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Kejriwal, Rahul and Prabhu at war over child’s death

AAP GOVERNMENT HAS ORDERED AN INQUIRY INTO THE SLUM DEMOLITION DRIVE

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Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi were locked in a war of words yesterday over the razing of hutments here and the death of a child of one of the hundreds left homeless in the winter chill.

The grieving father of the six-month-old baby insisted that the girl died in the panic caused by the imminent demolition of hutments at Shakur Basti in west Delhi on Saturday where they lived. The autopsy report said the death occurred due to head and chest injuries besides shock.

Prabhu told the Lok Sabha this was untrue and that the child died before the railways started pulling down the hutments they said were built illegally on railway land to make way for new rail lines.

Since the demolition, the hutment dwellers are living in the open, at the site, under canvas tents. Delhi’s ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) said it was determined to provide food and shelter to the poor.

Yesterday, accompanie­d by Delhi Congress president Ajay Maken, Rahul Gandhi met the displaced men, women and children and vowed to fight for their rights.

Gandhi said: “We will try to help you ... We will fight for you ... We will raise the issue in parliament.”

Gandhi’s office tweeted that both the central and Delhi government­s were to blame for the Saturday demolition. “Now they are busy blaming each other.

“Instead, they should provide help to the people who have been displaced and rehabilita­te them.”

Kejriwal promptly hit back, saying Gandhi was a “kid” who did not know that the railways which carried out the razing was controlled by the central, not Delhi, government.

Discussion­s afoot

Prabhu promised to invite Kejriwal to discuss how people left homeless due to the demolition could be rehabilita­ted and how public land could be put to use.

He said the demolition was carried out after sending repeated notices to people at Shakur Basti to vacate the land.

Calling the hutments an encroachme­nt, Prabhu said they had become an impediment for building a new passenger terminal and were also a safety hazard.

In the Lok Sabha, AAP’s Bhagwant Mann said the razing was an “atrocity on the poor”. The Delhi government again blamed the central government and the railways for the “inhuman” anti-encroachme­nt drive carried out in the absence of a rehabilita­tion programme for those evicted. “It will be difficult to compensate people who have been living on the [railway] land for 20-30 years,” Delhi Minister Satyendra Jain said.

“This is an inhuman act. Were any arrangemen­ts made to rehabilita­te these people? It is central government’s policy that till alternate arrangemen­ts are made, no demolition can take place,” he said.

The minister said the baby died during the demolition.

This is an inhuman act. Were any arrangemen­ts made to rehabilita­te these people? It is central government’s policy that till alternate arrangemen­ts are made, no demolition can take place.”

Satyendra Jain|

Delhi minister

 ?? PTI ?? Remains of a home A woman holds her child amid household items at Shakur Basti where a demolition drive was carried out in a slum in New Delhi yesterday. The hutments had been termed a health hazard.
PTI Remains of a home A woman holds her child amid household items at Shakur Basti where a demolition drive was carried out in a slum in New Delhi yesterday. The hutments had been termed a health hazard.

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