Displaced Uttar Pradesh tribals demonstrate against Mayawati government

Sonbhadra (UP), Mar 19 (ANI): Displaced tribals Uttar Pradesh”s Sonbhadra district staged a demonstration on Thursday against the Bahujan Samaj Party-led state government, demanding adequate compensation.

The tribals say that they have not yet received the compensation promised by the state government, which took their land for setting up a thermal power plant.

“The government promised us jobs in lieu of our land along with the compensation. We were also promised that the basic civic amenities, such as roads, water supply, education etc. will be developed in our region, but nothing has been done so far. We are waiting for the jobs and the compensation,” said Jiya Ram, a tribal.

“We are looking for our self-esteem, land and jobs. We need our land back if the state government can”t give us compensation. At least we can till the land and survive.” said Munia, another tribal.

The tribals said that it is ironic that in spite of a thermal power plant being erected on their land, their district of Sonbhadra is still deprived of electricity.

The tribals are supported in their protest by the Congress party, which hopes to woo Dalit voters in time for state elections in 2012. (ANI)

Selja to inaugurate workshop on world class tourism infrastructure today

New Delhi, Aug 19 (ANI): Union Tourism Minister Kumari Selja will inaugurate a one-day workshop on World-Class Tourism Infrastructure here today.

The objective of the workshop is to develop world class tourism infrastructure in consultation with architects, the engineering organisations, tourism managers and consultants.

As a capacity building workshop, focused to sensitise the various stakeholders of the tourism industry towards the emerging trends in world class tourism, the objective is to initiate dialogue and debate, it will also be a curtain raiser to the emerging demands of world class tourism today.

The participants in the workshop would be, head of the engineering departments of the implementing agencies in States/UTs and the chief architect associated with implementation, officers from the Ministry of Tourism, Government of India and resources persons/experts/specialists from the INTACH, the ADB, the JBIC, the CPWD, the RITES, the NBCC, the HUDCO and the ITDC.

There would be four simultaneous technical sessions on: urban civic amenities; built heritage; climate responsive architecture (vernacular architecture) and urban landscape.(ANI)

Selja to inaugurate workshop on world class tourism infrastructure tomorrow

New Delhi, Aug 18 (ANI): Union Tourism Minister Kumari Selja will inaugurate a one-day workshop on World-Class Tourism Infrastructure here tomorrow.

The objective of the workshop is to develop world class tourism infrastructure in consultation with architects, the engineering organisations, tourism managers and consultants.

As a capacity building workshop, focused to sensitise the various stakeholders of the tourism industry towards the emerging trends in world class tourism, the objective is to initiate dialogue and debate, it will also be a curtain raiser to the emerging demands of world class tourism today.

The participants in the workshop would be, head of the engineering departments of the implementing agencies in States/UTs and the chief architect associated with implementation, officers from the Ministry of Tourism, Government of India and resources persons/experts/specialists from the INTACH, the ADB, the JBIC, the CPWD, the RITES, the NBCC, the HUDCO and the ITDC.

There would be four simultaneous technical sessions on: urban civic amenities; built heritage; climate responsive architecture (vernacular architecture) and urban landscape. (ANI)

Only 2 out of 30,000 NGOs working for “suffering” Pak refugees in Bangladesh

Karachi, July 4 (ANI): Only two out of 30,000 Bangladeshi non-governmental organisations are working for the welfare of the Pakistani refugees living in 66 camps in that country, it has been claimed.

Addressing a press conference here on Friday, Anwar Khan Akmal, President of a US based NGO, OBAT Helpers, said the stranded Pakistanis in Bangladesh were deprived of basic amenities like education, health, employment, clean drinking water, sewerage system etc.

“In July 2004, I travelled to Bangladesh from the US to review the living standard of the stranded Pakistanis there. When I reached a camp, children asked me not to enter. I was told that there was no bathroom for women at the camp and whenever they took a bath inside the camp, children would keep guard and stop men from entering there,” the Daily Times quoted, Akmal, as saying.

Pointing out that he spent his 1,800 dollars for the construction of bathrooms for women, Akmal said he also started working to provide them basic civic amenities in collaboration with Pakistan-origin Americans and native US citizens.

Elaborating the grievances of the stranded Pakistanis, he said the refugees have suffered since the separation of East Pakistan, and now their third generation is waiting to see what the future holds for them.

“A better tomorrow for them would not be possible without financial, social and political assistance,” he added.

Akmal said his organisation had established coaching centres for stranded Pakistanis in Dhaka, Rangpur and Memon Singh, and helped 1,390 people in setting up small businesses, while 27 other projects have also been launched for their economic improvement.

