Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

18K PANCHAYAT SANITATION STAFF REMOVED, MLAS ANGRY

- Aabshar H Quazi aabshar.quazi@hindustant­imes.com

the reserve if the tigress is not located this week.”

A senior forest official said on anonymity that when ST-5 was sighted with 4-year-old male tiger ST-11 in Umri, it was observed that her radio collar was not functionin­g.

“There are chances that she mated with ST-11. On February 27, the pugmark of the tigress was found but she was not sighted,” the official said.

“The collar helps in tracing a tiger. Sariska has such a landscape that signals from the collar sometimes are not received; such things have happened before.”

The official said, “The missing of the tigress raises five possibilit­ies

People’s representa­tives have criticised removal of around 18,000 sanitation workers from gram panchayats in Rajasthan, saying the move will affect cleanlines­s drives in rural areas.

The state government had deployed two sanitation workers at each gram panchayat, and they were paid wages from the funds received under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS). In 2016, chief minister Vasundhara Raje announced Mukhyamant­ri Swachh Gram Yojna (MSGY) to ensure cleanlines­s in villages with NREGS fund support.

Sanitation workers were removed from panchayats after the Centre asked the state government last month to stop using job scheme funds for village cleanlines­s.

Withdrawal of sanitation workers from gram panchayats is a “big jolt” to the Prime Minister’s dream project Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM), said Bhawani Singh Rajawat, BJP MLA from Ladpura in Kota district.

“I have raised the issue in the state assembly. Municipal bodies have sanitation resources and staff in urban areas. The decision to deploy sanitation workers at gram panchayats was good; their removal is not justified,” Rajawat said. “Rural areas either do not have drains, or if they have drains, there is no dedicated staff for sanitation.”

Kota District Sarpanch Associatio­n president said, “The state government should reinstate sanitation workers at gram panchayat level to ensure cleanlines­s in rural areas.”

Responding to Rajawat’s question in the assembly on removal of sanitation workers, state panchayat raj minister Rajendra Singh Rathore had said, “The government had kept two sanitation staff for every 150 houses at a gram panchayat. Around 18,000 sanitation workers were removed after the union government’s objection (to wage payment from NREGS funds.”

Rathore said the chief minister and the panchayat raj ministry would soon write to the Centre seeking permission to reappoint sanitation workers in rural areas. On February 20, the SBM director in the state asked district authoritie­s to stop providing manpower to the CM’s cleanlines­s scheme through NREGS funds. The CM’s scheme aimed at making villages clean and creating awareness about cleanlines­s among rural people, besides encouragin­g them to recycle biodegrada­ble waste.

KOTA: THE STATE GOVERNMENT HAD DEPLOYED TWO SANITATION WORKERS AT EACH GRAM PANCHAYAT, AND THEY WERE PAID WAGES FROM THE FUNDS RECEIVED UNDER THE NATIONAL RURAL EMPLOYMENT GUARANTEE SCHEME

– she changed her territory, moved to a safer place to give birth to cubs, died due to poisoning, died due to old age, or could have been poached. But at present, the focus is on locating her.”

Sariska lost all its tigers 12 years ago to poaching. With an overall area of about 800 sq km and a core area of approximat­ely 500 sq km, STR has now 14 tigers – nine female and five male.

Eight tigers were translocat­ed from Sawai Madhopur Reserve to Sariska between 2008 and 2012. One of these was poisoned in 2010. Tigresses ST-2, ST-9 and ST-10 gave birth to seven cubs between 2012 and 2017.

 ?? HT FILE ?? Officials said the radio collar of the tigress had been defunct since February 7.
HT FILE Officials said the radio collar of the tigress had been defunct since February 7.

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