India Today Group Online
 


July 02, 2001
Issue



COVER
   

The Luckies
The Labelled, Urban, Chilled, Kicked-with-life Indians are here. The most fortunate ever if only for the choices before it, this generation is glib, global, cocky and informed-and chases success with an awesome spending power.

 

 
STATES
   

Wages Of Peace
The Centre's decision to extend its cease-fire with the NSCN(I-M)
to three other north-east states leads to large-scale violence
in Manipur.


Man Of Letters
Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik's skill with the quill has the PMO busy acknowledging his missives. And on occasion agreeing to his demands.

 

 
NEIGHBOURS
 

Civil Lines
Pervez Musharraf's assuming the office of President is being seen as a bid to legitimise his position. A look at what this means in the context of his India visit.

 

 
DIPLOMACY
 

Peace In Pipeline
India wants to put on Iran the onus of ensuring safe transit of gas.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
  Home  
 

CARE TODAY: FIGHT THE DROUGHT

Quenching The Thirst

It was almost as if nature was against the people. The rains last year were scanty and the sun was merciless and many districts in western Rajasthan, northern Gujarat and Saurashtra faced a calamitous future. There was a severe shortage of water for consumption and successive years of poor rainfall had resulted in poor growth of grass, leaving life-sustaining livestock in these rural communities almost on the verge of starvation. It was at such a time that CARE TODAY started the "Fight the Drought" programme. Not only was water distributed as an immediate relief measure but the society also designed other projects with the objective of strengthening water-conservation infrastructure that would simultaneously provide employment to a harassed people. To ensure transparency, all project work was undertaken through village-level committees set up by the affected communities.

Readers contributed Rs 29,33,312 (including interest of Rs 15,930)) to the fund. A sum of Rs 19,93, 095 has already been disbursed, and a further Rs 2,25,000 have been approved for utilisation. Administrative costs totalled Rs 83,500. The remaining amount of about Rs 5.5 lakh will be spent this year on similar drought-proofing projects. We have tentatively set aside some funds for a water project in Udaipur district of Rajasthan.


PROJECT: CARE TODAY gave Rs 3 lakh to the Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (Gujarat) for the construction of two percolation tanks at Sokhda village in Surendranagar district in November 2000.

STATUS: Work on both the tanks has been completed (picture at left). They cost Rs 2.25 lakh and 1,514 mandays of employment were generated. The unutilised fund will be used in other projects.

:IMPACT The percolation tanks will enable rainfall to recharge ground water stocks. As a result, four handpumps and four wells should have water available throughout the year, a big boon for the 238 households in the village.


PROJECT: Construction of two checkdams in Vyar village in Gujarat's Kutch district in July 2000 in collaboration with the Kutch Mahila Vikas Sanghathan (KMVS). Rs 1.06 lakh was granted for the work.

STATUS: KMVS built three checkdams (right) along the drainage line. Employment worth Rs 57,850 was generated. The surplus of Rs 8,399 was handed to the community for maintenance of the structures.

IMPACT: Besides regenerating 20 hectares of pastureland, providing water and recharging wells, the project has inspired the state Government and UNDP to replicate the process adopted in all drought-hit villages in the district.


 
 
 



     METRO TODAY
 
   

MetroScape

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If you missed the ambitious take on the world's select metros called "Century City" at the swank Tate Modern in London, an exhibition in Mumbai will fill that gap just a bit.
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Delhi Decorative Art: D'addomio

Kolkata Restaurant: Thai Tonight

 

 
    Web Exclusives
DESPATCHES
 

A Hare Krishna cult member's spiritual quest meets with a rude end. But he isn't the only one on trial. The credibility of the Orissa police is equally at stake, writes INDIA TODAY's Special Correspondent Ruben Banerjee in
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