DARBHANGA, Feb. 1 -- Bihar deputy chief minister and revenue and land reforms minister Vijay Kumar Sinha on Saturday said that long-pending problems in land administration were being addressed through time-bound, technology-driven reforms, asserting that while the "disease is old, the treatment has begun." Addressing a "Jan Kalyan Samvad" at the Laheriasarai auditorium-cum-art gallery, Sinha said that the programme was not a platform for speeches but a mechanism to hear people's grievances and ensure solutions. He said divisional- and district-level public dialogues were launched within the first 100 days of assuming office to obtain ground-level feedback, with a target to show visible improvement by March. The campaign, which began in Patna on December 12, has already covered Lakhisarai, Muzaffarpur, Purnia, Saharsa, Bhagalpur and Gaya before reaching Darbhanga. Sinha announced strict timelines for key services: correction of minor errors such as name-related discrepancies within 15 working days, technical errors within 35 days and complex cases within 75 days. Uncontested land mutation will now be completed in 14 days, while undisputed land measurement will take seven days and disputed cases 11 days, with reports uploaded within 14 days. He said that the CSC centres have been set up in every circle office to provide online services at notified rates. Police have been barred from intervening in land disputes, which will be handled strictly through revenue and judicial processes, with action promised against violators. An "Operation Land Possession" drive has also been launched to ensure actual possession for SC/ST land allottees. Among other measures, Sinha highlighted the family partition portal enabling joint mutation of all stakeholders, mandatory online issuance of certified copies from January 1, FIRs against fake documents, integration of a toll-free call centre with the grievance portal, and full digitisation of revenue courts, allowing citizens to represent themselves without mandatory legal counsel....