Govt targets state a 10 billion US dollar economy by 2028

Staff Reporter

Shillong, Feb 16: Meghalaya Governor Phagu Chauhan today said the State government has set an ambitious target of making Meghalaya a 10 billion US dollars economy by 2028, thereby doubling the State’s GDP.

“Sectors like infrastructure, power, water supply, investment promotion, IT, tourism and agriculture will drive the economic growth necessary for achieving that target,” Chauhan said while delivering his address in Hindi during the first day of the Assembly’s budget session.

Highlighting the policies of the MDA government, the governor said the State envisions doubling the farmers’ income by leveraging Meghalaya’s unique agro-climate conditions and by strengthening and innovating value chains.

To this end, the government is prioritizing farm to table interventions in high-value crops like turmeric, ginger, oranges, pineapple, herbs, spices and honey in mission mode. Under these missions, farmers are provided with planting materials, capacity building, value addition infrastructure and market linkages. Till date, these missions have helped 1 3 lakh farmers augment their income.

He said the Government is investing heavily in animal husbandry to create rural livelihoods and increase milk and meat production.

A 50 per cent subsidy on unit costs for piggery, goatery, and poultry is being offered under the CM ELEVATE program. Under the Piggery Mission, 367 cooperative societies have been formed which are operating more than 6,000 breeding and fattening units. More than 1,000 dairy farmers have availed interest-free loans under the Meghalaya Milk Mission.

Stating that Meghalaya’s fish production increased by 1,139 metric tons in 2023, reaching 19,374 metric tons, the governor said the state is taking further steps to reduce the demand-supply gap by introducing advanced spawning and culturing techniques like Recirculatory Aquaculture System and Integrated Cage Culture. Institutions for modernizing fishery related infrastructure and expertise is being set up across the state with support from NABARD.

In regards to the health sector, Chauhan said that Meghalaya’s public health indicators have shown remarkable improvement in the last few years. The state has experienced a 50% reduction in maternal death following the introduction of the Chief Minister’s Safe Motherhood Scheme.

“The scheme’s existing network of 140 transit homes is being strengthened by upgrading 20 CHCs into referral units. 6 24. 87% of eligible infants have been brought under the state’s routine immunization target. There has also been a 30% reduction in infant mortality, both of which are record-breaking achievements”.

He said that the Government has taken the lead in powering its public health infrastructure by solar energy adding that close to 400 sub-centres and more than 50 primary health centres and a number of other healthcare facilities are now fully solar powered. This has resulted in deliveries being conducted for the first time at sub-centres.

Further, the governor said to bolster the state’s healthcare workforce, the Medical Recruitment Board has filled 47% of vacant medical positions in just one year. The government has disbursed more than 6 crores rupees through 6,500 Village Health Councils to strengthen localized public health capacity through community participation.

Asserting that the government remains committed to providing quality education at all levels, the governor said the government is currently upgrading the existing infrastructure in all schools.

“208 Elementary, Secondary and Higher Secondary Schools have been taken up in Phase-I. 111 schools are being covered under Phase-II and another 1,725 under Phase-III. The long-standing issue of recruitment of government elementary school teachers has been successfully completed recently,” he said while adding that the 996 newly recruited teachers were handed appointment letters in programs at Tura and Shillong.

In the field of higher education, he said that Shillong Government College of Engineering was inaugurated last year and will welcome its first cohort of students soon. “The College of Architecture and Urban Planning in Tura is scheduled for completion later this year. The Captain Williamson Sangma Technical University Act was amended to make it a State University to be able to affiliate colleges. This is going to be Meghalaya’s first state university,” he said.

Coming to employment generation, the governor said that the Government aspires to train 1.5 lakh youth in employable skills in the next 5 years through the Skills Meghalaya program. Recent initiatives in skilling include the training of nurses who will find employment in developed countries like Japan, Singapore and the United Kingdom. A large number of youth are also being trained for self employment in trades like integrated farming, hospitality, culinary arts and fashion. These skilled youth are also being provided start-up tools to take up production, thus leading to employment and contributing to the State’s growth.

Moreover, the governor informed that till date, 4.8 lakh households across the state have been provided with functional tap water connections under the Jal Jeevan Mission – a coverage of 74% which is above the national average.

