Govt uses defunct law, dupes poor
Published on Wed, Jun 20, 2007 at 11:08, Updated on Thu, Jun 21, 2007 at 23:58 in Nation section
Tags: Special Investigation, Chattisgarh , Koriya

STAMPING OUT THE LAW: The Chattisgarh government is using a law that was abolished 30 years back.
Koriya (Chattisgarh): Pati Raj, who works as a daily wage labourer in Chattisgarh's Koriya district, has been robbed of his land. The Municipal Corporation is building houses under the Atal Niwas Yojana on his land and Pati Raj and his wife are now casual workers on their own land.
Pati Raj, who has been fighting his case in the local court, pays Rs 600 for each hearing. He is unaware that some of these costs are illegal.
The Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1971, abolished the application fees of Rs 2 for getting copies of revenue court orders. But in Chhattisgarh, the law is still being followed. While the copying fee specified in the Act is Rs 10 for three pages, tehsils in the district charge Rs 10 for every page.
"They demand Rs 10 per page for a copy of the court order. So Rs 150 for 15 pages and some money for themselves as well," says Pati Raj.
Atibal Singh, who works as a farmer, is also fighting a case involving his land and faces the same problem as Pati Raj.
"I have put Rs 10 stamps on every page," says Atibal.
Documents show the law is being implemented across the state. In district Manendragarh, the collections from application fees alone, were well over a lakh, in the last six years.
"Rule 15 of section 256 has not been amended. The Rs 2 stamp that the MP and Chhattisgarh governments are demanding is illegal," says a lawyer, Rishabh Kumar Jain.
Ramashankar Gupta, a local activist plans to take the matter to the Supreme Court.
"I'm pained for the people who lost their right to justice because of this corruption," says Gupta.
Meanwhile, the local and the state Governments remain ignorant of the law. Revenue Secretary, Chhattisgarh, N K Aswal says, "It could have been because of some ignorance. We'll get it examined if such complaints are there."
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Thank you, Mr. Chugani, for the compassionate work you and your organization have chosen to do, that of helping the
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Getting info through RTI ... It is not as simple as it sounds ... I have made over 50 RTI
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A fair report should have covered the topic in all the major states rather than concentrating on only two (read
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My father and his thousands of friends and relatives lost land in West Bebgal, but no one cares.
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They can use the RTI Act of 2005 and get the same information/documents by paying only Rs. 10/- as application
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