Kuwait Times

Tenants paying 30¢ rent oppose revamp of homes Mumbai chawls set to be redevelope­d

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MUMBAI: Madhuri Dewar remembers her wedding in 1981 in the tenement building where she had lived all her life: Guests sat in the colorful tent in the courtyard, packed the corridor and squeezed into the oneroom home she shared with her parents. Today, Dewar, 65, lives with her husband in the same room in a Bombay Developmen­t Directorat­e (BDD) “chawl” a building divided into small rooms with shared toilets - in Naigaon in central Mumbai. Her two sons and their families live in two rooms across from her, and the families walk into each other’s homes all day.

But after four generation­s, their way of life is under threat as city officials are set to redevelop the colonial-era BDD chawls in four locations in south and central Mumbai. “We have lived here for so many years. My family is here, all my neighbors are friends,” said Dewar. “We would like to have bigger homes, become owners, but we do not know if our lives are going to be the same after the redevelopm­ent, if we will all be together like we are now.”

About a third of India’s 1.25 billion population lives in cities, with the numbers rising every year as tens of thousands of people leave villages to seek better prospects. Up to 37 million households - a quarter of the country’s urban population - live in informal housing including slums and chawls because of a critical shortage of affordable housing, according to social consultanc­y FSG.

Shared Courtyard

Mumbai’s BDD chawls were built in the 1920s to house textile mill workers. Some were built as prisons, then converted into military barracks and lowcost housing for migrant laborers. More than 16,500 families live in the four BDD chawls spread across more than 93 acres of land in prime sites. They pay a monthly rent of about 18-20 rupees (about 30 US cents) each. The rooms, measuring 160 sq ft (15 sq m) each, have been modified by families over the years, some carving out a kitchen and a toilet as their means improved.

There is a shared open courtyard where children play and festivals and weddings are celebrated. In the corridors, washing is hung and children’s bicycles parked. The chawls - in close proximity to offices, schools and public transport - are rare enclaves of affordable housing in a city with some of the most expensive real estate in the world. Plans to redevelop the chawls in the space-starved city have been made and shelved repeatedly over the years as government­s changed and residents opposed the plans.

Now, the buildings are so dilapidate­d that they must be knocked down, officials say. “The buildings have outlived their life spans,” said SD Lakhe, vice chairman of state agency Maharashtr­a Housing and Area Developmen­t Authority (MHADA). “These people deserve safer, bigger homes with better amenities,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Random Cut-Off

India has a shortage of around 20 million urban homes, according to consultanc­y KPMG. In financial hub Mumbai, about 60 percent of the 18 million population live in crowded slums and other informal homes. States are rushing to meet a ‘Housing for All’ target by 2022, which aims to create 20 million new urban homes and 30 million rural homes. The plan for the BDD chawls is to give tenants twobedroom flats measuring 500 sq ft (46 sq m) each in high-rise towers. A third of the land will be developed and sold commercial­ly to help meet the project cost of more than $1 billion.

Residents say MHADA reneged on a vow to let them pick a developer, instead floating tenders without informing them. Also, only tenants who can prove they lived there before 1996 are eligible for a new flat. Anyone who owns property elsewhere in Mumbai is barred. Several residents’ associatio­ns have filed petitions against MHADA’s plans and have threatened to protest.

“MHADA did not take us into confidence and are going ahead without our consensus. This is a violation of our rights,” said Raju Waghmare, a spokesman for residents in the Naigaon chawl. “Everyone who lives here deserves a home; the cutoff date is random. And those who bought a property are being punished for prospering,” said Waghmare, who estimates about half the residents may not be eligible under these conditions. Public hearings were held for chawl residents, and contracts were given to builders Larsen & Toubro and Shapoorji Pallonji following a “transparen­t and thorough” procedure, Lakhe said. A cut-off date is essential to ensure only legitimate tenants get new apartments, he said.—Reuters

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