Skip to main content

Bulldozed dreams: The vanishing slums of india’s expanding cities

By Raj Kumar Sinha 
"किसकी है जनवरी, किसका अगस्त है?
कौन यहां सुखी है, कौन यहां मस्त है?
महल आबाद है झोपड़ी उजाङ है,
गरीबों की बस्ती में उखाड़ है पछाड़ है।"
(“Whose is January, whose is August?
Who here is happy, who here is content?
Palaces flourish while huts are torn apart,
In the colonies of the poor there is only uprooting and despair.”)
These lines of poet Baba Nagarjun remain as relevant today as when they were first written. The ever-expanding cities continue to draw the rural unemployed in search of livelihoods, forcing them to make homes in slums and survive under inhuman conditions. In Delhi, the government once promised “where there is a slum, there will be a house.” Instead, successive demolitions have driven thousands of the city’s slum dwellers onto the streets.
Delhi officially recognizes over 675 slum clusters, all part of the capital’s urban sprawl. Legally, these colonies are entitled to protection and rehabilitation. Yet without alternatives, they are being razed with bulldozers. From Madras Camp to Wazirpur, and from Jailerwala Bagh to Ashok Vihar, entire neighborhoods have been flattened. Since June 2025 alone, the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) has demolished more than 1,500 homes, displacing nearly 27,000 people. An estimated 9,000 among them have been denied even basic rehabilitation under public housing schemes.
Life inside these settlements is already a daily struggle—schools and hospitals are scarce, taps exist but water doesn’t, sanitation is poor, and garbage piles up. People arrive here leaving behind villages and states in search of work, only to watch their fragile shelters fall to bulldozers. Women, children, and the elderly suffer the most from these demolitions. Children, in particular, bear the trauma of losing their homes along with disruption in their education. Families say politicians assure them before elections that no demolitions will take place, but after polls, they face harassment and neglect. Even electricity meters are denied, yet electricity bills are demanded as proof of residence.
The picture is grim: bulldozers are being used to create cities where there is no space for the poor who build and sustain them. No society, institution, or industry can function without workers, and cities cannot develop without their labor. Yet the very people who clean, construct, and transport—who keep the urban machine running—are denied dignity, security, and a place to live.
The scale of the problem is immense. According to the 2011 Census, India had 1.23 lakh slums housing about 65.5 million people. In Delhi, more than 35,000 flats built under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) remain unallocated, lying in ruins. Projects such as the Rajiv Ratan Awas Yojana, launched in 2005 to provide homes for the poor, have failed to deliver. In other states too, such as Madhya Pradesh, governments are planning mass slum clearance campaigns, even as these settlements house large segments of urban populations.
Meanwhile, the government’s Smart Cities Mission, launched in 2015 with a massive budget of two lakh crore rupees, has been wound up after achieving only partial implementation. Only 16 cities completed their projects, while most others were left incomplete. The United Nations had already warned in its 2014 report that rapid, unplanned urbanization was fueling sprawl, pollution, environmental degradation, and unsustainable patterns of consumption and production.
Urbanization in India cannot mean bulldozers and evictions. What is needed is upgrading of slums, not erasure. That requires improving living conditions responsibly, ensuring access to land rights, credit, and essential services, and providing decent housing both in the short and long term. For millions of working-class families, this is not just a housing issue—it is about survival, dignity, and the constitutional right to life guaranteed under Article 21.
As India’s cities continue to expand, the question remains: will they be built for the rich alone, or will the workers who sustain them also find a place within?
---
Bargi Dam Displaced and Affected People’s Association

Comments

TRENDING

Plastic burning in homes threatens food, water and air across Global South: Study

By Jag Jivan  In a groundbreaking  study  spanning 26 countries across the Global South , researchers have uncovered the widespread and concerning practice of households burning plastic waste as a fuel for cooking, heating, and other domestic needs. The research, published in Nature Communications , reveals that this hazardous method of managing both waste and energy poverty is driven by systemic failures in municipal services and the unaffordability of clean alternatives, posing severe risks to human health and the environment.

From protest to proof: Why civil society must rethink environmental resistance

By Shankar Sharma*  As concerned environmentalists and informed citizens, many of us share deep unease about the way environmental governance in our country is being managed—or mismanaged. Our complaints range across sectors and regions, and most of them are legitimate. Yet a hard question confronts us: are complaints, by themselves, effective? Experience suggests they are not.

