Tuesday 26 April 2016

Addressing Drinking Water Crisis- Thumbe Dam Review

With the temperatures recording all time high and drought like situation in most part of the country it becomes increasingly important to be prudent about the resources and plan supply that can contain the resource and its usage in prudent manner.

The Visit to the Thumbe Dam along with Shri. J.R. Lobo (MLA Mangalore City South ) is important as it will get the corporation and the officials plan and gear up to ensure #Drinkingwater supply to the regions that are primarily dependent from the dam. On a normal day 160 MLD (million litres a day) of water is being pumped to the city from Thumbe dam. of which 40 MLD is consumed by the industries. As a measure water supply to the industries would be marginalized and water for drinking would be prioritized., as a standby measure 60 water tankers have been inducted to supply water to surrounding areas where there is scarcity of water.


With the existing storage expected to last for only 10 days. The decision post review meeting was to lift water from other sources such as Wells an tanks. Overall it’s a collective effort and the MLA has the approval from the State Urban Development Ministry to exercise veto power to take emergency decisions in case of urgency relating to water supply. It included taking decisions on drilling borewells or energising the existing ones.

Thursday 21 April 2016

Gramoday Se Bharat Uday - Launched in Udupi.

 It is important to give more publicity to the programmes formulated for the welfare of people in rural areas.





















For success of any such initiative is in giving more publicity to the programmes formulated by the government for the welfare of people in rural areas. Many a time people in the rural areas were unaware of the projects and schemes which were targeted at them.

A large number of people in the State and the country still lived in the rural areas. It was essential that the administrative machinery reached them and listened to their problems and solved them. It was also necessary to create confidence among the farmers with the regard to their future in agriculture. To make the government programmes easily understandable, street plays, folk songs, legal awareness camps and sports programmes would be conducted during the Gramoday campaign.

The campaign would also make use of Gram Sabhas, Mahila Gram Sabhas, children’s Gram Sabhas and health camps to disseminate information.




Wednesday 20 April 2016

Video 2

KAUP TMC Election Campaign 1

Kaup TMC Election Manifesto Snapshot

The future of Kaup is in the hands of the people of Kaup., they have the big task of ensuring that Kapu witnesses overall development which is envisioned and few of those projects have already been implemented. i would like to share with you few of the project snapshots so that people know its not in words but in action we believe.







Tuesday 19 April 2016

Karnataka Development Programme (KDP)

Hamlets in 22 GPs in Udupi dist. getting water through tankers

Vinay Kumar Sorake (centre), Urban Development Minister, chairing the tri-monthly Karnataka Development Programme (KDP) meeting in Udupi on Monday.A sum of Rs. 1.2 crore released to tackle water problem in urban areas: Sorake

Vinay Kumar Sorake, Urban Development Minister, said on Monday that all efforts were being made to supply drinking water in areas facing water scarcity in Udupi district.

Addressing presspersons after the tri-monthly Karnataka Development Programme (KDP) meeting here, Mr. Sorake said that water through tankers was being supplied to hamlets in 22 gram panchayats — 11 in Udupi, 10 in Kundapur taluk and one in Karkala taluk — hit by water scarcity in the district.

The following are the gram panchayats getting water supply through tankers: Hemmady, Gulvady, Yedthare, Koteshwar, Haklady, Paduvari, Belve, Karkunje, Kirimanjeshwara, Byndoor (Kundapur taluk), Perdoor, Ambalpady, Katapady, Harady, Uppoor, Kallianpur, Karje, Kadekar, Majur, Kokkarne and Bairampalli (Udupi taluk) and Shivapura (Karkala taluk).

Both temporary and permanent measures were being taken to solve the drinking water problem. Nearly 95 per cent of the permanent works had been completed. In some places, only power connection had to be given to these projects. Some drinking water projects would be taken up under the Multi Village Scheme.

A committee under the Chief Executive Officer of the Zilla Panchayat would be monitoring the drinking water situation in the rural areas. A sum of Rs. 1.2 crore had been released to tackle water problem in urban areas of the district.

As far as sand extraction was concerned, five tenders had been floated for sand extraction in sand blocks in the non-Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) areas of the district. As many as 30 sand bars had been identified in the CRZ areas. Sand extraction was expected to begin on Wednesday.

There was a delay of a couple of months in clearing sand extraction proposals in the district as some clearances from the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests were awaited. “We have urged the State government to allow the sand extracted in the district to be used for development works here,” he said.

Under the Swachch Bharat Abhiyan, over 5,000 toilets had been constructed in the district at a cost of Rs. 7.48 crore. It had also been decided to provide Solid Waste Management Plants to 19 gram panchayats in the district to help in garbage disposal.

Under the Gram Vikas Yojane, five selected villages in every Assembly constituency in the district had been given Rs. 26 lakh each for development works. As many as 120 houses had been sanctioned for the district under the Matsyashraya scheme, Mr. Sorake said.
Priyanka Mary Francis, Chief Executive Officer of the Zilla Panchayat, was present.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/hamlets-in-22-gps-in-udupi-dist-getting-water-through-tankers/article8492307.ece

Thursday 14 April 2016

Remembering Dr Bhimrao Ambedkar and his lifelong struggle against the caste system

Remembering Dr Bhimrao Ambedkar and his lifelong struggle against the caste system