He urged the government and civil society organisations to come forward and help in bringing about social, economic and political improvement in the lives of the stranded Pakistanis. (ANI)

FICCI emphasizes need to revamp tourism; suggest a 13-point action program

Emphasizing that “Firming up a visa strategy is of utmost importance,” the industry body FICCI has said that in order to achieve the 10-million foreign tourists’ target prior to the 2010 Commonwealth Games, the Indian tourism sector needs to focus on an easy visa strategy, tourists’ security and infrastructural improvements.

Towards that end, the FICCI has come up with a 13-point action program for not only revamping Indian tourism sector, but also projecting India as a value-for-money and safe destination, by providing ample tourist-security measures including an active tourist police.

The document released by the FICCI also stressed the need to train the tourism department employees to check con artists and taxi drivers feigning to be tour guides. The industry body suggested: “Tour guides must have proper training, good language and a badge to identify them as approved tour guides.”

Moreover, recommending an increase in the number of hotels, the FICCI also emphasized on improvement of civic amenities by the way of the public-private partnership model. It urged the Urban Development Ministry to classify at least two model cities or tourist centres as part of a pilot project for boosting tourism and tourist-related aspects.

Listing some issues to be tackled urgently, the FICCI recommended renovation and modernization of airport infrastructure and provision of at least 50 international gateways.

Shortage of electricity provokes UP villagers to boycott polls

Banthara (Lucknow), Apr 13 (ANI): Peeved at shortage of electric power and other civic amenities, residents of Banthara, a village in Uttar Pradesh, have decided to boycott upcoming parliamentary polls.

They have also resolved not let any politician or party representatives enter their village.

Incidentally, Bantahra with a population of 3500, is located just 22 kilometres away from Lucknow, on the outskirts of a radar tracking station of the Indian Air Force.

Yet it has been facing severe shortage of electricity as a result of which, the residents are unable to draw water from their bore-wells.

As if to add to their woes, the water taps in the village are erratic.
Consequently, the villagers wished to express their ire and they have erected banners reading ‘No electricity-no vote’ on the main road leading to Banthara.

According to the residents, they anticipated that the Central parliamentarian and state legislator whom they elected would understand their plight and take up remedial measures.

However, their hopes happened to be a mirage, prompting the village en-masse to boycott the ensuing elections to the Lok Sabha.

“This time, we have decided, ‘no electricity-no vote’. Even though we are just 18-22 kilometres from the capital, we don’t get electricity for eight hours. In this situation, we are forced to boycott the elections. We are worse than interiors regions. If we don’t get electricity we are as good or bad as an interior isolated habitat,” said Brijesh Singh, a resident.

The villagers claim that they receive electricity for merely 90 minutes in a day, bringing to standstill almost all activities.

The traders complain of huge losses due to lack of electricity. The students say they can hardly study after dusk for want of light.

“The main problem is that the children can’t study. We can sleep using mosquito repellents or mosquito nets but studies of children suffer. There are very few water taps in the village and people have water pumps. The water problem is related to shortage of electricity. Rest development has taken place in our village,” added Yogendra Singh, another resident. By Kamna Hajela (ANI)

South has shifted ‘out’

Mason Ranjit Singh could not get medical attention for six hours after a dog bit him in the ankle last month. The nearest hospital – the government-run Safdarjung Hospital – lay almost at the other end of town from his home in Tughlakabad Village.

“The only private nursing home is too costly and a dispensary near Asola village never has any stock,” said Singh. Welcome to the post-delimitation South Delhi, no longer the posh vision that the name conjures up.

With a vast rural expanse covering half the city from Bijwasan and Palam in the west to Badarpur on the eastern skirt and the ‘farmhouse-land’ of the Chhattarpur-Mahipalpur-Merhrauli belt in the south, this is one constituency where the Nuclear Deal and economic slowdown are non-issues. Instead, good-old promises of civic amenities still strike a chord.

So, politicians are promising jobs, access to healthcare, higher/technical education, and permanent civic amenities to woo voters. Sangam Vihar is Delhi’s biggest unauthorised resettlement colony near Tughlakabad.

“Politicians come and talk about permanent residence certificates, ration cards and sewer lines for the houses and clean drinking water,” said Kailash Kumar, a trader at the Sangam Vihar main market. In the Gujjar farmer-dominated Chhattarpur, the educated younger generation wants jobs in the ‘city’.

“I need to learn English and get out of here. I cannot work at the farmhouse like my brother or as a labourer like my father,” said Subhash Gujjar, a 22-year-old Arts graduate working as an office help in a farmhouse.

