In what could be termed as a 'rigorous scrutiny exercise', the state government on Monday filed a detailed affidavit before the high court pointing out loopholes and anomalies in the 849 replies filed by farmers against the proposed land acquisition for the ambitious bullet train project.
With the land acquisition for the project hitting a roadblock and representatives from Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), the funding agency, meeting the miffed farmers, the government seems desperate to prove the point that rules are not being flouted for acquiring land.
As per the government's reply, there are 191 affidavits filed by farmers who are not affected by the project, 5 affidavits are without documents, 29 affidavits do not have the land survey number, and 4 farmers have submitted incomplete affidavits, taking the total tally of alleged faulty affidavits to 229. In the remainder affidavits, there are 99 duplicate replies, whereby more than one reply has been filed by the same person. The state has claimed that there are only 521 affidavits filed by "actually affected persons".
Post the scrutiny, the government has cited several loopholes in the affidavits such as affidavits do not bear notary's stamp, the same person buying stamp papers in bulk and the same content having been printed on them, and three different persons filing the same description of land, among others. The scrutiny suggests that the affidavits filed by the petitioners "does not inspire confidence" and are placed on record only to "hype the whole issue", the affidavit provides.
Through the affidavit filed by the revenue department's deputy secretary Keshavlal Upadhyay, the state has submitted thefollowingarguments: