Karnataka CM Details Demolition Drive: 164 Illegal Sheds Razed in Bengaluru

Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah detailed the demolition of 164 illegally built sheds on government land in Kogilu, Bengaluru. He stated the land was allocated for solid waste management and blamed local revenue officials for allowing the encroachments. The CM assured that after document verification, genuine evictees would be provided alternate accommodation in the Byappanahalli housing project. The rehabilitation is scheduled to begin on January 1 on humanitarian grounds.

Key Points: Bengaluru Demolition Drive: 164 Illegal Sheds Cleared

  • 164 illegal sheds demolished
  • Land earmarked for waste management
  • Officials blamed for encroachment
  • Rehabilitation planned for evictees
3 min read

"Notices were issued to all of them...": Karnataka CM details demolition drive on illegal houses

Karnataka CM details demolition of illegal houses on govt land in Kogilu. Officials held responsible, evictees to be rehabilitated in Byappanahalli.

"Notices were issued to all of them... they refused to leave. - CM Siddaramaiah"

Bengaluru, December 29

Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Monday detailed the ongoing demolition drive of illegally built houses in Kogilu village near Yelahanka in Bengaluru, stating that at least 164 sheds have been demolished after issuing notices to the residents.

Siddaramaiah stressed that the residents refused to leave despite being told the sheds had been built on government land.

"A total of 164 sheds were demolished. Notices were issued to all of them. Despite being informed that this was government land and being asked to vacate, they refused to leave," he said.

He stated that the 15 acres of land, which had illegal construction of houses and sheds, was allocated by the Bengaluru Deputy Commissioner for waste disposal.

He held the local revenue officials and tehsildars for the illegal encroachment, saying such dwellings are not possible without their knowledge.

"The land in Kogilu, around 15 acres, has been demarcated for a solid waste management project. The Bengaluru Deputy Commissioner and officials had allocated this land to the corporation. corporation had also been disposing of garbage there. From December 20 and 21, we have been clearing all illegal encroachments..." he said.

"On this front, local revenue officers and corporation officials were instructed to take action against these illegal occupants. Such dwellings cannot come up without the knowledge of the tahsildar and revenue officials. These are illegal encroachments," he added.

Siddaramaiah asserted that the focus is on ensuring that such illegal encroachments or unauthorised buildings do not occur in the future.

Furthermore, he assured that the corporation officers and commissioners have been directed to verify the documents of all occupants by the day after tomorrow.

"Genuine beneficiaries should be provided with alternate accommodation. Corporation has a list, and they will verify documents and make a list," he said.

Speaking on the rehabilitation of the evictees, the Karnataka Chief Minister said that after the verification of all the residents, the genuine evictees who lost their homes will be accommodated at the Byappanahalli.

"I have spoken to Minister Zameer Ahmed Khan and asked him to arrange temporary housing. He suggested that in Byappanahalli, in Survey No. 23, there are 1,187 houses available...After proper verification and preparation of a list, those who are genuine and have lost their homes will be accommodated in the Byappanahalli housing project. It is around seven kilometres away from Kogilu," he stated.

The beneficiaries will be moved to their new homes after adequate verification on January 1. This is being done on humanitarian grounds, he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
My heart goes out to the families, especially with children. Demolition in December is harsh. 😔 But if the land was for waste management, it's a public health issue. The promise of alternate housing in Byappanahalli must be followed through transparently. No more empty promises, please.
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Vikram M
Typical blame game. First officials let people build for years, then before elections or when projects come up, they become "illegal encroachers". The system is designed to fail the common man. Where were these notices 5 years ago when construction started?
A
Ananya R
Good step for city planning. Bengaluru's infrastructure is collapsing under illegal constructions. We need strict rules. Hope the waste management project now proceeds quickly. The city's garbage problem is a bigger crisis than some illegal sheds.
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Siddharth J
The assurance of rehabilitation is key. "Genuine beneficiaries" – this phrase worries me. Who decides? The same corrupt officials? There should be an independent committee including local NGO members to verify. Otherwise, only those with contacts will get the houses.
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Michael C
Working in Bengaluru for 3 years. The urban sprawl and land issues here are complex. While enforcement is necessary, the human cost is real. The 7km relocation might seem close, but it disrupts livelihoods, school commutes for kids, everything. A more proactive policy is needed, not reactive demolitions.

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