Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
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June 3, 2007

India Invites Global Bids to Rebuild Slum
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=17B31E4:A6F02AD83191E160E29EE3AD42D11F669574F7DCC14957C0 Government says
$2.3-billion project will help to move 57,000 families living in
ramshackle houses to tiny apartments in high-rise blocks





Children play in a lane of Asia's largest slum Dharavi, in Mumbai,
India, 29 May 2007In India, the government wants to give Asia's
largest slum a makeover - and has invited Indian and foreign
developers to participate in a huge slum resettlement project in the
country's financial capital, Mumbai. But as Anjana Pasricha reports
from New Delhi, there is strong opposition to the plan.

Dharavi is not just a sprawling urban slum located in the heart of
Mumbai, it is a long established community. Over the last 50 years, it
has mushroomed over two square kilometers, attracting poor migrants
from all over the country. Today, more than half a million people live
and work in its narrow, dirty alleys.

The Maharashtra state government proposes to change all that, and
recently placed newspaper advertisements in 20 countries inviting
developers to rebuild Dharavi.

The plan is simple: the slum will be torn down. About 57,000 families
living in ramshackle houses will be given tiny apartments of 225
square feet in high-rise blocks. The remaining swathes of land will be
cleared for commercial and residential buildings.

The government says theĀ $2.3 billion project will benefit everyone.
Slum dwellers will get free, new housing with modern facilities and
sanitation.

But the project has triggered suspicion and resistance from many slum
dwellers. They say Dharavi is not just their home but also their
workplace.

The head of the National Slum Dwellers Association, Jockin Arputham,
is threatening massive protests. He says many people stand to lose
their livelihood if the project is implemented.

"The government can't give employment. People have made their
employment. 45 percent are self-employed in Dharavi, porters and
fisheries colony. Therefore it is not rebuilding Dharavi, it is taking
away the existing employment," said Arputham.

The government is trying to calm such fears. It says the project will
also make room for industries, except polluting ones such as
tanneries.

At the same time, prime land worth an estimated $10 billion will be
freed up for development in a crowded city, where property prices are
among the most expensive in the world.

However, opponents insist the project will mainly benefit developers.
They are demanding more transparency and community involvement in the
plan.

They point to hundreds of small manufacturing units that thrive in its
alleys producing a range of goods such as pottery, plastics, and
embroidered garments.

Over the years, Dharavi, has become a symbol of the haphazard urban
growth in massive cities such as Mumbai, where millions of people live
in slums. In Mumbai, more than half the city's population of 18
million lives in slums.

Often the inhabitants in these slums are not people mired in dire
poverty, but people forced to stay there due to exorbitant real estate
prices. Many cramped homes in Dharavi, for example, boast televisions
and refrigerators.

High profile foreign visitors such as Britain's Prince Charles have
stopped by Dharavi on their Indian tours to get an insight into the
challenges of urban development in developing countries.