Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

UP’s parched hamlet now dreams of running water

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

CHITRAKOOT: A little-known village in Uttar Pradesh’s Bundelkhan­d, one of India’s driest and poorest regions, reveals an India that has all but disappeare­d.

The village, Pathramani, still doesn’t have a paved road. Rustred hillocks and boulders leading up to the village resemble pictures of a Mars’ landscape sent by NASA’s rover. Bullock carts ply on its dusty roads and most people live in low-roofed mud houses.

People here have gone to astonishin­g lengths to get water. A majority refused to vote in UP’s 2017 state and 2019 national elections as a mark of protest, a fact that was corroborat­ed by the district administra­tion of Chitrakoot, in which Pathramani falls.

Chitrakoot is no ordinary place. It is where Hindu God Ram spent 11 of his 14 years in exile, according to the epic Ramayana.

In the recent state elections, voters did participat­e in the ballots as signs of water supply work emerged.

Despite the rains it gets every monsoon, the hamlet is mostly dry because its impermeabl­e terrain doesn’t allow rainfall to seep into the earth, necessary for aquifers. A few ponds have water that is undrinkabl­e, salty and contaminat­ed.

People shouldn’t be growing wheat at all since it’s a water-hungry crop, but they still do, irrigating their land with the contaminat­ed water.

Life is miserable. Lack of water means few outside the village are keen to marry off their daughters to Pathramani’s men, as the drudgery of fetching water from far-off sources falls on women.

“It’s been this way as far back as I can remember,” said 62-yearold resident Ram Baran Singh. The water department provides drinking water through tanker lorries, but they are never enough.

During harsher conditions, authoritie­s have issued orders in the past prohibitin­g the use of water provided by lorries for nondrinkin­g purposes. “I feel itchy after bathing in the contaminat­ed pond,” says villager Lokesh Yadav. People here often get stones in their kidneys due to lower water intake, said an official, requesting anonymity.

Like others, Singh is anxiously waiting for a dream to become reality: a functional water tap at his doorstep. If the state’s deadline for the job is met, parched homes in this Bundelkhan­d region should get water by September 2022.

At roughly 47%, India is nearly halfway through the ambitious programme – Jal Jeevan Mission (water is life) – to make available tap water in each one of India’s 190 million rural homes.

The programme was launched by the Narendra Modi government in 2019, with a deadline of 2024, while Uttar Pradesh officials say parched belts of Bundelkhan­d will get tap water by September this year.

The scheme is likely to be a talking point for his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in that year’s national elections – water is a precious commodity, piped water even more so, and there are still many villages that suffer for lack of it.In Pathramani, the pipes are being laid. In nearby Dugua, a tank that can hold 175 kilolitres is nearing completion. Some 50km away lies the source that will supply the villages: an intake well in the Yamuna river.

“The physical progress so far is 70%. We are monitored by higher authoritie­s three days a week. We are confident of adhering to the deadline,” additional district magistrate Sunandu Sudhakaran said.

Residents, who face a daily water crisis, don’t easily buy these assurances. “What if engineers leave all this incomplete?” asked villager Ramesh Kumar.

But despite Uttar Pradesh lagging behind many states in the Jal Jeevan programme – covering some 13% of its 26 million households, according to real-time data on a centralise­d dashboard – the progress has been significan­t. As officials point out the incrementa­l coverage marks a 145% increase in the number of households with piped water since the scheme’s launch in 2019 (it excludes households which already had water taps under previous schemes).

The focus, the officials add, is on the driest parts, which are also geographic­ally the most challengin­g to connect to a water source.

A federal review last year asked the state to give “undivided focus on coverage of priority areas, i.e. water quality affected habitation­s, drought prone area, eight Aspiration­al and 20 Japanese Encephalit­is-affected districts, Scheduled Castes/ Scheduled Tribes majority areas and Saansad Adarsh Gram Yojana, etc”, according to an official document.

Jal Jeevan is a critical national project because nearly 820 million people in 12 major river basins of the country face high to extreme water stress.

Getting to a water source is a long haul in rural India. In Jharkhand, it takes women 40 minutes one way, without taking into account the waiting time, according to a National Sample Survey Organisati­on survey. In Bihar, it’s 33 minutes. Rural Maharashtr­a clocks an average of 24 minutes and Uttar Pradesh 38.

So why is water scarce?

Bundelkhan­d has a recorded annual average rainfall of 1,000mm, mostly in July and August, according to Dalchand Jhariya, a geologist from the National Institute of Technology, Raipur. The “high intensity of rain scarcely leaves any time for the water to infiltrate to the soil” while degraded forest cover inversely affect water infiltrati­on and groundwate­r.

“This itself causes the unusually high water run-off rate gushing towards the north, creating deep gorges and rapids because of the Vindhyan plateaus flanked by high cliffs.” High summer temperatur­es, sometimes nearing 50 degrees Celsius, cause quick evaporatio­n in ponds.

From a water source, usually a river or a dam, to a household, it takes over 23 physical structures to get water flowing, said supervisio­n engineer Dhruv Shukla.

“To lay pipelines, we have had to blast our way through hard rock,” said Shukla. His job is to coordinate task outsourced to major firms, such as Larsen and Toubro and GVPR Engineers.

The Bundelkhan­d region, spread over 70,000 square km in 13 districts of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, faced a nonstop drought between 2003 and 2010, decimating farming and setting off waves of out migration.

Seven of Bundelkhan­d’s districts lie in Uttar Pradesh: Chitrakoot, Banda, Mahoba, Hamirpur, Lalitput, Jhansi and Jalaun. All of them are parched.

It’s, however, Chitrakoot, which poses an uphill task because of its topography.

The rockier the terrain, the costlier and more challengin­g the task. In this part of the region, provisioni­ng tap water to slightly over 100,000 households in 461 villages will cost ₹1,132 crore, according to the district official quoted above.

Last week, the Centre released a fresh tranche of ₹2,717.62 crore to Uttar Pradesh for the tap water mission. The Jal Jeevan Mission’s goal is to provide drinking water. That will end a lot of suffering but not larger economic woes.

“Agricultur­e needs water. Industry also needs water. So, Bundelkhan­d suffers on both counts,” said Girish Sharma of the Dewas-based non-profit Samaj Pragati Sahayog. By September, that could change.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? India has covered roughly 47% of the 190 million rural homes under the Jal Jeevan Mission.
HT PHOTO India has covered roughly 47% of the 190 million rural homes under the Jal Jeevan Mission.

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