Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Keeping the Hope Alive! Tasks Ahead for the New Administrator

Keeping the Hope Alive!
Tasks Ahead for the New Administrator

By Zubair Ahmed

"The cry of the poor is not always just. But if you don't listen to it, you will never know what justice is." ‑ Howard Zinn



Certainly we do not have a choice in selecting our Administrator. But, sometimes by coincidence we are bestowed with Lt. Governors, who prove their mettle and leave a mark. 

Even though It's too early to presume and judge the new Administrator, Lt Gen (Retd) A K Singh, PVSM, AVSM who took over the helms of the Island territory this month., he has already suffocated to death the ardent and critical critic in me with his healing touch and down to earth disposition. But, once again the skeptic in me keeps pestering and reminding me about the events that unfolded some six and half years back when Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh took over as the Administrator.

FLASHBACK

On December 29, 2006 at 11.45 AM, when Lt Gen (Retd) Bhopinder Singh AVSM, PVSM was administered the oath of office and secrecy for the office of the Lt. Governor and Administrator, he had declared, "I don’t believe in operating from the office alone. I would be touring extensively. I would like to keep my ears to the earth so that I could feel the rumblings inside. That way, I believe, I will be able to serve the people better and meet their hopes and aspirations in a more positive and effective way. I will work in close cooperation with the stakeholders and nothing would be imposed from above."

The Lieutenant Governor and Administrator Bhopinder Singh too went on a whirlwind tour of the territory from Campbell Bay to Diglipur apprising himself of the ground realities. He had extensive meetings with the local officials, PRI members and the common people. He listened to their problems, discussed developmental programmes and in many cases took spot decisions to solve the pressing problems of the people.

LG Bhopinder Singh repeated his five point philosophy in every meeting. He exhorted the officials to complete the developmental projects in a time bound manner, to send him the feedback on progress of work at regular intervals; weekly, if possible. He also emphasised the need for the officers to be accessible to the common people, listen to their problems and expedite solutions. He demanded total transparency in governmental works and system. Bhopinder Singh assured that there was no shortage of funds for developmental works but the funds should be spent judiciously.

The Light of Andamans on 24 Feb 2007 editorialized:

"The motorcade of the dignitaries would zoom past the devastated fields filling the nostrils of farmers with dust. That is where Lt. Gen (Retd) Bhopinder Singh, Lt. Governor makes the difference. He is the man who thought it fit to go into the villages, talk to the people, realise their pains, understand their problems and put his hand of sympathy on their shoulders. That is the least a mortal can do. It is not the shelters; it is not the free ration, it not the permanent houses that drive a man to fight against odds in life, overcome tragedies. It is the encouragement, the sympathy, the understanding that acts as moral boosters."

Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh also captured the hearts of the Islanders when he spoke off the cuff at Island Tourism Festivals and at other occasions, and at many times announcing various schemes and projects, which either he could not follow up or the bureaucracy could not materialize for him.

Still, after six and half years, when the incumbent Lieutenant Governor takes a similar route, the Islanders are overwhelmed. When a soft word, a sympathetic look, an encouraging sentence, sensitivity towards common man’s feelings are at a premium, a little step with a healing touch makes people forget the past and erase all bad memories. They expect miracles.

When Lt Governor A K Singh visited the crocodile victim at GB Pant Hospital and put his hands of compassion on Lipus Das' shoulders, all protocol barriers disappeared into thin air. Instead of calling the public hearing a 'Durbar' and standing with the public interacting with them as one among them bridged the gap between the ruler and the ruled. When he cycled with the Island team and even had a slight fall at the velodrome , he stood tall amongst them. When he invited a fisherman to cut the ribbon of fish landing centre at Diglipur, he was sharing power with the common man. Within a week of swearing in, wherever he went, he left his mark. He asked DGP not to hold traffic for long during his visits.

Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh too was generous with LG's Relief Fund, which he distributed among the needy and distressed frequently which earned him praise and admiration from all quarters. Otherwise, his inept administration and ill-advised decisions without outcome dented his image.

Indeed, for Lt Gen A K Singh, its a fresh beginning. Its easy to have spot decisions, but the proposal will take ample time to overcome the labyrinthine bureaucratic process. As in the case of  an ambulance for Nicobari settlement in Harminder Bay, Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh announced it on the spot during his first visit to Little Andaman in 2007. Till 2013, no ambulance reached Harminder Bay. But, can the Islanders be rest assured that Lt Gen AK Singh is not Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh?

After the familiarization tours, when the Lieutenant Governor settles down, he will need enough resolve to review all the projects and proposals in pipeline, entwined once again in various bureaucratic conundrums. A few projects that the Islanders are hearing since last one decade if gets proper attention will go a long way.