He said apart from households, 66% schools, 66% of Anganwadi centers and 71% of PHCs have been provided with drinking water by the state government. More than 1,000 villages in the state have been certified as ‘Har Ghar Jal’ villages. 5,467 villages have been declared open defecation free under the Swachh Bharat Mission (Gramin) Program. The government is targeting to achieve ODF status for all remaining villages in Meghalaya by the end of the current year, he added.

Further, Chauhan said that the department has taken several steps to extend the air transport infrastructure of the State. Shillong is already connected with flights to 8 cities across India.

“Airport Authority of India is conducting a technical study to expand the Shillong Airport at Umroi to allow regular passenger flights to all major cities,” he said while informing that the proposed heliports in Shillong and Tura are in advanced stage of planning.

On the decision of the government to develop the new hill city – the New Shillong Township, Chauhan said that it will be in two phases. The first – an Administrative City at Mawdiangdiang with world class governance infrastructure is making steady progress. The second – a Knowledge City at Mawkhanu is in the ideation stage.

As part of a comprehensive connectivity plan for New Shillong, 3 roads connecting New Shillong, Shillong City and the Shillong Bypass are being built. Similar plans are being developed for Tura and Jowai.

He said that the government is also taking a number of measures to enhance ease of living for citizens in urban areas. “A Comprehensive Mobility Plan is being worked out for Shillong and Tura with the aim of providing seamless, sustainable and affordable mobility. As part of this effort, the state is repurposing the government land for building parking spaces, pathways and improving road geometrics. Works on upgradation of the Umkhrah Riverfront and Ward’s Lake in Shillong are under progress,” Chauhan said.

Hill Stations of India- A British Legacy

by Parag Ranjan Dutta

Without doubts, India is one of the most favoured tourist destinations of the world today. Millions come to India every year to discover our works of architecture, cultural heritage and the glorious historical past. But of the great number of foreign tourists only few of them venture in the higher reaches of the beautiful hill stations nestled in the Himalayas and elsewhere. Come the sultry summer months thousands of Indians, as if bitten by instinct take days off to the hills to enjoy the salubrious climate. Much before the capital of the country was shifted from Calcutta to Delhi in 1911, a number of hill stations had already been developed in the hills in erstwhile U.P. and Himachal Pradesh. On a later day the British developed cantonments and sanatoria in the hills for the British Army and subsequently for the Indian soldiers.
It is not very easy to trace back a chronological history of the hill stations founded and developed by the British. My story is about some selected ones and begins with the history of Darjeeling. Darjeeling was discovered by Lt. General George Lloyd of the East India Company but it was never a part of India then. In the early part of 1700s Darjeeling was under the administration of Chogyl (King) of Sikkim, inhabited by the local Lepchas. Gorkhas from the neighbouring Nepal made several unsuccessful attempts to invade Sikkim but in 1780 were in full control of the territory. In 181 A war between the British and the Royal Nepal Kingdom broke out in the western front in present day U.P. and in 1816 the Nepalese army lost the battle. The fallout of the battle was seen in the eastern part of India when Nepal was forced to sign a treaty at Sugauli, on March 28, 1861, conceding entire territory, including Darjeeling, annexed from the Chogyl to the East India Company. Sir Ashley Eden, Lieutenant Governor of Bengal signed the treaty on behalf of the British. It was Dr. Archibald Campbell who may be credited to be called the founding father of Darjeeling. A member of the Bengal Medical Service Dr. Campbell was the first superintendant of the sanatorium of Darjeeling.

In 1817 John Sullivan, the collector of Coimbatore was on a mission to the Blue Mountains or the Nilgiri Hills for the first time with a contingent of British and Madras sepoys. After travelling for six days through difficult terrains reached a scenic hill station and was very much fascinated by its beauty. The place was then called Udhagamandalam, derived from Ottakal Mandu, which means village of a single stone. The place was inhabited by the local tribal people, called the Todas. In 1822 Sullivan bought a land from the Todas and built a permanent house and named it ‘Stone House’, and planted an oak tree in the compound. Wellington, another beautiful hill station was founded by John Sullivan in1820. The cantonment town of Wellington is the home to the Madras Regimental Centre and the Defence Services Staff College.

