dear Friends;

This is from today's The Telegraph U K (03 03 2012).


-bhuban




By Helen Roberts in Mumbai







The 250 dilapidated slums in the shadow of glass and steel office blocks 
housing multinational companies are being bought up by property companies as 
part of a swathe of redevelopment.

However, the huge increase in property prices means some slum-dwellers feel 
short-changed – even when corrugated iron shacks next to open sewers and the 
incessant rumble of Mumbai's trains from the nearby station are selling for 
8,000,000 rupees (£102,000).

Abdul Rashid, 58, lived in Bandra Kurla Complex, next to where the 
rags-to-riches Danny Boyle film was shot. He accepted a developer's offer and 
was able to buy a proper flat in a building in a nearby suburb.

"It wasn't enough money though," he insists. "Mumbai is growing at such a rate 
that I regret selling when I did. I should've waited and demanded more money 
and then I could've got a bigger flat."

Sarah Pravin, 43, from the same slum has stuck her heels in the ground and 
stayed. She and her husband and two sons have been one of the few residents in 
her area who have refused developer's money.

A huge 496 families lived in the slum in 2008, but today over 350 have been 
paid an average of £100,000 and left.
But Ms Pravin is among a small minority still waiting and insisting on a home 
exchange.
"Many of us have watched as bulldozers have moved in to demolish the 
surrounding buildings. It's like living on a building site now, and it's become 
quite terrifying when the drug dealers move into crumbling buildings and hide," 
she said.
"But I will stand my ground. I love this neighbourhood. I've lived here 16 
years. If I have to move to make way for developers and new buildings then I 
want a good deal that will help my family's future and security."
For other former slum-dwellers who have sold up, the payout has offered them a 
new life away from the squalor of the railway shacks.
Lubna Mamin, 23, and her husband Imran, along with his parents and sister, 
accepted a new apartment for their filthy slum in Bandra East.
Now life could not be better in Bazar Road, Bandra West, in a flat with a 
private shower and lavatory and a separate kitchen.
She says: "It's so nice to have our own private lavatory and shower. The 
security is lovely. We never felt so safe in our old place but now when we 
close our door at night we are home, our own home."
Ms Mamin and her husband’s family were set up in rented accommodation by their 
developers while the new apartment block was being built. Once it was completed 
they exchanged paper work, and the new apartment was theirs.
For the developers handing over ten or 15 apartments to slum families is 
nothing compared to the profits they made from selling the remaining 70 
apartments at around £200,000 per flat.


latl
_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
[email protected]
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

Reply via email to