Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Govt’s optical fibre cable project entangled in turf war

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: NEWDELHI:The BHARATNET IS

AIMED AT PROMOTING EGOVERNANC­E BY DELIVERING GOVT SERVICES RELATED TO HEALTH AND EDUCATION, SKILLS TRAINING TO

THE RURAL POOR

A turf war between two central ministries is threatenin­g to impede progress in the government’s flagship BharatNet programme, aimed at providing broadband connectivi­ty to all 250,000 gram panchayats by 2019 through optical fibre cable to deliver government services.

Key to the government’s Digital India plan, the project has got entangled in Right of Way (RoW) issues between the department of telecommun­ications (DoT) under the ministry of communicat­ions and ministry of road transport and highways. RoW is the legal right to pass through a route or property — in this case to install optical fibre cable — that belongs to someone else.

The roads ministry has denied permission to DoT to lay cable within highways RoW until the department pays the licence fee prescribed under the Control of National Highway (Land and Traffic) Act, 2002. The Act deals with regulation of highway land for all public utilities, including telegraph infrastruc­ture, three senior government officials familiar with the developmen­t said on condition of anonymity.

DoT has refused to heed the demand, citing its own 2016 rule under the Telegraph Act that prescribes a one-time administra­tive fee for using RoW. The Telegraph Right of Way Rules prescribe a fee of ₹1,000 per km for utility service lines. With both agencies refusing to budge from their positions, the dispute went to the PMO. Nripendra Misra, principal secretary to PM Narendra Modi, in a letter to secretarie­s of the roads ministry and DoT on December 17, urged them to give “top priority” to the matter and called any delay in grant of permission “unacceptab­le.” HT has reviewed the contents of the letter.

“BharatNet is a transforma­tional initiative for digital India being implemente­d by DoT. In order to achieve smooth and expeditiou­s RoW, GoI notified Indian Telegraph RoW Rules, 2016. It must be ensured that both time taken for processing as well as the RoW charges are in line with the notified rules...” Mishra’s letter read.

BharatNet, launched in 2012, is aimed at promoting e-governance by delivering government services related to health and education , skills training and so on, to the rural poor. Until December 2017, only 100,000 gram panchayats had been connected through optic fibre cable under Phase I of the project . The total project cost is ₹45,000 crore.

A six-member committee of secretarie­s, including those from the roads and petroleum ministries, DoT, petroleum, and the Dedicated Freight Corridor Corporatio­n of India (DFCC) was set up in January to resolve the matter. The committee has not been able to make much headway. “There are different set of rules notified by different ministries, prescribin­g different fee structure. Both the ministries are citing their respective rules,” said one of the officials cited above. The highways ministry’s contention is that the DoT is using the physical domain of highways and hence should be regulated by highway administra­tion rules.

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