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>Sentinelassam

>The Transformation of Nagpur

>

>Tavleen Singh

>

>When I went to Nagpur last week to meet the women who killed Akku Yadav it

>was

>my first visit in nearly ten years and the transformation in this city is

>so

>unexpected and extraordinary that I consider it worthy of being the subject

>of

>this week's column. Ten years ago Nagpur was a typically Indian town,

>filthy,

>crowded, unplanned and unsightly. Our disdain for town planning has

>resulted in

>us building since Independence some of the ugliest, dirtiest towns on the

>Planet. Our former colonial masters had no such disdain so in Raj days

>India

>had beautiful towns and cities in which even the poor lived in relatively

>attractive surroundings. Trees lined the streets and there used to be parks

>for

>children and public areas where people could meet on hot evenings to take

>the

>air.

>

>It was when colonialism was replaced by socialism that our problems began.

>Our

>socialist rulers appear to have thought of town planning as a needless,

>capitalist frivolity so the towns that they built were built without a

>thought

>to planning. The consequences have been disastrous. By the seventies once

>beautiful towns and cities had become slums with desperate shortages of

>such

>essential ingredients of urban life as clean drinking water and

>electricity.

>The fact that last week middle class women in Delhi took to the streets to

>demand at least enough water daily to take a bath speaks for itself. Our

>problems of urbanization have multiplied because our socialist rulers also

>believed that only they had the right to build housing. Ostensibly this was

>done to protect "the poor" from real estate sharks but the net result of

>the

>approach was that nobody built any housing for the poor so they were forced

>to

>plan their own cities and towns in the form of the jhugghi-jhonpri colonies

>!

>that are now the dominant feature of our big cities. The problem is so

>serious

>that the Prime Minister drew attention to it in a recent speech pointing

>out

>that we now had 30 cities with a population of over a million and needed to

>give serious attention to the problems of urbanization.

>

>Alas, mostly what we have heard from politicians are speeches and this is

>what

>makes the Nagpur story so interesting because behind its transformation is

>a

>politician by the name of Nitin Gadkari.

>

>Gadkari is not well known outside Maharashtra but is quite famous here as

>the

>man who built the Mumbai-Pune highway. It was a project that had been in

>the

>process of being built for more than twenty years but never got off the

>ground

>till Gadkari became Minister in Charge of Public Works in the Shiv Sena-BJP

>government and resolved that he would build it before the government's term

>was

>over. He achieved this goal and also built several roads and flyovers in

>Mumbai

>that he is remembered by but what he did for Nagpur has remained relatively

>untold.

>

>Nagpur is so transformed in the past ten years that it is probably the only

>Indian city in which - by and large - you do not see uncollected garbage or

>open drains. You see parks and broad roads and slums so clean that you

>hesitate

>to call them slums. Even here the streets are wide, there are trees lining

>them

>and there is a total absence of that stench of rotting garbage that is so

>much

>a feature of the average Indian slum. Sadly, not all the citizens of Nagpur

>remember that the transformation of their city is thanks mainly to Gadkari

>because although it was he who laid out the plan the government fell before

>he

>could implement it so it is a Municipal Commissioner called T.

>Chandrashekhar

>who gets most of the credit.

>

>As one of those who knows that real credit should go to Gadkari I sought

>him out

>when I was in Nagpur. This former RSS devotee lives about five minutes away

>from the spot where the RSS held its first shakha more than half a century

>ago.

>It is an old fashioned locality full of old-fashioned buildings that seem

>to

>teeter towards each other but Gadkari's house is a new-fangled version of

>the

>old design. It rises, like a pink wedding cake, upwards in layers and a

>lift

>takes you up layer by layer. He was ensconced in a large living room with

>marble floors and sofas arranged against the walls.

>

>Over cups of sweet tea in pretty glass cups he told me how the

>transformation of

>Nagpur had happened. You see, he said, since I come from this city I wanted

>to

>do something for it that would be remembered. So, with the help of experts

>I

>drew up a plan in which we concentrated on such things as roads, drainage

>and

>drinking water. There used to be a perpetual shortage of water in the city

>and

>now this has been solved as has the problem of drainage. He explained how

>but,

>sadly, I do not have the expertize to explain it to you more fully. I can

>tell

>you, though, that Gadkari is not exaggerating when he says they built 36

>parks

>in the city and that you can see them everywhere. You can. Even on the edge

>of

>slums.

>

>Gadkari, once in full flight on his favourite subject, is unstoppable and

>so

>from what he has achieved for Nagpur he went on to tell me of his plans to

>replicate the Nagpur model in other small towns across India and would have

>done it if the Vajpayee government had not lost the elections. This may

>have

>come as a blow but Gadkari has not stopped dreaming his urban dreams and

>now

>pins his hopes on the Shiv Sena- BJP alliance coming to power once more in

>Maharashtra after the October elections so that he can do for other towns

>in

>Maharashtra what he has done for Nagpur.

>

>Of course, all this will cost money. The transformation of Nagpur cost more

>than

>Rs 400 crore but Gadkari is not one to let costs deter him. If he had, he

>points out, then there would never have been a Mumbai-Pune highway. When

>you

>are determined to do something the money somehow comes, it becomes

>available.

>"For me politics is a means of social and economic change. If I cannot make

>a

>difference I would see no point in being in politics."

>

>This is not a column that usually has anything good to say about

>politicians but

>this is because there are not many politicians like Nitin Gadkari around.

>So,

>why is he so low-key in the BJP? Why is he not more celebrated?

>

>When I asked the question in Nagpur I was told the answer in one word.

>Politics.

>Maharashtra's more powerful politicians would like to restrict him to

>Nagpur

>because if there is one person in the State who would make the best

>possible

>BJP chief minister it is Gadkari and if he becomes a really good chief

>minister

>then he would get noticed at the national level and become more important

>than

>them.

>

>It would be sad for all of us, though, if Gadkari does not find his way

>into

>national politics because urban renewal is something our towns and cities

>desperately need. Meanwhile, our politicians and policy-makers would do

>well to

>go to Nagpur to see the transformation that comes about in people's lives

>and

>in their attitudes if they can escape the squalor of our urban environment.

>

>-------------------------------

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>

>

 

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