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17 land, water conservation units bound for Bundelkhand

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Indian Express   03.06.2010

17 land, water conservation units bound for Bundelkhand

Tarannum Manjul Tags : bundelkhand land, water conservation units, lucknow Posted: Thu Jun 03 2010, 01:19 hrs

Land, water conservation

A regular sight in Bundelkhand: Women and children carry water from far-flung areas. EXPRESS ARCHIVE
 Lucknow:  The state government’s move to provide relief to drought-prone Bundelkhand region may see a dozen other districts in Uttar Pradesh deprived of water and land conservation projects. As a part of the implementation of the Centre’s Bundelkhand package, the Department of Land Development and Water Resources (DLDWR) will shift as many as 17 land and water conservation units from over a dozen districts here to Bundelkhand.

Incidentally, the department’s move to meet “urgent need in drought-affected Bundelkhand” will see units being shifted from districts, which too had been identified as drought-prone in the past.

The Rs 4506-crore Bundelkhand package from the Centre lays stress primarily on land and water conservation projects. The DLDWR, which has over 15 projects worth Rs 42 crore in the package, has given orders for the 17 units to be shifted from 12 districts in central, eastern and western UP. The units will be shifted to Bundelkhand by July this year and will start functioning with immediate effect.

These include 12 soil conservation and reclamation units under the Ramganga Command Pariyojna and five under the Sharda Sahayak Samadesh Pariyojna. Specialised units working under Centrally funded projects like the Drought Prone Area Programme (DPAP) and the Integrated Wasteland Development Programme (IWDP) are also in the list of those being shifted.

Functioning under the Ramganga Command Pariyojna and the Sharda Sahayak Samadesh Pariyojna, these units work primarily for land conservation and soil reclamation in drought-prone areas or also those that have been declared as wasteland. Providing irrigation through different methods like drip irrigation and canal channel irrigation, these projects treat land to enhance agriculture prospects. Under both these projects, running since 1989, so far, over 13.44 lakh hectares of land has been treated. 

The units to be shifted include the soil conservation unit Phase 1 at Behraich, which will be shifted to Jhansi, the DPAP unit at Behraich and the Naini Unit in Allahabad district to be shifted to Chitrakoot, besides the units at Azamgarh, Sikandrabad (Bulandshahr), Khair (Aligarh) and Khurja (Aligarh) to be shifted to Mahoba. Tthe units at Dibai (Bulandshahr), Nazibabad (Bijnore) and Hapur will be shifted to Hamirpur, those at Karchana (Allahabad) and Sonebhadra will be shifted to Banda while the IWDP unit at Aurraiya, DPAP at Sidhauli (Sitapur) and unit at Mirzapur will be shifted to Jalaun. The IWDP unit at Jaunpur and single unit at Atrauli (Aligarh) will be shifted to Lalitpur.

Of these, the units at Azamgarh, Khair, Sonebhadra, Aurraiyya, Mirzapur and Jaunpur were set up five years ago after these districts had been listed as drought prone.

DLDWR director Heeralal Pasi said the units are being shifted because there is more demand for such units in Bundelkhand. “We do not want to waste any time in setting up new units as they require specialised staff and lots of investment. We already have over two dozen units functioning all over the state, of which we are shifting 17.”

Asked what will happen to projects already running in these units, Pasi added: “Our focus is on Bundelkhand as the Centre’s package is for this region only. We will see what can be done in other districts.”

Another official with the department added: “The Central government gives funds for soil and land conservation projects in drought-prone areas and also to reclaim soil in wasteland area. The units were set up in these districts because they had shown urgent need. While seven of these units were functional, the others were in poor state.” The old units are being shifted to Bundelkhand citing “immediate relief measure and urgent need” as the reason, said the official, adding the department does not have any plans to set up new units in the affected districts. “This means work comes to a standstill here since the entire staff will also be shifted to the new sites. No one knows what will be the fate of projects which are underway (in the 12 districts of UP),” added the official.

Last Updated on Thursday, 03 June 2010 10:27