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Maharashtra is Losing Thousands of Hectares to Land Grabbers — and Current Laws Can’t Stop It
Over 71,000 hectares of government land — forests, pastures, religious trusts — are being illegally encroached upon across Maharashtra. The criminals doing this know the law will not punish them fast enough. That must change.
The Scale of the Crisis
Land grabbing in Maharashtra is no longer an isolated problem. It is a systematic, organised crime — carried out through forged documents, political connections, and the complicity of administrative officials. And it is growing.
These are not estimates. These figures come from the government’s own affidavits submitted in courts. The actual number — including urban and trust lands — is almost certainly higher.
Why Existing Laws Have Failed
The problem is not lack of laws. The problem is that existing laws have no deterrence value. Here is why land grabbers are not afraid:
- Two separate cases required — one civil, one criminal
- Years of delays before any judgment
- No fast-track mechanism for land disputes
- Administrative officials who assist go unprosecuted
- Punishment is weak and rarely enforced
- High cost for the common citizen to fight back
- Land grabbing made a standalone criminal offence
- Single tribunal handles all aspects — faster relief
- Strict time limit for final judgment
- Officials involved face criminal prosecution too
- Enhanced punishment for organised & repeat crime
- Expert monitoring authority over investigation
Other States Already Have This Law — Maharashtra Does Not
This is not an untested idea. India’s own states have shown it works. Four states have already enacted criminal anti-land-grabbing legislation:
Gujarat
Andhra Pradesh
Karnataka
Maharashtra — one of India’s largest and most urbanised states — lags behind. The absence of such a law sends a clear signal to land grabbers: this is a safe state to operate in.
The 5 Demands: What Nagrik Social Foundation is Asking For
After an extensive study of state laws and consultation with legal experts, Nagrik Social Foundation has submitted a formal representation to the Maharashtra State Government. These are the five demands:
Currently treated as a civil/revenue matter. It must carry criminal liability under a dedicated law.
Harsher penalties when crimes are committed by syndicates, with government complicity, or by repeat offenders.
Dedicated courts to hear land grabbing cases without the decade-long delays of the regular judicial system.
The law must prescribe a maximum time within which the tribunal must deliver its decision.
A dedicated body of domain experts to oversee investigations — preventing suppression or manipulation by local officials.
Who Suffers When Public Land is Grabbed?
When pasture land is illegally occupied, poor farmers and pastoral communities lose their grazing rights. When forest land is encroached, entire ecosystems and tribal livelihoods are destroyed. When temple or trust lands are grabbed, religious communities lose their heritage. And when government land is stolen, it is public money — your tax money — that disappears.
Land grabbing is not a victimless crime. Every encroachment is a theft from the public.
Support the demand for a Maharashtra Land Grabbing Prohibition Act. Share this article and make your voice heard.
Data sourced from government affidavits and court records cited in proceedings before Maharashtra courts. This article is a public interest advocacy piece based on the representation submitted by Nagrik Social Foundation to the Maharashtra State Government.