Showing posts with label INDIA Governance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label INDIA Governance. Show all posts

Monday, April 6, 2015

Welcome to the Imperial City: Modi Sarkar's Bizarre Proposal to Rename Delhi

SOURCE:
http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/other/welcome-to-the-imperial-city-modi-sarkars-bizarre-proposal-to-rename-delhi/ar-AAatel6



Welcome to the Imperial City: Modi Sarkar's         Bizarre Proposal to Rename Delhi

British socialite and politician Nancy Astor may have been a bit of a maverick but she was not much off the mark when she said, "The main dangers in this life are the people who want to change everything... or nothing.''

© Provided by Firstpost  

One was reminded of Astor's warning on reading that the Modi Government, in a rush to "change everything'', now plans to junk even Delhi's historical name for no obvious pressing reason.


And,it will have not one, but two names.

One for Lutyens' New Delhi (home to ministers, senior civil servants, diplomats, and fashionable hotels), and another for the 400-year-old Mughal-era walled city that generations of Delhites grew up calling Old Delhi.

If the move goes through, New Delhi will be rechristened as the "Imperial City of Delhi", and Old Delhi as the "Imperial City of Shahjehnabad".

Of course, Delhi is not the first city facing the threat of an abrupt name-change. It will join a long list of major cities - Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru, Kolkata, Pune - which have been renamed for various reasons. But renaming the national Capital is in a different league altogether.

At this point, you might like to know the reason behind this unprovoked rebranding exercise. For, unlike in the case of other cities which have been through this, there has been no public demand or campaign to rename Delhi on ethnic or nationalistic grounds. Even prickly foreign investors - the great invisible elephant at the heart of every government decision these days-are perfectly OK  doing business with good old Delhi.

So, what's going on?

Well, it seems that the government has suddenly discovered that the old name is not sexy enough to attract Western tourists. "Imperial'', it believes, would do the trick. A notion has gone round that London taxi drivers and New York pensioners, scouring for a sunny tourist destination over Christmas holidays, would find the charms of an "Imperial" tag more irresistible.

"Honey, we're heading for the Imperial City of Delhi this winter...Damn the Bahamas and the beaches of Bali".


BABUGIRI  or CHAMCHAGIRI

The bureaucratic brains behind the move have also convinced themselves that harking back to Delhi's imperial past would persuade UNESCO to grant it the status of a heritage city which, it hopes, would in turn boost international tourism.

The Hindu quoted official sources as saying that the idea "has been mooted with an eye on the efforts to earn 'Heritage tag' from UNESCO''.

( GRANTING  HERITAGE TAG TO DELHI  WILL BE AS RIDICULOUS  AS   GRANTING "NOBEL PRIZE" or BHARAT RATNA TO "MAHATMA GANDHI" )
                                                                           -Vasundhra 

"The nomination dossier, seeking Heritage tag for Lutyens' zone sent to UNESCO names the area as Imperial City of New Delhi. Similarly, the Walled City of Delhi is named in the dossier as the Imperial City of Shahjehanabad. In order to weed out any inconsistency when the UNESCO team is going through the verification process, a request has been made to the (Delhi Development) Authority to rename these areas, an official said," the paper reported.

The problem is that UNESCO has very stringent rules for determining whether a city qualifies for the Heritage tag and a city's name is not one of them. Havana, Rome and Timbuktu didn't have to sex up their nomenclature to earn the status of World Heritage cities. They qualified because they met UNESCO's ten-point guidelines for what a Heritage City should be like.

I am not sure if Delhi's bureaucracy has read the rules carefully.

If it had, it might have thought twice before taking the plunge.

UNESCO demands that in order to qualify for inclusion in the World Heritage List, a city /site must be of "outstanding universal value"; "represent a masterpiece of human creative genius"; "bear a unique or at least exceptional testimony to a cultural tradition or to a civilization which is living or which has disappeared"; " be an outstanding example of a type of building, architectural or technological ensemble or landscape..." ; "contain superlative natural phenomena or areas of exceptional natural beauty and aesthetic importance"; "contain the most important and significant natural habitats for in-situ conservation of biological diversity..."

