Business Standard

Karnataka scraps ~1,800-crore flyover plan

- APURVA VENKAT

Faced with intense citizen protest, the Karnataka government has scrapped a plan to build a 6.2 km steel flyover at a cost of ~1,791 crore here, a year ahead of the Assembly polls.

The project involved cutting down a little over 800 trees, to facilitate faster traffic movement towards the city centre from a hub that connects to the airport. Citizens had, apart from other concerns, made accusation­s of corruption in the proposed deal. The flyover was to be jointly built by Larsen & Toubro and the Nagarjuna group.

Karnataka is among the last large states the Congress party is in power in the country. In 2013, it had wrested control from the Bharatiya Janata Party, which lost the state partly over scandals regarding alleged corruption and misuse of power.

Chief Minister Siddaramai­ah’s government had similar apprehensi­ons on the citizens’ protests. “We have been forced to prove our sincerity. There are corruption charges being levelled against us when not a single rupee has been taken as a kickback by us. We do not want to take the blame for something that we have not done; so, we are dropping the project,” said K J George, the state’s minister for Bengaluru Developmen­t and Town Planning. “The project had become a pain point for us, as the media has been speaking on a daily basis about corruption in it.”

Various citizen activists had united under the banner of ‘Steel Flyover Beda’ (beda is Kannada for no or also not wanted). “The news of the government’s climbdown is very welcome. This project was characteri­sed by unseeming hurry, no public consultati­on, no environmen­t impact assessment, inflated costs and finally an alleged diary with kickback entries,” said Rajeev Chandrasek­har, an independen­t Rajya Sabha member from the state, who was part of the fight.

Adding: “Government­s and politician­s will be wellserved to remind themselves that they are here to serve the people and our city, not to exploit. Those who do so will be held to account under law. The demand for investigat­ion into the alleged diary remains and must be followed through.”

Another prominent activist, architect Naresh Narasimhan, said one should appreciate the chief minister’s decision in accepting the mistake and withdrawin­g the project. “The CM has shown leadership and we should appreciate it. I hope the partnershi­p between citizens and the government continues for betterment of the city,” he added.

Some said the fight would move to allied issues. Srinivas Alav, founder of Citizens for Bengaluru, said the movement had turned from ‘Beda’ to ‘Beku’ (Kannada for want), “where we ask for (better) public transport”.

Citizens had, apart from other concerns, made accusation­s of corruption in the proposed deal

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