Annadammula: Anubandham 2021
Contact the Project Officer (Integrated Tribal Development Agency - ITDA) of your district. Keep your acknowledgement receipt handy. Disclaimer: While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information regarding Annadammula Anubandham for the year 2021, government schemes are subject to amendments. Readers are advised to consult the official Telangana State Portal or the local MRO for current updates.
In August 2021, under Annadammula Anubandham, the government identified his case. After three months of negotiation, the original plot was bought back for ₹3.8 lakh. Ramu and his brother now cultivate paddy together. "We have not just regained land; we have regained our brotherhood," Ramu told local reporters. annadammula anubandham 2021
| Benefit Component | Details (2021) | | :--- | :--- | | | Up to ₹4,50,000 per family. | | Maximum Land Extent | 3 acres of dry land or 1.5 acres of wet land (irrigated). | | Legal Aid | Free legal assistance from the District Legal Services Authority to recover title deeds. | | Post-Purchase Support | A one-time grant of ₹10,000 for initial plowing and seeds. | | Joint Patta | Land registered in both brothers' names to ensure shared responsibility. | Impact and Success Stories from 2021 The year 2021 was a watershed moment for many families. Consider the example of Gundra Ramu from Cherla Mandal, Bhadradri district. His elder brother sold their 2-acre plot to a non-tribal farmer in 2010 after a failed cotton crop. For a decade, Ramu worked as a daily-wage laborer on the same land he once owned. Readers are advised to consult the official Telangana
The scheme primarily targets alienation to non-tribals. If sold to a tribal, the government may still intervene but with lower priority. Ramu and his brother now cultivate paddy together
No specific age limit, but he must be above 18 and legally capable of holding land.
For the tribal youth of Telangana, the scheme offered more than soil and survey numbers. It offered dignity—the right to stay in their ancestral villages without migrating to cities as bonded labor.


