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in Book: Epilogue: Writing on the Wall: from Slumming India: A Chronicle of Slums and Their Saviours
Text by Gita Dewan Verma in category: Research Abstracts and TextsThe events of just one year described in this book show how these utterly unequal, undemocratic and unconstitutional 'rights' actually characterize contemporary urban development. The real problem about the slumming of our cities is not the manifest pervasive urban squalor that offends us or moves us, oppresses us or confounds us, enrages us or engages us. That can be dealt with. The real problem is the moral and intellectual bankruptcy that is driving contemporary urban development in the direction of sustaining the problem rather than towards finding and implementing sustainable solutions, towards chaos and anarchy rather than towards orderliness and sanity.
Source: Slumming India: A Chronicle of Slums and Their Saviours, Publisher: Penguin Books India; ISBN 0143028758. November, 2002 . Reproduced by the permision of The Author+ Categorisation: Research Abstracts and Texts (primary)… with related pages…
Perhaps I am too cynical. Perhaps I over-react. Perhaps I lack the right attitude towards development. Perhaps I am an idiot. But I can still see even without glasses. I see tailors and wannabe tailors applauding one another for fashionably clothing the emperor, and the still naked emperor walking through the great Contemporary Urban Development circus, bewildered and cold. I see Sickly Cows feeding on garbage and Fences eating grass as they mind meadows for milch cows and imported pigs. I see Big People piously pleading for the wrong rights they have given the Little People and righteously fighting for the wrong rights they have assumed for themselves. I see every monument to Contemporary Urban Development standing on building blocks guaranteed to produce slummier cities and more and more people falling off the Contemporary Urban Development expressway, watching askance the great Contemporary Urban Development race continue in the name of those it has miserably failed. And I do not understand, nor has anyone been able to explain to me, how , if see what I see, is Contemporary Urban Development so great . So I posit it is not. Not being a proponent of Contemporary Urban Development, I do not have yet another 'original' theory for a new, improved model for urban development arising out of my limited understanding just to pander to my own desire to be original. I only suggest that since the path we have taken in the last few years does not seem to be going anywhere we want to, we should just get into reverse gear and reach a better point to trace a new path and face a changing world with different challenges. I only plead for restoring the correct rights, clearer responsibilities and, thereby, systemic sanity in development systems that seem to be hurtling at breakneck speed towards complete anarchy. Not as a 'solution' but merely as an 'example' of imperatives logically arising out of the chaos chronicled in this book and out of possibilities already available in existing laws and policies, reproduced here is most of an informal note I had sent in early 2000 to a senior government official (who had asked for it in the context of critical comments I had been making through letters and newspaper articles about the DNSP, Indore, etc).The first thing is land. If we are the state we claim to be, we cannot allow the inequity of a majority of the population having to live in a measly proportion of land. Many things need doing, starting with taking a different view of 'public purpose' and 'greater common good'. (After all what can be greater than the majority population!) There just has to be land reservation for the poor in all layouts with very strict enforcement of the same. I personally feel exemplary punitive action for omissions on this count is called for. I am convinced some land can also be found within existing layouts. It may sound bizarre but 'employees' housing can be sensitively designed in some unused, 'left over' spaces in upper income housing/other areas (where legal/policy provisions anyway required housing for city service personnel to have been ensured ), 'employers' being residents/users of those (inefficient) layouts. A related thought is on unutilized public land. If an agency has not used what it was meant to, must it get an 'extension' for continuing inefficiency/speculation/whatever, especially if its own 'employees' (including 'indirect' ones like coolies/hawkers on stations) live in slums? Something must also be done to restrict inefficiencies in non-poor/non-slum developments so we can economize on all land rather than just keep downgrading plot sizes for the poor. I recall the National Housing Bank had come out with guidelines on these lines. Also, we need to get serious about voluntary resettlement. Try asking slum dwellers to apply for reserved plots in new developments, 'employees' housing as above, etc, instead of shifting entire slums to 'planned' enclaves of the poor, which can never be truly 'integrated'. After such de-densification some existing slums may actually become 'tenable' for upgrading!