Around the same time Shimla was founded by the British when General Hastings declared a war against Nepal I 1814 for economic reasons. The main reason behind this invasion was Nepal’s growing army strength and its vintage location. Anglo Nepalese war was fought between1814-16, and after the war the treaty of Sugauli between the Gorkha chiefs and the British, some areas of present-day Nepal was ceded to the British East India Company. Prior to the coming of the British, Shimla, the ‘Queen of the Hills’ was ruled by the Gorkhas. During the war Anglo Nepalese war with the British found a temple of the Goddess Shyamala in the midst of a dense forest. Goddess Shyamala Devi is actually an incarnation of the Goddess Kali. From then on the place came to be known as Shimla, after Goddess Shymala.

In the 19th century after the Gorkha conquest of the Kumaon – Garhwal region under one Umer Singh Thapa the British moved from Dehradun, the state capital, to Mussoorie, approximately twenty kilometres to the to build a sanatorium. It is then the British raised their Gorkha battalion. It is believed that Mussoorie has been derived from an indigenous shrub, mansur which used to grow on the hill slopes and extensively used by shepherds to graze their sheep. To the south Mussoorie overlooks the Doon Valley and the Lower Siwalik Range. Mussoorie, the beautiful hill station was actually founded by one Lieutenant Frederick Young, an Irish officer of the East India Company when he ventured into the hills for shooting game around 1823. Frederick decided to build a hunting lodge on the Camel Back road, located at the foothills of the Garhwal Himalayas.

Captain Young, the commandant of the first Gorkha Battalion, built his house in the twin town of Landour and named it Mullingar, after the name of his native place in Ireland. Scotts and Irish were very nostalgic in naming their houses in a faraway place from their homes. The small cantonment town is known for its colonial-type architecture and triangular-roofed house. Landour, considered a part of Mussoorie is known for fairytale atmosphere to the outsiders. The quiet small town is ideal for sidewalks among the greenery. The name Landour is drawn from Llanddowor, a village in Carmarthenshire in South West Wales.

After the Anglo-Sikh war Punjab province came under the British rule. It was then that one Lt. Col. Napier, the chief engineer of the Punjab Province spotted a beautiful place in the Chamba Valley of Himachal Pradesh. In 1854 Sir Donald Macleod suggested that the charming hill station founded by Napier be named after Lord Dalhousie. Lord Dalhousie the Governor General of India wanted to establish summer resort here. Lansdown, the little explored hill station and not very far off from Dalhousie was founded by the British Viceroy in 1887. In the wake of the Tibetan uprising in 1959 his Holiness Dalai Lama escaped from Lhasa. The head quarter of the Tibetan Government in exile was shifted to Macleodganj, a suburb of picturesque Dharamshala in the Kangra district of Himachal Pradesh. In the 18th century the region fell to the Gorkhas and after the Anglo- Sikh war, the settlement was named Macleodganj. Today Macleod Ganj is known as ‘Litte Lhasa’. Macleodganj is the home of the local tribes, the Gaddis and Gujjars. It was named after Sir Donald Macleod, the former Lt. Governer of Punjab. Ranikhet though ruled by the Kumaoni rulers, it was the British who took over the beautiful hill station of the Kumaon in 1859, where they wanted to develop a cantonment. Lord Mayo was so much impressed with the place that he wanted to shift the summer capital from Shimla to Ranikhet. But the plan did not work. The British developed the place and built a cantonment, which is now the head quarter of the Kumaon Regiment.

One of the marvels of Kerala, Munnar, known for its tea plantations was accidentally discovered by John Daniel Munroe, a British resident of Travancore kingdom, Kerala, when he was asked to solve a dispute between the Kingdom and Madras. One A.H. Sharp was the first person to plant tea bushes in about 50 acres of land. In 1895 Finlay and Muir bought 33 estates. In 1964, the Tata Group entered the area and started a collaboration with Tata Finley, a new horizon opened up in tea industry. Munnar, a lovely hill station in the Western Ghats of the Iduki district of Kerala is a former resort of the British Raj. The lush green hill slopes dotted with tea and coffee plantations look like Alpine Meadows. Munnar, known as ‘Kashmir of South India’ is famous for a rare flower Nellakurinji which flowers in every twelve years from August to October.

