The Chief Minister had just dropped a bombshell.
He was traveling, looking for alternative sites for the construction of the National Institute of Technology. The present site on which the Institute has been planned till now has run into rough patch as there has been so much protest from the farmers who own the lands. The site is near the Manipur University and called the Kyamgei Loukon.
A Media team was also with him. He told them that a team from the Airport Authority of India had just visited Imphal and had asked the State government for 500 acres of land for upgrading the present airport. He told them that the plan is for the shifting of the present terminal building towards Malom (ie, across the National Highway towards West) and taking further land for the runways from the Mekola side ( ie, further South of the present runway).
As I was reading the headlined news, I muttered to myself-‘Impossible’.
It would be impossible because the present tussle for a comparatively small land for the construction of the National Institute of Technology has already gone beyond the realm of ‘local issue’. The JAC (the ‘omnipresent’ Joint Action Committee) had just met the press at the premises of Manipur Press Club, together with all the mother of Civil Society organizations, which have State-wide representations.
We can well imagine what would be the response if the Government tries to uproot two large settlements like Malom and Mekola for grabbing lands for the up gradation of the airport.
But what about infrastructure? There are so much angers for not getting the facilities of adequate infrastructural development in the State. Now, there are some solid plans for starting building the things. Suddenly, we have no lands for letting the physical structures to stand on!
Well, we can all understand the emotional relations between the land and its tillers and we should not arbitrarily grab lands from the farmers.
But we should have an alternative model for letting the infrastructure to come up. Where is the alternative model?
Monday, April 30, 2007
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