Gujarat CM Streamlines Land Demarcation for Farmers with Uniform Statewide Procedure

Gujarat Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel has issued directives to establish a uniform, statewide procedure for land demarcation to resolve measurement discrepancies in villages. The initiative classifies applications into seven categories to ensure systematic disposal and protect farmers' interests. District-level Land Demarcation Committees, chaired by the Collector, will be made operational to oversee the process. The CM has also empowered local officers and emphasized swift, transparent resolution so applicants avoid frequent visits to government offices.

Key Points: Gujarat CM's Land Demarcation Order Aims to Protect Farmers

  • Uniform land demarcation method
  • Seven categories for dispute resolution
  • District committees chaired by Collectors
  • Powers granted to local officers
3 min read

Gujarat CM's significant decision for rural citizens and farmers: Uniform method, planned land demarcation

CM Bhupendra Patel orders uniform land demarcation to resolve measurement disputes for farmers, ensuring transparency and ease of doing business.

"adopted a farmer-centric approach to safeguard rural farmers' interests - CMO Release"

Gandhinagar, March 11

Gujarat Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel has issued clear guidelines for land demarcation in a high-level meeting of the Revenue Department to ensure a uniform method and systematic disposal of applications for correcting measurement discrepancies in promulgated villages across the state.

According to the CMO, through this decision, CM has adopted a farmer-centric approach to safeguard rural farmers' interests by ensuring the transparent and accurate resolution of objections related to land measurements after promulgation, while also promoting Ease of Doing Business.

He instructed that Land Demarcation Committees be made operational in districts across the state under the chairmanship of the Collector, and that periodic reviews of district-level land demarcation work be conducted.

Such district-level committees will comprise the Collector, Resident Additional Collector, SLR/Deputy Director of Land Records, Prant Officer, DILR, Mamlatdar, TDO, Land Acquisition Officer, and representatives of the Sardar Sarovar Punarvasvat Agency or other acquiring institutions, the release stated.

Following the directives issued by the CM, the Revenue Department has classified applications for correction of post-promulgation measurement discrepancies under land demarcation into seven categories to ensure systematic and smooth disposal.

Accordingly, the categories include situations where there is no reduction in government or public interest land and no objections have been raised. Another category covers cases where there is no reduction in government or public interest land, no objections are pending, and no landholder has raised any objection. There are also cases where there is no reduction in government or public interest land, but objection applications are pending. There is a reduction in government or public interest land along with pending objection applications. Another category involves a change of possession, such as exchange or alteration, in more than 30 percent of the survey numbers in a village. Some cases relate to villages where objections are limited to a specific area. There are also situations where the area has changed in more than 30 percent of survey numbers, resulting in cascading effects and significant changes in land configuration. Finally, there are villages where promulgation has not taken place.

The CM has also instructed that complex issues related to the correction of measurement discrepancies under land demarcation be resolved swiftly and that applicants should not be required to visit government offices.

For this purpose, additional powers have been granted to Taluka Development Officers and Mamlatdars, and the Mobile Magistrate Court Committee will take action and provide a resolution in accordance with Sections 119 and 120 of the Gujarat Land Revenue Act and Rules 21(1), 21(2), and 21(3) of the Land Revenue Rules, 1972, the release noted.

The Chief Minister directed the Revenue Department to ensure that as many measurement discrepancy issues as possible are resolved quickly and transparently through a uniform statewide land demarcation procedure, enabling citizens to experience effective and accountable good governance.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally! My uncle in Kutch has been running from pillar to post for a correction in his land record for 5 years. The instruction that applicants should not have to visit offices is the best part if it actually happens. Less harassment for farmers.
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Aman W
Good initiative on paper. But the committee has so many officers - Collector, Prant Officer, Mamlatdar, etc. Will they meet regularly and actually resolve cases, or will files just keep moving between them? The proof will be in the disposal rate.
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Sarah B
As someone working in rural development, systematic land records are the foundation for everything - credit, insurance, selling produce. Categorizing the issues is a smart, technical approach. Hope other states learn from Gujarat's model.
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Vikram M
The mention of the Mobile Magistrate Court Committee is interesting. Taking the court to the village for land disputes could be a game-changer. No more wasting money on travel and losing daily wages for hearings. Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan!
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Kiran H
Respectfully, while the intent is good, I'm skeptical. We've seen many "farmer-centric" announcements that get lost in bureaucracy. Giving power to TDOs and Mamlatdars is good, but will they be held accountable for delays? The system needs teeth to punish non-performance.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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