logo
Rs 100 Crore Road Built In Bihar. Problem: Nobody Cut Trees In The Middle

Rs 100 Crore Road Built In Bihar. Problem: Nobody Cut Trees In The Middle

NDTV10 hours ago

Imagine driving on a wide, newly built road with zero potholes and trees lined up on both sides. As you speed through the smooth road, the fresh breeze and landscape make for a scenic and pleasant driving experience. But what if these trees shift to the middle of the road? It turns into a real-life biking game where you either evade hurdles or lose a lifeline. And, this has come true in Bihar's Jehanabad, 50km away from the capital Patna, where a Rs 100 crore road widening project went terribly wrong.
In Jehanabad, on the Patna-Gaya main road, trees stand tall in the middle of the 7.48 km long road, making the commuters prone to accidents. These trees didn't grow overnight. Then what happened?
When the district administration undertook a Rs 100 crore road widening project, they approached the forest department, seeking permission to remove trees. But their demand was rejected. In return, the forest department demanded compensation for 14 hectares of forest land. However, the district administration could not fulfil the request, and they made a bizarre move - they created a road around the trees.
The trees aren't planted in a straight line, which a driver could avoid. One must criss-cross their way through them. It appears to be an Rs 100 crore invitation to death.
Many accidents have already happened due to trees being in the middle of the road, a passerby said. The district administration, however, does not seem to be taking any concrete initiative to remove the trees.
Who will be held responsible if a major accident occurs and someone dies? It is a question that remains unanswered, like the problem at hand.

Hashtags

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fiscal deficit narrows by 0.8% of full-year target in April–May FY26
Fiscal deficit narrows by 0.8% of full-year target in April–May FY26

New Indian Express

time16 minutes ago

  • New Indian Express

Fiscal deficit narrows by 0.8% of full-year target in April–May FY26

The country's fiscal deficit for the first two months (April and May 2025) of FY26 narrowed sharply to Rs 13,163 crore, or just 0.8% of the annual target, according to the government data released on Monday. This is an improvement from the Rs 50,600 crore deficit—equivalent to 3.1% of the full-year estimate—recorded during the same period last year. As per the financial ministry data, the total receipts between April and May rose to Rs 7.33 lakh crore. Last year, it was Rs 5.73 lakh crore for the same period. Gross tax collections stood at Rs 5.15 lakh crore, compared to Rs 4.60 lakh crore a year earlier. Non-tax revenue more than doubled to `RS 3.57 lakh crore, largely due to the RBI's record Rs 2.69 lakh crore dividend transfer in May. Total government expenditure increased to Rs 7.46 lakh crore from Rs 6.24 lakh crore last year. The data also noted that capital expenditure—a critical driver of infrastructure investment—rose sharply to Rs 2.21 lakh crore, up from Rs 1.44 lakh crore during the same period in FY25. Subsidy spending on food, fertilisers, and petroleum stood at Rs 51,252 crore or 13% of the revised annual allocation. This was marginally lower than 14% spent during the same period last year, indicating a more measured subsidy outgo.

'No Money To Buy Books Twice': Parents On Chhattisgarh Syllabus Order
'No Money To Buy Books Twice': Parents On Chhattisgarh Syllabus Order

NDTV

time17 minutes ago

  • NDTV

'No Money To Buy Books Twice': Parents On Chhattisgarh Syllabus Order

Raipur: In Chhattisgarh, schools open in April. However, it seems the Education Department prefers surprise tests, not just for students but for parents too. On June 25, Raipur's District Education Officer issued an eight-point directive, catching schools and parents off-guard. By this time, most students had already completed two months of their academic session. Many parents had bought books worth thousands in April, only to now be told: "Wait, the government will distribute free books." "I bought books worth Rs 10,000 for my three daughters because schools reopened in April," says Dhalendra Sahu, a small trader from Raipur. "Now, if the syllabus changes, we'll suffer. Almost 70 per cent people will face problems. We don't earn enough to buy books twice." Mr Sahu, who earns Rs 25,000 to Rs 28,000 a month from agriculture, has three daughters - one each in Class 8, 3, and nursery. Like many parents, he trusted the schools' word and got the books early. Now, the government's order feels like an afterthought - like it, too, came back from a long summer break. The June 25 order left private schools scrambling. While books hadn't arrived, the department suggested they should wait. Rajiv Gupta, president of the Private School Association, says they had no choice but to move ahead with private publishers. "Schools reopened on June 16. It's been 15 days and we haven't received books," says Mr Gupta. "There are over 800 schools and two lakh students in Raipur alone. If the distribution begins on July 1, books won't reach all students before July 20." The Education Department's move seems well-intentioned on paper. But when students are midway through their syllabus, and books are nowhere in sight, parents ask - is this about learning or about logistics? The issue has taken a political turn. The Congress accuses the Education Department of colluding with private schools. Their charge: the delay in SCERT book distribution benefits private publishers. "Due to corrupt officials and the private school lobby, free books meant for lakhs of students haven't been given," says Congress spokesperson Vikas Tiwari. "Parents are being misled in the name of CBSE." The ruling BJP has a different take. While acknowledging the delay, they call it an educational "experiment". "This is part of a review process to improve education quality," says BJP spokesperson Gaurishankar Shrivas. "Yes, there's been a delay, and not all schools fall under the directive. The department will review and take appropriate steps." At the heart of the issue lies a simple question: was this order really for the students' benefit or just to decorate files? In an ideal world, children study from books, not from bureaucratic guidelines. But in Chhattisgarh this year, books seem to come only after orders - and that too, not before July.

Rs17L liquor stock of last financial yr seized in Mau
Rs17L liquor stock of last financial yr seized in Mau

Time of India

time20 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Rs17L liquor stock of last financial yr seized in Mau

Varanasi: Illegally stocked liquor from the 2024-25 stock, worth Rs 17 lakh, was seized by police and the excise department officials in Mau district on Sunday night. One person has been arrested in this connection. Instead of surrendering the old stock in March as per the norms, the liquor was stored in a marriage lawn's storeroom to be sold through different outlets in the new financial year. CO (City) Mau Anjani Kumar Pandey on Monday said that upon receiving inputs regarding the illegal stocking of liquor, the joint team of police and the excise officials raided the marriage hall in Balliamode area on Sunday night. During the raid, 158 cases of various premium brands of liquor, worth Rs 17 lakh, were seized. Police have arrested one Ramesh Mali from Chandanpur in the Kopaganj police station area. The CO said that following the initial investigation, it is suspected that the stock was not surrendered as per the rules at the end of the financial year and was stored to be sold illegally. The role of the marriage hall owner would also be probed, he said. Excise officials were trying to detect whether the stock was being cleared through licensed outlets or delivered to individuals by people in Mali's syndicate.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store