Hindustan Times (Delhi)

AAP’s Mann donates salary to Irom’s party

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com Joydeep Thakur letters@hindustant­imes.com

Aadmi Party’s Sangrur MP Bhagwant Mann donated his one month’s salary a day after Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal donated ₹50,000 to rights activist Irom Sharmila’s party, which is fighting Manipur polls.

“As a member of parliament m donating my one month salary to Irom Sharmila who is fighting against corrupt system n justice in Manipur(sic),” Mann, tweeted on Sunday. In response, PRJA party thanked him.

Maan is fighting Punjab assembly elections as an AAP candidate from Jalalabad seat against deputy chief minister Sukhbir Singh Badal.

With shortage of funds and manpower, Sharmila’s People’s Resurgence and Justice Alliance (PRJA) party has taken to online crowdfundi­ng to raise funds and campaignin­g on cycle to reach out to the masses.

PRJA is the first regional party in Manipur which has taken to crowdfundi­ng to finance its election expenses in the state.

According to PRJA sources, online crowdfundi­ng with a slogan “Ten For a Change” is an idea to bring in transparen­cy in election funding and reach out to the masses.

“The online crowdfundi­ng is in line with the party’s call for accountabl­e governance. When we started the party there was a lot of need for funds,” a PRJA source said.

Around one out of every five persons in rural India, who do not have access to clean drinking water, is from West Bengal.

According to estimates available with the Union ministry of drinking water and sanitation, around 411 lakh villagers in India, which is around 4.5% of the country’s rural population, do not have access to safe and clean drinking water.

India is listed by WaterAid – an internatio­nal NGO - among the top 10 countries in the world with the largest number of people living without access to clean water.

“Out of this 411 lakh population around 19% or 78 lakh villagers are from West Bengal. West Bengal has the second highest number of villagers who do not have access to safe drinking water in India, second only to Rajasthan. In Rajasthan around 82 lakh villagers do have access to safe drinking water,” said a ministry official.

State public health engineerin­g (PHE) minister Subrata Mukherjee pleaded helplessne­ss stating that there were several natural causes, including arsenic and fluoride in ground water and rising salinity in drinking water sources in coastal areas, which were adding to the problem.

“Around 84% of the rural population in Bengal has to depend on ground water sources. But in nearly 83 blocks are affected with arsenic problem in the state, around 43 blocks have fluoride in drinking water above the permissibl­e limit. Apart from this, there are several other problems such as high doses of iron and salinity in several other blocks,” said Arunabha Majumdar a public health expert formerly associated with the All India Institute of Hygiene and Public Health.

The data also reveals that only around 56% families living in urban areas in West Bengal have access to safe drinking water, which is far less than the national average of 70.6%.

An annual per-capita water availabili­ty of less than 17 lakh cubic metres is considered a water stressed condition, whereas annual per-capita water availabili­ty below 1000 cubic metres is considered as a water scarcity condition.

“The average annual per capita water availabili­ty in 2001 was around 18.2 lakh litres. This dropped to 15.4 lakh litres in the year 2011, suggesting that we are already reeling under a water stressed condition. It may further drop to 13.4 lakh litres in 2025 and to 11.4 lakh litres by 2050,” said a PHE official on the condition of anonymity.

 ?? SAMIR JANA/HT FILE ?? Seventyeig­ht lakh villagers and 44% of families living in urban Bengal don’t have access to clean drinking water.
SAMIR JANA/HT FILE Seventyeig­ht lakh villagers and 44% of families living in urban Bengal don’t have access to clean drinking water.

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