrastructure such as railways, water supply, sewage treatment at the entry and exit points.”

Under the Dharavi Redevelopment Project, all the eligible slum dwellers whose names are incorporated in the electoral roll of 1995 and whose structures are existing on site will be rehabilitated free of cost in a self contained pucca tenement with a carpet area of 225 sq ft through the developers to be appointed by the government of Maharashtra. Besides, additional amenities like school, an ITI, colleges, municipal hospitals, police stations and post office will be developed and these facilities will be available to slum dwellers.

Iqbal Chahal, the chief executive officer of Slum Rehabilitation Authority (SRA) who has been recently appointed as vice president and chief executive officer for the Dharavi Redevelopment Project told FE, “For this, the quantum of amenity requirements is now increased to 10% from the earlier limit of 5%.”

Of the 557 acres, the actual redevelopment of Dharavi will span 360 acres, which the state government has divided into five sectors. With the total redevelopment cost of Rs 9,200 crore, Dharavi will be redeveloped as an integrated township with modern amenities that will be financially viable and self-sustaining. It is envisaged to provide the infrastructure along five points dubbed HIKES where H stands for Health: State of Art Health Care Centre; I for Income: Income generation through supporting the craftsmen working in leather, pottery, food processing, garment manufacturing, gems and jewellery industries. K for Knowledge: Through education to achieve 100% literacy, and, S for Socio – cultural development.

Hemant Shah, chairman, Akruti Nirman says, “Looking at the dynamism of this project, the cost of the project may exceed over Rs 20,000 crore over a period of time from the current estimated cost of Rs 9,300 crore. This is because every aspect of the Dharavi Rehabilitation project is positive as it has gained wide publicity in 40 cities across the world whereby many international builders are looking at bidding for this project.”

As per the tender issued by SRA, Dharavi’s proximity to Mumbai’s business district, railways and airport provide the strategic advantage of leveraging Dharavi’s improvement costs with free sale buildable areas. Given an appropriate scale of operation, one large and continuous free sale area can be developed into a high-rise garden city complex, with completely modern infrastructure and amenities for the local residents and all of Mumbai.

Ashutosh Limaye, head—urban development of TrammellCrow Megharaj (now Jones Lang LaSalle Meghraj), opines, “Prior to the Dharavi redevelopment, one of the biggest challenges for the SRA authorities as well as builders will be to eradicate the ongoing illegal commercial activities there.”

Mumbai-based Ali Lokhandwala, director, Lokhandwala Infrastructure who has shown keen interest in bidding for the project cautions builders on the resistance which they will have to face from the slum dwellers since everybody has so far been used to living on the ground level. He adds, “There will be political agenda by politicians who will try to meet during the redevelopment process. In such circumstances, the state government will have to be firm in terms of standing by the redevelopment plan of Dharavi so that judiciary also supports the state government.”

Since the residential buildings will command a selling price of Rs 10,000 per sq ft is similar to the prices on the Western Express Highway, Dharavi will see a population pull from Western and Central suburbs. But redevelopment of Dharavi is being considered good from a urban regeneration point of view since Dharavi has always been a permanent eyesore to foreign travellers flying to India apart from slums adding pollution to the Mithi river.

Niranjan Hiranandani, managing director, Hiranandani Construction says, “With Dharavi getting redeveloped, I feel great. Although the state government is not doing anything to remove the Urban Land Ceiling Act (ULCA), at least an effort is being made by them instead of doing away with the slums in Dharavi.”

Hafeez Contractor—a renowned architect from Mumbai told FE, “The redevelopment of Dharavi seems to be good and I am looking forward to it as there will be many office buildings and residential complexes.”

Although it is understood that the temporary accommodation of slum dwellers will be done at the transit camp by the developers within Dharavi itself, speculations are rife that the same slum dwellers may not go for the upcoming flats. However, Chahal denies any such bottleneck and affirms that the redevelopment project will benefit the slum dwellers and beautify Mumbai.



