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Dream Valley Imagine Illegal villas on GO 111 land..

  • Illegal villas are being built mutely.
  • Each villa is spread across 15,000 sq ft.
  • The sq ft. price is Rs 15,000.
  • Each villa costs around Rs 25 crore.
  • Are IAS officers among those who bought the villas?
  • is well aware of this!
  • Previous government didn’t care much
  • Congress government in a state of inability?
  • Illegal villas must be demolished
  • 16 acres.. 31 villas…
  • Beautiful villa in half an acre
  • Sold for back money
  • GO 111 catchment area turning into a concrete jungle
  • Santhosh Reddy, who doesn’t care about anyone

In undivided Andhra Pradesh, farmlands were scattered in the GO 111 area. Villa communities could be counted on one’s fingertips, with a few resorts here and there. But, after the formation of Telangana state, former CM KCR’s election promise of lifting the GO 111 gave wings to many developers, with them illegally constructing villas on Himayatsagar and Osman Sagar catchment areas. In this area where permanent construction is prohibited, all the waste water released from the structures being built in violation of the rules is being dumped into the twin reservoirs. If this continues, after some years, they will turn into pollution pits.

A total of 84 villages come under GO 111. However, illegal construction of villas in areas like Moinabad, Aziznagar, and Bakaram has become common in the previous government’s regime. These illegal builders managed HMDA officials and built villas at will. Officials didn’t care much about how many illegal villas they built because the previous government was in favour of its officials. But will the newly formed government in Telangana call these illegal builders into question?

Dream Valley, a company managing the Dream Valley Resort in Bakaram, GO 111, earns a monthly income of Rs. 2.16 crore from its ninety rooms, is all rooms are booked daily. Even if 75% of the rooms are booked every day, half a million per month will be earned by the company. The resort’s sewage is not properly managed, and additional income is generated through weddings and functions. Despite being part of GO 111, Dream Valley’s resorts do not give any revenue to the government.
The company has been generating substantial revenue from illegally built structures in the GO 111 area. On 20 acres of land near a resort, 31 villas are being constructed, each villa on 20 pits of land, spanning 15,000 square feet. This project is located about two kilometres from Himayatsagar, on the outskirts of Bakaram Revenue adjacent to Aziznagar in Survey No. 78/8. These villas in the GO 111 area are priced at Rs. 15,000 per sq ft. Simply put, each villa costs around Rs. 22.50 crore, with a total sales value of up to Rs 1,000 crore. Construction is ongoing, and buyers must have company chairman Kancharla Santhosh Reddy’s permission to visit the project site. The villas are only sold to those with financial capacity and black money.
The Imagine Villa Community brochure, titled ‘A World of Possibilities’, showcases Dream Valley’s impressive features. However, the government should be held responsible for obstructing its construction and preventing similar villas from being built in the GO 111 area. The sewage produced by these communities could lead to polluted water supply in two reservoirs, posing a risk to the clean water supply. Therefore, the Congress government has the responsibility to demolish these villas.

Think…

Not sure if we can turn Hussainsagar into Gandipet or not, but if the Congress government ignores such illegal constructions, then it is sure that these illegal constructions will turn our twin reservoirs into two Hussainsagars.

Just imagine…

It is known that the HMDA officer who indirectly supported this project is currently in jail. Will the person who built it be fined by RERA? Will he not go to jail?

If an IAS buys, then do you give up on the norms?

The government seems to be very strict about the senior IAS officers who behaved erratically in the previous government. Do you think the government will spare retired IAS officers and current IAS officers who are buying or have bought villas here?

It may not be a big problem if you build a farmhouse to have fun with your family every now and then. But if villa communities are built separately, where will all the sewage go?

The government takes special measures for solid waste management in cities and towns. Also, in the villas built on the two-way roads, garbage, rubbish, and plastic will be mixed in twin reservoirs?

No matter what happens, will the public representatives close their eyes if they get their share of profit? Will the authorities not act if the villa is given for free or at a low rate?

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