These are only a few of the criteria, and at first glance it doesn't seem that Delhi fits any of these.

A motley collection of indifferently-maintained tourist sites doesn't add up to World Heritage. If old buildings and monuments were enough to get the nod, Mumbai, Kolkata, Lucknow, Jaipur - even Varanasi - would be more suitable candidates than Delhi, especially, the Lutyens' zone which over the years has got cluttered with ugly skyscrapers clashing with Lutyens' original low-rise design.
The once-majestic colonnaded Connaught Place is now a dump-sleazy, filthy, unsafe, surrounded by shabby office tower blocks and reeking of decay.


Old Delhi has a better claim but most of its historical sites and places of cultural interest are a mess. Delhi's famous poet Mirza Ghalib's "haveli'' in Ballimaranwas a godown when I last saw it; and

the grave of another of its great poets Zauq was bulldozed to build a  "URINAL" on it!

The shameful reality is that Delhi has done a poor job of looking after its heritage, and a city which has such little sense of history and treats its cultural legacy with such contempt doesn't deserve a heritage status.

Meanwhile, a word about this mania for renaming. Which always reminds me of Stalinist-era revisionism. Now, we all know that our Prime Minister has a thing for rebranding. But, renaming Planning Commission and schemes he doesn't like is one thing while renaming the country's capital city without a good solid reason is quite another.

It is not unknown for governments to rename their capital cities as the Chinese did switching from Peking to Beijing; or even for a country to reinvent itself -Ceylon/Sri Lanka; Burma/Myanmar; Southern Rhodesia/Zimbabwe etc. But these changes were prompted by historical reasons - decolonisation, partition, secession, and splits and mergers caused by civil wars.

None of this applies to Delhi. And what a name to go for! Democratic India's national capital to be known as "Imperial City''. It's a city where less fanatically nationalistic administrations than Narendra Modi's have worked overtime to erase reminders of its colonial past by Indianising British street names. And now a proud Hindu nationalist comes along and wants to put "Imperial'' back into Delhi.

More appropriate would be to restore to it its ancient name, Indraprastha, a sort of "ghar wapsi". At least it would be more authentic (calling it Imperial City sounds as tacky as that school in Meerut which calls itself Oxford English-medium school), and gel well with the prevailing nostalgia for ancient India, and its miracles.

But, really, the whole idea is absurd. As Americans like to say, "don't fix it, if it ain't broke". And New Delhi is doing fine, thank you.


 

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Swatch Bharat :THERE ARE MANY 'FATHERS' TO SUCCESS BUT NONE TO ORPHAN

Sourcehttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Swachh-Bharat-Modis-promise-of-cleaning-Varanasi-doesnt-appear-to-be-an-empty-one/articleshow/46811357.cms#






Swachh Bharat: Modi's promise of cleaning Varanasi doesn't appear to be an Empty one

                                       By

                     Prerna Katiyar, ,ET Bureau

 

     THERE ARE MANY 'FATHERS' TO 

        SUCCESS BUT NONE TO ORPHAN

                                                          Vasundhra

 

                              
 05 Apr, 2015





Swachh Bharat: Modi's promise of cleaning Varanasi doesn't appear to be an empty one
Varanasi's Assi Ghat. (Photo taken from Twitter)

 A lot of it is dirty work. But I am up to the task," declared Narendra Modi a year ago when he descended on Varanasi after deciding to contest the Lok Sabha polls from the holy city.

He wasn't exaggerating when he called it "dirty work". Solid waste, liquid waste, paan stains, silt and garbage from households are as conspicuous in Varanasi as its temples and ghats that lead to the banks of the river Ganga.
Cleaning up and beautifying India's spiritual capital was one of Modi's biggest electoral promises to the people of Varanasi.
 
