The Mumbai airport slum rehabilitation project continues to be mired in controversy, in the wake of the airport operator terminating its contract with project developer HDIL.
HDIL was supposed to complete the project by October 2011.
On Wednesday, it posted a quarterly loss of Rs 280 crore (Rs 2.8 billion) after writing off Rs 442 crore (Rs 4.42 billion) pertaining to the project.
The stock of the company fell 6.8 per cent, to close at Rs 47.95 on BSE on Wednesday.
The GVK group-run Mumbai International Airport Ltd entered into an agreement with HDIL to rehabilitate an estimated 80,000 slum dwellers residing on 276 acres of airport land.
The project was to be completed by 2011 but not a single dweller has been shifted, as the government did not complete the mandatory survey to identify ‘eligible’ ones.
The government is yet to even fix the eligibility conditions.
An MIAL spokesperson said: “MIAL entered into a slum rehabilitation agreement with HDIL in October 2007.
HDIL had to complete the slum rehabilitation within four years, i.e., by 2011.
However, HDIL continuously failed to perform and MIAL issued a notice in June 2011.
Because of non-performance of HDIL, the MIAL board decided to terminate the agreement and accordingly, in February, MIAL terminated the said agreement. Before termination, MIAL invoked the performance securities,” he said.
“There will be no impact of this issue on our development plans,”