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Idgah row may be setteled

Given the elections later this year, it seems chief minister Shivraj Singh doesn’t want to take any chances in Bhopal, where residents in three crucial assembly constituencies, Bhopal North, Bhopal South and Huzoor, have been affected by two major land controversies - Bhopal merger agreement and Idgah Hills land issue.

Updated on: Feb 21, 2013 02:37 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Bhopal
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Given the elections later this year, it seems chief minister Shivraj Singh doesn’t want to take any chances in Bhopal, where residents in three crucial assembly constituencies, Bhopal North, Bhopal South and Huzoor, have been affected by two major land controversies -- Bhopal merger agreement and Idgah Hills land issue.

HT Image
HT Image

There are fresh hints that the state government wants to provide relief to the affected people as it doesn’t want to antagonise them in the election year, especially in the Old City where the BJP wants to make inroads.

On Wednesday, secretary to chief minister SK Mishra and two other senior government functionaries met representatives of people affected by the merger agreement and Idgah land controversy at Vallabh Bhawan and discussed how these controversies could be resolved. The members included Jagdish Chhawani, Bharat Aswani and Narayan Parwani and Harish Ramkhyani.

After the meeting, legal advisor Ghar Bachao Sangharash Samiti Jagdish Chhawni said the MP government seems in a mood to resolve both issues during this assembly session. “We met SK Mishra and other two senior functionaries who told us that the CM wants that people in Bhopal should not suffer and as such both the issues be resolved at the earliest.

On Idgah issue, Chhawni said in 1974 the then commissioner of Bhopal declared the Idgah land as a private property. “But surprisingly in 2001, the then collector declared this property as government land. There is also a case pending in the MP high court, under which the HC has asked the MP government to explain the stand taken by the then commissioner in 1974 and by collector in 2001,” he added.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Neeraj Santoshi

Neeraj Santoshi is the Chief of Bureau for Hindustan Times in Uttarakhand, where he leads the state reporting team while covering government, politics, environment, wildlife, Uttarakhand High Court, and issues shaping the Himalayan region. With more than two decades in journalism across conflict zones, he has covered politically sensitive regions and environmentally fragile landscapes, and focused on stories that combine public interest with in-depth storytelling. An alumnus of Pune University with a Master’s in Communication Studies, he has reported extensively from Jammu & Kashmir (2003-2010), Madhya Pradesh (2010 to 2018 ) and Uttarakhand (Since 2018), covering subjects ranging from insurgency, elections and governance to wildlife conservation, mining, climate change, agriculture, human rights and social justice. He has covered politics and legislative assemblies of both Jammu & Kashmir and Madhya Pradesh over more than a decade. Before taking over as Chief of Bureau in Uttarakhand, he served as Special Correspondent with Hindustan Times in Madhya Pradesh and earlier reported for both Hindustan Times and The Indian Express in Jammu & Kashmir, where he covered state politics, environment and insurgency-related developments. Over the years, his stories have focused on environmental degradation, wildlife, illegal mining, governance and the changing social fabric of Himalayan states and Central India. He is particularly interested in long-form explanatory journalism, and stories that explore the intersection of ecology, conservation, governance and society. Outside the newsroom, Neeraj enjoys reading widely on neuroscience, consciousness studies, Artificial Intelligence and quantum physics, with a special interest in Kashmiri Tantric Shaivist traditions. He is also passionate about wildlife, mountaineering and the Himalayas, interests that continue to inform his reporting and deepen his understanding of the region he covers.

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