Showing posts with label Railway Budget. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Railway Budget. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

PC's fans -Indian Union Budget 2008-2009

Finance Minister P. Chidambaram's farmer-friendly budget, which had not made much of an impression on our dour comrades, is finding an entirely unexpected resonance in communist China. Raving about the Indian budget in a signed article published in Beijing News, Chinese scholar Zhu Sipei says it reflects the "Indian government's determination to let farmers gain a share of the wealth created by the country's rapid economic growth."

That was not all. Zhu insisted that "the same is overdue for China's peasantry, which has played the biggest role in China's road to prosperity with its sacrifices to feed and enrich the country's modern cities."

The Chinese enthusiasm for India's budget comes amidst mounting rural unrest in our northern neighbour. In recent years, China has moved to grant a measure of property rights to its citizens, especially in urban areas. The peasants do get leases on land, but can't own it. The Communist Party is reluctant to touch the socialist dogma on 'collective ownership of land'.

Driven to desperation, Chinese farmers are fighting back with the slogan 'land to the tiller' that should sound familiar to our communists. China's rural unrest is gaining new international and domestic attention, thanks to the focus on the Olympic Games to be held in Beijing later this year.

Last month, a Chinese land rights activist, Yang Chunlin, was put on trial for subversion. Yang gathered 10,000 signatures for an open letter demanding farmers' rights. To rally support, he posted the letter on the Internet with the title, 'We want human rights, not the Olympics.' For now, opposing the Olympics is the bigger, more urgent crime.

Lalu's big think

While Chidambaram has reasons to be pleased, Railway Minister Lalu Yadav might want to check out what the Chinese Railways are up to in Nepal which shares a long border with Bihar.

After it completed the rail link to Lhasa a couple of years ago, Beijing has repeatedly signaled its interest in extending it up to the Nepal border. Now there are indications that China is ready to push the line right into the Kathmandu valley.

An assistant foreign minister, He Yafei, who is visiting Nepal this week, has reportedly reaffirmed Beijing's interest in the Kathmandu rail link. The minister has also promised to make permanent arrangements for the supply of petroleum products to Nepal from China. Until now India has been the sole supplier of fuel to land-locked Nepal.

When these two projects go through, China would have neutralised India's geographic advantages in Nepal. Rather than oppose these projects, India should expedite its own plans to build oil pipelines into Nepal and deepen the Indian rail network's presence in our northern neighbour.

Lalu has enough political clout to get New Delhi to make an historic offer on building a rail link to Kathmandu and beyond. He could even propose joining up with the Chinese rail network on Nepal's border. That should connect the markets of north India and west China and position Nepal as a transit zone.

A rail line connecting northern India with Kathmandu has been around for a long time. Rail Bhavan's babus, however, have had no stomach for it. After China's breathtaking Lhasa line and India's own spectacular rail road to Srinagar, under construction, why should an Indian rail line to Kathmandu be mission impossible?

http://in.news.yahoo.com/indianexpress/20080306/r_t_ie_op_clm/top-pc-s-fans-7f368a9_1.html

Monday, February 25, 2008

India Rail Budget 2008-2009

Lalu presents Railway Budget for 2008-09
E-ticket will also be available in wait list
Janasadharan TIcket booking seva extended all zones
Exploring options of reserved and unreserved ticketing through mobiles
Ticket reservation possible from anywhere
Online info boards in overnight trains to display news
Railways to introduce multi-purpose smart Mumbai card
Touchscreen, colour display boards at stations
Rajdhani, Shatabdi maintenance by private agencies
Display boards at railway stations
3000 new bogies to freight trains
High-level, low-level platforms to be increased
Multi-level parking at 36 railway stations
Modular toilets to be installed in trains
New call centres to be added
“Go Mumbai” Smart Card for Mumbai suburban trains, to start from next month

India Rail Budget 2008-2009 - LIVE Major highlights Railway Budget 2008-09

New Delhi: Union Railway Minister Lalu Prasad is presenting his fifth railway budget in Lok Sabha. Headlines India is bringing you the major highlights of the Railway Budget 2008-09.

Railways registered a profit of Rs 25,000 crore in 2007-08 fiscal
Railways earned a surplus of Rs 68,778 crore in last 4 years
Railways earned Rs 2,000 crore from 3,000 additional bogies
Lalu claims that productivity assets has increased
Till December 2007, 8.2 per cent growth in freight loading
Railways registered an Operating Ratio of 76.3 per cent in 2007-08 Fiscal
All trains to have modular toilets
Go-Mumbai Card, a multi purpose card for Mumbai trains
Passengers can get E-Tickets on the Internet
Plan to do away with long queues on Reservation counters in 2 years
Number of trains increased in peak seasons
Display facility on all express trains
Maintenance of trains to be transferred to private agencies
Rs 500 crore to be spent on maintenance of platforms
30 big stations to have multi-level parking
High level platforms to be introduced on major stations
50 more stations to have escalators and elevators facility

http://www.headlinesindia.com/archive_html/26February2008_71348.html

Bookmark

Add to Technorati Favorites