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GOVERNMENT
ACCOMMODATION
Vacate or Else
The Centre cracks down on overstaying VVIPsBy Sayantan Chakravarty
Janata
Dal president Sharad Yadav is a perfect host. The parties that he hosts are elaborate
affairs, and his sprawling 9 Akbar Road bungalow in the heart of Lutyens' Delhi makes for
an ideal venue. But the good times may just be coming to an end.
Last week, Union Minister for Urban Development Ram
Jethmalani sent out personal letters to 48 VVIPs asking them to vacate their bungalows at
the earliest. It's a customary agenda every new housing minister sets himself. But the
bigwigs have paid scant attention to such ministerial warnings in the past. Many of them
have continued to stay in bungalows they are not entitled to, confident that no government
will actually evict them.
But Jethmalani is dead serious. "I hope you will not
take it amiss to vacate the bungalow as soon as possible," his brief letters said,
clarifying how he was under pressure to find houses for the new team. Over 40 ministers of
the BJP-led Government are currently being put up in government guesthouses for want of
regular accommodation.
PRIME TARGETS |
P A Sangma
20 Akbar Road
S B Chavan
4, K M Marg
K Karunakaran
9, K M Marg
Ram Vilas Paswan
12, Janpath
Somnath Chatterjee
21, Ashoka Road
Madhav Rao Scindia
27, Safdarjung Road
S Jaipal Reddy
14, Akbar Road
S R Bommai
17, Akbar Road
Vijayaraje Scindia
16, Teen Murti Lane
Kalpnath Rai
36, Aurangzeb Road
Rajesh Pilot
10, Akbar Road
Jitendra Prasada
11A, Teen Murti Lane |
Those who have received the notices include such
names as P. Chidambaram and Mulayam Singh Yadav, whose residences on Aurangzeb Road and
Krishna Menon Marg fall in the prestigious Lutyens' Bungalow Zone. Of the 48 targeted,
three -- Sharad Yadav, Sukhbans Kaur and Colonel Ram Singh -- are MPs who lost the recent
elections and are no longer entitled to government accommodation. Fifteen of the remaining
45 are entitled to Type VII bungalows, meant for former ministers, former governors and
top bureaucrats. Most of them, however, still occupy the more spacious Type VIII
bungalows. The rest have to settle for the less fashionable Type V to Type VII housing in
areas like Pandara Road, Kidwai Nagar and Chanakyapuri.
"We want those entitled to smaller houses to move out
immediately," says Jethmalani. While a few days' delay for genuine reasons is
acceptable, there would be no room for negotiating for a longer stay. Under the Public
Premises (Eviction) Act, anyone not complying with the order can be forcibly evicted. That
this has rarely happened is, of course, another matter.
While delivering the judgement on the housing allotment
scam involving former urban development minister Sheila Kaul in December 1996, the Supreme
Court had laid down eligibility criteria for government accommodation. But a presidential
ordinance later nullified the judgement. Now, Jethmalani seems determined to set the house
in order.
It may be an uphill task though. Already, there are
rumblings in some quarters. Says Sharad Yadav, who has been staying on Akbar Road for 11
years: "I will move out provided I am given alternative accommodation befitting my
status." And Mulayam says his security requirements under the Z plus category makes
it difficult for him to move out of his current residence. That's an argument the
articulate lawyer in Jethmalani is only too willing to take up. |