The second thing is planning and design. Right now we seem to be applying all our creativity to somehow making the poor fit into tiny units in both resettlement and low-income housing. This is a self-defeating exercise because all it leads to is a different kind of slums! Over the years, professionals have glorified certain minimalist design paradigms without waiting to test their impacts. Sadly, these have been extrapolated into education and we have an entire crop of professionals who swear by them. I personally think those who wrote these Emperor's New Clothes fairy tales should quit but that of course is just a fairy tale ending! On the other hand there are less pretentious low-income housing projects that don't look so impressive in drawings but have worked. Perhaps we need to 'replicate' these simpler options rather than all the fancy designer low-income housing that has failed at great cost. The Master Plan (as revised in 1990) also seems to think so! The above also applies to low cost/cost effective construction technology.
The third thing is the institutional aspects. Some transparency (and before that clarity) is needed on who's going to do what and when. At present the whole thing seems to be in the nature of a free-for-all, no-holds-barred sort of effort! There just have to be measurable indicators for progress and so there has to be a strategic plan, rather than just a policy. Also that must come from government agencies. Right now anyone seems to have the right to prepare an alternative slum strategy or even master plan. This is a sure recipe for anarchy after all everybody has a noise level and a nuisance value. NGOs must be involved, but cannot be allowed to call all the shots. Their strength is their grassroots ethos, which makes them great for monitoring and implementation (including project formulation). To let them take over policy and planning levels to the exclusion of professionals is justifiable only after stopping expenditure on professional education. At the rate we are going, we will welcome even open-heart surgeries by NGOs simply because they care! Also there are good and bad NGOs and we must distinguish between them. It is not enough to check accounts or otherwise assess 'activity'. We need to assess their 'impact'. Elsewhere also, confusing of activity with impact must go. I hate to say this, but many 'professionals' in many premier agencies seem to have been reduced to 'babus' and 'babuains' in a job, not a vocation. The problem is partly personal but partly systemic. After all, performance nowadays is measured in terms of, say, number of times bottoms occupy chairs in training, number of publications in research, number of awards in projects, etc. Almost all heads of premier agencies I am familiar with spend all their time improving these 'performance indicators' of activity and no time on assessing impact or building a purposeful vision. We also need to get much more serious about what we consider 'good practices' worthy of 'replication'. All big time firms and agencies are too quick on the draw to glorify what they have done and then there is no looking back. The Indore slum project is an extreme example but it is by no means the only one. The 'disconnect' between claims and ground realities is growing and this does not augur well. Systematic impact assessment has to be institutionalized. For starters, can we stop celebrating projects for the poor before they are completed/occupied and subjected to impact assessment, including user feedback? This is especially necessary because codes of professional conduct do not make professionals accountable to 'beneficiaries' who are not paying clients. And 'globalization' of the habitat agenda has made it incumbent upon agencies to competitively report 'best practices'.
Most importantly, urban development agencies have to make 'backlogs' a priority in master plans (many of which are due for revision in and around 2000). They must put all except the most necessary new development on hold till those who have missed the bus of planned development are taken on board. Fancy 'world-class' commercial complexes and flyovers for future traffic counts can wait a few years. But the majority in the city cannot be left to enter the new millenium without any share in the benefits of our half-century old planned development. They have already waited too long and, as our president lately reminded us, their patience must be running out.
~ * ~
The problem is not with identifying what to do. The problem is with how to make it happen. And this is not about 'resource constraints' or 'technology constraints' or 'organizational constraints' or 'vested interests' or 'population excess' or other oft-flogged dead horses. This, in my opinion, is a problem arising from two fundamental flaws in our thinking. One is that we have rather conveniently taken quite seriously Lord Krishna's exhortation to Arjun on the battlefield to do his karm (duty) without dwelling on its phal (result). Planting trees for all, digging borewells for ourselves, running gali schools for others' children and suchlike are not enshrined in our Constitution as fundamental karms. Yet we have made them our karm in our view of development even as the phal (both good and bad) affects others as well. Almost every NGO, corporate, celebrity, 'activist', professional, bureaucrat transferred to a 'development' related post, or politician come to power seems to want to do more and more 'original' developmental karm. They seem to have become original thinking generals, fighting battles of their own choice in their own way for their own victory. But the Mahabharat is a poor analog for urban development. In urban development, victorious generals cannot a victory make because the desired phal is about changing the battlefield and not about winning a battle on it. Yet in our chosen karmbhoomi we are all running in different directions, scoring little victories and claiming to do our karm. Is it surprising that we are running only to stand still? The other, and in my opinion greater, flaw in our thinking is that we do not put enough premium on equity. We teach our children to say yes to trees and no to polybags, but do we teach them to say yes to equity and no to inequity? We use efficiency and capacity as criteria for appraising, monitoring and evaluating interventions (whenever we do these things), but do we use equity as a yardstick ever? We don't. If we did, we would not have to fight wasteful interventions going on around us on contrived 'technical' criteria. Flyovers that our politicians are gifting to city after city would flunk on grounds of pandering to the wants of the rich even as the needs of the poor have yet to be met. Resettlement in puny plots in faraway locations would flunk in comparison with plot sizes and locations of those doing it. Slum improvement 'successes' would flunk on the criterion of land share. Analysis of financial statements (on items like proportion of money spent on travel) as a basis of rating NGOs would flunk for not including a comparison between improvement in the status of the saviours and the saved. But, in reality, all these don't flunk. They not only make the grade, they also set standards for the future. The wall of inequity we are building (meanly claiming to do so with the wholehearted participation of those left on the other side of it) is growing higher. And the writing on the wall is clear, though we miss it, because it is writ, after all, on the other side.
