
Supreme Court agrees to hear contempt plea against demolitions in Assam's Goalpara
A bench led by Chief Justice BR Gavai and Justice K Vinod Chandran issued notices to the chief secretary and other officials, seeking their responses in the matter within two weeks, PTI reported.
Advocate Sanjay Hegde, appearing for the petitioners, told the court that the state authorities issued eviction notices to residents in Goalpara's Hasilabeel village just two days before razing their homes.
He argued that even those accused of encroaching on government land are entitled to due legal procedure.
'These are 667 poor families who have been there on that land for 60–70 years,' he said, adding that many had been forced to settle in higher areas due to shifts in the course of the Brahmaputra river.
The petitioners contended that the evictions and demolitions 'predominantly targeted a minority community, leaving out similarly placed persons from the majority community untouched', PTI reported.
When Hegde requested interim relief in the form of a status quo, the court cautioned that any relief would not apply if the demolitions involved government land.
The petition relies on a Supreme Court judgement from November that held as illegal the practice of demolishing properties of persons accused of crimes as a punitive measure. It added that processes must be followed before removing allegedly illegal encroachments.
The judgement, however, specified that the guidelines would not apply to unauthorised structures on public property, including roads, riverbanks and railway lines.
The contempt plea has been filed by eight residents of Hasilabeel village in Goalpara who claim to have lived in the area for over six decades with valid voter identity cards, PAN and Aadhaar cards, Live Law reported.
According to the plea, the demolitions there began after a circle officer issued an undated notice on June 13, giving just two days to vacate land reportedly allotted to the Assam Fisheries Development Corporation in 2015.
They alleged the authorities only gave common notices to the affected through announcements on a microphone, rather than giving individual notices.
On June 16, district authorities in Goalpara demolished the homes of 690 families in Hasilabeel. This was followed by a second drive in the district on July 12, when 1,080 more families were evicted from their homes in the Paikan Reserve Forest.
Between 2016 and August 2024, more than 10,620 families – the majority of them Muslim – have been evicted from government land, according to data provided by the state revenue and disaster management department.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
29 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Trump reignites feud with London Mayor Sadiq Khan, calls him ‘nasty person'
US President Donald Trump, on Monday (July 27), took a swipe at London Mayor Sadiq Khan, calling him a 'nasty person' who has done a 'terrible job' during a news conference in Scotland. On being asked by a reporter if he would come to London in September for a state visit, Trump said, 'I'm not a fan of your mayor. I think he's done a terrible job.' 'The Mayor of London… a nasty person,' he said, reigniting his feud with Khan. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, visibly caught off guard, interjected, describing Khan as his 'friend'. 'He's a friend of mine, actually,' he said. Despite Starmer's defence, Trump remained critical, stating, 'I think he's done a terrible job. But I would certainly visit London.' 🚨🎥 WATCH: Donald Trump says Sadiq Khan is a 'nasty person' who has done a 'terrible job' as London Mayor Starmer: 'He's a friend of mine actually' — Politics UK (@PolitlcsUK) July 28, 2025 Khan's response to Trump's jibe In a statement issued later on Monday (July 28), a spokesperson for Khan said the mayor was 'delighted that President Trump wants to come to the greatest city in the world'. 'He'd see how our diversity makes us stronger, not weaker; richer, not poorer. Perhaps these are the reasons why a record number of Americans have applied for British citizenship under his Presidency,' the spokesperson further added. Trump and Khan have had a turbulent past with the two indulging in war of words on several occasions. In a podcast recorded before Trump's re-election in November 2024, Khan accused the incoming president of targeting him because of his ethnicity and religion. 'It's personal, let's be frank. If I wasn't this colour skin, if I wasn't a practising Muslim, he wouldn't have come for me,' he said. The London mayor, during Trump's first term, called out the US president over his stance on immigration and travel ban targeting Muslim-majority nations. In return, the US president accused Khan of doing a 'very bad job on terrorism', calling him 'very dumb' and a 'stone cold loser'. (With inputs from agencies)


Mint