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work in progress

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completed buildings

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Good step. even if 5 or 10 % slums are done away through five-year project, it would be good.

keep it up. Slow and steady wins the race :) But dont stand still
 
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Scholar explodes myth of ‘India Shining’ image
By Asad Hashim

Sunday, 13 Sep, 2009 | 10:35 AM PST |


KARACHI: Dr Marie Lall, South Asia specialist at the University of London and an associate fellow of the Asia Programme at Chatham House, was speaking at a seminar titled ‘India Today: Rising Star or Land of Snake Charmers?’ organised at a local hotel here on Saturday.

Beginning her talk, Dr Lall asserted that in her experience Pakistanis and Indians tended to have very 'incomplete pictures' of one another, and that this tends to colour their perceptions.

She spoke about the development of the idea of India’s identity and its aims as a nation. Jawaharlal Nehru, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, and other leaders at the time of partition, she said, were primarily educated in the West, and so the anti-colonial movement was shaped ‘primarily by Western ideas of the nation state’.

‘Nehru’s first challenge,’ she said, ‘was framing a new identity for India around something. For Pakistan this was simple, as there was a common religion, but for India this was not workable. So he chose the idea of shared history.’

She argued that there is a disparity between the image of India and the realities on the ground. ‘There is an India of the 70 per cent, and an India of the 30 per cent. To the outside world, they see just the 30 per cent.’

Dr Lall also provided a brief overview of Indian political and economic history, with particular emphasis on the 1991 financial reforms, which were necessitated after India was forced to empty its gold reserves to pay off loans to international institutions. She said that reforms led to devolution of power from the Centre towards the provinces, thus leading to the growth of smaller, local parties. The south of India prospered more in comparison to the north, and there were rural/urban demographic shifts. She further said that the rise of Hindu nationalism is directly linked to the reforms that were brought about between 1991 and 1996.

She said the 2004 and 2009 wins for the Congress party in the Indian general elections were relatively unexpected, particularly to analysts, who assumed that India would go whichever way the middle-classes went, which was presumably with the BJP.

‘But the masses dictated the elections, and the Congress won, something which most analysts did not factor into their calculations
,’ she said.

Regarding foreign policy, Dr Lall asserted that India’s ‘aim was always to be a global power and to be recognised as such’.

Prior to the 1990s, she said, India’s claim to being a global power was on the basis of ‘moral standing’. Nehru’s vision was that India would ‘lead the postcolonial world’.

This, however, proved to be problematic as time went on, as India’s ambitions then grew to leading the developing world, many of whom were not postcolonial and had no interest in being led by the South Asian giant.

With Indira Gandhi, she said, one saw a gradual shift to a more realistic approach on the regional level, where India recognised that it was the hegemon, and acted as such by dominating smaller states such as Nepal and Bhutan. ‘Again,’ Dr Lall said, ‘you see a dualism, where there is regional hegemony on one hand and then ‘moral standing’ on the other.’

Post-1991, she said, things changed significantly, and India went from being non-aligned to dictating foreign policy on the basis of economic growth and needs. ‘To open markets you need to trade, and there was no real foreign policy vision from either the Congress or the BJP.

The only government which did have that vision was the short-lived United Front government, led by I.K. Gujral. There was also a gradual shift towards welcoming mostly Hindu non-resident Indians, who had in the past been shunned by the Indian state, to invest in the country. Congress followed in BJP’s footsteps, as far as this was concerned.’

She added that it was significant that during this ‘new era’ of foreign policy, India also approached other states it would in the past not have, including the US and Israel.


Indian energy security

A significant part of Dr Lall’s talk also centred on India’s new focus on energy security. She said that as of 2004 India realised that it requires this security in order to fuel its economic growth in the coming years.

‘It is now energy that drives Indian foreign policy. Nothing else,’ she said. ‘Right now there is no idea how they are going to meet the needs they will have in 2020, and even though there is increasing cooperation with other states, the energy secured so far is not enough.’

On the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline, she said that the project will likely not only provide India with energy, but will also foster regional stability. The economic and logistical feasibilities were all worked out in 2007-08, she said, but the only remaining issue was the US’s objections to the deal. In the past this would not have stopped India, she said, but now there was the India-US nuclear deal to consider. As such, she said, her feeling was that the pipeline would not in fact be built.

‘The India-US nuclear deal has nothing to with energy, let’s be clear about this,’ she said. ‘It has nothing to do with energy and everything to do with great power status.’


