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Petition filed against Madurai Corporation

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The Hindu 11.11.2009

Petition filed against Madurai Corporation

Mohamed Imranullah S.

“Labourers were not paid salary arrears of over Rs.2 crore”

 


They are from Mahabubnagar district in Andhra 265 were employed in storm water drainage work


MADURAI: A public interest litigation petition has been filed in the Madras High Court Bench here alleging that around 265 labourers involved in the Madurai Corporation’s project of laying storm water drainage system in various parts of the city recently were not paid salary arrears of over Rs. 2 crore.

A Division Bench of Justices D. Murugesan and S. Nagamuthu on Tuesday directed the petitioner’s counsel A. Thirumurthy to submit by Thursday, the list of labourers, the number of days they had worked, the daily wage fixed for different category of employees and arrears to be paid to each of them.

The judges said that the Corporation as well as the contractor of the project would be given an opportunity to check the veracity of details provided by the labourers before passing any orders in the PIL petition. They also wanted the details of the payments that had been already made to the workers.

The Mahabubnagar District Palamoori Migrant Labour Union based in Andhra Pradesh had filed the petition.

Its affidavit read that Palamoor is the old name of Mahabubnagar district which was the “second most backward district” in the country. The poor residents of this area migrated to various places in search of work.

“These labourers eke out their livelihood through manual labour within Andhra Pradesh and other States and most of them belong to Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe communities… These labourers are accustomed to work in miserably inhuman conditions,” the president of the Union P. Narayanaswami said.

Around 265 such workers were employed in the storm water drainage work at Karpaga Nagar, B.B. Kulam, Avaniapuram, Arapalayam and Teppakulam areas here. The Union claimed that they were not paid salary arrears for nearly seven months between September 11, 2008 and May 30, 2009.

Stating that the Union had made many representations to the Collector, Corporation Commissioner and Labour Inspector in this regard, its president said: “It is quite unfortunate that the official respondents who are obliged to take immediate action on such a burning issue have turned a deaf ear for reasons best known to them.”

Counsel for the Municipal Corporation told the Bench that the construction work was handed over to a private contractor who was liable to pay the labourers. On the other hand, the contractor’s lawyer contended that he had nothing to do with the matter as the labourers were engaged by a sub-contractor.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 11 November 2009 01:04
 

Durban municipality to ink MoU with Corporation

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The Hindu 11.11.2009

Durban municipality to ink MoU with Corporation

Syed Muthahar Saqaf

For promoting links on various fronts between the two civic bodies

 


Corporation delegation expected to visit Durban after MoU “MoU will also pave the way for Tamils to re-establish links”


DURBAN: The Ethekwini Municipality, Durban, will sign a memorandum of understanding with Chennai Corporation for promoting links on various fronts between both local bodies.

The formalities had already been worked out and the MoU will be signed in Chennai in January, Councillor Logie Naidoo, Deputy Mayor of the Ethekwini Municipality, told The Hindu here recently. The MoU was aimed at promoting information technology industry, cultural, business and sports links.

Mr. Naidoo said he visited Chennai Corporation twice in the recent past, the last trip being in January this year, to finalise the MoU. He had also called on Deputy Chief Minister M.K. Stalin. A Chennai Corporation delegation is expected to visit Durban after the signing of the MoU, he said.

Mr. Naidoo, whose forefathers hailed from North Arcot district of Tamil Nadu, said a large number of labourers from Tamil Nadu had come down to South Africa to work in the cane farms in and around Durban in the 1860s. At present, fourth and fifth-generation Tamils residing here have lost their links with their roots in Tamil Nadu and are on the lookout for their relatives. However, they visit various places in India often on pilgrimage or as tourists.

The MoU will also pave the way for the Tamils residing in Durban to re-establish contacts with their relatives. Mr. Naidoo said he himself had planned to visit Tamil Nadu next year to search for his relatives with the help of the ship documents of his forefathers.

He said many IT companies and other firms from Tamil Nadu had set up branches in Durban. Chennai-based IT firm Ramco System is doing business here. Apollo Tyres has purchased Dunlop Tyres, a South African company. The Murugappa Group is also here, he said.

