Monthly Archives: September 2014

A soldier from every home is tradition here

The memorial at P. Thippanapalli village. Photo: N. Bashkaran / The Hindu
The memorial at P. Thippanapalli village. Photo: N. Bashkaran / The Hindu

A crow perched atop the high flag mast scans a sleepy kutcha stretch while a cement statute of a turquoise uniformed-sepoy sporting a twirled moustache stands upright, the right hand raised in a salute. Hidden in a corner is a plaque with names of persons who perished in the two World Wars.

The sleepy village of P. Thippanapalli, nestled away from the yawning highways, is some 20 km from Krishnagiri. The village, with 345 households, has over 400 men in the armed forces while over 160 persons draw ex-servicemen’s pensions.

Even today lanky young boys in the village want to continue in the footsteps of their fathers and grandfathers in what has become an unwritten tradition spanning over a century since World War I. According to P. Chinappan, district president of the ex-servicemen welfare association, poverty and lack of education drove the villagers to take up jobs in the army during the world wars. Later, army jobs became a lucrative proposition for them as it ensured job security.

The village had one of its own get martyred only once; in 2008, when Govindasamy, deployed in Afghanistan, was killed in a suicide-bomb attack. “Whoever went away always returned. Perhaps, that may also be the reason why we do not fear sending our men,” says 35-year-old Anuradha, whose husband returned to Sikkim last weekend.

“My father and uncle were in the Army, and now my husband is posted in Sikkim,” says 34-year-old Saradha while Kannamma, 45, whose husband has been in the Army for over 25 years, says: “We are used to this. It is a pride for our village, and for the country.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National> Tamil Nadu / by P. V. SriVidya / Krishnagiri (T.N.) – August 28th, 2014

Tamil Nadu farmers reap rich dividends through watershed projects

Recreating water bodies, improved farming techniques yield better income

CHENNAI, AUGUST 15:

When the National Agro Foundation, a brainchild of the late C Subramaniam, the architect of India’s green revolution, set about sharing agro technology upgrades with farmers in Kanchipuram district near Chennai in 2003, their response was: All this is fine, but where is the water?

“This set us thinking. Kanchipuram was once known as the district of lakes, and gets an annual rainfall of 1,000 mm, but concentrated in two months,” says MR Ramasubramanian, Executive Director of the Foundation.

A double whammy was that along with the rainwater runoff, the rich top soil was washed away each year. An investigation with remote sensing maps and discussion with village elders revealed that numerous water bodies — tanks, ponds, wells etc had all disappeared over the years. So the Foundation, along with NABARD, launched a project to recreate water bodies through four watershed projects on 5,400 hectares at a cost of ₹4.62 crore.

The community was involved in repair and renovation, better use of water, modern farming techniques, resulting in better incomes and increased cropping cycles.

Crop cycles

Most of the farmers have small to medium landholding (2-3 hectares), and the project helped them move from one cropping cycle to two, sometimes even three, and profits went up by ₹20,000-40,000 per acre a year, says SV Murugan, Joint Director in charge of the project. The more enterprising ones, such as Nallamuthu, an IT graduate, went in for floriculture and horticulture and earned over ₹7 lakh.

Though planned in 2007, on a 50:50 basis between NABARD and the Tamil Nadu Government, grant of funds has been delayed, and work on only 1,000 hectares has been completed.

When work on the watershed programme began, both on farm as well as common land, all the land looked flat as the uncared for water bodies had filled up with soil and silt. Those renovated or recreated are now able to hold over one lakh litres of water; and one particular tank 7 lakh litres.

Apart from percolation ponds, groundwater recharge, water absorption trenches, supply channels were created or repaired, as also bunds, and water bodies linked to enable water to flow from one tank to another, one village to another; in one case 20 villages were thus linked.

Peak summer 

“Based on land ingredient and slope we do different kinds of bunding so that natural harvesting of rainwater takes place,” says Ramasubramaniam, recalling the Tamil adage: “Running water should be made to walk and walking water to sit.”

With the water table going up, “in peak summer months the wells are filled to the top. The last two years have seen deficient rainfall but farmers have managed well,” says Murugan.

The green cover in the entire area has gone up, top soil is conserved, resulting in farmers getting additional income. “Once water is conserved and used optimally, next comes technology, nutritional security for women through kitchen gardens, and then upgrades in value through organic cultivation. We ask farmers to reduce agro chemicals and use them only as supplements where necessary,” says SS Rajsekar, Managing Trustee.

The biggest benefit is that 280 acres of underutilised land has now been made fertile and brought under cultivation, he adds. “Also, the children of educated people like Nallamuthu will be enthused to stay in agriculture and not leave it for jobs in cities. And, such projects are the first steps towards the linking of rivers,” adds Rajsekar.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> Opinion> Columns  / by Rasheeda Bhagat / Chennai – August 15th, 2014

SRM Transports joins hands with India Post

Will offer ticket booking facilities at Post Offices

Chennai :

Cashing in on the retail network of India Post, omnibus operator SRM Transports India has tied up with India Post to book bus tickets across Tamil Nadu.

The over ₹100-crore SRM Transport operates close to 500 vehicles connecting all key cities across Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and Puducherry. The company recently launched ‘Dial-in’ services for ticketing, where by travellers can block tickets from anywhere.

The tie-up with India Post is expected to offer booking tickets through the Internet.

“As the Internet is yet to penetrate in a big way into rural geographies, the India Post tie-up will come in handy for us,” explained Vivek Sivaraman, Chief Executive Officer, SRM Transport.

According to SC Barmma, Postmaster General (Mails & Business Development), who launched the service at a press conference here on Monday, said consumers can book SRM Bus tickets at post offices. To start with 94 post offices across Tamil Nadu will offer this service, and it will be extended to over 2,000 post offices in the State in a phased manner.

Ravi Pachamoothoo, Chairman, SRM Group, said the company is keen on expanding its network across the South through hub-and-spokes model. At present, it operates from Chennai and Bangalore as hubs.

More cities

The plan is to have more cities, such as Coimbatore, Madurai, Tiruchi, Mysore, Thiruvananthapuram and Hyderabad as hubs connecting various points around these cities. He also expressed the company’s tie-up with India Post for its cargo services as well.

Besides, the company plans to double its fleet in the next couple of years.

“We are also open to expand our network through acquisitions,” said Sivaraman.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> Logistics / by The Hindu Bureau / Chennai – August 18th, 2014