~ * ~
In the beginning of 2001, when I started writing this chronicle, slum dwellers near my house (who had been there since before the government 'developed' the area and built flats like the one I live in) were writing to ask the government to stop 'development' of more flats before first settling them. They were also writing to the chief minister to change the procedure that was forcing majority of 500,000 families in Delhi to sign false affidavits just so they might keep their ration cards. Hawkers near my house, who had just learned that for ten years there had been statutory provisions for their benefit, were writing to the government to ask it to implement laws for settling them before implementing laws for removing them. Slum dwellers in Indore were writing to the Aga Khan Foundation (which was to again give its triennial honours) asking that nominations for settlement projects be first put up for public objections by their intended beneficiaries. All these people and others too were clearly angry. And in their anger I see most unpleasant glimpses of the future. Lest you think these are freak personal instances, consider the following calendar of what I consider significant events in the year 2000, along with examples of the reactions I know they evoked. In January, addressing the nation on the eve of the golden jubilee of Republic Day, President K. R. Narayanan cautioned: 'Many a social upheaval can be traced to the neglect of the lowest tier of society, whose discontent moves towards the path of violence'. He warned that the fury of the patient and long-suffering people would be unleashed if the three-way fast lane of liberalization, privatization and globalization failed to provide 'safe pedestrian crossings' for unempowered India.[1] (I mentioned this a year later in the fifty-year old 'slum' near my fifteen-year old government-built flat. An elderly lady said, 'Perhaps we should write to the president and tell him the government has not noticed us for fifty years and wouldn't have noticed us for another fifty if the value of this land had not gone up.') In February, Bangkok prepared for a weeklong UN conference. Thailand's prime minister said the meeting must address 'impact of globalization' and 'widening gap between rich and poor countries'. As he spoke, workers were lining up hundreds of potted teak trees and ferns to hide a slum across the street, presumably to ensure that delegates would not have to see the gap between the rich and the poor in Bangkok.[2] (A friend from Indore said, 'The same will be necessary in Indore if the UN ever decides to hold a conference in what it believes is a slum-free city on account of a project it believes is a global best practice. More necessary, in fact, because slum residents here will most certainly protest.') In March an irate mob of around 5,000 slum dwellers from Sanjay Gandhi National Park vandalized the Bharatiya Janata Party and Congress offices in Mumbai to protest against demolition of their houses. Days later, more than 300 of them created a ruckus in the Bombay High Court and, after trying in vain to pacify them, the division bench had to order the police to evict them from the courtroom.[3] (A colleague from Mumbai said, 'I wish they'd done this to politicians for helping them settle there instead of for failing to help them remain. That might have reminded politicians that their job is to help people get what is rightfully theirs, not to help them break the law to keep them open to electoral blackmail.') In April, former prime minister V.P. Singh, in an hour-long address to 2,000 jhuggi dwellers facing eviction in Delhi exhorted them to wield lathis for their rights. He said the government was deaf to pleas and would attend to their problems only if they got united and showed their might.[4] In an unprecedented development, Sahyog, an NGO, became the target of public ire in the hills and, in an uncharacteristic show of unity, local politicians and eminent citizens all condemned it.[5]
(An old teacher said, 'Fifty years ago we needed to get united and show our might against foreign rulers. Now we need to do exactly the same against our own governmental as well as non-governmental organizations. It is sad that we don't have options for better uses for strength in unity.') In May, in Mumbai, well-established but still unauthorized hawkers shouted slogans and pelted stones at a BMC demolition squad. Police had to resort to a lathi charge. Though no one was injured, the windscreen of one encroachment removal van was shattered. BMC only decided to intensify its removal drive by deploying more people, including commandos.[6] (I mentioned this a year later at a meeting of hawkers in Vasant Kunj while discussing the draft of the report they had commissioned for DDA. Some one said, 'Is that what they spend so much money to train commandos for? What do we live in the world's largest democracy or a police state?') In June, the year's summertime health intervention (made jointly by the Delhi government and dozens of NGOs) in Delhi's slums covered not water- and vector-borne diseases but AIDS awareness. There was no real basis to suggest either that slums were a priority for AIDS interventions or that AIDS was a priority for health interventions in slums. The minister in charge of both health as well as urban development portfolios had a personal opinion about the 'suspected sexual behaviour' of slum dwellers. (Slum dwellers were reported saying of the NGOs involved, 'These people come and sit here for the money. They do not care whether we are sick or not.' Others, affronted by the minister's remarks, were demanding that he 'apologize from the heights of Qutub Minar to the poor in Delhi for categorizing them as scum.')