In 1842 Sir Thomas Munroe, the Governor of Madras Residency discovered Yercud near Shevaroy Hills in the Eastern Ghats. Etymologically the name Yercud has been derived from two Tami words, ‘yer’ meaning lake and ‘kadu’ from forest. But it was David Cockburn who really developed the place with the introduction of coffee, pears and apple. In 1821 lt. B.S. Ward was the first person to visit Kodaikanal, the Princess of Hills when he was on a mission to survey the area around Palani Hills. In Tamil language Kodaikanal means’ the gift of the forests’. Henry Levinge, the collector of Madurai district created the beautiful Kodai lake by damming three streams.

In 1816 The Baptist Missionary Society of England established the Serampore Mission near Calcutta. In 1822 David Scott, known as Iskat Sahep to the locals was appointed Agent to the Governor General of India for North Eastern Frontiers. In 1832 18 year old Alexander Lish was sent by Willam Carey of Serampore Mission to commence missionary operations in Cherra. Old Cherra or Sohrarim was the original Cherra village, but with the coming of the British the village came to be known as Sohra.

The British made Cherra their first summer capital. But the climatic conditions and facilities of Chrrapunji did not make British happy. The place was too wet for them. Thomas Jones and his wife arrived in Cherrapunji on 22nd June, 1841. He opened three schools at Mawmluh and Sohra. Jones was known as the father of the Khasi alphabet. The coming of the British to Cherra had a distant connection to Assam. To understand the backdrop we have to go back to the days of the Ahom rule. Assam was in turmoil during the rule of Gaurinath Singha Moamaria rebellion and the Burmese invasion destabilized the region. Raja Gourinath Singha was advised by his ministers to approach the British for a solution. Gourinath sought the help of Lord Cornwallis.At that point of time the British were reluctant to colonize in Assam. At long last the British Army entered Assam and defeated the Burmese Army. After the treaty of Yandaboo ( Burma) on 24th February,1826, formally ended the Anglo-Burmese War and the whole of Assam Manipur were ceded to the British. In order to connect Surma Valley the British wanted to establish a station north of Chatak in the hills far north. And Cherra was selected.

In search of a much drier place the British arrived at a farming village known as Laban. Shillong became the new civil station in 1864 and made the British headquarter. The place was then known as Yeddo or Iewduh, the market place of the Syiem of Mylliem. Hopkins did not like idea of naming the settlement Yeddo, because there was another place called Yeddo in Japan, which is today’s Tokyo. Hopkins renamed the settlement at the foothills of the revered Shillong Peak as Shillong.
So it can very well be said that today we are enjoying the sweet fruits once nurtured by the British.

The author was the former Head Department of Geography, St. Edmund’s College

ADCs fail to submit UCs on central schemes

The autonomous district councils (ADCs) have failed to submit pending utilization certificates (UCs) for the implementation of various development schemes sanctioned by the Centre during 2017 – 2022.

Out of the grants of Rs 385.71 crore received as central grants during 2017-22, the ADCs could submit UCs for only Rs 129.63 crore (34%) of the total fund allotted, said the State Finances Audit Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India for the year ended March 31, 2022.

Non-submission of the UCs means that the authorities have not explained as to how funds were spent over the years or they were not spent, it said.

The CAG has suggested that the ADCs may be advised to submit the pending UCs.

Meanwhile, the report said that the annual accounts of the ADCs were in arrears for two to six years.

The outstanding annual accounts of the KHADC were from 2020-21 to 2021-22, JHADC from 2019-20 to 2021-22 and GHADC from 2016-17 to 2021-22.

As per the Fund Rules of JHADC and GHADC, the annual accounts were to be submitted to the PAG (Audit) by June 30 of each year but no prescribed date was mentioned in the Fund Rules of the KHADC.

The CAG said that persistent delay in the finalization of accounts is fraught with the risk of fraud and leakage of public money going undetected. It recommended that the state government may advise the ADCs to finalise the arrear accounts and submit them to the Principal Accountant General (Audit).