Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

One big ticket project & Bihar’s ‘cow belt’ goes loco with investment surge

- Anirban Guha Roy anirbanroy@htlive.com ▪

PATNA: For years, Lal Kunj Yadav of Chakla Sripur, on the outskirts of Madhepura town, was unemployed. He could barely make a living, managing a small grocery store. But, for last one year, he has seen brisk business at his shop, which now earns him Rs 2000 per day.

“I had never dreamed, I would see such a day,” he says, dreamily.

Yadav is among hundreds of locals of Chakla, Ganeshstha­n and hamlets like Tuniyahi, who owe their new found prosperity to the new Madhepura electric locomotive factory at Chakla, which started production on October 11 this year.

The project was initiated a decade ago, in 2007-08, when Lalu Prasad was the Union railway minister.

The locomotive factory, a joint venture of Alstom and Indian Railways, has generated much hope among the locals due to the huge investment being pumped into the project and land acquisitio­ns still going on to set up ancillary units.

“We have got proposals from various companies, including a Japanese firm keen on investing Rs 100 crore for a unit. This area is going to be another Bokaro, a decade down the line,” said Mohammed Sohail, district magistrate, Madhepura.

Evidently, land prices in the

THERE ARE, HOWEVER, FEW COMPLAINTS FROM LOCALS OF NOT GETTING FULL COMPENSATI­ON AMOUNT AGAINST LAND ACQUIRED FROM THEM DUE TO PROBLEMS OVER LAND DEEDS & OTHER GLITCHES

area have sky rocketed. Companies keen on putting up small industrial units are offering Rs 15 lakh per kattha of land (around 1,360 square feet) in the area close to the locomotive factory. A decade ago, it would have cost no more than Rs 50,000.

The total investment in the factory is estimated at Rs 26,000 crore, with Alstom getting a contract to produce 800 engines of 12,000 horse power each, over a period of time- a first of its kind production facility in the country. The economic progress is discernibl­e in this backward region, with the factory coming up. One can notice small kiosks for electrical equipment, mobile and other small shops mushroomin­g on the stretch from Madhepura town to Chakla, where villagers have even started renting out rooms to labourers working at the unit. A total of 304 acres of land has already been acquired.

“We earn more now. The area was long known for floods but now there is industrial progress.

It is good thing,” said, Mohammed Irshad, a local resident of Chakla, who has opened an electrical equipment shop. Selling small fans and battery operated lights to hundreds of labourers and employees working in the locomotive factory, he has even managed a new home.

However, there are still some complaints from locals who claim they have not yet received the entire amount of compensati­on against land acquired from them owing to problems over land deeds and other technical

glitches. “The factory is okay. But we are yet to be paid for our land. Officials keep on asking for more documents,” claimed Tarni Prasad Yadav, who has got Rs 31 lakh so far against 100 decimal (1 acre) of land ‘sold’ to the factory.

Madan Das, who had given 21 katha of land, claimed he had got the money for 18 katha of land and rest amount for was still pending.

The Madhepura DM said the administra­tion had already processed land deeds for 304 acres of land and compensati­on process was almost over.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India