[7] In July, Residents Welfare Associations (RWAs) in Delhi, having got a reprieve in the matter of illegal additions to flats, told Jagmohan they would help him by forming an 'anti squatter forum'. By then, in the drive against 'urban indiscipline', parliament was later told DDA had 'taken action to remove 2,790 unauthorized constructions, 70 illegal constructions in flats and 107 encroachments on plotted area'. On the other hand, more than 10,000 squatter families had been relocated.[8] (In the fifty-year old 'slum' of Rangpuri Pahari, where fifty houses had lately been demolished without any notice even as illegal additions in the neighbouring fifteen-year old flats had been given a reprieve, someone said of flat owners showing such enthusiasm against squatters, 'Who do they think they are? Will any one let us form an "anti-illegal-additions forum" against them?') In August, when we celebrated fifty-three years of independence, in Indore, patients of the TB sanatorium were discharged to make way for a management institute that would train bright managers for the future. In Delhi it was reported that several secondary schools had built facilities to run management colleges, etc, on land meant to be used as playgrounds, even as lease conditions requiring schools to offer free seats to poor children in lieu of cheaply allotted public land were nearly never met. [9] (It struck me as being rather sad that we seemed not to be able to manage our management studies without compromising the rights of others. I approached some schools with suggestions on sharing their infrastructure after school hours. None responded positively and in one very expensive and very well appointed school I was told 'We do not indulge in such things'.) In September, a number of DDA employees were suspended when it came to light that they had connived with property dealers to sell at premium rates in the open market thousands of flats that ought to have been allotted at cost to the general public.[10] (In Rangpuri Pahari, where residents had begun to write to the DDA for cheap plots in the vicinity under Plan provisions, someone said, 'That's why DDA prefers flats to plots. That's why we "need" to be shifted from places where flats will sell well. Obviously, DDA cares more for its corrupt employees than for us or its law.') In October, the sanatorium in Indore was demolished. In a war-like operation, explosives were used and a massive police escort deployed to complete the job within a day, which started mere hours after the court had vacated the stay. (A friend who called in the morning to let me know tearfully said, 'They have already started It had taken them days to start re-admitting patients after the court had ordered that But this time they have already started') In November, the industrious in Delhi took to the streets and protested not just the closure of their units but also the entire urban development process (especially the Master Plan) that had brought them where they stood. The apex court only said they were 'hooligans'. (Being a planner specialized only in housing, I had to refer to the Master Plan to understand this. I ran my analysis through senior colleagues and later through some lawyers. To my dismay, they did not fault it. I was left wondering how this could be happening then... What kind of welfare state have we become?) In December, while those whom DDA had failed (industries, slums dwellers, etc) continued to be punished, (only) seven DDA officials were arrested in the 'housing scam' and Jagmohan said DDA had illegally expanded a golf course.[11] In another case of this weird 'disconnect', two months after it had dramatically demolished an eighty-six-year old sanatorium, Digvijay Singh's government in Madhya Pradesh bagged one Global Development Network Award (out of 267 entries from over fifty countries) for some 'innovative effort' for 'improving health and medical services in partnership with the people'[12]. Also in December, while our parliamentarians were considering giving themselves a salary raise, the Comptroller and Auditor General's report on four government programmess targeted at the poor said that, despite Rs 13,790 crore being spent every year, intended benefits seemed to have failed to reach the target groups; and that 'unless effective remedial measures are taken, the non-existent relationship between input and output is likely to continue'.[13] (Commenting on the news reports about the CAG report, a disgusted slum resident said, 'Why don't they just stop spending on us? We get nothing worthwhile anyway. At least that way we'll not be blamed for being a burden on the exchequer.')
