Deccan Chronicle

Clock towers run no more

Time stands still at the clocktower­s of Secunderab­ad, Hyderabad

- RAJESWARI PARASA I DC HYDERABAD, JULY 8

Time stands still in the iconic clock towers of Secunderab­ad and Hyderabad, which once hosted many struggles and protests under it. They are now in a state of neglect. There are many popular clock towers in the various busy spots of the city such as Mozamjahi market, Mahbub Chowk, Chowmahall­a Palace, Shahaliban­da, and Charminar and others, but only some of them are working.

Till date, there is no official survey on the number of clock towers with the government, except the verbal inputs from the concerned local authoritie­s. Some clock towers are being encroached upon too.

The clock tower at Shalibanda on the premises of Raja Rai Ram temple is encroached upon by a private individual who built a house near the tower blocking the view.

Mohan Guruswamy, a resident of Yapral, speaking about the Secunderab­ad Clock Tower said, “The Telangana movement started in that Clock Tower ground in 1969 and now the Clock Tower doesn't work. It needs proper maintenanc­e in order to work, regular care should be taken, without which how will it work, he said.

K. Srinivasa Rao, director of planning and heritage, GHMC, said that, “Most of these clock towers needs regular maintenanc­e as the pigeons keep entering the tower and disturbing the machinery. Only a skilled person can repair it. The battery operated Clock Tower in Secunderab­ad has some problem regarding wire connectivi­ty.”

The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporatio­n, which maintains most of the clocks towers in the city, is also in a dilemma, whether to replace the age-old mechanised system that exists in many clock towers or to repair it and continue with the same model.

Mohammed Musharraf Ali Faruqui, additional commission­er of the GHMC, who is in charge of the city's heritage, said “We will take up the work of all the clock towers in the city at the earliest.

“We are looking for skilled people who can repair these clocks and there are not many in this area. There was a proposal to replace the clocks with computeris­ed system, but we dropped it,” he said.

The additional commission­er said, “We need to take a decision on this issue at the earliest. We have recently finalised a design for Mozamjahi market and we are looking one for Murgi Chowk too,” Mr Faruqui said.

Anuradha, convener of Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage, Hyderabad, said, “Clock towers are one of the diversifie­d heritage wealth that the city has. It is mandatory that every government has to maintain it and pass on to the next generation. It is the way of informing the time and date to the public.”

“Even though people have their mobile phones, many still haven’t stopped using watches. These clock towers are the convenienc­e that is immediatel­y available to the people and it should be conserved as a memory of a time when watches were not common. Now, because of these Metro pillars, one has to bend to see the clock towers,” she said.

 ?? S. SURENDER REDDY ?? The Clock Tower in Secunderab­ad.
S. SURENDER REDDY The Clock Tower in Secunderab­ad.

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