 A year later, it doesn't appear to be an empty one.
READ ALSO: Urban Gujarat speeds ahead in implementing Swachh promise

"Look how Assi Ghat (the southernmost of the 84 ghats of Varanasi which is known to accommodate over 20,000 people during festivals like Shivratri) looks today — as clean as a new one. Modi is here and changes are visible. There may be some delay in work but transformation of Varanasi looks inevitable," says Praveen Kumar, an employee of Banaras Mercantile Bank, whose T-shirt with Mai Narendra Damodardas Modi emblazoned all over doesn't exactly leave you wondering about his political leanings.


Varanasi's Assi Ghat. (Getty Images photo)
There are those like Deepak Madhok who runs the Sunbeam chain of schools in the city who will tell you that the cleaning of Assi Ghat began before Modi chose Varanasi as his constituency. "Our school kids were working on the cleanliness of the ghats on a war footing since September while Modi came in December," avers Madhok. "When our boys and girls were doing the work on Assi Ghat, not a single BJP man visited the place and the moment Modi entered Banaras, throngs of them came in overnight and flew away with all the credit."
READ ALSO: 'Swachh Bharat' campaign is beyond politics, PM Narendra Modi says



Assi Ghat in the evening. (Photo taken from Twitter)
When your MP is also the PM, it's inevitable that the buzz factor hits a crescendo, along with expectations. "Earlier, dharnas and even minor scuffles between smaller political outfits were a regular feature, but now almost all political activity is limited to the PM and his talks," says Kaushal Kishor Mishra, professor of political science at Banaras Hindu University (BHU). "There is a demand from certain circles that Varanasi should be made a union territory so that it can be under the direct control of the Centre. Expectations are really high." He's hopeful, and points to Assi Ghat as the basis for that hope. "A big part of the (Assi) Ghat that was till now buried under silt has re-emerged. There's hope that there will be changes in Varanasi — something that most of us had never imagined till the PM entered Varanasi," adds the professor. "Work is on in full swing," pipes in an enthusiastic state BJP spokesperson Ashok Pande. And no prizes for guessing his frame of reference — "Visit the Assi Ghat and see for yourself," he says pointing southwards.
READ ALSO: Swachh Bharat may add 1% extra service tax to 5-star hotel bills

Meanwhile Pranjal Yadav, Varanasi's district magistrate, has been moving in tandem by initiating a cleanup of another kind — encroachments from congested roads. Rubbishing claims that there is friction between the Centre and the state for funds or projects, he says the roles of the two are well defined. "Land has been acquired for the ring road that will help decongest the city. Work will start this month and the project should be ready by April 2017; all the hanging wires of the city will be covered underground under the Integrated Power Development Scheme; streetlights will have LEDs; and the capacity of liquid waste management will be increased."

City mayor Ram Gopal Mohale, too, is full of beans. "Everything will change in three years. Varanasi will transform into the most beautiful city in the world," he gushes.


Photo of a cleaner Assi Ghat, Varanasi.

The hope over Varanasi would have been unthinkable a year ago. Local civic authorities had almost given up on this city of 15 lakh people with a population density of 2,400 persons per square km — till the point Modi entered Varanasi.

Scepticism of course can be found in generous doses, and from predictable quarters. "Third-grade material is being used for all the construction work. Besides, most of the work is the initiative of the state government and the Nagar Nigam. Where is Modi's contribution in all this," asks Congress' Ajai Rai who had contested the elections against Modi in 2014 and is a five-time MLA. Remind Rai about the regular visits by ministers from Delhi, such as the one last week by Union finance minister Arun Jaitley, and he offers a different perspective.



"The people who are coming here on courtesy calls have no sync with the culture of Varanasi," says Rai. "Forget that, Jaitley said on his visit that the local officer-bearers must spend time here. Does it take a Cabinet minister to remind a local office-bearer to do his duties, address public grievances and be in his constituency?" he asks. "Where were the office-bearers in the last 10-11 months? It is a sign that nothing will happen. The new Modi office [in Ravindrapuri, also called mini-PMO] has become a post office. Just that the letters are never delivered to the PM," he adds.