~ * ~
Isn't it obvious that the boat is leaking, the captains lying? Isn't it obvious that urban development-walas must set their house in order? Isn't it obvious that we must make urban development a vocation instead of a business and get down to it in earnest? Isn't it obvious that it is more urgent to roll the wheels we have than to invent new ones that may or may not be better? Isn't it obvious we (whether in politics or professions, in corporate or voluntary sectors, in government or activism, in media or consultancy) must realign so it becomes clear who all have a (vested) interest in problems and who all have a (real) interest in solutions? What are we waiting for? A bloody revolution?
References:
- 'Reform benefits must reach poor: President', Hindustan Times, 26 January 2000.
- 'As workers hide slums, Thailand urges "ambitious" world trade agenda', Times of India, 10 February 2000.
- 'Slum-dwellers vandalise BJP office in Mulund', Times of India, 10 March 2000; 'Angry slum-dwellers bundled out of court', Times of India, 14 March 2000.
- 'Wield lathis for your right, VP exhorts jhuggi dwellers', Hindustan Times, 17 April 2000.
- 'AIDS booklet leads to controversy in Almora', Hindustan Times, 23. April 2000; 'Row over AIDS study: 11 NGO members held', Hindustan Times, 27 April 2000.
- 'Khairnar strikes at hawkers' stalls at CST', Indian Express, 6 May 2000; 'BMC to set up commando force to evict hawkers: Khairnar', Indian Express, 10 May 2000.
- 'An AIDS camp few are aware of', Indian Express, 3 June 2000; 'AIDS campaign boomerangs, Walia's apology demanded', Indian Express, 8 June 2000.
- 'Jagmohan discusses illegal constructions, squatters', Indian Express, 30 July 2000; 'Residents' groups to form forum to check squatting, slums', Times of India, 30 July 2000; 'Anti-squatting forum to be set up', Hindustan Times, 30 July 2000; 'Jagmohan to MPs: Come, see what I have done for poor', Asian Age (Delhi Age), 8 August 2000.
- 'Schools utilise DDA land for commercial purposes', Hindustan Times, 15 August 2000.
- 'Housing scandal: Eight DDA officials suspended', Hindustan Times, 29 September 2000; 'Mafia, middlemen nexus in DDA', The Hindu, 30 September 2000.
- 'DPCC launches "nyaya yudh" for unit workers', Hindustan Times, 15 December 2000; 'MCD plans to relocate 30,000 slums', Hindustan Times, 8 December 2000; DDA housing scam: Seven officials, 2 realtors arrested', Hindustan Times, 1 December 2000; 'Jagmohan: DDA illegally acquired land for expanding its golf course', Hindustan Times, 22 December 2000.
- 'Global award for Digvijay govt', Daily Pioneer; 19 December 2000.
- 'CAG: Benefits of growth haven't reached poor', Hindustan Times, 26 December 2000.
Comments (1)
At the bottom of the food chain
The planned slumming of metropolitan India.
