Meghalaya News

Shillong Hawkers Protest Eviction, Demand Fair Relocation

Hawkers in Khyndailad protest Shillong Municipal Board’s eviction, calling for corrections in the relocation process.

Sentinel Digital Desk

Correspondent

Shillong: Tensions flared in Shillong’s Khyndailad on Monday morning as hawkers and street vendors refused to comply with an eviction drive carried out by the Shillong Municipal Board (SMB), demanding that serious flaws in the relocation process be corrected before any move.

The eviction operation, conducted in the presence of magistrates and police, followed a government notification issued on June 21 declaring the upper floor of the Meghalaya Urban Development Authority (MUDA) complex as a designated ‘vending zone’ and the rest of Khyndailad as a ‘no vending zone’. However, vendors under the banner of the Meghalaya and Greater Shillong Progressive Hawkers and Street Vendors Association (MGSPHSVA) have strongly opposed the move, stating they will not vacate until the Provisional Town Vending Committee (PTVC) addresses unresolved issues.

Angela Rangad, leader of Thma U Rangli Juki (TUR), who has extended support to the MGSPHSVA, condemned the eviction attempt. “We will not allow the SMB to forcefully evict the hawkers. We will shift only when we are made part of the plan,” she told reporters. Rangad alleged that the MUDA basement, identified for hawking, was constructed without PTVC approval and is unfit for business. “They (SMB) were supposed to place the plan before the PTVC. This is because we are the legitimate members of the TVC and we are the ones to decide how to move forward (the proposed relocation of hawkers),” she asserted.

Calling the designated site unsafe for both vendors and customers, Rangad reiterated the hawkers’ willingness to cooperate, but only under fair conditions. “We don’t say we will not shift but we will shift based on conditions,” she said.

Highlighting discrepancies in the licensing process, she pointed to significant flaws in the digital survey conducted by the authorities. “From the beginning, let us conduct the insitu survey to know who are eligible hawkers and street vendors, conduct claims and objection to see whether this survey really include genuine hawkers or if there are any who are taking advantage of this and the process has reach to the stage of issuing licenses. As PTVC members, we had pointed out that we know very well that there are people who owned big shops, but they were issued with hawkers’ licenses,” Rangad said.

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