MULTAN’S MISSING MANGOES
Syed Murid Husain Shah lives on an oasis. Around him is the sprawling Phase-1 of the Defence Housing Authority (DHA) in Multan, being constructed on more than 3,000 acres of land. And while construction works around him carry on apace, Shah has been resolutely defending his land and the mango orchards that are standing on it.
“How can I allow the felling of mango orchards that were planted by my grandfather?” he says incredulously.
Shah is a resident of Mauza Garh-i-Wahan in Multan. He is among the handful of landowners who did not sell their land to the DHA-Multan. In March last year, he found a notice on his doorstep: the DHA-Multan had attained permission to acquire land in the vicinity to develop its Phase-I.
The notice urged those land owners who did not sell their land to the DHA to do so till March 31, 2016. No further extensions were to be allowed; the remaining land in the notified area for the DHA was to be acquired under the relevant government rules and regulations. The unsigned notice was issued by DHA-Multan’s deputy director for estate on March 17, with a UAN 061-111-111-189 provided in case any clarifications were needed. Shah did not succumb to the notice. He remains worried, however, that DHA authorities can obtain his land forcibly —as he is still being pressured from various quarters to sell his land to the DHA.
Housing schemes have mushroomed in the city over the past few years, eating into its once-fabled orchards of the king of fruits. They are putting in peril the city’s and Pakistan’s mango produce
Shah’s case is symptomatic of larger developments in Multan: hundreds of acres of mango orchards on the outskirts of the city have already turned into populous housing schemes by various land developers. This onslaught of ‘development’ was unleashed around two decades ago and shows no sign of abating any time soon. And while population pressures dictate new housing colonies crop up, many more mango orchards have been marked for felling.
LAND AND LUCRE
As many as 48 big housing schemes burgeoned in the city, claims a report prepared by the Punjab Agriculture Department a few years ago. The report estimated the orchard area of Multan Tehsil measured about 44,000 acres then. The new housing schemes chewed up 7,817 acres of land — 2,043 acres (26 percent) of this acquired land is in fact orchard area that has been lost to property greed.
A few days ago, the Multan Development Authority (MDA) released a report claiming that the number of legal and illegal housing societies in Multan actually stands at 460. The majority of land taken over is agricultural while more orchard land has already been marked for sale.
In fact, the northern bypass of the city has opened a new vista for real estate investors with many big players having attained agricultural land. The biggest chunk of acquired land lies with the DHA which has encroached upon the northern approach to the city. DHA alone is being established over an area of 9,000 acres and its maximum proposed area is derived from land where mango orchards stand today.
Opposite DHA Phase-I are the Buch Villas (a gated society), also constructed over land that was previously mango orchards. The encroachment of developers continues till Bund Bosan, Royal Orchards, and Wapda Town Housing Scheme, among others — all of these have been erected in the heartland of mango-growing areas of Multan. These housing societies have uprooted many mango orchards and removed growers from their ancestral trade.
When sellers began purchasing the files to land in DHA Phase-I, they were greeted with news that a marla as defined by DHA-Multan stood at 225 sq ft (approximately 21 sq metres). With a precedent now set, other developers also decided to reduce their marla size. Those buying into housing schemes on agricultural land and mango orchards were paying arbitrary rates, set by real estate tycoons, for a plot of land sized far below its standard measurement.
The eastern flank of the city has not remained immune to this disaster, either. For instance, Jinnah Town and other colonies have sprung up in a jiffy, uprooting orchards and people in its wake, as Multan city limits have now reached the outskirts of a small town near Multan called Duniyapur.
On the face of it, there must have been a demand for new housing for these companies to have started construction there. But in truth, there are multiple tragedies at play.
“Much of the land that has been acquired is in the mango-growing region of South Punjab,” asserts president of the Mango Growers’ Association (MGA), Zahid Hussain Gardezi. “There were many small- and middle-sized farmers in these areas for whom agriculture wasn’t cutting it any more. High cost of inputs, low returns, and water shortages were common. These paralyzed growers were unable to withstand the glitter of money and even coercion.”
Gardezi bemoans the real estate boom in Multan as a tragedy — both for the city as well as for the heritage of Multani mangoes.
The MGA chief explains that the major annexation of agricultural land for housing projects began in fertile agrarian belts — with society’s most vulnerable sometimes exploited with great ease at times, and at others, coerced into doing business. He argues that farmers had to face the brunt of abhorrent government policies, which had “no footing in the agro status of these areas,” meaning they lacked knowledge about the on-ground situation in these agricultural areas.
The prosperity offered by the growing real estate businesses lured many mango orchard owners into selling their land for one-time premium prices. Before the arrival of the DHA to the locality where DHA Phase-I currently sits, one acre of land would cost between two and three million rupees. Prices now vary between six and 10 million rupees — a 200-300 percent increase.
A few days ago, the Multan Development Authority (MDA) released a report claiming that the number of legal and illegal housing societies in Multan actually stands at 460. The majority of land taken over is agricultural while more orchard land has already been marked for sale. In fact, the northern bypass of the city has opened a new vista for real estate investors with many big players having attained agricultural land ... DHA alone is being established over an area of 9,000 acres and its maximum proposed area is derived from land where mango orchards stand today.
“Multani mango-growers took pride in transforming the entire landscape of the city,” says Gardezi. “From its historical associations with gor [graveyard], gard [dust], garma [heat] and gadaagar [beggar], they turned it into a beautiful skyline adorning the outskirts of the walled city. If you were taking off in a plane from the old short runway of Multan Airport, you’d gaze at miles of mango orchards and fertile agriculture land. None of it exists anymore.”
WHAT’S IN A MARLA