Electricity lights up lives of Jharkhand villagers

Koderma (Jharkhand), May 21 (ANI): Farmers in Jharkhand’s Koderma district are benefiting from the recent electrification of their villages.

40 villages in Chandwara subdivision of Koderma have been electrified under the Rajiv Gandhi Rural Electrification Scheme.

The villagers are happy that darkness ends, the electricity lighting up their homes.

The biggest benefit has been to farming. The farmers can now use power-generated water pumps to irrigate their lands during dry summers.

“Our village got electricity in November 2008. Electrification of the village has really helped us. Our children can now study. It has also facilitated farming. We can use fans, watch television and charge our mobile phones. Moreover when there was no electricity, we were forced to live in the dark. But now things have changed,” said Rambriksha Ram, a farmer.

The final stage of the project is underway. The project is expected to be completed within a month.

“This is in the final stage. It will be completed within a month. It has a capacity of 33/11 KB. 40 villages will get electricity from this plant,” said Mohammed Hasib, Site Supervisor, Koderma Power Sub Station.

The Rajiv Gandhi Rural Electrification Scheme named after former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was started by the government to facilitate availability of electricity for accelerated growth and enrichment of quality of life of rural population. By Girija Shankar Ojha (ANI)

Bhopal civic authorities take police help for water distribution

Bhopal, May 20 (ANI): To ensure a hassle-free water distribution in Bhopal, the civic authorities here are taking help of police personnel nowadays.

Earlier, the residents used to quarrel while fetching water, be it at the public tap or from the water tanker. Often these brawls for a bucket of water had turned bloody. With police presence, such incidents have become a thing of the past.

Around 225 police personnel are at the disposal of the water supply wing of the Bhopal Municipal Corporation. They are expected to escort the water tankers doing the rounds in various colonies to supply water.

“There are around 225 police personnel deployed all over the city, who escort the water tankers to ensure that no fight takes place and people do not waste water. We ensure that the locals form a queue and fetch water,” said Raja Ram Vishwakarma, a police official in Bhopal.

According to Hasib Ansari, in-charge Water Supply Wing of Bhopal Municipal Corporation, dispute over water distribution among civilians had become a tricky affair as such the officials sought assistance of the police.

He also mentioned that the presence of the police had worked wonders, infusing civic sense among the people.

“To solve the water crisis in Bhopal, we, as the civic authorities have taken the help of police force to distribute water peacefully and also to ensure that people do not face any kind of inconvenience,” noted Hasib Ansari, in-charge Water Supply Wing, Bhopal Municipal Corporation.

Residents, meanwhile, have appreciated the novel method of municiapal corporation officials, as they feel safe due to police besides there is no wastage of water.

“Earlier, we had trouble getting water. People used to fight like cats and dogs to fill water. But now ever since they (police) have come, things have improved a lot,” recalled Sahibabi, a resident of Bhopal.

Cases of water-related violence have been reported from a couple of places in Madhya Pradesh due to acute water scarcity. (ANI)

Al Qaeda militant behind 7/7 London attacks arrested in Pakistan

Peshawar, Jan 22 (ANI): Pakistani security forces have arrested seven militants during a raid on a militant hide-out in Peshawar, including a senior al Qaeda operative allegedly involved in the July 7 bomb attacks in London in 2005.

The arrested militant, Zabi ul-Taifi, was among seven fighters surrounded by Pakistani forces as they met in a house on the outskirts of Peshawar, The Telegraph reported.

“He’s been arrested in the northwestern city of Peshawar this morning. It was a well-planned raid carried out against a militant den. The men were caught off guard and captured without resistance,” a Pakistani security official said.

The raid was carried out at the house of a man called Bakshi Khan in the lawless suburb of Bara Qadeem on the edge of Peshawar.

A resident said he saw Westerners observing the operation from a car with tinted glass and local officials said American investigators were present at the time.

The men – a mixture of Afghans and Arabs – are thought to have been planning attacks on trucks taking supplies through the Khyber Pass.

It was not immediately clear what role ul-Taifi allegedly played in the London bombings and sources at the Scotland Yard said they had no knowledge of the suspect.

British and American intelligence officials say they have accounted for most of the senior al-Qaeda operatives allegedly involved in planning the July 7 attacks from Pakistan.

Abdul Hadi al-Iraqi, the man said to have planned the attacks, was captured in Turkey in 2006 as he was travelling to Iraq in a bid to improve relations with terrorists there.

His associate, Abu Munthir, who acted as a contact between terrorist groups and al-Qaeda’s senior command, was detained in Pakistan in 2004.

The bomb-maker is said to be a man called abu Ubaida al-Masri who is thought to have died from hepatitis C last year, the paper reported.

The July 7 bombers – Mohammed Sidique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer and Hasib Hussain from Leeds along with Jermaine Lindsay from Huddersfield – killed 52 people on three tube trains and bus and injured more than 700 when they blew themselves up four years ago. (ANI)