Economic superpower’s social failure? Inequality, malnutrition and crisis of India's democracy

By Vikas Meshram  India may be celebrated as one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, but a closer look at who benefits from that growth tells a starkly different story. The recently released World Inequality Report 2026 lays bare a country sharply divided by wealth, privilege and power. According to the report, nearly 65 percent of India’s total wealth is owned by the richest 10 percent of its population, while the bottom half of the country controls barely 6.4 percent. The top one percent—around 14 million people—holds more than 40 percent, the highest concentration since 1961. Meanwhile, the female labour force participation rate is a dismal 15.7 percent.

Kolkata event marks 100 years since first Communist conference in India

By Harsh Thakor*   A public assembly was held in Kolkata on December 24, 2025, to mark the centenary of the First Communist Conference in India , originally convened in Kanpur from December 26 to 28, 1925. The programme was organised by CPI (ML) New Democracy at Subodh Mallik Square on Lenin Sarani. According to the organisers, around 2,000 people attended the assembly.

From colonial mercantilism to Hindutva: New book on the making of power in Gujarat

By Rajiv Shah  Professor Ghanshyam Shah ’s latest book, “ Caste-Class Hegemony and State Power: A Study of Gujarat Politics ”, published by Routledge , is penned by one of Gujarat ’s most respected chroniclers, drawing on decades of fieldwork in the state. It seeks to dissect how caste and class factors overlap to perpetuate the hegemony of upper strata in an ostensibly democratic polity. The book probes the dominance of two main political parties in Gujarat—the Indian National Congress and the BJP—arguing that both have sustained capitalist growth while reinforcing Brahmanic hierarchies.

Urgent need to study cause of large number of natural deaths in Gulf countries

By Venkatesh Nayak* According to data tabled in Parliament in April 2018, there are 87.76 lakh (8.77 million) Indians in six Gulf countries, namely Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). While replying to an Unstarred Question (#6091) raised in the Lok Sabha, the Union Minister of State for External Affairs said, during the first half of this financial year alone (between April-September 2018), blue-collared Indian workers in these countries had remitted USD 33.47 Billion back home. Not much is known about the human cost of such earnings which swell up the country’s forex reserves quietly. My recent RTI intervention and research of proceedings in Parliament has revealed that between 2012 and mid-2018 more than 24,570 Indian Workers died in these Gulf countries. This works out to an average of more than 10 deaths per day. For every US$ 1 Billion they remitted to India during the same period there were at least 117 deaths of Indian Workers in Gulf ...

The greatest threat to our food system: The aggressive push for GM crops

By Bharat Dogra  Thanks to the courageous resistance of several leading scientists who continue to speak the truth despite increasing pressures from the powerful GM crop and GM food lobby , the many-sided and in some contexts irreversible environmental and health impacts of GM foods and crops, as well as the highly disruptive effects of this technology on farmers, are widely known today. 

History, culture and literature of Fatehpur, UP, from where Maulana Hasrat Mohani hailed

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*  Maulana Hasrat Mohani was a member of the Constituent Assembly and an extremely important leader of our freedom movement. Born in Unnao district of Uttar Pradesh, Hasrat Mohani's relationship with nearby district of Fatehpur is interesting and not explored much by biographers and historians. Dr Mohammad Ismail Azad Fatehpuri has written a book on Maulana Hasrat Mohani and Fatehpur. The book is in Urdu.  He has just come out with another important book, 'Hindi kee Pratham Rachna: Chandayan' authored by Mulla Daud Dalmai.' During my recent visit to Fatehpur town, I had an opportunity to meet Dr Mohammad Ismail Azad Fatehpuri and recorded a conversation with him on issues of history, culture and literature of Fatehpur. Sharing this conversation here with you. Kindly click this link. --- *Human rights defender. Facebook https://www.facebook.com/vbrawat , X @freetohumanity, Skype @vbrawat

Transgender Bill testimony of Govt of India's ‘contempt’ for marginalized community

Counterview Desk India’s civil society network, National Alliance of People’s Movements (NAPM)* has said that the controversial transgender Bill, passed in the Rajya Sabha on November 26, which happened to be the 70th anniversary of the Indian Constitution, is a reflection on the way the Government of India looks at the marginalized community with utter contempt.