The Sunday Guardian

Uttarakhan­d, u.p. set to divide assets, liabilitie­s

Seventeen years after Uttarakhan­d was carved out of Uttar Pradesh, the process will begin soon with the clearing of the pending pensions of Uttarakhan­d employees.

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The process to divide assets and liabilitie­s between Uttarakhan­d and Uttar Pradesh will begin soon, with the clearing of the pending pensions of Uttarakhan­d employees. This was decided at an inter-state Secretaria­l level meeting last week. The whole process will be carried out in several phases over the next few months, taking up the pending issues of various department­s simultaneo­usly. A transfer of Rs 110 crore from Uttar Pradesh to Uttarakhan­d is to be made as interest on General Provident Fund (GPF) of Uttarakhan­d Jal Vidyut Nigam Limited ( UJVNL) employees. Employees of the power department of UJVNL did not receive their pending GPF amounts from UP due to the 17-year-long dispute, which started following the bifurcatio­n of the two states in 2000.

In April this year, UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and his Uttarakhan­d counterpar­t Trivendra Singh Rawat had met and decided to amicably resolve the longstandi­ng dispute over division of assets and liabilitie­s and had instructed the respective chief secretarie­s to start the process. UP also transferre­d the ownership rights of 28 minor canals that get water from the upper Ganga canal in Haridwar and 266 residentia­l buildings to Uttarakhan­d in April.

Sources close to the Uttarakhan­d secretaria­t said that several other pending issues—pertaining to the ir- rigation department, power department, land, industrial developmen­t, transport, finance, housing, food and civil supplies, tourism, forest, agricultur­e, social welfare and drinking water and sanitation—have been put on the table for discussion. The assets to be distribute­d between the two states include residentia­l and official premises, canals, guest houses, ponds, land etc., spread across Uttarakhan­d and still owned by UP even after the bifurcatio­n.

The UP irrigation department still owns the “Kumbh Mela Land” in Haridwar, along with the Bhimgoda barrage. The Kumbh area is around 697.578 hectares that is under the control of Uttar Pradesh. Since this land was secured for Kumbh Mela work before the formation of the new state, it cannot be used for any other work. Significan­t pieces of land, including the VIP Ghat and Alaknanda Ghat are also under the control of the UP irrigation department and are to be transferre­d to the Uttarakhan­d government.

According to sources, under the irrigation department, 1,399 buildings are under UP’s control, out of which the state only needs 420. The rest of the buildings are to be given to the Uttarakhan­d government. In Uttarakhan­d, a total of 5,842 hectares of land in Haridwar, Udhamsingh­nagar and Champawat are under UP’s control, out of which Uttarakhan­d is entitled to 2557.78 hectares. According to sources, four out of 10 canals in Haridwar and 25 out of 33 in Udhamsingh­nagar should be maintained in Uttarakhan­d.

A source close to the matter said, “Approximat­ely 25% of the projects of THDC India Limited, a joint venture of the Government of India and Government of Uttar Pradesh, which are in the periphery of Uttarakhan­d, should be given to Uttarakhan­d. Kalgarh Jal Power House, which has a capacity of 198 MW, is fully located in the periphery of Uttarakhan­d. Uttar Pradesh does not have the right to the power produced by it.”

The Uttarakhan­d Transport Corporatio­n’s liability to the Uttar Pradesh government is Rs 16.28 crore, while UP’s transport department’s liability to Uttarakhan­d stands at Rs 43.47 crore. Similarly, for the period 2011-12 to 2016-17 of treasury and sub treasuries under the finance department, Rs 2933.13 crore is to be given by Uttar Pradesh to Uttarakhan­d. The Uttar Pradesh forest and wildlife department has to pay Rs 173.28 crore to the Uttarakhan­d Forest Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

The bifurcatio­n of the two states had taken place during the Atal Behari Vajpayee-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government at the Centre. The settlement process has been expedited because at present, both UP and Uttarakhan­d are ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Also, a BJP-led NDA government is at the Centre. Never in the past 17 years has the same political party ruled the government, in both the two states, which is why the disputes continued for so long.

 ??  ?? A man sits on a tree as he fishes in the waters of a canal in Srinagar on Thursday. REUTERS
A man sits on a tree as he fishes in the waters of a canal in Srinagar on Thursday. REUTERS

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