<p>A survey of the land at Banbhoolpura here, which the railways claims belongs to it, began on Sunday to determine how much of it belongs to the Uttarakhand government, officials said.</p>.<p>The survey is being done on the basis of a 1959 revenue map of the area, Nainital Additional District Magistrate (ADM) Ashok Joshi said.</p>.<p>He said the survey is being conducted in compliance with a court order which had asked the state government to tell how much of the encroached land belongs to it.</p>.<p>Revenue and forest departments and the railways are jointly conducting the survey, he said.</p>.<p>The forest department has pillars and boundaries in the area after which the railways' land begins, followed by 'nazul' or government land, he added.</p>.<p>"We are going by the 1959 revenue map of the area, which is the most reliable document in this regard," Joshi said.</p>.<p>Banbhoolpura came into focus early this month when its residents hit the streets against an Uttarakhand High Court order for demolition of encroachments from the railways land in the area.</p>.<p>On January 5, the Supreme Court stayed the order for removal of encroachments from 29 acres of land claimed by the railways, terming it a "human issue" and saying that 50,000 people could not be uprooted overnight.</p>.<p>According to the railways, there are 4,365 encroachers on the land.</p>.<p>Nearly 50,000 people, a majority of them Muslims, belonging to over 4,000 families reside on the disputed land.</p>.<p>The top court fixed February 7 as the next date of hearing in the case.</p>
<p>A survey of the land at Banbhoolpura here, which the railways claims belongs to it, began on Sunday to determine how much of it belongs to the Uttarakhand government, officials said.</p>.<p>The survey is being done on the basis of a 1959 revenue map of the area, Nainital Additional District Magistrate (ADM) Ashok Joshi said.</p>.<p>He said the survey is being conducted in compliance with a court order which had asked the state government to tell how much of the encroached land belongs to it.</p>.<p>Revenue and forest departments and the railways are jointly conducting the survey, he said.</p>.<p>The forest department has pillars and boundaries in the area after which the railways' land begins, followed by 'nazul' or government land, he added.</p>.<p>"We are going by the 1959 revenue map of the area, which is the most reliable document in this regard," Joshi said.</p>.<p>Banbhoolpura came into focus early this month when its residents hit the streets against an Uttarakhand High Court order for demolition of encroachments from the railways land in the area.</p>.<p>On January 5, the Supreme Court stayed the order for removal of encroachments from 29 acres of land claimed by the railways, terming it a "human issue" and saying that 50,000 people could not be uprooted overnight.</p>.<p>According to the railways, there are 4,365 encroachers on the land.</p>.<p>Nearly 50,000 people, a majority of them Muslims, belonging to over 4,000 families reside on the disputed land.</p>.<p>The top court fixed February 7 as the next date of hearing in the case.</p>