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This is no miracle. What you see is the hard work of the people of the state, the officials, employees, MLAs and ministers. We worked as a team, reached everywhere, took stock and did what needed to be done.
It will take us time to rebuild the infrastructure that has been destroyed; but all roads are now open and the state is absolutely safe. I invite people and tourists to come and see the change for themselves.
Nothing really until now. What New Delhi has released is merely an advance amount from the annual budgetary grant determined before the disasters struck. We had demanded a special central relief package of Rs 12,000 crore.
We had sent the resolution adopted by the Assembly, though unsupported by the BJP, to the government. We are not clear yet if it is coming. However, the state government has arranged for Rs 4,500 crore for relief, restoration and rehabilitation from its own resources.
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Heavier than normal rainfall, cloudbursts and landslides affected water and power supply and damaged the irrigation system. After stock-taking, we decided to take temporary measures to restore systems. We did not wait for central grants to come through or aim for permanent restoration.
That is why you find there is no panic in the state, no chaos. An important reason was that people stood by the government and helped us restore systems. I am deeply thankful to them.
What is sad, however, is the behaviour of BJP leaders. They would not even utter the phrase ‘national calamity’ in the House, leave alone ‘special relief package’. BJP’s Members of Parliament from the state failed to even submit an appeal to the Union home minister urging him to help the state.
I did not expect MPs to pay anything from their savings but I did expect that BJP legislators would send a delegation to New Delhi to demand urgent aid and relief assistance. This was not the time for politics but...
I was moved by children going around collecting donations, with their gullaks (piggy banks) in their hands. I had donated Rs 19 lakh from my personal savings during the Covid pandemic as well. There was a BJP government in the state at the time. So, this was not a publicity gimmick.
I did not think much about it because as chief minister I get my salary every month and although I was left with just Rs 17,000 after donating Rs 51 lakh, I was not worried. Thousands of citizens actually donated and that is how we could mobilise Rs 200 crore from the people alone. It was historic.
There are two relief manuals, one of the central government and the other of the state. The state government manual provided for a compensation of Rs 1,00,000 (one lakh) if an entire house was destroyed and a maximum of Rs 6,500 for partial damage.
Himachal is the first state, and certainly the first hill state, to enhance the compensation from Rs 1,00,000 to Rs 7,00,000. We will pay one lakh for partially damaged houses. We resolved to provide free water and electricity to the victims.
We reduced the tax on cement to just Rs 280 per bag. As many as 16,000 families will benefit, of whom 3,500 saw their houses being completely destroyed.
Additionally, for milch animals killed in the disaster, the state government has made provision for Rs 55,000 in the case of cows and buffaloes and Rs 6,500 for goats.
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We dramatically increased the support price for apples, the highest increase in the last seven decades. But a lot more needs to be done. We are engaged in putting the economy and our finances back on the rails.
Every day we are tinkering with new ideas and I am confident that the state’s economy will improve and become sufficiently robust in four years. We will work hand-in-hand with the apple growers to make Himachal one of the most prosperous states in the next 10 years.
In the hills, landslides do take place when roads are laid. It is true that experts advise hillsides be cut in slopes. Even then, they say, it normally takes four to five years for the hills to settle. Your observation is correct.
The NHAI (National Highways Authority of India) has been guilty of cutting hillsides vertically at 90 degrees. We have had discussions with NHAI and they have agreed to mend their ways.
Natural disasters have nothing to do with inflow of tourists. Yes, sometimes the rush of tourists does become unmanageable and creates problems of parking and vehicular movement. We are holding talks with experts and consultants to find ways of sorting out these problems.
We have enough home-stays and hotels for tourists. Presently we receive around 15 million tourists every year. I hope we will soon be able to receive 50 million tourists. ‘Over-tourism’ is not an appropriate term.
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Himachal Pradesh has not had one new hill station in the last 75 years. We have been advised to develop new tourists spots and new hill stations. Availability of water and of course land will be the key factors. We have tentatively identified two spots, one at Palampur and another at Jakhya Devi, both in Kangra.
I do not say this will be a cakewalk. But new hill stations are needed and studies are being undertaken to proceed with due diligence and care for such concerns.
As you yourself pointed out, Himachal Pradesh has 65 per cent forest cover. The state functions as the lungs for the plains of north India. The state, however, gets nothing in return. This was the context in which I had made the statement that the state needs to be compensated. As for turning the state into a ‘tourist capital’, it will be a long haul and there will undoubtedly be many obstacles.
I like to believe that we have won the trust of the people. People take us and our word seriously. They believe that if we say something, we will deliver. That has been the biggest gain. You may also ask around and people will tell you, I am sure, that things are changing in government offices.
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