Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

CM SEEKS CANALISATI­ON OF 3 MAJOR RIVERS

- HT Correspond­ent

CHANDIGARH: Chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh on Thursday urged the Union government to take up canalisati­on of the state’s three eastern rivers of the Indus Water System as a national project to enable conservati­on of water and enhancemen­t of the region’s economic growth.

In his proposal presented to Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a meeting in New Delhi, the CM suggested constructi­on of high-speed economic corridors on the 985-km-long river embankment­s, apart from river training works, flood protection measures and lining of internal side-slopes of the Sutlej, Ravi and Beas.

Expressing concern over the state’s reduction in Jal Shakti at the time of India’s partition and against during the reorganisa­tion of the state in 1966, the CM pointed out that the three perennial rivers of Sutlej, Ravi and Beas irrigate only about 27% of the state’s cultivated area, leading to over-exploitati­on of the groundwate­r.

It is apprehende­d, he said, that seven districts of the state will transform into a desert in the near future, with sure signs of poverty revisiting these areas.

Underlinin­g the need to increase water productivi­ty through augmentati­on and strengthen­ing of water management, control and regulation infrastruc­ture, Captain Amarinder suggested launch of the canalisati­on project with the Sutlej river, which would require an investment of about ₹4,000 crore over a period of three to five years, exclusive of external incentives such as commercial exploitati­on of government and private land and waiver of taxes, duties and cesses, as relevant.

The task may begin with a feasibilit­y study that may be assigned to techno-economic experts of internatio­nal repute, he suggested. LONDON:AN Indian-origin woman is fighting charges of manslaught­er at a UK court trial where she is accused of shaking her sixmonth-old baby girl to death.

Ravinder Deol, 35, allegedly acted out of “pure frustratio­n” when she killed the “incredibly small” girl in Aylesbury, central England, in 2016, Reading Crown Court was told this week.

The baby, named Ravneet, suffered major health problems after being born prematurel­y but was doing well at the time of her death on April 3, 2016, The Sun newspaper reported. “Though her age was six months, had she been born at full term she would have been 11 weeks. She was also incredibly small,” prosecutor Jane Bickerstaf­f told justice Whipple and the jury.

“There is no suggestion that the defendant meant to kill her child, or cause really serious harm to her. Looking at the circumstan­ces you may well conclude she snapped. She snapped because Ravneet was crying, she snapped out of pure frustratio­n of the situation,” Bickerstaf­f said.

On the day of Ravneet’s death, Deol’s partner was sleeping after a 12-hour nightshift when he received a phone call from her just before 4.30pm telling him to “come quickly” as there was something wrong with the baby.

He told the jury: “I could tell from her voice that there was something seriously wrong. I saw Ravinder holding Ravneet against her, she was crying. There was no movement in Ravneet’s face ”

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