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Tamil Nadu News Papers

parks lined up for Madhavaram

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The Hindu 10.07.2009

parks lined up for Madhavaram

K. Lakshmi

— Photo: S.Thanthoni

SHAPING UP: Construction of the compound wall for the upcoming park in Teachers’ Colony, Kolathur, is progressing.

CHENNAI: Many areas in Madhavaram will get a lung space soon with the local body developing eight parks on lands that were locked in litigation for several years.

One of the localities that will get a park is Teachers Colony at Kolathur. With a park being developed in 4th Layout, residents and children need not travel up to Anna Nagar, says G. Selvam, Federation of Welfare Associations president.

Though the area was developed in the 1980s, residents did not have recreational facilities. There have been several chain-snatching incidents, many of the victims being morning walkers. In the absence of a park the residents had to walk on roads.

A Madhavaram Municipality official says the 8,000-sq.ft park in Teachers Colony will be developed at a cost of Rs.10 lakh. “We expect to inaugurate the park by this month-end. It will have walkers’ track, tennis court and play area for children.”

Nearly Rs.1 crore has been allocated to create parks in eight localities, including Assisi Nagar, Secretariat Colony, Vinayagapuram and Ring Road Housing Sector.

N. Anandan, president of the Teachers’ Colony Residents’ Welfare Association, says blacktopping of roads and construction of stormwater drains are among long-pending demands of the residents.

They also want the bus stand in the area to be developed.

Stormwater drain

According to the official, the local body has taken measures to provide a stormwater drain network in five wards covering the localities. Culverts will be constructed along Red Hills Road at Vinayagapuram, which was heavily flooded during the last monsoon. A library is proposed to be constructed in Third Layout of Teachers’ Colony. Some of the badly damaged roads such as Fourth Main Road, Gangaiamman Koil Street and Netaji Street will soon be re-laid.

Last Updated on Friday, 10 July 2009 10:28
 

Projects worth Rs 1,500 cr get govt nod

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Source: The New Indian Express Date : 09.07.2009

Projects worth Rs 1,500 cr get govt nod


CHENNAI: Tamil Nadu government gave administrative sanction to the Chennai Corporation’s several projects worth Rs 1,500 crore, to be carried out under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM), Mayor M Subramanian said.

Speaking to Express at Ripon Building here the Mayor said, “Few days ago, the government gave its accent to the projects, which include ambitious Chennai macro and micro drain project (Rs 1447 crore), Ganeshapuram Railway subway (Rs 30 crore), flyover at Mint Junction (Rs 23 crore), modernisation of Communicable Diseases Hospital (CDH), Tondiarpet (Rs 13 crore) and restoration works at Ripon Building and Victoria Public Hall.”

These projects were on policy stages till now and the government’s sanction would help to the Chennai Corporation to go ahead with swift implementation, the Mayor added.

While the Centre will grant 35 per cent of funding for these projects, the state’s component is 15 percent and the remaining cost would be borne by the civic body itself.

Under the ambitious Chennai macro and micro drain project, the civic body along with the Public Works Department has plans for connecting Buckingham Canal, Otteri Nullah, Cooum River and Adyar River to facilitate free flow of surplus rainwater.

Last Updated on Thursday, 09 July 2009 12:17
 

Children labour for drinking water too

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Source: Deccan Chronicle Date : 09.07.2009

Children labour for drinking water too

Chennai, July 8: Step out of your home and the crowd of images of child labour in manifest forms hit you hard, whether you are in a city or a village, even as you continue to nurse Dr Abdul Kalam’s dream of India emerging as a super power in 2020.

Shotu, barely ten and peddling pani-poori outside an IT park in Guindy, is one such among the millions not only denied the joy of childhood but also exposed often to dangerous vocations to stave off hunger. This kid from Orissa has been brought by an agent paying his family a tiny sum last year. There are quite a few younger than Shotu in his shanty of child labourers at Ambal Nagar.

“Our ‘owner’ has taught us a few Tamil words to be able to sell our wares, nothing more. I get Rs 800 a month as salary, which is sent to my parents directly. I get two meals a day,” Shotu told this newspaper. When he pleaded for a chance to speak to his mother over phone, the boss shooed him away saying that the cost of the call would exceed his salary.

“Child labour is rampant everywhere, city or village,” says a senior officer at an international child welfare outfit, who did not want to be named. “There is misconception that child labour only refers to kids in factories. What about the children employed as servants in homes or kids used by their families to roll beedis in Vellore or carpet-weaving in Kashmir?” In many cases, children are forced to work after their school hours.

Not all times does a child slog for money. In Salem, little girls must pick jasmine flowers in exchange for a pot of drinking water. “These girls are employed because they have slim and tender fingers; besides, the job is made easier as they are just as tall as the jasmine bushes,” says Prof R. Chandra, a child rights activist. In fact, large tracts of paddy fields have been converted to floriculture since it’s cheaper to employ kids to pick flowers than have adults for rice cultivation, she adds.

When contacted, a senior official of the state labor department first said that the Madurai blaze did not have child victims but later modified his stand. “We are verifying if that factory had employed children,” he said, pleading inability to explain any further “because the Assembly is in session”.

 


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