Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Tie discom officials to tree if they fine farmers: BJP MLA

- Manoj Ahuja manoj.ahuja@hindustant­imes.com

A Rajasthan MLA from the ruling BJP has asked party workers to tie to a tree officials who slap penalty on farmers for power theft or overload, accusing them of hounding the poor and favouring the rich.

Ladpura MLA Bhawani Singh Rajawat defended the remarks on Monday, a day after he made the controvers­ial statement which also goes against the government’s efforts to improve the financial health of the state power board.

“I stand by my statement. The discom officials are very lenient on industrial­ists but when they catch a farmer using four bulbs, they book him for overload and impose arbitrary penalties of up to Rs 1 lakh,” he told Hindustan Times over the phone.

Rajasthan discoms are the biggest loss-making power distributi­on companies in the country. Power thefts are common in the state, where 40% of the electricit­y is consumed by the farm sector.

“I have asked the party workers to tie the personnel who visit any village to issue VCRs to a tree. This is the only way to dissuade them in future,” Rajawat said of the vigilance checking report that is issued when a consumer is caught stealing power or committing a similar offence.

The defaulter is asked to pay a penalty, and in some cases, an FIR is also registered. These are among the many steps that Rajasthan has taken to curb thefts and meet ever-growing demand for power.

In November 2015, when the Centre launched Ujwal Discom Assurance Yojana (Uday) scheme to revive debt-laden state electricit­y boards, Rajasthan was the biggest defaulter with a debt of more than Rs

JAIPUR: I stand by my statement. The discom officials are very lenient on industrial­ists but when they catch a farmer using four bulbs, they book him for overload

BHAWANI RAJAWAT, BJP MLA

80,000 crore.

When asked if he had identified villages where such penalties were imposed, Rajawat said it happened across Rajasthan and the issue had been raised in the assembly as well.

“The statement is unfortunat­e. We are working to reduce AT&C (aggregate technical and commercial) losses and turn profitable in the next financial year and curbing power theft in rural areas is high on our priority,” a Jaipur discom official, who did not wish to be named, said.

After implementa­tion of Uday, up to 75% of the debt was to be taken over by states that could issue long-term bonds to banks with state guarantee. While this took care of most of the debt, future funding was linked to performanc­e.

Rajasthan has issued bonds worth Rs 70,525 crore, the highest among all states since the Uday scheme was implemente­d.

 ?? HT ?? Bhawani Singh Rajawat.
HT Bhawani Singh Rajawat.

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