WATER FROM RUTLAND
Water from Rutland still remains a dream. Eight years and Rs 15 crores down the line, the elusive fresh water is still in Rutland and the parched throats in Port Blair. Let the Islanders pin their hope on the new Administrator to pursue vigorously the Rutland Water Supply Scheme to serve the people with water next summer; and not just promises!   

SUBMARINE OPTICAL FIBRE CABLE
Undersea Optical Fibre Cabling connecting mainland and Island was one of the promising projects which could have changed the face of the Islands by bringing it closer to the world. The bids have been opened and the L1 identified. However, the project, which is supposed to be complete in 18 months is dragging eternally for the last three years.

WET LEASE OF SHIPS/BOATS
The undue delay in the Wet Lease of Ships/Vessels to cater in the Inter-Island, Foreshore and Harbour sector is affecting the whole sea transport system.  With shortage of vessels on all routes, service is perennially hit especially vehicle ferries in Bambooflat-Chatham sector.

CHARTERED FLIGHT BETWEEN MAINLAND-ISLAND
Chartered Flight between Mainland-Island is another project the bureaucracy is scared to venture into. With sky-rocketing airfare between Mainland and Andamans, this proposal should have been pursued vigorously.

TOURISM PROJECTS
Many Short-term and Long-term Tourism Projects were envisaged in the Tourism Policy of the Islands, which still remains in paper.

RURAL ROADS
The worst condition of rural roads with Zilla Parishad and other two wings of PRI interested in expeditious spending’ of money and rather than ‘judicious spending’.

ALTERNATE SEA-ROUTE TO BARATANG
The deadline for Alternate Sea route to Baratang is March 2015. What has been done on this front is anybody's guess. The Administration has never taken it seriously or it would not have wasted precious five years.

HOLISTIC DEVELOPMENT OF N&M ANDAMAN DISTRICT
North and Middle Andamans is yet to be treated at par with South Andaman as a district. With great difficulty a separate district of North and Middle Andaman was created amidst its fair share of political controversies and bureaucratic red tapism. It finally has a separate Zilla Parishad, a degree college, a judicial court, a hospital, a few ports and helipads, a small airstrip and a few other facilities but is totally dependent on Port Blair for all its basic needs. For every other eventuality its residents are to rush to Port Blair, be it proceeding to mainland for higher education or super-specialist medical treatment at metros. Traders sitting at Port Blair control their markets and cost of living are much higher for all basic commodities. There is always resentment in the settlers at being a step behind the South Andamanians. A unambiguous blueprint needs to be prepared for the holistic development of NMA District making it independent and self-sufficient, and reducing its dependency on Port Blair and South Andaman.

POWER TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION
Presently, there is no shortage of power in the Islands with both IPP, HPP and department-owned power plants generating surplus electricity. But, the department lags behind in proper maintenance of lines and frequent disruptions and outages causing heavy T&D loss.

The Chief Secretary and his set of bureaucrats draw power from the Administrator, and if he shows the same commitment and resolve till the end of his tenure, he will surely be remembered as an outstanding Administrator as well as human being.

The tasks ahead for the new Administrator are daunting enough. But not impossible! 

6 comments:

Francis said...

Very well written. Typical Zubair stuff. We did have friendly, relaxed, open to meet public LGs earlier. If he continues like this he will go down in history as a kind-hearted general. Throwing open the Raj Niwas gates would make him popular. Perhaps he would remove the intimidating statues near the gate and put them in the lawns. We have high expectations from His Excellency.

Francis said...

Very well written. Typical Zubair stuff. We did have friendly, relaxed, open to meet public LGs earlier. If he continues like this he will go down in history as a kind-hearted general. Throwing open the Raj Niwas gates would make him popular. Perhaps he would remove the intimidating statues near the gate and put them in the lawns. We have high expectations from His Excellency.

Kalapani Times said...

Beautifully carved out sentence structure has been the forte of my friend Zubair. I cant help appreciating him for that. He has put the whole scenario in crystal clear "Black & White" before the new Administrator to ponder upon. Let us hope for the best, as we have always been!

Debkumar Bhadra said...

The Lt Governor visiting GB Pant to console the victim of croc attack or inviting a local fisherman to join him in the ceremonial ribbon cutting indeed points towards the frame of mind with which he has come to the islands. The islanders feel elated with his humanitarian gesture.
But then there is a group waiting outside who would desperately want to be his eyes and ears. Hope his excellency identifies them before they veer him off the subject.

abhijit.reflections said...

So very aptly penned!! Time alone can give the response !! Let us not lose hope and look forward to a great tomorrow and put in our sincere efforts for and on behalf of the civil society to support the anticipated endeavour for the betterment of our emerald islands!!We too have a great role to play and we should not shirk from our responsibilities!!

drdinesh said...

We never know what is going in the mind of Hon'ble Lt. Governor, only after two or three years we will come to know the ground realities..so wait and watch..hope for the best..