Par panel on land bill to meet on Monday

NEW DELHI : Days before the first half of Budget session comes to an end, a Parliamentary panel will sit on Monday to discuss the controversial land acquisition bill of 2015 through which the NDA government sought to make key alterations in UPA’s 2013 land law but later changed its mind.
The Joint Committee on the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (Second Amendment) Bill 2015, headed by BJP MP S S Ahluwalia will take a view on the remaining clauses of the bill.
The government is hopeful that a consensus will emerge on all issues related to the bill. The committee has already been given at least five extensions.
In November last year, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had hoped for “some consensus” on the legislation.
The panel had on December 16 decided to seek a fresh extension of its term till the beginning of the Budget session as only a few states had by then tendered their response to various clauses of the bill.
At the panel’s meeting on August 3 last year, BJP had agreed to bring back the key provisions of UPA’s land law including the ones on consent clause and social impact assessment and drop controversial amendments brought by the Narendra Modi Government in December last year through an ordinance.
All the 11 BJP members on the Parliamentary panel had then moved amendments seeking to bring back social impact assesment and consent clause.
However, the committee could not take a view on three key provisions including the one on return of unutilised land to its owners after five years.
At the August 10 meeting last year, a sharp exchange of words had taken place between BJP and Congress members as the latter were opposed to any changes in the retrospective clause of the bill dealing with compensation of land acquired under the 1894 Act, which was replaced by the 2013 law passed by the UPA government.
The committee is likely to take a view on these remaining points besides taking up some new issues that might have cropped up.
The panel members have already been circulated the replies received from the state governments and Union Territory administrations besides various ministries and departments of the central government regarding land acquisition proceedings initiated under Land Acquisition Act, 1894 and the status of land acquisition proceedings that have lapsed or may lapse in terms of Section 24(2) of RFCTLARR, 2013.
The August 10 meeting last year was expected to evolve a consensus on the remaining three key provisions including the one on return of unutilised land to its owners after five years and the retrospective clause. (AGENCIES)