The Asian Age

‘Voter cards not must for slum-dwellers’ rehab’

HC tells govt to consider other documents as proof of residence

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Name in the voters list need not be mandatory for considerin­g slum-dwellers for rehabilita­tion if they have other documents or proofs to show they are residing in an area for long, the Delhi high court told the AAP government on Friday.

A bench of acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C. Hari Shankar felt that a “holistic” and “realistic” view needed to be taken by the authoritie­s in such matters.

The court’s observatio­n came during the hearing the pleas of 28 slumdwelle­rs residing at Rajiv Camp near NH-24 that they were declared ineligible for rehabilita­tion by the Delhi government’s urban shelter board on the ground that their names were absent from the 2012 to 2016 voters lists.

The slum-dwellers, represente­d by advocate Robin David, had sought rehabilita­tion as their homes were demolished on February 9 this year

The slum-dwellers had sought rehabilita­tion as their homes were demolished on Feb. 9 and the land was handed over to NHAI for widening of NH-24

and the land was handed over to National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) for widening of NH-24. The national highway connects Delhi to Lucknow.

The Delhi Urban Shelter Improvemen­t Board (DUSIB) had held the slum-dwellers of Rajiv Camp, also represente­d by advocate Dhiraj Philip, ineligible under its relocation and rehabilita­tion policy primarily for the reason that their names were not there in the voters lists.

Disagreein­g with the DUSIB’s decision, the bench held that 14 out of the 38 people before it were eligible for allotment of flats as per the board’s policy as they had furnished several other proofs of residence, like gas and electricit­y bills, bank passbooks, driving licences and even voter identity cards.

“A realistic view has to be taken in this regard. We find that the persons who were found ineligible were in possession of public identifica­tion including voter ID cards,” the court said.

It said there could be several reasons, including the person being not at home when the booth officer visited for conducting survey, for the names not figuring in the electoral rolls.

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