Udaan
Quest for an Alternative world
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
Monday, 22 April 2013
Rethink your "ways"
A Society of Easy virtue
means "Women are honored where, divinity blossoms there, and where women are dishonored, all action no matter how noble remain unfruitful".
It is ironical to see that the society which gave such aforesaid maxims has stooped to a level where a barbaric activity of raping a 5 year old girl is perpetrated and a woman who choose to stand for her is slapped by the Police.
The Prime Minister says that he is deeply disturbed by the incident. So am I. And many like me. The only difference is that of sympathy and empathy. The people at large will very soon realize their power and rise to occasion but for you even if Jambavant (the one who reminded Hanuman of what power he possessed) comes to enlighten you of your powers you will fail to resurrect....
Saturday, 27 October 2012
Lal Salaam
Monday, 18 June 2012
“Teri Kah ke lunga..........”
Friday, 18 November 2011
Baton Of Suo Moto Responsibility
It is very easy to enjoy the warmth of one’s nest. Peeping out of the nest is like being aware of empirical facts yet choosing to be indifferent to it. But it takes a lot to transform oneself from being just a silent witness to the relay runner with the baton of change or reform. Pardon me for being truthful to the extent of bluntness. But I can’t hold myself back from calling one numb to the change around if he is not acting ecologically and is thus not a living being.
Allowing the things to continue as they are in cases where its continuance is a hindrance to development is like total subjection the situation. In this way one is allowing the miscreant to continue his dominance (social, psychological, economic and ideological) and arbitrariness unabated.
Indian societies where ignorance is the norm, forget about attaining a certain intellectual level, it becomes imperative on the part of intelligentsia in such situations to spring into action against such elements. The action need not be revolutionary outbreak or spearheading any movement. It can be a direct discussion and dialogue through government’s own devised methods. Some political parties or coalition for that matter after assuming governance had been hypocrite to the extent of passing laws, setting up machinery against corruption and maladministration and yet violating them all themselves with impunity.
One of the prime reasons for it is inaction on the part of educated citizens. Judging people’s representatives by their self proclaimed standards make things easier for citizens. They can be trapped in their own mesh of promises, provided we do so.
Right to information and Social Audit is one such important an potent weapon in that direction and that is the reason that off late politicians are trying to dilute its provisions.
Having said that, the possibility of the above envisaged action can be easily played down stating the insignificance of contribution made by one individual alone. I have an answer to them. Your contribution may be too insignificant to make a desired change but it may inspire some other to take the baton from where you leave. We all have the fires burning within. The point here is that who chooses to act first. So, be the one who reflect the aspirations of the society and who equally influences the society.
Its 11 and the question looms large
Eleven years have passed since the State of Jharkhand has been carved out of its mother state Bihar. Though the demand for Jharkhand state was old as the Indian independence it only saw the dawn of the day as late as 15 November 2000. The past decade has seen it all except the light of the day. In the wake of demand for new states elsewhere (Purvanchal, Paschim Pradesh, Bundelkhand, Awadh Pradesh, Telangana, Vidarbha and Gorkhaland) it brings me to a situation of analysis of what good the division has done to Jharkhand.
The Jharkhand movement revolved around Jharkhandi identity, which disadvantaged societal groups articulated in order to augment political resources and influence the policy process in their favour. The Jharkhandi identity and the demand for autonomy was not premised solely on the uniqueness of its tribal cultural heritage, but was essentially a fallout of the failure of development policy to intervene in socio-economic conditions of both the adivasis and non-adivasis in the region.
When the daughter state was carved out of Bihar, its residents had expected it to emerge as one of the most developed state of India, till date an unfulfilled desire. The facts speak for it.
Almost all the national highways in the state, except NH 2, are in bad shape. It takes almost two hours to cover 60 km on NH 33 (Jamshedpur-Tamar) despite repeated government announcements to make the stretch crater-free. The state has failed to add a single mega watt to power generation. When Jharkhand was formed, it had three state-owned power plants. In 10 years, the state has not built one. Similarly, in healthcare, the promise of 24x7 health centres in rural area has remained on paper only.
There has been some improvement in education after the state got a Central University and an IIM in Ranchi. But these have failed to stop migration of students. On an average, more than 100,000 students migrate for degree and professional courses. Lack of development in the far-flung areas, despite the state’s 11% GDP growth in 2010-11, has allowed Maoists to gain traction in Jharkhand. The state has shown relatively lower economic growth in the past decade. The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of its Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) for 2000-01 to 2009-10 has been 11.33% compared to 12.54% in other general-category states.
Though the state has witnessed about 7% economic growth but considering the huge boom in mining over the past decade, Jharkhand should have done much better. Whereas Chhattisgarh had an average of 8.8% and Uttarakhand was rocketing up at 10.8%. Uttarakhand has tapped its vast hydro potential to become a seller of power to northern grid while Chhattisgarh has opened up its mineral resources for exploitation in a big way.
During the tenure 2001-02 to 2010-11 food grain production has dipped by a massive 19% in spite of the fact that agriculture is the mainstay of the majority of the population and food grain the most widely cultivated crops.
On the employment front out of the 39.6% registered households for MGNREGA only 10.9% have been given jobs. Though there has been some improvement in the number of primary and upper primary schools leading to its effective literacy rate rising from 54% in 2001 to 68% in 2011. The infant Mortality rate has declined from 70 in 2000 to 44 in 2009.
Naxalism continues to be a menace in the state playing upon the grievances of the tribals. Political instability has been the feature of the state and the government was marred by various scams and corruption.
If creation of a smaller state was the justification provided for the development of this part of the former state Bihar then it has certainly failed to give it an expression. And the one question that looms large is that where do we from here?