Assam: Dholpur Evictees is not forcibly taken land, said report – News2IN
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Assam: Dholpur Evictees is not forcibly taken land, said report

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Guwahati: Three months after the eviction of drives in Dholpur in Darrang District Assam, minority families are afraid of their home while they are prone to flooded banks from Brahmaputra they can be their permanent address.
Of the 23 families before 1971, the number of families of flood victims and erosion has grown more than 1,500 in the area in five decades.
The politician from BJP in power also questioned the citizenship of many settlers, although they were accepted as Indian citizens from Darrang and neighboring countries.
Even when tags have remained intact in the government version, minority study centers, research and development, Assam & Btad The Citizen Rights Forum, in a report published on Thursday, declared that from 21 villages that were closely bound by Dholpur, nine villages had no population In 1971.
Five other villages close to Dholpur had a population of less than 100 in 1971.
It was said that large erosion, the road changed on the river, and heavy flooding during the rainy season was the main reason that underestimated the area.
However, in that, this study said that Muslim neo-assames or migrant Muslims, the migrant grandmother migrated from Bengal Bengal in British India, occupies a piece of land by forcibly revoked others.
The survey team found that of the 517 families surveyed, 21 families bought their land in Dholpur before 1970.
Between 1971 and 1980, 40 families bought land from Hindus and Muslims Assam were around him.
The report said even though the seller had never been to Dholpur, they claimed that their ancestors were land residents, and thus they transferred land ownership by signing sales of sales on stamp paper.
In the same way, the team found 95 families who bought their land between 1981 and 1990, and 83 families between 1991 and 2000.
After 2001, only 62 families who bought land from local neo-assam Muslims.
“From 517 families, 134 families live on the land inherited by Riverside.
It is worth mentioning that 62 families are found not to have land during the survey, and 129 families pay their land income for a certain period of time,” read a report titled Dhalpur: The truth behind.
It has been prepared with a famous personality such as Professor Abdul Mannan and the leading lawyer of HRA Choudhury as an advisor to the survey team.
In particular, among the non-population villages in 1971, the report added that Chuba and Kumar Main Chaba were two important villages, known as Garukhuti right now and were bone arguments.
The state agricultural project has been initiated by the Government led by BJP by expelling families of various segments of Dholpur here.
“One basic point is clear.
Muslims, especially Neo-Assam Muslims, remain concentrated in villages such as Dhalpur, Kirakara and Phuhuratoli, where they used to live before 1971.
Only in the village of Niz Salmara, and in Indonesia Goriya Muslim geographical embraced Thin, Muslim Neo-Assam began to settle up by buying land from the Muslim goriya, “said the report.
It added that the same thing was the case with Bazna Pathar, Dhanbari and Milon Bazar and several parts of Kuruwa in the Darrang district.
In the 1971 Indian report census, it was noted that Dholpur (which was divided later became Dhalpur No.1, Dhalpur No.
2 and Dhalpur No.
3) spread over 13,050 hectares of land, where 11,000 hectares were completed and 597 acre did not join.
“There were only 23 families in Dholpur in 1971.
The total population in the village at that time was 138, where 66 women and 72 women.
There was no road to the village in 1971,” the report said.

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