Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Punish babus and netas for criminal negligence

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tively lower rent compared to the old business hubs. Lakhs of office workers now commute to the area, most of them by the suburban trains on the Western and Central Railways. Their only other option — which is equally agonising — is to spend hours travelling by road. Apparently, nobody told the Indian Railways about the big changes in the area.

Lower Parel is served by Parel and Currey Road stations on the Central Railway and Elphinston­e Road, Lower Parel stations on the Western Railway. These stations were built during the first phase of railway constructi­on in the country in the first half of the 20th century. At that time, the area was filled with textile mills and chawls that housed the workers. Stations were not made to handle a heavy rush of commuters.

When the area started to change in the 1990s, the railways and the city’s government looked away. The government allowed developers to construct high-density office complexes without bothering to think how workers would reach there. This is clearly a planning loophole.

The result is that these stations are now among the most crowded and most dangerous in the city.

Commuters using Parel and Elphinston­e Road stations will tell you there are stampede-like situations daily. Parel has not been remodelled though there has been talk about it for decades.

This road turns in a septic water pool when it rains because the railways forgot to build storm water drains along the lane’s periphery. The only addition has been a pedestrian bridge at the northern end of the station, which few commuters use as it goes nowhere. An extra platform is being constructe­d to ease the crowding but work has been exasperati­ngly slow. The railway’s solution to the crowding has been to station two constables with lathis to herd the crowds.

While millions risk injury and death, senior railway babus travel south in government cars to their quarters in Badhwar Park. They, and the politician­s who represent the city, have not told the Railway Board about the risks faced by Mumbai’s commuters. Babus and netas will have to be punished for this criminal negligence.

Chakmas in Mizoram have written to the Centre, seeking security for the minority community after a group of people claiming to be members of Mizo Students Union (MSU) vandalised Chakma House owned by the Chakma Autonomous District Council in Aizawl on Thursday.

Following the incident in which the liaison officer of Chakma House was locked up for 15 minutes, the All India Chakma Social Forum (AICSF) has asked for deployment of security forces.

According to AICSF, all the guests in Chakma House were asked to vacate the premises following threat from MSU leaders.

Two Mizo organisati­ons carried out a procession against Chakmas in Aizawl on Friday and a Chakma Bandh, preventing members of the community from coming out of their residences, was carried out at Lunglei. “The attack on Chakma House and permission to allow a bandh against Chakmas shows law and order in Mizoram has collapsed,” said Paritosh Chakma, AICSF secretary general. HTC

GUWAHATI:

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