
Delhi's residential complex for MPs to be inaugurated next week
There is high demand for these flats among the lawmakers, sources said. The new complex has four towers (25-storey each with two levels of basement) and was completed in two years. Each flat, with a carpet area of around 5,000 sq feet, has five bedrooms, offices for the MP and their PA, and two rooms for helpers. Each room has an attached toilet.
'These flats have morespace than the Type-VIII bungalows which comprise the top category,' said a source.
Officials said Sam India Infrastructure, which had bagged the project, has not used bricks in the structures, employing RCC and aluminium stuttering for faster construction. 'While the traditional construction method allows the roof to be laid in a period of 30-35 days, through this method, it can be done every 10-12 days. So, the construction period reduces significantly,' said an official.
The
Central Public Works Department
(CPWD) has implemented the project at an expenditure of around Rs 550 crore. The buildings have a shelf life of over 100 years. The two-level basement has the capacity to accommodate 500 cars. A community centre has also been built in the complex for lawmakers to hold social events. There will be four shops at the community centre to meet the requirements of MPs.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hans India
7 minutes ago
- Hans India
Chart-VRV extends support to local school
Sri City: The Sri City based Chart–VRV India Pvt. Ltd., upgraded facilities at the Government Primary School, Nagananadapuram, Varadaiahpalem mandal, under its CSR initiative. The Rs 31-lakh project included a new classroom building, completion of toilets and kitchen, a compound wall, greenery, and painting of the entire school building. Sri City Foundation coordinated this project. The new facilities were inaugurated on Wednesday by Managing Director of the company Parvesh Mittal and Director (HR) Yamini Sinha in the presence of Director (CSR), Sri City Nireesha Sannareddy. Among those present were VRV's HR Manager, Kandaswami and Varadaiahpalem MEO-2 Gunnayya. Speaking on the occasion, Parvesh Mittal reaffirmed their commitment to improving the infrastructure of government schools and other educational institutions in the surrounding areas of Sri City. Nireesha Sannareddy said that active participation of industries, together with Sri City's special initiatives, has brought remarkable improvement in government educational facilities in the region.


Hans India
7 minutes ago
- Hans India
India's democracy is being stolen - One vote at a time
Authoritarianism is no longer a creeping threat in India; it is in full stride. For over a decade, the BJP-led NDA government under Narendra Modi has bent the nation's institutions to its will. The Election Commission (EDI) meant to be the impartial guardian of democracy now appears increasingly complicit in the very electoral malpractice it is sworn to prevent. Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi has, for years, warned of the Centre's heavy-handed pressure on election officials. Recently, he produced detailed evidence that exposes shocking loopholes in India's voting process revelations that suggest industrial-scale vote theft. The pattern is hard to ignore. After losing the Lok Sabha elections in Haryana and Maharashtra, the BJP returned to win the Assembly polls in those states just months later. In Maharashtra, over 6.5 million votes were recorded in a two-hour window after polls officially closed mathematically implausible. The Election Commission offered no explanation. The Congress party's forensic examination of recent polls reveals disturbing trends: duplicate voters, false addresses, bulk registrations at single homes, and misused voter applications. In Bengaluru's Mahadevapura constituency alone, over one lakh fraudulent entries were identified. They were enough to swing the seat, and with it, the BJP's narrow 32,000-vote win in Bengaluru Central in 2024. Nationally, more than 25 seats were won by margins smaller than this threshold. These are not isolated anomalies. Across India, voter rolls list people with no valid address, households with over a hundred registered voters, and individuals registered in multiple states. The Election Commission refuses to release this data in digital form, perhaps fearing what a proper audit might uncover. The rot extends beyond vote lists. CCTV footage has been withheld, VVPAT audits stonewalled, and procedural irregularities brushed aside. This is how public trust in elections is hollowed out from within. Having tasted the fruits of manipulated victories, the BJP now seeks to entrench itself through constitutional engineering. Its 'One Nation One Election' proposal is less about efficiency and more about locking in a power advantage. In Bihar, where Assembly polls loom, the party stands accused of plotting to remove over 6.5 million voters under the pretext of roll revision. The Supreme Court has had to compel the Election Commission to account for this purge. This is not mere political gamesmanship. It is the systematic dismantling of the world's largest democracy. If the ruling party believes it can win only by subverting the rules, then India's elections are no longer free and no longer fair. The Congress Party has vowed to confront this theft with hard evidence. The fight is no longer for power alone; it is for the survival of the democratic process itself. (The writer is the Chairman of Rajiv Gandhi Panchayati Raj Sanghatan, Telangana)


Hans India
7 minutes ago
- Hans India
Tirupati EMC to host Rs. 468-crore chip unit
TIRUPATI: The Electronics Manufacturing Cluster (EMC) shaping up near the Tirupati Airport has got a major boost with the Union Cabinet approving the establishment of a semiconductor manufacturing unit in Andhra Pradesh. The state government has proposed to set up the project at the Tirupati EMC, cementing the region's status as a hub for high-value electronics manufacturing. The semiconductor unit will be established by Advanced System in Package Technologies (ASIP) with an initial investment of Rs 468 crore. ASIP's facility will have initial capacity to produce 9.6 crore chips annually, catering to applications in mobile devices, set-top boxes, automotive electronic control units, and household electronics items. The Andhra Pradesh government, in a letter sent to ASIP on Monday, formally invited the company to set up its operations in the state and outlined a package of incentives for the firm. According to official sources, ASIP has given its consent and has plans to scale its investment over time to Rs 1,500 crore. To attract the project, the state government has offered a 25 per cent capital subsidy, land at nominal cost, a Rs 1.50 per unit electricity subsidy for five years, electricity duty exemption for the same period, a five-year interest subsidy on term loans, and full State GST reimbursement for five years. ASIP's consent was subsequently communicated to the Centre, which granted its approval, clearing the way for the unit's establishment at the Tirupati EMC. The venture marks a significant push in the state's strategy to balance its tech footprint—focusing on software investments in Visakhapatnam as well as Amaravati and positioning Rayalaseema as an electronics manufacturing hub. Tirupati was declared an electronics cluster between 2014 and 2019, and the new semiconductor unit is expected to accelerate investments in this sector. ASIP Technologies, partnered with South Korea's Apact Company Limited, will be the latest high-profile occupant of the EMC. The cluster, developed under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology's (MeitY) EMC scheme, already hosts major players like Dixon Technologies and Celkon in EMC-1, while EMC-2 has attracted investments from companies such as TCL and Sunny Opotech. The arrival of the semiconductor unit is expected to strengthen the electronics ecosystem in Tirupati, drawing in both domestic and foreign investors and leveling up India's position in the global semiconductor supply chain.