reviewed by Harini Narayanan
Slumming India: A Chronicle of Slums and Their Saviours
by Gita Dewan Verma
Penguin Books India, New Delhi, 2002
INR 200, pp xxiv + 183
ISBN 0 14 302875 8
“What are we waiting for? A bloody revolution?” Gita Dewan Verma demands with a mixture of old-fashioned anger, frustration and impatience in the con-cluding lines of Slumming India: A Chronicle of Slums and Their Saviours. The book is a passionate critique of the haphazard and insensitive urban development initiatives that have converted more than half of modern India’s city spaces into slums that no society with even a modicum of sensitivity ought to consign its citizens to. And her suggested method for resolving this appalling chaos is typically simple and old-fashioned too:
I do not have yet another ‘original’ theory for a new, improved model for urban development arising out of my limited understanding just to pander to my own desire to be original. I only suggest that since the path we have taken in the last few years does not seem to be going anywhere we want to, we should just get into reverse gear and reach a better point to trace a new path…
Accordingly, she reserves her most bitter criticism for what she terms Contemporary Urban Development (CUD). Verma’s formulation is simple: over the years, a number of master plans, programmes and policies, including the Draft National Slum Policy of the late 1990s, have been put together at the instance of various arms of government, often with the help of planning professionals and non-governmental organisations (that might or might not know anything about city planning). Many of these plans have provisions built into them that, if implemented, might actually make a difference for the better. Then why is it that nothing is ever done until some kind of crisis situation is reached, and even then, instead of going back to follow the provisions offered by existing policy documents, the first – and often only – thing that Those in Charge (another of Verma’s terms) do is to call for a fresh set of studies or policies?
Verma believes this is because such activities sound busy and exciting, they might just make the headlines and perhaps even convince a middle-class public with a short memory that a radical solution to urban slummification (to borrow a term favoured by the author) is in sight, something that would be impossible to convey by simply referring to decades-old policy documents that everyone has been convinced were failures. As Verma explains, the failures have occurred because policies have never been properly implemented, not because they have failed after they have been fully implemented, but who is to point out this fine difference? “Pilot projects, model projects, best practices, policy announcements, new policy announcements, etc… being continually published, discussed, debated, celebrated, replicated and extrapolated… create the illusion of constant activity with little regard to impact”. Adding later: “It [does] seem like national policy-making [has] been reduced to just a routine exercise in word-processing, photo-copying, spiral-binding, distributing and discussing at ‘consultations’ – fashionable but illusory fabrication that [makes] tailors look busy but [leaves] the Emperor naked”.
Intensely personal
Through her career as a mainstream urban planner and later, as an independent planning researcher, Verma has made it her business to point the above facts out to those concerned at every stage – to be what she calls a ‘whistle-blower’ – but as she says, no one has ever paid much attention: not the government, not the international agencies that hand out awards to the sexiest policy fabrications without checking to see if they are working, and certainly not the media. It must have been this intense moral claustrophobia, this feeling of constantly pounding at doors and windows that will not open to let her ideas in, that propelled her to pour her anger out in the form of a book.
This energy makes the work intensely personal, even self-conscious. The book is dedicated to “the little people”, “the big people’, “the other people” and “the whistle-blowers”. Each chapter begins with a little parable in which the “Lord of CUD” typically rejects the “de-fault Old-fashioned Urban Development Option” offered by his computer in favour of the CUD option – a stylish policy approach that has no bearing on reality. Every chapter ends with an impassioned piece of rhetoric. The point, though, is that by and large, the style works for Verma – perhaps because it is both sincere and backed by some very exhaustive discussions of case studies drawn from different parts of India, though the most detailed examples relate to Delhi and Indore. Also, at every stage, Verma attempts to link the micro-level tales of uprooted or boxed-in slum-dwellers or hawkers with the larger urban development problematic and the comprehensive moral bankruptcy of a state and a society that refuse to tackle the big question with honesty and perspective.
For instance, even as she re-counts the tragic stories of specific slum-dwellers who are made to pay by the state for the privilege of being put through compulsory ‘resettling’ or ‘upgrading’ procedures that are exercises in treachery that often do not even offer temporary security of tenure, Verma steps back to point out that such exercises are destined to intensify slummification. “That development processes have come to ignore so many so consistently has serious implications for planned development, which is meant to leave equitable room for all. Anything else directly or indirectly only abets slumming”.
“The root cause of urban slumming seems to lie not in urban poverty but in urban wealth”
In fact, it is the lack of equity in the distribution of urban land that leads most directly to the emergence of slums, and not in-migration or urban poverty, the author points out. As Verma and others have noted, the very first Master Plan for Delhi (1962) acknowledged that housing that incorporated very small plot sizes was extremely likely to deteriorate into slums. Even so, over time, plot sizes in slum resettlement colonies in Delhi have gone down from 40 sq metres to 12.5 sq metres. An estimated 3-3.5 million slum-dwellers (the estimates have been made by government departments) – who make up one-fourth or more of the city’s population – live in five percent or less of the city’s land. In other cities, where ‘en-croachable’ land is even scarcer, slum densities are even higher. Such densities and house sizes are sim-ply not conducive to living spaces that look like anything other than slums. No wonder the Municipal Corporation of Delhi and the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) continue to include slum resettlement colonies that they have themselves created in their list of official ‘slums’.
