Delhi’s land woes are poised to end with the introduction of ‘Bhu Aadhaar,’ Chief Minister Rekha Gupta’s flagship digital reform. Each land parcel will get a distinct 14-digit ULPIN, transforming chaotic records into a secure, accessible database.
‘Imagine a land Aadhaar card for every plot—transparent, tamper-proof, and efficient,’ Gupta remarked. This move aligns seamlessly with Digital India’s ethos, tackling corruption and disputes head-on. Reviving a dormant 2016 central plan, her administration is fast-tracking it via the revenue IT team and Survey of India expertise.
Employing cutting-edge tech like drone photos and vast geospatial datasets, the system will delineate boundaries precisely, starting with 48 villages. The Tilangpur Kotla pilot’s 274 successful ULPINs signal smooth scaling. Funds from the prior Rs 132.07 lakh allocation fuel the momentum.
Benefits abound: minimized border fights through geo-coding, fraud prevention via single-record authority, and effortless property checks for owners. Government silos break down as data integrates seamlessly.
Gupta invoked PM Modi’s mantra: modern land records underpin Viksit Bharat. ‘We’ve seen lifetimes of savings lost to shady dealings. Bhu Aadhaar restores faith,’ she affirmed. Committed to shielding citizens’ assets, the government eyes full implementation, heralding a new era of property peace in the capital.