Goemkarponn desk
VELSAO: Goa Foundation, led by Advocate Claude Alvares, today said that Goa police has no right to interfere in matters involving conflict of land rights between private land owners and the railways.
“There is a mistaken impression that because the High Court has disallowed a petition filed by the Velsao Panchayat and another petition by Chandor villagers (Ganv Bhavancho Ekvott), the railway authorities are empowered to carry out development works connected with the doubling of the rail tracks between Margao and Vasco without any obstructions from any source,” said Claude.
He further said that it needs to be clarified that the High Court has dismissed the petitions in respect of lands which are either owned by the railways or which have since been acquired by the railways.
“These judgments do not cover private lands neither owned by the railways nor acquired by them. The Court has held that Section 11 of the Railways Act, 1989 enables the railways to carry out development works without reference to local or environmental laws,” he added.
Claude, however, said that Section 11 only enables the Railways to carry out such development within properties owned or acquired by the railways.
“The protests of Velsao villagers relate to the lands owned by them, on which the railways can have neither rights nor may use the powers granted to them under Section 11 of the Railways Act,” he said.
He said that Railway authorities are themselves very clear about this since they are not using the Railway police to get their way on the private lands in Velsao and adjacent villages because the Railway police only have the authority to act in respect of railway lands.
The use of the Goa police to support illegal trespass of private lands in Velsao and adjacent villages is, therefore, unacceptable.
“The Goa police has no right to interfere in matters involving conflict of land rights or conflicts between private land owners and the railways. If the railways are using force to bulldoze their way, they are responsible for creating law and order problems, and the Goa police are required to act against them and not against those defending them.
Their rights to lands owned by them since times immemorial,” he added.
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