Delhi govt asks Centre to amend 2008 notification: Jain

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Feb 23 2017 | 9:07 PM IST
The Delhi government has sought amendments in the Centre's 2008 notification to legalise over 1600 unauthorised colonies in the city, arguing that it was difficult to do it as per the existing guidlines.
Urban Development Minister Satyendra Jain today said the Delhi government wants 1,639 unauthorised colonies to be regularised on 'as is where is' basis, a similar move had been proposed by the then Sheila Dikshit dispensation, but rejected by the then UPA government.
"All political parties are on the same page that the 1,639 colonies need to be regularised, but why is the delay on the part of the Centre? The Centre wants more details on our proposal to legalise these colonies, leading to the delay.
"The Delhi government has provided all details available with it," Jain told reporters addressing a press conference at Delhi Secretariat here.
The development came a day after the Delhi High Court told the Centre to take an "in-principle decision" on the government's proposal to regularise unauthorised colonies.
The court has given the central government four weeks time to take a decision on the matter.
Jain said that in 2008, the decision had been taken together by the Centre and the state government.
The AAP government demands the Centre to give in-principle agreement and thereafter, the city administration will distribute the certificates within 24 hours, he added.
Regularisation of unauthorised colonies is a long-pending issue. The then UPA government had distributed provisional certificates to over 1200 colonies ahead of the 2008 Delhi Assembly elections.
The conditions laid in the 2008 notification - in terms of the colony boundaries, covered and open areas, cost of land in colonies that had come up on government land and development charges - emerged to as bottlenecks in the regularisation process.
Ahead of the 2013 assembly elections, the Sheila Dikshit government had proposed the Centre to amend the policy and grant permission to regularise the colonies.
However, the then UPA government had rejected the move.
Both the Centre - during President's Rule - and the Aam Aadmi Party government gradually increased the cut-off date for including the colonies in the regularisation list to January 1, 2015.

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First Published: Feb 23 2017 | 9:07 PM IST

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