Applications are being accepted under the scheme from June 2 for a week.
Landowners fear that the TS government’s offer will be misused by land grabbers (Representational Image)
Hyderabad:
The Telangana state government’s offer to legalise land registrations
done on plain paper (sada bainama) prior to June 2, 2014 has opened a
can of worms.
Complaints are pouring from all districts over the misuse of this
scheme by land grabbers and tenant farmers who are applying for
registration by creating fake land deals on plain paper without the
knowledge of genuine owners. Applications are being accepted under the
scheme from June 2 for a week.
Those who own agriculture lands in villages and have settled
elsewhere, especially abroad, long ago, are being targeted. Due to the
numerous complaints, the government has asked revenue officials to
thoroughly verify the applications at field-level besides trying to
contact the owners before registering such lands.
CCLA Raymond Peter issued instructions to all collectors, RDOs and
MROs to be extra vigilant while processing these applications before
recommending registration.
“We will put all these applications online so that anyone can verify
whether they are genuine or not. In case of any fraud, they can lodge
complaint online, which will be referred for inquiry. Only after
thorough verification, the applications will be approved and lands will
be registered. There is no need for anyone to worry about losing their
lands,” Mr Peter said.
Such as been the huge response for this scheme that 56,100
applications have been already received since June 2. Officials expect
the numbers to cross the one lakh mark till the June 10 deadline. A
large number of applications were received from Khammam, Warangal and
Karimnagar districts.
Traditionally, Telanganaites have been known to carrying out land
transactions on plain paper rather than on stamp papers in rural areas.
This is because of illiteracy or lack of awareness among the rural
masses.
Also, many landowners have given their agriculture lands to tenant
farmers for cultivation decades ago and have settled in cities or
abroad. Their relatives or friends in villages are alerting them about
the attempts being made to grab their lands under the new scheme.
Alerted by this, these landowners are now lodging complaints through
e-mails to revenue departments. Such complaints have been received from
USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, UAE etc.