Dial auto service launched in Chandigarh

Chandigarh, Sept 17 (ANI): In a bid to provide quick, hassle free and reasonably charged mode of transportation, a dial-an-auto service equipped with GPS navigation system has been launched for the first time in Chandigarh.

The neat and clean pink coloured motor rickshaws, known as Tuk Tuk, are changing the way people travel in the city.

The fleet of 10 dial-an-auto-rickshaw, which is only a phone call away, also boasts of two lady drivers, the first in Chandigarh.

Women passengers, who feel safer traveling with lady drivers, are appreciating their services.

“Chandigarh is one city where people are safe anyway. We have been told we are safe with the service,” said Alka Thapar, a lady auto driver.

One has to just dial 4242424 for calling an auto rickshaw to get it at your doorstep.

The autos are equipped with tamper proof fare meters to assure passengers of not being overcharged.

“We maintain our call center. Whenever any individual requires an auto he rings up and the call centre picks up the call. They record the call and then convey to the driver by selecting the vehicle nearby to pick up the customer. That’s the procedure and customer has to pay from the pick up point to the drive point only,” said VS Dhillon, Managing Director of the Tuk Tuk Auto Rickshaw Company.

The service aims at providing a quick, reliable and safe journey to people who can relax and sit back without the fear of getting fleeced by drivers.

“I’m using it for the first time It’s reasonably priced and I’m really liking it,” says Charanjit, a customer.

The new service is a welcome change for commuters. With the new service in place, passengers can hope for a change in the attitude of traditional auto drivers who are often accused of fleecing customers. By Sunil Sharma (ANI)

INLD releases first list of candidates for Haryana poll

Chandigarh, Sep 4 (ANI): The Indian National Lok Dal (INLD) released its first list of 42 candidates, for the upcoming Haryana Assembly polls here on Friday.

Party president and former Chief Minister Om Parkash Chautala said the list, includes five women candidates.

Chautala is contesting from Uchana Kalan constituency in Jind District.

Former state minister Ashok Arora has been fielded from Thanesar in Kurukshetra district.

The INLD is fielding 10 youths in the polls fray. Almost all the senior leaders of the party managed to get the ticket in the first list only.

The party’s women candidates includes Kanta Devi from Jhajjar, Swatantar Bala Chaudhary from Fatehabad, Sheela Bhyana from Barwala, Seema Devi from Uklana and Shashibala Tewatia from Pirthala.

The young faces figured in the list are Pradeep Chaudhary from Kalka, Dilbagh Singh from Yamunanagar, Narinder Sangwan from Gharaunda, Ashok Kashyap from Indri, Atul Malik from Gohana, Charanjit Singh from Kalanwali and Satish Nandal from Garhi Sampla Kiloi.(ANI)

The kicking buffalo and other rustic tales

IT HAS been a challenging afternoon at the vet’s. The patient is obstinate.

Dr Ranvir Prasad (26) is prodding the genitals of a buffalo with a rusted 10-year-old castrator, and the animal has already kicked him once from under the rickety, box-like enclosure where farm animals are tied during examinations. “The Punjab government expects its White Revolution to be managed by doctors with rusted instruments,” says Prasad, with a grimace, using the phrase often used to describe the dairy boom.

“Punjab produces 51.33 million tonnes of milk every year and #8230; 10 per cent of the country’s total production,” says Prasad, who works in Deon village in Bhatinda district, 300 kilometres west of the state capital of Chandigarh. “And yet this is all we get – outdated tools and medicines past their expiry date.

” The two-room veterinary hospital is a snapshot of a larger rot setting in across the state’s countryside, perceived in the rest of the country as the kingdom of the farmer and milk. In some ways, it is.

Agriculture and livestock are the heart of Punjab’s economy – 60 per cent of the state’s population of 2.44 crore are either farmers, dairy farmers or livestock breeders. “But the government’s policies are anti-people and anti-animal,” says the vet, dusting off his hands.

Irrigation and farmer subsidies are still a priority area in India’s granary, 40 years after the Green Revolution and White Revolution made agriculture and dairy farming profitable again. But medical care for the animals behind the turnaround remains rudimentary at best – although millions of lives are connected to livestock.

