Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

War on waterloggi­ng: Marshes turn farms again after years in 270 villages of Malwa

MISSION ‘SEM ROKO’ ₹960crore project by irrigation dept rejuvenate­s 570 ponds, pumps out saline water

- Prabhjit Singh n prabhjit.singh@hindustant­imes.com

MUKTSAR/FAZILKA : Six months after his brother committed suicide due to continuous crop failure for five years, Hardev Singh’s land has turned fertile this rabi season. The beleaguere­d family's 12 acres had remained unproducti­ve due to waterloggi­ng for half a decade till ‘mission sem roko (halt waterloggi­ng)’, came up as a succour for farmers like him at Kundli village of Fazilka district.

Mission 'sem roko' began in October 2015, with a target of pumping out the saline water from the 1.5-lakh acres across 270 villages in Fazilka and Muktsar districts.

The ₹960 crore project undertaken by the Punjab irrigation department has so far achieved its target of rejuvenati­ng 570 ponds, besides clearing the waterlogge­d areas where the saline water had also inundated many villages. The project was cleared by the Congress-led UPA-2 central government in 2014, agreeing to fund 75% of the total cost.

"We discovered that the ponds are the lifeline of these villages, and these choked water bodies were hindering the free flow of the undergroun­d water system in these areas," said irrigation secretary KS Pannu, who had drafted the 'sem roko' project and got it sanctioned.

"We began the project in mid2015, and it was a Herculean task with over two-dozen engineers surveying the vast tracts of land and supervisin­g the laying of undergroun­d pipes and motors to pump out the saline water," irrigation department's superinten­ding engineer (SE) Sohan Lal said has been distressin­g, including suicide by a farmer who did not see a single crop in five years.

“I am under ₹8-lakh debt now that I owe to the banks and the money lenders,” said Hardev Singh, whose brother Jagseer Singh had ended his life.

Hardev is excited seeing the wheat crop after five years. "I hope I will be able to clear debt now," he says, thanking XEN Manoj Bansal again and again for not allowing the 'sem' damaging the fields any more.

"Are motors doing fine?" Bansal asks a farmer at Rahurainwa­li village, where crops are swaying over 84 acres after 8 years.

TWO MOST DEVASTATED VILLAGES

Residents of Shajrana and Khui Khera villages in Fazilka have started relating themselves with farming after about three decades during which they could produce little on their land due to the waterloggi­ng.

“Of the 635 acres of marshy land in Shajrana, 391 acres have been reclaimed. In Khui Khera, 458 of the 612 acres are good for farming now,” said XEN Pawan Kapur, who has been camping in the area for over a year now.

"I have tied my turban after several years," said an emotionall­y charged Khajan Chand, who had a yield of paddy in October last year after 20 years. "Farmers have no self-respect if they do not have crops and the rising debt is so humiliatin­g," he said.

CENTRAL FUNDS AWAITED

The last UPA regime at the Centre had cleared the mission 'sem roko' project in January 2014, giving nod to 75% central grant for the ₹960 crore project crore central grant was sanctioned in 2014, Punjab awaits the two instalment­s totalling ₹280 crore,” Pannu told Hindustan Times.

“The next three years are equally crucial for the project to sustain, for which we need funds to pay the electricit­y bills for the motors to function and drain out the saline water at the highly vulnerable locations,” he said. The department also needed the much-awaited funds to clear wild grass through chemical de-weeding, he said.

He said funds are also need to construct a ditch drain to take the water to the adjoining Sutlej in the rainy season at Muhar Jamsher village in Fazilka district.

“The funds are expected by

 ?? SANJEEV KUMAR/HT ?? Farmer Karamjit Singh (left) shows his first wheat crop after eight years at Rahurianwa­li village; and (below) a rejuvenate­d pond at Kundal village, in Fazilka district, being shown by executive engineer, irrigation, Manoj Bansal.
SANJEEV KUMAR/HT Farmer Karamjit Singh (left) shows his first wheat crop after eight years at Rahurianwa­li village; and (below) a rejuvenate­d pond at Kundal village, in Fazilka district, being shown by executive engineer, irrigation, Manoj Bansal.
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