Meanwhile, as the space available for the poor in our cities is systematically reduced and erased, other forms of land use are as systematically – and often illegally – privileged. As more and more ‘farmhouses’, cyber parks, gigantic upper-end shopping malls and office blocks for the ‘new economy’ are granted sprawling, prime real estate at ‘token’ prices, the poor who populate the lower-end service and industrial sectors of the city, the modest neighbourhood retailers who serve the majority of citizens and the “small factories needing propinquity to ancillary establishments” will necessarily all be accommodated in overcrowded and ‘inappropriate’ locations. “The end result”, Verma points out, “will be and is the slumming of our cities. Seen thus, the root cause of urban slumming seems to lie not in urban poverty but in urban wealth”.
As an example of one single large-scale ‘slummification’ exercise that contravenes all existing master plan and slum policy provisions, not to mention all codes of civic decency, Verma details the massive Narela resettlement project on the outskirts of Delhi. 60,000 slum-dwellers were evicted from various parts of Delhi (even from sites designated for residential use under the master plan) in the mid-dle of the monsoon in mid-2000 and summarily deposited at Narela, a site far away from their jobs and erstwhile homes, a location that had been planned since the 1962 master plan to be “a self-contained sub-city but was yet to be developed as such”. The evictees were offered no alternative sites, no consideration on the basis of distance from their current homes or jobs, no public transport or other services, no jobs except those in “non-conforming industries yet to come up in the industrial area yet to be developed” – and of course, no explanation for why they had to move at that particular moment, often from locations where they had been living from well before the first plans were even formulated.
Subsequently, an explanation for this relocation was offered, rather obliquely, in a report prepared by the government for the Istanbul+5 United Nations Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat) Conference 2001, where it was claimed that Delhi slum-dwellers were relocated to Narela “from the most untenable and disaster prone sites” in the city. This claim, as Verma points out, cannot be entirely true, since the area cleared of slums has since been found suitable for government housing, office complexes and parks and green belts.
In an essay published in DELHI Urban Space and Human Destinies (2000) on the settling of Welcome colony, a slum resettlement colony in East Delhi, the anthropologist Emma Tarlo also talks of the many parks, public spaces and pavilions that have come up in the spaces that have been vacated by uprooted slums. By locating on a map several of the over-80 different locations spread all over the city that yielded their populations to Welcome, Tarlo demonstrates how, far from being “peripheral to the deve-lopment of the city as a whole”, the development of Welcome colony is actually “inextricably bound with the morphology of the city as a whole”. However, neither Tarlo nor Verma provide a comprehensive map of all the uses to which land emptied of slum-dwellers has been put. Had they done so, one could have asked a powerful question: in an ideal situation, the presence of a large number of parks and other ‘lungs’ for the city is obviously desirable, but how valid is the satisfying of the secondary and tertiary needs of a privileged few when the cost involves the destruction of the very basics of existence for everybody else?
This is certainly not a question that troubles local administrators overmuch. In fact, my own study of annual reports and other documents generated by the DDA has shown that discussion is hardly ever directed at the demolition and resettlement of jhuggis (huts) on the one hand, and the use to which the violently cleared land has been put on the other. Apparently by chance, sections that list demolition activities are often followed in these documents by sections that detail the acreage given over to the development of parks, lawns and woods during the year in question. The number of acres set aside each year for these felicitous developments, created to keep in “tune with [the DDA’s] vision of developing a healthy city”, are uncannily similar to the number of acres listed as having been cleared through demolition, but an overt link is almost never made. In the DDA annual report for 2000-2001, for example, the only instance in which one is actually told of the use to which a particular piece of land is going to be put after it has been ‘freed of encroachments’ appears, of course without irony, in a section titled ‘Rehabilitation of Jhuggi Dwellers of Motia Khan’. Here, we are told that “about 2,246 jhuggi dwellers” are to be uprooted from Motia Khan to make way for a hotel and that “it has been proposed” that these evictees be resettled in Sector 4, Rohini. The freeing up of land for the starred hotel is clearly an achievement of which the city development agency is particularly proud.
