On the ground Another Patanjali group company with land in Kot purchased through Pravin Kumar Sharma, Jadibuti Krishi Private Limited, was found to be doing organic farming in the village, even as the company records showed it earned no revenue from operations.
Business Standard visited the gated, walled and fenced-off well-tended plantation and farm located in one of the hilly valleys tucked between Aravalli ridges. The caretaker of the property, Jitender Singh, said the operations belonged to Jadibuti Krishi Private Limited. “We have been selling organic farm produce from this farm for 2-3 years,” he said.
“It is Baba Ramdev’s company. Sometimes Acharya Balkrishna himself comes here to supervise. We grow nothing but organic. We levelled the lands to start farming. That can be done atop hills, too.” His assistant chipped in: “Along the route up to this farm you would have noticed amla tree plantations? Those are also ours.”
A priest at one of the two temples in the village later said: “They own a lot of land here. They buy whatever they find. I don’t know for what purpose.” Several others in the land, including the husband of the village Panchayat head, Kesar, who is leading the case to recover the land back to the community, confirmed this.
“They have got Shamlat and ‘gair mumkin pahad’ land through PoA agreements from others who earlier bought it illegally. We are fighting to get the land back but the state is helping them with the latest orders to consolidate landholdings in the commons. This is illegal,” he said.
Buying disputed land at throwaway prices in the hope of holding on till disputes are settled in one’s favour is legitimate business, even if risky. This is how land is accumulated by real estate developers cutting through a haze of land records and laws. Gurgaon and Faridabad are replete with such stories. The reward is high if the land titles get settled by state authorities or courts in favour of the company.
The Patanjali group’s foray into real estate in Haryana — along similar lines — is, therefore, neither novel nor illegal.
However, these are not village agricultural land. Many of the land parcels the group companies and their associates were found to own in Kot are hilly commons in the Aravalli range. And, the Patanjali group could soon see their risky investment in Kot pay off.
The concluding part of this series shows how the Haryana state government’s recent moves could affirm private ownership in the Kot hilly common land and open these patches for privatised commercial development of Aravalli hills in the village.