Further, she argued that US and Indian priorities on the deal were actually conflicting. While the US wants to use India to counter China as a growing economic threat, and to increase trade with it to ease its own balance of trade deficit, India has pursued the deal mainly to be recognised as a military and civilian nuclear power, and to have access of fissile material and the latest nuclear technology. India, she said, also wants a greater role to play in the Asian balance of power, and believes that the nuclear deal gives it a greater ‘status’ as a country.

Dr Lall also spoke briefly about Indo-Pakistan relations, as well as about relations between India and Myanmar. Concluding her talk, she said that in the Indo-Pakistan set-up at present, India ‘does not need to do anything, and so it is treating Pakistan like China treats India. It can afford to stand back’.

Dr Lall’s research has focused primarily on India, Pakistan and Myanmar. She has written widely on issues of political economy, energy security and foreign policy. She also works on education policy in Pakistan and India, and is a senior lecturer at the Institute of Education at the University of London.

She is currently residing in Lahore, where she is a member of the visiting faculty at the Lahore University of Management Sciences.
 
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The "Scholar" has said nothing that we don't already know.

The title of the speech itself reveals her tired, recycled thoughts, which have been expressed by a thousand writers before her.
 
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Here's a list of Development Authorities in India that work to provide affordable housing to its citizens...
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Development Authorities in India

Development Authorities in India have played a very significant role in carrying about planned and organized growth. The basic premise of all the Development Authorities in India is the realization of the fact that there is distinction between Growth and Development and the latter has to be achieved through strategic use of the available resources. India has long been a sleeping giant and the Development Authorities in various cities made India wake up from its slumber. Development Authorities in India concentrate on special functions like Housing, Planning, and Restructuring and Urban Development. In New Delhi, Delhi Development Authority has been responsible for providing Housing for innumerable residents, undertaking urban restructuring, Development of commercial as well as residential properties and providing opportunities to avoid the clash between residential and commercial priorities.

Similarly, the Bangalore Development Authority that was constituted in 1976 has been managing Housing Colonies as well as commercial complexes. It includes allotting sites for public utilities and carrying out Real Estate Developments in Bangalore. The most notable Development Authority in Maharashtra has been MHADA- Maharashtra Housing Authority and Development Authority that has provided Housing to various economic sections of the population in Mumbai and other areas of Maharashtra. In fact, all the Development Authorities, for that matter have always accorded priority to the Lower Income Group and the Middle-Income Group and have made decent accommodation available to them. In India, Development Authorities has been instrumental for providing shelter to those who cannot afford skyrocketing Real Estate transactions. In developing towns like Gurgaon, Noida etc, constructive efforts by the Development Authorities like the HUDA- Haryana Urban Development Authority and NDA- Noida Development Authority respectively have transformed the city into the most happening satellite towns of the capital attracting MNCs and Foreign Direct Investment. Indiahousing.com understands the significance of the developmental Authorities and hence offers analytical information on various Development Authorities.

Bhopal Development Authority

Cochin/Kochi Development Authority

HUDA - Haryana Urban Development Authority

HUDA Faridabad Development Authority

HUDA Gurgaon Development Authority

Housing Authorities In Itanagar

Mangalore Development Authority

Nagpur Development Authority

Pondicherry Development Authority

Rajkot Development Authority

Shimla Development Authority

Thiruvananthapuram/Trivandrum Development Authority
 
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India economy is over 1 trillion dollars now and much of that Cash is spent of subsides. And earlier this year the gov had unveiled a plan to decrease spending on subsides over the next few years starting this year. even a small percentage of that cash is in the billions. India has plenty of cash on hand to institute projects like this, that should of happened years ago.

Roads are finally being done on time an at not cost to the government due to the new way projects are contracted.

Providing housing for the millions of people living in slums across India's now more wealth cities. IS no Pipe dream. It is one that is very much attainable, especially with the news that private industry will be spearheading the projects.

because for them "time is money" and they want to make lots of money.

Kudos to India for fianally stepping up to face a serious challenge, and the outcome of this will change the face of India forever.

And of course not to mention the millions of votes that they would gain for re-election.:rofl:
 
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