Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Govt hikes funds for border road developmen­t projects

- Anisha Dutta letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEWDELHI:THE Union government has increased funding for border road developmen­t projects and raised the allocation for maintenanc­e of border roads -- a developmen­t that follows a military standoff with the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in the Eastern Ladakh sector -- as it attempts to boost infrastruc­ture in frontier areas.

Funding for road developmen­t projects in border areas has been raised from ~340 crore to ~440 core in the current financial year. The budget for maintenanc­e of border roads has gone up from ~120 crore to ~220 crore.

This is the second revision of funding for border roads in the fiscal year; in June, the ministry of road transport and highways raised the allocation for border road maintenanc­e by four times to ~120 crore.

The government has been trying to reinforce infrastruc­ture in border areas.

The Chinese and Indian armies have been embroiled in a tense standoff along the Line of Actual Control in Eastern Ladakh sector, where a brutal brawl in the Galwan Valley on June 15 led to the deaths of 20 Indian and an unspecifie­d number of Chinese soldiers.

According to documents reviewed by HT, the additional allocation of ~100 crore for “general works” to the Border Roads Organizati­on (BRO) is for projects under the Chardham Pariyojana, aimed at improving connectivi­ty o the four pilgrimage centres of Kedarnath, Badrinath, Yamunotri and Gangotri in Uttrakhand.

Works for the Chardham Pariyojna are being implemente­d by three executing agencies of the transport ministry -- the Uttarakhan­d State Public Works Department, BRO, and the National Highway and Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Corporatio­n Limited (NHIDCL).

BRO functions under the defence ministry and is tasked with constructi­on and maintenanc­e of roads in the border areas, classified as General Staff (GS) roads in line with defence requiremen­ts. GS roads are developed and maintained through funds provided by the Border Roads Developmen­t Board through the ministry of road transport and highways.

Strategic affairs analyst Brahma Chellaney said, “This raises two issues—one, given that the constructi­on of any border road takes several years because of the treacherou­s terrain, why are authoritie­s waking up to the need for increased funding in the midst of China’s aggression? And second, even with the increased allocation­s, the budget seems inadequate to build the kind of border infrastruc­ture India needs to defend itself.”

In June, the transport ministry had allocated ~1,691 crore for highway developmen­t by BRO in Jammu & Kashmir and Uttarakhan­d for 2020-21. Of this, ~1,351 crore was sanctioned for road works in J&K and ~340 crore for Uttarakhan­d. The transport ministry also allocated an additional ~71 crore for highway works in Ladakh, Sikkim and Tamil Nadu.

This time around, the ministry has also increased the allocation for roads in the Northeast under its road developmen­t programme from ~290 crore to ~390 crore.

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