Mamata tells industry to buy land

Promises cooperation but says ‘no’ to forcible acquisition

January 09, 2015 12:00 am | Updated 02:05 pm IST - Kolkata:

Reiterating her stand on forcible land acquisition, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Thursday said her government did not support the policy of acquiring acres of land for Special Economic Zones or big industry.

Delivering the valedictory address on the final day of the two-day Bengal Global Business Summit here, Ms. Banerjee assured the business community of her “committed cooperation” in the effort to put the State on the growth track but said her administration would not “forcefully” acquire land. “Land is not a problem. If you take land forcefully, you may be able to set up the industry. But it is a wrong policy. If you want to capture the land forcefully, there will be scuffle and industry will not be successful,” said the Chief Minister, whose anti-acquisition campaign led to a situation in 2007 when Tata Motors and Indonesia’s Salim Group left the State due to unmanageable unrest at the project sites.

“Bengal has the highest population density in the country and land acquisition has to be done very carefully here,” said a senior Trinamool leader, who backed his party chief. A section of Trinamool leaders feel that handing land over to industry without addressing farmers’ concerns would strengthen the opposition.

At the same time, Ms. Banerjee spoke of her commitment to industry in the State, which failed to attract significant private investment during her tenure.

“It is better to [go in for] negotiation [to acquire land]. You [industry] purchase the land; we give you the permission,” she said, adding that the Trinamool was not against land acquisition. “We only have purchased and cleared 7,000 acres of land… now we have a land bank in place, a cheap and skilled work force and I personally promise all kinds of cooperation to the industry captains to do away with the road blocks in Bengal,” she said.

The business community’s reaction is mixed. While industry leaders are still apprehensive about the Trinamool’s “understanding of land acquisition”, many called the summit a successful one.

“In about one-and-a-half years’ time, Ms. Banerjee will have to face the election and while she needs to protect the interests of farmers, she also needs to boost investment. She made it clear at this summit,” a medium-enterprise paint manufacturer said.

Ms. Banerjee announced a potential investment of 2.43 lakh crore. However, many of these investments have not yet got approval from the respective boards of private companies and public sector units.

Ms. Banerjee has announced a potential investment of Rs.2.43 lakh crore

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