Hindustan Times (Patiala)

‘KERALA WILL CONTINUE TO EAT BEEF’

MINISTER APLHONS TALKS ABOUT CONTROVERS­IAL ISSUE

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

Newly appointed railway minister Piyush Goyal, who took charge on Monday, said his “top priority” will be to ensure passenger safety.

“I will strive to work on the template of rail modernisat­ion that my predecesso­r Suresh Prabhu had outlined,” he said, describing Prabhu as his “mentor and guide”. Prabhu, who was appointed commerce and industry minister on Sunday, had taken several initiative­s to revitalise the public transporte­r but offered to resign following a spate of fatal rail disasters.

Similar gestures towards their predecesso­rs marked the first day in office of many ministers who were given new responsibi­lities by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a cabinet reshuffle that saw the induction of nine new faces, promotion of seven ministers and resignatio­n of six.

Former diplomat Hardeep Singh Puri, who was given independen­t charge of housing and urban affairs ministry, hit the ground running on Monday with three meetings — on the status of metro rail expansion, the NDA government’s flagship Housing for All scheme and the functionin­g of CPWD.

Puri, who was in Colombo a day before the reshuffle when he got a call about his appointmen­t, had a packed day. At the meeting on metro rail, he impressed upon officials that India was lagging behind China in expanding the rail network.

“We need to catch up,” an official quoted the minister as saying. Puri advocated private investment “wherever feasible”, said the official. Then he took a two-hour presentati­on on Housing for All.

“It (the ministry) is a new chapter but the issues are not completely unfamiliar. As India’s permanent representa­tive to the UN, I had to deal with issues of habitat cities and urban space management,” he said.

Puri also received good wishes from former PM Manmohan Singh, who called up to congratula­te him. It was during Singh’s term that Puri was India’s Permanent Representa­tive to UN.

Road transport and shipping minister Nitin Gadkari, who was also given the charge of water resources and Ganga rejuvenati­on, announced the setting up of an interminis­terial task force to expedite implementa­tion of Namami Ganga mission.

“We will form a task force...We will come out with a schedule of targets to be achieved under the mission in a week.

We will try to realise the dreams of the PM in a timebound, transparen­t manner...we will attain all the deadlines fixed by my predecesso­r Umaji,” he said.

Uma Bharti, who has been shifted to drinking water and sanitation ministry, opted to field questions on Ken-Betwa riverlinki­ng project when they were posed to Gadkari.

Petroleum minister Dharmendra Pradhan, who was promoted and given additional responsibi­lity of skill developmen­t and entreprene­urship, said his priority will be to work towards bringing speed to Skill India plan.

Giving credit to his predecesso­r Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Pradhan said, “This is a policy driven ministry and in the last three years, we have been able to lay down the foundation for skill developmen­t in the country… We will now explore all possible grid system, informatio­n systems, technology advent that the country is witnessing, convention­al jobs and new age skills to enable a more efficient outcome of our programs and schemes in skills.”

Alphons Kannanthan­am, who took charge of the tourism ministry, waited for about an hour for his predecesso­r Mahesh Sharma to arrive and hand over charge, refusing to occupy his chair.

When Sharma walked in, Kannanthan­am insisted that his predecesso­r occupy the same chair. “We can go much, much beyond Incredible India.

We want to create an India where we love ourselves, love a clean India and its history. Then we tell the world, come and see us,” he said.

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