Assam govt prepares for mega eviction drive in Golaghat, to affect 2,000 families
The eviction drive will begin on Tuesday morning in Rengma Reserve Forest in Uriamghat along the Assam-Nagaland border in Sarupathar sub-division.
PTI
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Representative image
Golaghat, 28 July
The Assam government is preparing to clear more than 10,000 bigha (over
3,300 acre) of land from alleged encroachments in Golaghat district, which will
affect at least 2,000 families, officials said on Monday.
The eviction drive will begin on Tuesday morning in Rengma Reserve
Forest in Uriamghat along the Assam-Nagaland border in Sarupathar sub-division,
they said.
"The exact details are still being worked out as the surveys
continued today as well. However, it will be over 10,000 bigha of land, where
around 2,000 families encroached," a senior Forest Department official
said.
For carrying out the eviction drive, the authorities have divided the
entire area into nine zones, and are doing the survey accordingly, he said.
"An extensive land survey of 30 villages in the Rengma Reserve
Forest was done. It was found that thousands of bigha of forest land were
converted into agricultural land by the encroachers," another official
said.
A district administration official said proper notices were served by
the Forest Department to the encroachers, giving them seven days to vacate the
place.
"Following this, most of the suspected encroachers started vacating
places such as Chilanijan, Kherbari, and Dayalpur," he said.
Many of the suspected encroachers are from Nagaon, Morigaon and Sonitpur
districts, and most belong to the minority community, he added.
The Assam Police has stationed a senior officer from the headquarters in
Golaghat to oversee the law and order situation during the eviction drive.
"There are enough security personnel deployed, and we are fully
prepared. Apart from our own personnel, we have taken support from CRPF for the
eviction exercise," the official said, without sharing further details.
Meanwhile, the Nagaland government issued an advisory to the bordering
districts to keep a strict vigil so that displaced people cannot cross into the
state following the eviction drive.
On 25 July, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma visited Uriamghat to
inspect the areas that have been encroached upon.
He said nearly 70 per cent of the encroachers had vacated the land
voluntarily, and those who had settled on the land came from various districts
in Assam, such as Cachar, Sribhumi, Dhubri, Barpeta, Hojai, Nagaon and Morigaon,
as well as from other states, including West Bengal and Bihar.
The CM had said on 21 July that 1.29 lakh bigha (over 42,500 acre) have
been cleared of encroachment in the last four years, and around 29 lakh bighas
(more than 9.5 lakh acres) of land are still under encroachment in the state.
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