Sixty years since Dr Ambedkar, caste continues to remain a part of India’s social reality. May it be the discrimination that members of socially-backward castes undergo, or the subtler issues of matchmaking during marriages, the question of caste continues to haunt our society. Dr Ambedkar’s life and legacy, however, remains an inspiration for many who believe that caste hierarchy should cease to exist, and formation of an equal society is the way forward.
Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar (1891-1956) was born into a Mahar (‘Untouchable’/ Dalit) family. His father served in the British Indian Army at the Mhow cantonment in the Central Provinces (now in Madhya Pradesh). Unlike most children of his caste, young Bhim attended school. However, he and his Dalit friends were not allowed to sit inside the class. Teachers would not touch their notebooks. When they pleaded to drink water, the school peon (who belonged to the upper caste) poured water from a height for them to drink. On days the peon was unavailable, young Bhim and his friends had to spend the day without water.
Due to his deep interest in learning, Bhim went on to become the first Dalit to be enrolled into the prestigious Elphinstone High School in Bombay. He later won the Baroda State Scholarship for three years and finished his postgraduate education from Columbia University in New York. He passed his M.A. exam in June 1915 and continued his research. In his thesis on Castes in India (1916) presented at the Columbia University, he wrote –

“The caste problem is a vast one, both theoretically and practically. Practically, it is an institution that portends tremendous consequences. It is a local problem, but one capable of much wider mischief, for as long as caste in India does exist, Hindus will hardly intermarry or have any social intercourse with outsiders; and if Hindus migrate to other regions on earth, Indian caste would become a world problem.”
After completing three important theses that dealt with Indian society, economics, and history, Dr Ambedkar enrolled at the London School of Economics where he started working on a doctoral thesis. He stayed in London for the next four years and finished two doctorates. He was conferred with two more honorary doctorate degrees much later in the fifties.
After returning to India in 1924, Dr Ambedkar decided to launch an active movement against untouchability. In 1924, he founded the Bahishkrut Hitkaraini Sabha, aimed at uprooting caste system in India. The organisation ran free schools and libraries for all age groups. Dr Ambedkar took the grievances of the Dalits to court, and brought them justice.
Over the following years, Dr Ambedkar organised marches demanding Dalit’s rights to drinking water from public resources, and their right to enter temples. Despite severe attacks from the upper-caste Hindu men, Dr Ambedkar walked with fellow Dalits into public tanks and reservoirs and drank from its water.
In a conference in late 1927, Dr Ambedkar publicly condemned the Manusmriti for justifying caste discrimination and untouchability. On December 25, 1927, Dr Ambedkar led thousands of Dalits and burnt copies of the text.
Dr Ambedkar continued to ferociously protest the caste system. In 1935, at a conference at Nasik, he asked Dalits to convert to a religion where there is no hierarchy. In his undelivered speech titled Annihilation of Caste (1936), Dr Ambedkar claimed that political reform without social reform is a farce. He sought social equality and believed that political freedom from the British will automatically follow. He also claimed that caste is not a division of labour, but a division of labourers. He called the idea of racial purity absurd, and argued that inter-caste dining and inter-caste marriages are not sufficient to annihilate the caste system. “The real method of breaking up the Caste System was not to bring about inter-caste dinners and inter-caste marriages but to destroy the religious notions on which Caste was founded,” he wrote.
Mahatma Gandhi, unlike Dr Ambedkar, was a believer of the Varna System. He accepted untouchability as a serious problem, and advocated for Dalits to gain acceptance as the fifth caste. In a newspaper article titled Dr Ambedkar & Caste (1933), Gandhi wrote –
“The present joint fight is restricted to the removal of untouchability, and I would invite Dr Ambedkar and those who think with him to throw themselves, heart and soul, into the campaign against the monster of untouchability. It is highly likely that at the end of it we shall all find that there is nothing to fight against in Varnashram. If, however, Varnashram even then looks an ugly thing, the whole of Hindu Society will fight it.”
In 1937, when the British government agreed to hold elections on the provincial level, Dr Ambedkar’s Independent Labor Party won in the Bombay province with a thumping majority. Dr Ambedkar led many social, labour, and agricultural reforms in the region in the years that followed.

Post-independence, Dr Ambedkar was invited by Congress to serve as the nation’s first Law Minister, which he accepted. He was soon appointed the Chairman of the Drafting Committee formed to write India’s new Constitution. Article 11 of the Constitution abolished untouchability in every form. Granville Austin in his famous book The Indian Constitution: Cornerstone of a Nation (1964) described the Constitution of India as one of the most progressive and revolutionary political documents of its time.

During the fifties, Dr Ambedkar drifted away from politics. His writings at this stage seem to be addressing the moral void Mahatma’s assassination had created in the Indian politics. A believer of non-violence, satyagraha, and dhamma, Dr Ambedkar was deeply moved by the ideas of Buddhism. He travelled to Sri Lanka and Rangoon to attend conferences of the World Fellowship of Buddhists. He finished his final book The Buddha and His Dhamma(1956), which was published posthumously. As promised, he converted to Buddhism after writing the book.

Dr Ambedkar was a reformer whose legacy and relevance continues to grow. His message of social equality continues to reverberate and resonate with passing time. In his last but incomplete essay, The Buddha or Karl Marx, Dr Ambedkar reiterated his belief in the slogan of the French Revolution and claimed that equality will be of no value without fraternity or liberty. His message, although approached differently, was a repetition to what he had written 20 years ago in The Annihilation of Caste (1936) –

“Political tyranny is nothing compared to the social tyranny and a reformer who defies society is a more courageous man than a politician who defies Government.”

Credit:
Article by : SOURAV ROY 
http://social.yourstory.com/2016/04/bhimrao-ambedkar/