READ ALSO: How Swachh Bharat can succeed

Modi's apparent proactivity has had an unintended ruboff effect, which Radhika Ranjan Tiwari, a priest at the Vishwanath temple, spells out: "There's a chain reaction. After the PM came to Varanasi, the CM [Akhilesh Yadav] too has become more active." The healthy competition it seems is working well for the wellbeing of this ancient city. "Many of the projects that were stalled since ages got approved recently."


View of Assi Ghat. (Photo taken from Twitter)

BP Singh, a professor of statistics at BHU, explains Modi's catalytic effect. " On his own, he may not have achieved much as of now but his entry in Varanasi has galvanised many NGOs, global organisations and individuals to participate for the uplift of the city."

Alok Kumar Rai, professor at Faculty of Management Studies, BHU, says certainly there's hope — and not hype — that things will change in the city. "As yet nothing tangible is visible on the ground except for some improvement of train schedules. But it is too early. Rome was not built in a day. Varanasi too must wait."

READ ALSO: Contribute to Swachh Bharat, govt asks public sector banks


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Varanasi cleanliness drive,Swachh Bharat,PM Modi,Narendra Modi,Cleaning and beautifying Varanasi
 





















BREAKING FREE OF NERHU : LETS UNLEASH INDIA

SOURCE:E-mail CIRCULATION
 Gurcharan Das- an eminent Indian writer and commentator writes " Every Indian must read this book by Sanjeev Sabhlok Ex IAS"
Comments below by Rajput are worth reading.
The book is available on the internet for on line reading. Hard copy is available with Oxford Press and Lulu.com
Prem Sabhlok




v
>
+
-
Recommendation
 'It must be read by every Indian’
- Gurcharan Das, author of India Unbound

Click for FREE e-book   (ISBN 9788190583589) and also visit my blog.
 
For the detailed recommendation of Gurcharan Das, click the book image below. The recommendation is on the back cover.


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These include: 
* An amazing read
* Great primer on India
* [H]ighly recommend … to anyone who wants to understand Individual liberty in an Indian context
* An ‘Ode to Freedom’
* I highly recommend you find out for yourself what Sanjeev has to say
* This is a real good account for … all those who dream, yearn [for], and envisage … a great India!
* Deserves serious reading ….
Updates
Published Dec. 2008
December 2008: Breaking Free of Nehru published by Anthem Press. July 2009: After a successful print run, the author and Mr. Tej P. S. Sood of Anthem Press UK agreed over email on 9 July 2009 to "bring the contract for publication of this book in India or elsewhere to an end, without obligation." The author […]
Reviews in the media
Breaking Free of Nehru has been reviewed in the media as well as by significant blogs, including: (a) Telegraph, Kolkata 19 Dec. 2008 (b) Bharat Times, Melbourne Dec. 2008 (c) India Link, Melbourne March 2009 (d) Satyameva Jayate 12 June 2009 (e) Reason for Liberty 23 June 2009. (f) Freedom First, Mumbai, 1 October 2009. […]
Sanjeev’s next book
Sanjeev is currently working on his next book, The Discovery of Freedom, a draft manuscript of which is available for free download.   The book Breaking Free of Nehru started its life as A Short History of Freedom in early 2005. It grew quite large so it had to be split into two. Breaking Free […]











            WEED OUT  THE USELESS, CORRUPT

                                           &

                BUREAUCRATIC  DEAD WEIGHT

                                          OF

          INDIAN ADMINISTRATION CALLED “I.A.S”
 
 
 
A patriot has done a great service to his fellow
 

countrymen/women by writing a book calling for the abolition of
 
INDIAN ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICE (I.A.S.). But in the world of
 
BABOOS and INERT ministers the wish is as futile as Bapu
 
Gandhi’s call to abolish the All India Congress Party after it had
 
shown their “patriotism” by surrendering five provinces to
 
please the Indian Muslims in 1947.Still it is the best news of the
 
decade.
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
IAS has become a bunch of "BABOONS", totally subservient to
 
the corrupt rulers and politicians, who have shown no initiative,
 
no new ideas and no improvement to reform the crippling
 
system of red tape and bureaucracy that waste years of a
 
citizen's life making him a coolie or moron in the end. Like the
 
ministers, they, too, are corrupt, dishonest and unreliable. 
 