Hunger over housing
Perhaps there is, after all, a certain cold-blooded method to the mad-ness of apparently arbitrary and repeated eviction, followed by low-grade resettlement (often with no meaningful assurance of tenure) and later, eviction again. Apart from ensuring that space occupied by the poor is always available at practically a moment’s notice when some ‘public’ need is felt, this process of keeping the city’s poor forever unsettled also helps to build an enduring picture of them as shiftless, unproductive, shadowy beings who are forever living off the largesse of the city administrators who need to spend precious public money to evict them. The journalist Kalpana Sharma, writing in Rediscovering Dharavi: Stories from Asia’s Largest Slum (2000), discusses the manner in which this fundamental uncertainty and assumed illegality of residence that slum-dwellers in Indian cities have to live with, even in old and apparently well-settled slums like Dharavi in Bombay, cloaks their entire beings – their very existence – with a mask of illegality as far as the city’s better-off residents are concerned.
In fact, the Supreme Court of India has repeatedly responded to public-interest litigation that de-mands the removal of slums, hawkers, garbage and so on by reinforcing this negative image of urban slum-dwellers. In a landmark judgement on garbage management in Indian cities quoted by Verma, for instance, the court observed that “rewarding an encroacher on public land with [a] free alternate site is like giving a reward to a pickpocket”. This image of slum-dwellers makes it easy
to evict them summarily, and even the most meagre provision of resettlement can then be projected as public and administrative largesse.
Predictably, Verma reserves some of her fiercest ire for justices who have repeatedly functioned as de facto urban development experts, especially in Delhi, where localised urban-use squabbles repeatedly fetch up at the country’s premier court of law. She is also critical of well-meaning NGOs that often plunge into the business of making policy suggestions on this and other subjects without the necessary background training or knowledge, and of government agencies that solicit such efforts. “NGOs must be involved”, she concedes, but cannot be allowed to call all the shots. Their strength is their grassroots ethos, which makes them great for monitoring and implementation (including project formulation). To let them take over policy and planning levels – to the exclusion of professionals – is justifiable only after stopping expenditure on professional education. At the rate we are going, we will welcome even open-heart surgeries by NGOs simply because they care!
As an example, she discusses the drafting of national schemes for the homeless in early 2001 by a group of NGOs that based their list of priorities on the findings of research conducted in Delhi. Housing was apparently not included as the
subject of a scheme because the homeless people surveyed did not list it as a priority. This sounds an alarm bell for Verma, who concludes that a false result must have been arrived at because of flaws in the research design. This might well be so – the complete research ques-tionnaire is not available to this reviewer at this point, so a more informed comment cannot, in all fairness, be made. However, it was important for Verma to add that such a result is not unusual in surveys of those at the very bottom of the urban human food chain, as it were.
Pushing the line of questioning would have probably yielded the answer that employment, and with that, the sating of hunger, are prioritised over housing of any kind. Anthropologist Joop W De Wit’s research (and Verma’s own) has shown that slum-dwellers faced with resettlement protest the move most bitterly because they will be far removed from their existing jobs – too far removed to commute back on expensive or non-existent public-transport routes – and because they see no prospects for new jobs in the wildernesses to which they are typically banished. This is why many of them are prepared to sell off their new homes and return to live near their old neighbourhoods in housing quality that is worse than before – perhaps even on the pavements.
But the point is not about whether slum-dwellers prioritise housing or jobs. The fact that they prioritise jobs cannot be taken by the state (or by NGOs) as a reason to sideline the housing issue. To return once again to the much-maligned master plans that Verma repeatedly reminds the reader of: most such existing plans actually do envisage the concomitant, all-round development of decent housing stock, employment centres and infrastructural facilities in all the areas that all the residents of a city are expected to live in, whether they be in ‘original’ or ‘resettled’ areas. All that needs to be done, as Verma might say, is for the bloody plans to be implemented faithfully.
In conclusion, one must stress that a book such as this one is not easily found in the Indian context. Given that the growth of slums and their interface with urban India is one of the most pressing urban issues of the day, this is strange, to say the least. But further, a combination of background experience, meticulous research and passion, such as can be found in Slumming India, is even more rare and, therefore, even more special.
Posted by Harini Narayanan | December 11, 2006 10:41 AM