Tamil films and actors are popular in South Africa, particularly in Durban. It is the Tamil films which enabled Tamils here to continue to have their link with the Tamil language and culture. Many continue to speak in a little Tamil thanks to the Tamil movies. “There are many important and eye-catching locations in South Africa, particularly in and around Durban. I want the Tamil film industry to shoot movies here. Such a move will also enable the Tamils here to re-establish their links with their roots,” Mr. Naidoo said.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 11 November 2009 00:45
 

Chennai’s rains and drains

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The New Indian Express 10.11.2009

Chennai’s rains and drains



The oft-heard refrain in the armed forces runs thus: “God and the soldier all adore, in times of danger and not before. When danger is past and things are righted, God is forgotten and the old soldier slighted.” Citizens of Chennai can modify this and say: “Canals and drains all remember, in times of rains and not before. When rains are past and everything dries-up, canals get silted and drains clogged.” At present we are in the ‘times of rains’ and even its first burst has exposed the ‘silted canals and clogged drains’, throwing life out of gear. One wonders as to what is in store for the city during the remaining part of the monsoon.

Chennai city and its surroundings are very flat with contours ranging from 2m to 10m above Mean Sea Level with a few isolated hillocks in the southwest.

Chennai’s monsoons are characterized by clearly marked seasons with specific types of weather. The Northeast monsoon (October-December) is the main season when over 50 per cent of the annual rainfall happens.

Chennai’s terrain necessitates an effective storm water drainage (SWD) system and the Corporation of Chennai has a network covering a length of 855 km. Through this network, rainwater runoff gets drained into the 16 open canals maintained by the Corporation and reaches the sea via four waterways - Otteri Nullah, Buckingham Canal, Adyar and Cooum rivers – under the control of the State Public Works Department.

METROWATER discharges most of its sewage into these canals and waterways! Desilting of the drains is carried out twice a year and canals are desilted once in two years. Structural repairs are also carried out whenever necessary and more drains are constructed on a continuous basis. The corporation is in the midst of implementing a massive Rs 1,400 crore SWD project for which substantial funding will come from the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM).

Urban development in Chennai Metropolitan Area has drastically altered its land use pattern. Lands with vegetation have been converted into residential, commercial, industrial and other uses. Buildings, roads, streets and other paved surfaces that have sprung up thereof have reduced permeability of lands thereby increasing the runoff generated from the ‘developed’ lands.

Hence urban drainage systems are designed to carry storm waters that dispose of into major waterways as quickly as possible. Since the second half of the last century, the city has grown densely, not adhering to spatial planning principles, especially in the downstream reaches of the rivers in the city area, affecting the runoff pattern.

Most natural drains have been occupied and constructed upon. According to experts, further urbanisation, as envisaged in the Second Master Plan (SMP) along the south and southwest growth corridors would drastically increase flood peaks in the Adyar and Cooum rivers due to increase in impermeability of the surface and quick flow of storm waters.

SMP has laid down certain policies and strategies to combat floods in the CMA. The most important of them is to utilise flood waters to augment urban water supply through creation of additional storage capacity. Developing a cluster of open spaces to provide green environment would enable flood moderators during heavy monsoon.

Micro-drainage being the responsibility of the local bodies, it needs to be fully and effectively integrated with the macro-system. PWD is suggested as the nodal agency for holistic planning and maintenance of existing water bodies by preventing encroachments and implementation of macrodrainage systems.

The root cause for the floods is choking and blocking of natural drains and ‘infrastructure development’. Typical examples are the monstrosity called MRTS (Mass Rapid Transit System) that has killed Buckingham canal as a flood carrier and indiscriminate road laying and raising of road levels all over the city. The much-touted highspeed elevated corridors on the riverbanks and the ‘expressway’ over Chennai’s beaches could drive the last nail in the coffin! Low quality of material used and poor standard of constructing drains result in their breaking soon thereafter.

Loose sand-fillings under low-quality pavement slabs get into the drains and choke them. The weak maintenance system only adds to the woes.

Management and maintenance of water supply, waterways and drainage system is a merry-go-round between METROWATER, PWD, Chennai Corporation and Municipalities with no single, effective authority in charge.

The result is chaos and confusion, a heady concoction for corruption and non-performance. Institutional reform is an immediate imperative if the city and its citizens are to be spared of this recurring agony.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 10 November 2009 10:00
 


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