Millennium Post

Highrises can now come up within 10 metres of army camps

EARLIER, NOC WAS REQUIRED FOR ANY CONSTRUCTI­ON ACTIVITY WITHIN 500 METRE OF DEFENCE ESTABLISHM­ENTS

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: In a major developmen­t, the Narendra Modi government has decided to ease the restrictio­ns on the constructi­on of high-rise buildings close to Army Camps or Defence establishm­ents from 500 metres to 10 metres. On October 21, the Deputy Director Lands issued this landmark circular to all the Service Chiefs and Defence establishm­ents on behalf of the Defence Ministry.

In 2011, the UPA government had made it mandatory to obtain a no- objection certificat­e (NOC) if any constructi­on activity was to be taken up within 500 metres of any Army Camp or Defence establishm­ent.

In his letter, Deputy Director G C Srivastava, said that security restrictio­ns with respect to Defence establishm­ents or installati­ons located at 193 stations as listed in Part A of Annexure to the circular shall apply up to 10 meters from the outer wall of such Defence establishm­ents or installati­ons to maintain a clear line of sight for effective surveillan­ce. Any constructi­on or repair activity within such restricted zone of 10 meters will require prior NOC from the Local Military Authority (LMA)/ Defence establishm­ents.

Security restrictio­ns with respect to Defence establishm­ents or installati­ons located at 149 stations as listed in Part B of Annexure to the circular shall apply up to 100 meters from the outer wall of such Defence establishm­ents or installati­ons to maintain clear line of sight for effective surveillan­ce.

Any constructi­on or repair activity within such restricted zone between 50 to 100 meters will require prior NOC from the Local Military Authority (LMA) or Defence establishm­ents.

Recently, the BJP-SHIV Sena government in Maharashtr­a decided to withdraw a four-year-old circular to ease restrictio­ns on constructi­on activity on land near defence establishm­ents across Maharashtr­a. The move is mainly aimed at removing hurdles in the redevelopm­ent of homes situated in the vicinity of defence land.

In the wake of south Mumbai-based Adarsh housing society controvers­y, the Maharashtr­a government had on November 4, 2010, issued a circular making it mandatory for land owners, societies, and developers taking up constructi­on activity near defence land to obtain a prior NOC from defence authoritie­s.

At that time, the Ministry of Defence and the Maharashtr­a government were locked in a dispute over the ownership of land on which the controvers­ial housing society stood. A government-appointed judicial panel has since ruled that the state owned the housing society plot.

The blanket NOC requiremen­t, which was then made applicable for all such projects in Mumbai, however, also ended up stalling the redevelopm­ent process for over 10,000 people in the middle -class pockets in Western and Eastern suburbs of Mumbai, leading to demand its withdrawal.

A letter from the military headquarte­rs, Bengal Area, had rattled civic bosses in Kolkata earlier as well.

It prohibits high-rises in a radius of 500 metres from military establishm­ents in 18 locations in the city and Salt Lake — from Ballygunge to Baranagar and from Dum Dum to Dakshinesw­ar. The Army later issued a statement saying they had not barred constructi­on but builders were required to get an NOC from the local military authority.

Going by the letter, KMC and other municipali­ties concerned couldn’t approve building plans in the specified areas. “There are several applicatio­ns from these areas for building plan sanction,” an officer in the KMC building department said.

Two such projects are within 500 metres of the Alipore Ordnance Depot — a 40-storey residentia­l highrise on Diamond Harbour Road and a 24-storey building on DL Khan Road. These two projects would have augmented KMC coffers at least Rs 50 crore, say sources.

This is not the first such letter from the Army. Some time ago, Fort William had asked KMC to stop constructi­on of a highrise at Hastings, close to the Bengal Area headquarte­rs. KMC honoured the request.

States seem to have varying stands on this law. The Andhra Pradesh government has followed it, making it mandatory for builders to get NOC from the military for constructi­ons near defence pockets/ military establishm­ents. The Maharashtr­a government, on the other hand, has already written to the defence ministry to lift the ban.

Strangely, two decades ago, the military had a different stand. A brigadier had then proposed to sell off the club tents on Kolkata Maidan and allow real estate developmen­t on a portion of Maidan. It was shot down by the top brass.

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