Key Points

The Assam government cleared 82 bighas of encroached VGR land in Nalbari with 500 police ensuring no clashes. Over 70% of affected families left voluntarily after receiving eviction notices. Officials cited a Gauhati High Court order mandating the removal of illegal occupants from grazing reserves. Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma vowed to continue anti-encroachment drives statewide.

Key Points: Assam Clears 82 Bighas in Nalbari Eviction Drive Amid High Court Order

  • 500 police deployed for peaceful eviction in Bakrikuchi village
  • 70% families vacated voluntarily after June 3 notice
  • 12 bulldozers razed structures on encroached grazing land
  • Displaced families demand rehabilitation near schools and mosques
2 min read

Assam: Eviction drive conducted in Nalbari, 82 bighas cleared

Assam evicts 300 families from 82 bighas of VGR land in Nalbari, citing Gauhati HC mandate. Officials report peaceful operation with 500 police deployed.

"Evictions will continue. Our biggest achievement is that people now think twice before occupying government land. – Himanta Biswa Sarma"

Guwahati, June 30

The Assam government on Monday carried out a large-scale eviction drive to clear 82 bighas of occupied Village Grazing Reserve (VGR) land in Bakrikuchi village under Nalbari district's Borkhetry revenue circle.

The operation began at dawn with a heavy security deployment, including 500 police personnel, to prevent unrest. No clashes were reported during the demolition of unauthorised structures, officials claimed. District Commissioner Nibedan Das Patowary stated that over 70 per cent of the 300 affected families had voluntarily vacated before the drive, following a June 3 eviction notice.

The Gauhati High Court had earlier mandated the clearance of all encroached VGR lands, designated for cattle grazing, across Assam. "Residents cooperated, and the process remained peaceful," said IGP Akhilesh Kumar Singh, who supervised the operation. Twelve bulldozers razed structures on the 82 bighas where houses stood, while the remaining 370 bighas, used for fisheries and agriculture, are under scrutiny for further action.

Displaced families, now camped along the village approach road, demanded rehabilitation. The area also houses schools, mosques, and Anganwadi centres. This marks Assam's second major eviction this month after the June 15-16 drive in Goalpara's Hasilabeel, where 667 families were evicted.

Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said that his zero-tolerance policy on encroachments has been successful in deterring fresh occupations. "Evictions will continue. Our biggest achievement is that people now think twice before occupying government land," Sarma said. Over the past four years, the state administration has conducted anti-encroachment operations in every district.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
My heart goes out to the displaced families, especially children. Where will they go now? Government should have arranged rehabilitation FIRST before demolition. This is so inhuman!
A
Aditya G
Court orders must be followed, but the timing is questionable - right before monsoons? Couldn't this wait till winter when people wouldn't suffer so much? Think about the humanitarian aspect too.
S
Sarah B
As an outsider living in Assam, I see both sides. Land records need to be respected, but the scale of displacement is heartbreaking. Maybe a phased approach with proper rehabilitation would work better?
K
Karthik V
Why only target poor villagers? What about the big fish who encroach on forest lands for resorts and factories? Government should show equal strictness to all.
M
Meera T
This is just vote bank politics. Same government regularised many encroachments before elections. Now suddenly they care about grazing lands? Hypocrisy!
R
Rahul R
Good step, but what's the guarantee these lands won't be given to corporates later? We've seen this pattern before. Protect our commons properly!

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