Just 10 minutes from Bengaluru Airport, Ozone Urbana was launched with grand promises of luxury living and top-tier amenities. Yet, over a decade later, the project remains incomplete, leaving hundreds of homebuyers—many of them elderly—struggling for justice.

Despite years of appeals to the Karnataka Real Estate Regulatory Authority (KRERA), frustrated buyers have now withdrawn all their complaints, citing the body’s failure to enforce its own rulings. Disillusioned, many are now turning to the Karnataka High Court for relief.

For senior citizens like Dipak Chaudhary, 78, who invested ₹1 crore in a promised 2019 handover, the battle has been exhausting. With his health deteriorating due to Parkinson’s, his wife is now leading the legal fight. “We never wanted to depend on our children. Now, we’re forced to buy another home elsewhere,” she said.

Buyers who secured KRERA compensation orders report that enforcement has been nonexistent. Some have relocated, while others have filed complaints with the National Human Rights Commission and the police. Legal experts argue that KRERA needs judicial members and stricter enforcement powers to be effective.

With mounting losses and fading hope, homebuyers demand urgent action to hold developers accountable and prevent future real estate crises. The fight for justice continues.