CM announces new district of Chhota Udepur

Published By : Admin | September 10, 2012 | 20:05 IST

Gujarat to have Chhotaudepur as new district, to start working from January 26, 2013

“Rs.12,500-cr distributed to 85-lakh poor during 1,000 Garib Kalyan Melas”

“Implementation of two major irrigation projects worth Rs.4,000-cr” “Gujarat tops in India in distribution of forest land title papers to tribal” – Narendra Modi

Ahmedabad, Monday: Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi today announced Chhotaudepur as a new and the twenty-eighth district of the state. It will start working from January 26, 2013.

Addressing an Adivasi Mahasammelan attended by tribal people from a dozen predominantly tribal districts of the state extending from Ambaji (Sabarkantha) to Umargam at Chhotaudepur, he said that a high-level committee headed by the Chief Secretary has been formed to decide which talukas and which villages would be included in the new district. Gir-Somnath was declared as the twenty-seventh district of the state last month. It is part of the state government’s initiative for decentralization to make administration easy and fast for the people.

Mr. Modi also announced implementation of two major ambitious irrigation projects costly Rs.4,000-crore for the benefit of people living in ravines in the remote hilly region, in the mercy of vagaries of monsoon. The projects aimed at taking water from the rivers to the fields with the help of technology.

One project costing Rs.500-crore involves constructing 1,064 check dams, 1,200 community wells, 87 lift irrigation schemes and 120 ponds to irrigate over 13,000 ha of land. The other project costing Rs.3,500-crore is to divert surplus flood waters flowing down the Narmada to the tribal areas through 663-km of pipelines to irrigate 75,000 ha of land.

The Chief Minister distributed forest land title papers to tribal people and said that Gujarat has distributed maximum number of forest land papers to the tribal in the country. He said that Rs.40,000-crore Van Bandhu Kalyan Yojna will be implemented for all round development of tribal. Distributing government assistance and gadgets to the beneficiaries during the Garib Kalyan Mela, he said that the tribal, poor, dalits and have-nots of Gujarat have by now recognized who are exploiting them and have thus joined the present government. Having failed to woo the poor, he said, they are now targeting the middle class as the vote bank, which is unlikely to happen.

He said the government has allotted houses to all the16-lakh eligible people living Below Poverty Line (BPL) in the 0-16 Point bracket in the state, while the remaining 6-lakh BPL people in the 17-20 Point bracket are being distributed the first installment of Rs.21,000 for plot and building materials.

Mr. Modi said the government has provided drinking water facilities in 5,900 villages and 11,900 hamlets in the tribal areas as the percentage of water taps to tribal householders has gone up from 4% to 76% over the last ten years.

Electrification of 1.50-lakh huts has been completed, 3,000 ponds have been deepened and 13,000 check dams built. Nearly Rs.1,225-crore have been spent on projects to irrigate 8.75-lakh ha in tribal areas.

He expressed happiness at the delayed but noteworthy rainfall in the state this monsoon, saving the state from severe spectre of drought.

Speaking on the occasion, Tribal Development and Forest Minister Mangubhai Patel expressed happiness at unprecedented development of tribal people under the leadership of the Chief Minister, who has also hosted the sacrifices of tribal freedom fighters at Pal Chitaliya, Mangarh and Jambughoda in India’s map for Independence struggle. The earlier government indulged in corruption in even distribution of hens and ducks.

Minister of State for Law and in-charge District Pradipsinhji Jadeja said the government took help of satellite technology to map forest density and accordingly distributed 9.365 acre forest land titles to the tribal. Members of Parliament Ramsinh Rathwa and legislators Gulsinhji and Abhesinh Tadvi also spoke on the occasion.

Others present on the occasion included Parliamentary Secretary Yogesh Patel, District Panchayat President Sudhaben Parmar, heads of religious groups, office-bearers, senior and prominent citizens of the town and district.

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Prime Minister said that India has boarded the “Reform Express”, driven primarily by the strength of its young population, and empowering this demographic remains the government’s key priority. Prime Minister noted that the Conference is being held at a time when the country is witnessing next-generation reforms and moving steadily towards becoming a major global economic power.

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Discussion during the Conference

The discussions during the Conference reflected the spirit of Team India, where the Centre and States came together with a shared commitment to transform ideas into action. The deliberations emphasised the importance of ensuring time-bound implementation of agreed outcomes so that the vision of Viksit Bharat translates into tangible improvements in citizens’ lives. The sessions provided a comprehensive assessment of the current situation, key challenges and possible solutions across priority areas related to human capital development.

The Conference also facilitated focused deliberations over meals on Heritage & Manuscript Preservation and Digitisation; and Ayush for All with emphasis on integrating knowledge in primary healthcare delivery.

The deliberations also emphasised the importance of effective delivery, citizen-centric governance and outcome-oriented implementation to ensure that development initiatives translate into measurable on-ground impact. The discussions highlighted the need to strengthen institutional capacity, improve inter-departmental coordination and adopt data-driven monitoring frameworks to enhance service delivery. Focus was placed on simplifying processes, leveraging technology and ensuring last-mile reach so that benefits of development reach every citizen in a timely, transparent and inclusive manner, in alignment with the vision of Viksit Bharat.

The Conference featured a series of special sessions that enabled focused deliberations on cross-cutting and emerging priorities. These sessions examined policy pathways and best practices on Deregulation in States, Technology in Governance: Opportunities, Risks & Mitigation; AgriStack for Smart Supply Chain & Market Linkages; One State, One World Class Tourist Destination; Aatmanirbhar Bharat & Swadeshi; and Plans for a post-Left Wing Extremism future. The discussions highlighted the importance of cooperative federalism, replication of successful State-level initiatives and time-bound implementation to translate deliberations into measurable outcomes.

The Conference was attended by Chief Secretaries, senior officials of all States/Union Territories, domain experts and senior officers in the centre.