There are 90 million heads of livestock in Punjab, serviced by just 1,500 veterinary hospitals and 2,500 dispensaries – that’s one facility per 22,500 animals. Over 50 per cent of the 680 veterinary positions in the state are vacant.

And most of the animal hospitals in the state are ill-equipped. “Look around you,” says Prasad, gesturing at the 800-square-foot facility.

“Is this a hospital?” There is no X-ray machine. In three years, Prasad says he has received supplies twice – both were small batches of antibiotics.

He is the only government vet for Deon’s 1,500 cows, 1,000 buffaloes and myriad herds of goats and sheep. The result: Infertility, low milk yield and death.

There is an average of two cattle deaths daily in Deon – many of them caused by quacks who have rushed in to fill the gap left by the government. The only college of veterinary science sees about 120 graduate every year.

Over 50 per cent flee the state, most seeking employment abroad. In Bhatinda city, Prasad’s batchmates are on one of their periodic protests.

“My clinic is in the heart of Bhatinda city, but I last got supplies eight months ago,” says Dr Charanjit Sarangal (31). “Every election season sees more promises, but never any action.

” In 2006, says Sarangal, Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Badal, then in the Opposition, met state vets during a fast unto death and promised all would be well when they returned to power. “The Akali Dal returned to power in 2007, but that promise has not been kept,” says Sarangal.

“Utility bills for the hospitals are not paid. So many doctors have given up and now have side-businesses to supplement their income.

” Back at Deon, Prasad lists his monthly expenses: “Out of Rs 26,000 per month, I give Rs 5,000 to the pharmacist, Rs 2,260 to the Class IV staff and spend about Rs 1,000 on water and electricity bills. The government has not paid these dues in years.

” What he’s left with is barely two-thirds of his salary. So he’s become a part-time insurance agent.

Badal woos Tohra loyalists

On the fifth death anniversary of former SGPC chief Gurcharan Singh Tohra today, the SAD leadership tried to woo his loyalists.

Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal called upon Akalis to strengthen the panth for Tohra’s sake. He said Jathedar Tohra, who had remained the SGPC chief for 27 years and was at the centrestage of Akali politics for five decades, could never think of joining hands with the Congress. He said a few followers of Tohra had joined the Congress recently.

He added the victory of the SAD in Lok Sabha polls would be a true tribute to the late leader.

“Jathedar Tohra had once said that he could never support the Congress, even in his death,” asserted Badal. “They have been killers of Sikhs and now by granting tickets to Sajjan Kumar and Jagdish Tytler, the Congress has confirmed its anti-Sikh stand,” he said.

Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal also exhorted the public to trounce the Congress in the polls.

Others who addressed the gathering included SAD’s Lok Sabha candidates Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa (Sangrur), Charanjit Singh Atwal (Fatehgarh Sahib) and Prem Singh Chandumajra (Patiala). Tohra’s widow Joginder Kaur, daughter Kuldeep Kaur and son-in-law Harmail Tohra were present on the occasion.

Badal woos Tohra loyalists

On the fifth death anniversary of former SGPC chief Gurcharan Singh Tohra today, the SAD leadership tried to woo his loyalists.

Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal called upon Akalis to strengthen the panth for Tohra’s sake. He said Jathedar Tohra, who had remained the SGPC chief for 27 years and was at the centrestage of Akali politics for five decades, could never think of joining hands with the Congress. He said a few followers of Tohra had joined the Congress recently.

He added the victory of the SAD in Lok Sabha polls would be a true tribute to the late leader.

“Jathedar Tohra had once said that he could never support the Congress, even in his death,” asserted Badal. “They have been killers of Sikhs and now by granting tickets to Sajjan Kumar and Jagdish Tytler, the Congress has confirmed its anti-Sikh stand,” he said.

Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal also exhorted the public to trounce the Congress in the polls.

Others who addressed the gathering included SAD’s Lok Sabha candidates Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa (Sangrur), Charanjit Singh Atwal (Fatehgarh Sahib) and Prem Singh Chandumajra (Patiala). Tohra’s widow Joginder Kaur, daughter Kuldeep Kaur and son-in-law Harmail Tohra were present on the occasion.