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Few takers for houses near D-5, Nithari holds up

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Arpit Parashar

Posted: Feb 14, 2009 at 0215 hrs IST

NOIDA A strange silence prevailed near D-5 in Noida’s Sector 31 in the run-up to Friday’s pronouncement of sentence by the special CBI court, broken only by stray comments by police and media personnel. The streets were also near-empty in adjoining Nithari village.

Suddenly, a boy bolted across, yelling “mil gayi, mil gayi” (got it, got it). News of the capital punishment to Moninder Singh Pandher and Surinder Koli had flashed on television screens by then.

And, almost as suddenly, the streets got busy. A neighbour of Pandher’s, who refused to give her name, said, “It has been bad for us since December 2006 (when skeletons were dug out from a drain outside Pandher’s house). People refuse to come to our house.”

She claimed that rents in the sector have gone down rapidly, and in fact many owners have left their houses. “People do not take up accommodation on rent in this sector because of the name Nithari attached to it,” she said.

Fellow Sector-31 resident Neeta Jain said, “Many people left after that incident, and getting tenants have been difficult since.”

Just metres across the street is property dealer Praveen Kasana’s shop/office — in Nithari village. But neither the rents nor takers have gone down for accommodation in and around the village, he claimed. The upscale Sector 31, though, is a different story. Near ground zero, “people refuse to even look at the house (D-5),” Kasana said.

The rentals have suffered as a result. “Rent for a first-floor or ground-floor house used to be Rs 10,000 till a couple of years ago,” Kasana said. “But since then the response has been bad though many have drastically slashed rents.”

Some 30 or 40 houses are vacant in the sector, he said.

The village area, however, has seen the rates for one-room accommodation and shops remain steady, he said. In fact, there are signs of new constructions in the village, and a villager said spaces are usually rented out within weeks, if not days, of construction.

Bunty Pandey, who works for Kasana and stays in the village, said, “People from Bihar, UP, Bengal and other states come here looking for accommodation.”

The average rent has gone up of late, Pandey said and reasoned it on the demand-supply factor: “When people keep pouring in, the villagers will obviously raise the rent.”

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