An eviction drive to clear over 500 hectares of forest land in Assam's Lakhimpur district will be undertaken by the administration on Tuesday, affecting nearly 100 families, officials said.
A mock drill by security forces for the drive was conducted on Sunday, they said.?Out of 2,560.25 hectares of Pava reserved forest, only 29 hectares are currently free of any encroachment.?In the first phase on January 10, 500 hectares in Adhasona and Mohaghuli villages will be cleared, the officials said.
An eviction drive to clear over 500 hectares of forest land in Assam's Lakhimpur district will be undertaken by the administration on Tuesday, affecting nearly 100 families, officials said.
A mock drill by security forces for the drive was conducted on Sunday, they said.?Out of 2,560.25 hectares of Pava reserved forest, only 29 hectares are currently free of any encroachment.?In the first phase on January 10, 500 hectares in Adhasona and Mohaghuli villages will be cleared, the officials said.
The Himanta Biswa Sarma-led dispensation has been carrying out eviction drives in different parts of the state since it assumed power in May 2021, with two such exercises undertaken last month.
The drive in Nagaon's Batadrava on December 19 was billed as one of the largest in the region in terms of the number of people affected, with more than 5,000 alleged encroachers being uprooted.?Among the other major eviction drives was the one in Dhalpur area of Darrang district which led to violence, resulting in the death of two persons and injury of over 20 in September, 2021.
Lakhimpur divisional forest officer (DFO) Ashok Kumar Dev Choudhury stated that at least 701 families have encroached upon the Pava reserved forest land over the last decades. The illegal settlers include people from different parts of the state as well as locals displaced due to flood and erosion.
District deputy commissioner Sumit Sattawan said about 80 families have already left the villages and another 100 are still living there.?"We have requested people still residing on these lands to leave peacefully," he said. The DC said the people living in the encroached areas were notified by the forest department and local administration two years ago to vacate the area.
In July last year, 84 families submitted documents claiming land ownership but these were found to be fake upon scrutiny. On September 7, the circle officer of Naoboicha personally approached the encroachers and asked them to leave voluntarily, he said. The drive was supposed to be carried out in September.
"We had to defer it as floods hit the area. In the last two weeks, we have again conveyed to the encroachers that the eviction drive will be conducted on January 10. Though some people left, others have continued to stay," Sattawan added.
Lakhimpur Superintendent of Police Bedanta Madhab Rajkhowa said 600 personnel of state police and CRPF have been deployed for the exercise and a mock drill was conducted by the forces on Sunday.?"We are prepared to conduct the drive in a smooth and peaceful manner," he added.