 
 
RED TAPE of the Mogul Era, that had trapped the suffering
 
Hindus under tons of Sharia Law of Koran, was wiped out by the
 
British rulers on one day after they ousted the last senile
 
Mohammedan Emperor in 1857 but since India was again slave
 
colony and the natives had to be kept busy, filling in forms,
 
getting them verified and attested, and re-attested, was
 
necessary under the new complicated system of unending paper
 
work. The citizens were all kept so busy in form filling and
 
queuing up to buy essentials of daily use that they could never
 
think of liberation from the foreign yoke. India had to wait for
 
the end of World War 2 to hope for freedom from foreigners. But
 
as ill luck would have it, NETAJI, Shyama Prasad Mookerjee
 
 
and SardarPATEL were no more, leaving the field to another
 
anglicised  brown skin “coolie” of Empire, Jawaharlal Nehru.
 
 
 
Instead of liberating the natives from the crushing load of red
 
tape and bureaucracy he let the IAS create more and more
 
ingenious ways to tie the natives down under pestering rules and
 
regulations. Bribery and corruption flourished.
 
Countless capable Indians (NRI’s) left the native
 
shores, seeking freedoms abroad.
 
 
 
 
India is most unfortunate where the natives are brainwashed
 
and conditioned over centuries to willingly give a ride to any
 
foreigner. How they have been charmed by a useless ITALIAN
 
born Sonia Maino, No. 1 security risk, by putting patriotism and
 
self esteem under her foot. Would she like to see a Hindu
 
smiling? Would she wish to cut red tape? Would she speak up for
 
eradication of corruption?
 
 
 
Given the tolerant, timid and subservient Hindus, our Bharat
 
cannot have a REVOLUTION where  everything useless and
 
cumbersome is set on fire, and new beginnings are made.
 
 
 
Such is the case with the newly independent countries in Eastern
 
Europe that went through the sudden collapse of the Soviet
 
Union and had to write up totally new rules in the fresh air of
 
freedom in 1991. Gone is the red tape there. To give an example,
 
it takes SIX TO EIGHT WEEKS to buy a house in England with all
 
those time consuming legal searches (where bureaucracy is
 
frozen since the times of Magna Carta) but only three days to buy
 
a house or apartment in Lithuania with all legal formalities
 
completed! An NRI who bought his house in Vilnius in three days
 
cried for the Indians back home who are trapped in the
 
labyrinthian  “baboodom”. 
 
 
 
 
India has no hope of any REVOLUTION by her majority
 
community who are flat under the rulers' foot like a deflated
 
balloon, but she will ultimately be overwhelmed by a foreign
 
power once again. Then this BABOODOM will also die and many
 
a citizen will kneel down to THANK  A NEW AVTAR 'GOD.'
 
 
 
We would like to congratulate the learned author of the book
 
who pleads for the abolition of IAS. What a CONTRAST these
 
"baboons" are to the original ICS (Indian Civil Service) of pre
 
Partition days!
 
 
 
India did not get freedom in 1947. She got
 
“MUTILATED” (Partition) and her citizens lived under far worse
 
bureaucracy thereafter.
 
 
Only Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru got Independence.
 
 
 
 
 
Click & Read the BOOK
 
 
 
 
 



 
 
   DRAFT OF THE  NEXT BOOK

Click & Read the DRAFT BOOK

http://sanjeev.sabhlokcity.com/book2/discovery.pdf
 
 
 
 PLEASE DONT FORGET TO SEND YOUR            SUGGESTIONS & OR  COMMENTS
                                  TO
                         THE AUTHOR