Table of Contents
What has happened?
- A group of farmers in Kutch, who are originally from Punjab and Haryana and have settled here, are embroiled in a legal battle with the Gujarat government over their agricultural land.
- The dispute dates back to 2010 when many farmers were told that records of their land were being frozen as they were not natives of Gujarat.
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi was state chief minister then.
- On Tuesday, PM Modi interacted with farmers in Kutch, including those from Punjab, during his visit to the border district to lay the foundation stones of several projects.
Who are the farmers fighting a legal battle?
- A group of around 60 farmers from Kutch have been fighting a legal battle for the past decade to retain their agricultural land.
- These farmers are mostly natives of Punjab and Haryana, who either purchased land or received it through government
- However, underlining that since they were not native Gujaratis, the state government has frozen records of land belonging to them and around 700 other farmers in Kutch.
- Of the total 784 farmers whose land records have been frozen, 245 are from Punjab and Haryana.
- The rest are from Rajasthan, Gujarat and Maharashtra.
- A majority of them are Sikhs.
How did they happen to come to Kutch?
- During the 1965 India-Pakistan war, the Pakistan army had managed to enter Kutch.
- After the war, however, then Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shashtri proposed to populate border areas in the district to make the border more secure.
- Government incentivised settlements in Kutch by allotting people land and handing out cash doles to help them purchase bullocks, etc.
- In response, a sizable number of families from Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Maharashtra came to Kutch.
- The state government allotted land to a total of 550 individuals between 1965 and 1984.
- Of them, 390 were Sikhs, some of them having come to Punjab after the Partition.
- They started exploiting groundwater to irrigate their crops in Kutch and brought about a revolution in agriculture in this semi-arid district.
- Relatives and friends of these early migrants followed as land in Kutch is abundant and comparatively cheap.
- (Kutch is spread over 45,000 square kilometres and thus accounts for 23 per cent of total geographical area of Gujarat)
What did Gujarat government do in 2010?
- On October 22, 2010, Kutch collector served notices on 784 farmers,
- Informing them that records of their land were being frozen since they were not natives of Gujarat.
- The government cited a circular of year 1973 which declared that only native Gujaratis can purchase agricultural land in the state.
- Freezing of records of their land meant that the owners of such land couldn’t sell it nor could they transfer it in the name of their heirs through mutation entries.
- Also made them ineligible to avail of bank loan, etc.
- The 784 land accounts included those who had been allotted land by the government.
- Land records of 52 farmers who could prove it through documents that they legally held land allotted by the government were de-frozen later on.
Current position
- After courts of revenue authorities, the matter reached the Gujarat High Court (HC).
- In July 2011, a single judge bench of the HC ruled in favour of the state government but the farmers challenged that verdict before a larger bench of the court.
- In June 2012, the larger bench of the HC ruled in favour of the farmer.
- Therefore, the state government approached the Supreme Court in 2012 with a special leave petition praying no third party interest should be created in the land in question.
- The SC granted that prayer.
- However, the government’s petition challenging the Gujarat HC ruling is still pending.
Q) Which among the following is longest river in Gujarat?
- Narmada
- Tapi
- Sabarmati
- Mahi
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