Farmhouses here stand as little islands in the sea of shanties of migrant labourers and landless farmers, most of whom sold their plots before the property boom arrived. Some 20 km to the west, 60-year-old Rajpal Shehrawat in the Jat-belt of Palam village shares the same ambition, albeit for his grandsons.

“Our generation was fooled by promises of development. We are neither in a city nor in a proper village.

Now, for the younger lot, we want colleges and industries here. They need to learn English and work for big companies,” he said between puffs on his hookah.

Amidst the squalor, the posh residential colony of Kalkaji sticks out. A part of the old South Delhi constituency with neatly painted houses, tree-lined parking lots and guarded colony gates, this Punjabi dominated area has very different concerns.

“If all work is directed towards the rural belt, I’m afraid our area might get neglected,” said businessman and resident Haran Anand.

A party – sans politics – does its village proud

Hathchoya (Uttar Pradesh), April 10 (IANS) Fed up with the false assurances of politicians, this village decided to set up its own party to initiate development work. Within a year, Hathchoya boasts of schools, hand pumps, community centres and civic amenities.

The residents of this village in Muzaffarnagar district, some 350 km from state capital Lucknow, are proud of their very own Vikas Party.

‘After suffering the apathy of politicians, we set up a non-political outfit – Vikas Party – around a year ago for the all-round development of the village,’ its founder member Anil Sharma told IANS.

‘All local people have aligned themselves with the party and we no longer rely on legislators or MPs for the development of our village as we have already learnt how to progress without their assistance,’ added Sharma.

The Vikas Party undertakes work in the village through funds generated by residents. It represents about 15,000 people and has no political affiliations.

‘Residents contribute in their own way to the party. While some donate cash, others provide agriculture produce to generate money,’ said Sunil Kaushik, another member of the party.

‘Those who are economically weak offer their labour without charging anything.’

Villagers under the banner of the Vikas Party meet every month at a public place to devise strategies.

In the last one year, with the funds generated by locals, the Vikas Party has set up two primary schools and two community centres, installed five hand pumps, constructed metalled roads and dug up drains and public toilets for improving sanitation in the village.

‘We had been demanding all this for quite a long time from the politicians. But now we have made all the facilities available in our village by the dint of cooperation and hard work,’ said Tinai Paswan, a farmer in Hathchoya village.

Feedbacks are invited so that past schemes can be reviewed.

‘On the basis of inputs given by villagers in the monthly meets, it is decided which developmental programme will be undertaken. The particular scheme is only approved after general consensus,’ said Kaushik.

Bad roads: Villagers to boycott election

KOLKATA: Disappointed and angry over failed promises, about 542 villagers of Jalsuka, a small village under Ichhapore gram panchayat off the
Barasat-Nilgunge road in North 24-Parganas, have decided to boycott the forthcoming Lok Sabha election.

Villagers complained that with no basic civic amenities like proper roads, inadequate streetlights and poor quality of drinking water for years, they have no faith in political parties. The village falls under Barasat parliamentary constituency where Forward Bloc’s Sudin Chattopadhaya, Trinamool Congress’s Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar and BJP’s Bratin Sengupta are in the fray.

Just a few days ago, villagers held a meeting and decided to boycott the poll. “What is the use of casting our votes when our long-standing demands are not met? The condition of roads here has remained terrible for years. The gram panchayat authorities have never cared to look into the matter,” fumed a villager. “If the villagers boycott the polls, they are doing nothing wrong. I stand by them morally,” said Bishal Sarkar, a member of the North 24-Parganas district Congress committee

Don’t vote for a criminal, Sreedharan urges people

New Delhi, April 1 (IANS) Delhi Metro Rail Corporation chief E. Sreedharan Wednesday urged people to choose the ‘right political leaders’ and not vote a criminal to power.

In an appeal to the public in an open letter, Sreedharan said that constant news of corruption, lawlessness, poverty and inadequate civic amenities had driven Indians to a state of helpnessness and cynicism that nothing could be done to improve the situation.

He said that the solution was in the hands of the people of India and urged every voter to exercise his or her franchise after striving to ascertain the credentials of the candidates.

‘We may not have a satisfactory choice; but we shall do our best to ensure we don’t allow a candidate with criminal background to rule our nation,’ said Sreedharan, who is also president of Foundation for Restoration of National Values (FRNV), a civil society organisation.

He added that even after 61 years of Independence, democratic rights had not been understood and displayed satisfactorily and that ‘the time had come when this gap had to be filled’.