29 minutes ago
- Mint
Jammu and Kashmir: Rahul Gandhi to sponsor education for 22 children orphaned in Pakistan shelling
Senior Congress leader Rahul Gandhi will sponsor the education of 22 children who lost either one or both parents in the Pakistani shelling along the Line of Control (LoC) in the Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir during Operation Sindoor, a party leader has said, as reported by PTI. Pradesh Congress Committee president Tariq Hameed Karra also refuted any differences with the pre-poll alliance partner National Conference (NC) but said his party is waiting for the formation of the coordination committee with the ruling party for the past nine months, PTI reported. 'A lot of civilian casualties and damage to properties took place in Poonch and Rajouri (between May 7 and 10) in Pakistani shelling. Rahul Gandhi visited Poonch in the aftermath of the devastating shelling and visited the bereaved families. He asked us to prepare a list of school-going children who lost one or both parents, especially the breadwinners, and accordingly we submitted the list to him,' Karra, who reached Rajouri on a three-day tour of the region, told reporters late Monday. He said the party has a list of 22 such children in the Poonch district alone, and more such children might be included at the end of the three-day visit. A gunman armed with an AR-15-style rifle opened fire inside a Manhattan skyscraper on Monday evening, killing four people, including an off-duty police officer, before fatally shooting himself. 'This is an initiative aimed at extending a helping hand to the children so that their studies are not impacted,' he said.


Indian Express
29 minutes ago
- Indian Express
In West Bengal, voter lists appearing online sparks speculation of electoral roll revision in state
West Bengal Chief Electoral Officer has made some voter lists from the 2002 electoral roll revision available online, sparking speculation that the exercise will begin in the state in August. This comes two weeks after the Election Commission of India wrote to state Chief Electoral Officers (CEOs) asking them to prepare for a Special Intensive Revision similar to one currently ongoing in Bihar. According to sources in the election commission, the list that has been published on the website of the of the State's Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) contains the names of 11 districts — Coochbehar, Jalpaiguri, Darjeeling, Uttar Dinajpur, Dakshin Dinajpur and Malda in North Bengal and Nadia, Howrah, Hooghly, Medinipur and Bankura in the south. So far, there's been no word from the Election Commission on the speculations in West Bengal, with a senior official saying only that they were 'ready for anything'. 'Within two-three days we will publish all 23 districts' lists of electors according to 2002 SIR,' the official at the West Bengal CEO said. Significantly, West Bengal is due to hold assembly polls next year. In its order to Chief Electoral Officers, the ECI asked them to rationalise polling stations (including identification of new buildings to ensure no polling station has more than 1,200 electors); fill up all vacant positions of key officials, from Block Level Officers (BLOs) and Electoral Registration Officers (EROs) to Assistant Electoral Registration Officers (AEROs), and supervisors who will undertake the enumeration on the ground; and conducting their training. Also mentioned in the order was the direction to publish the 2002 electoral rolls online. As part of the exercise, the West Bengal Chief Election Officer began training its Booth Level Officers for the enumeration exercise Saturday. But Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has opposed the exercise, saying Monday that her party 'won't allow SIR in West Bengal'. She also accused the Election Commission of acting on directions from the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance at the Centre. 'They (EC) are finalising the voters' list, while sitting in Gujarat… The BJP's agency (EC) is doing this… They have already set up detention camps in Haryana and Assam… We want to say: 'Jo humse takrayega, choor choor ho jaayega' (Those who mess with us will be shattered),' she said. However, Leader of Opposition and BJP leader Suvendu Adhikari has supported the move. 'No Rohingya or Bangladeshi Muslim illegal immigrant, however, will be allowed to have their names in the electoral rolls in the state,' Adhikari said. The electoral roll revision exercise in Bihar has been at the centre of a row, with Opposition parties claiming that the requirement that voters enrolled after 2003 produce multiple documents to stay on the rolls could potentially disenfranchise millions of voters and has spurred legal challenges in the SC. Unlike the Bihar exercise, the qualifying date for pan-Indian exercise has been kept as January 1, 2026.