Pragati Maidan tunnel, 5 underpass: Now, a smooth commute on Ring Road and Mathura Road

Pragati Maidan tunnel, 5 underpass: Now, a smooth commute on Ring Road and Mathura Road

Now open for commuters, the tunnel as well as five underpasses are aimed at providing hassle-free and seamless connectivity between Central, Southeast and New Delhi, and will make the city’s busy routes — Bhairon Marg, Ring Road and Mathura Road — signal free. Collectively called the Pragati Maidan Integrated Transit Corridor, the project cost Rs 923 crore.
The tunnel will connect Ring Road with India Gate via Purana Qila Road passing through Pragati Maidan and provide direct access to the Pragati Maidan Trade Centre. It will decongest traffic movement at ITO junction, India Gate and the Supreme Court and is expected to help more than 1.5 lakh vehicles on a daily basis.
Narendra Modi, Pragati Maidan, Pragati Maidan tunnel, Pragati Maidan tunnel underpass, Delhi news, Delhi city news, New Delhi, India news, Indian Express News Service, Express News Service, Express News, Indian Express India News Narendra Modi, Pragati Maidan, Pragati Maidan tunnel, Pragati Maidan tunnel underpass, Delhi news, Delhi city news, New Delhi, India news, Indian Express News Service, Express News Service, Express News, Indian Express India News PM Modi inaugurated the tunnel and five underpasses on Sunday. Abhinav Saha
Out of the six underpasses, four are on Mathura road, one on Ring Road and one is under construction at the intersection of Ring Road and Bhairon Marg. The four underpasses on Mathura Road will serve as u-turns and make the entire busy stretch signal free. With this, travelling to and from Ashram and Nizamuddin will also become easy.Best of Express PremiumReading RSS chief’s remarks: The vishwaguru fantasyPremiumAgnipath shadow looms over bypolls: From Sangrur to Azamgarh to RampurPremiumTo rev up EV push, battery solutions per Indian needsPremiumIndia will be critical driver of demand in next 30 yrs, international arr...Premium
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Officials said the sixth underpass passes beneath a railway line and construction can only take place when trains are not running. Sources said it will take at least six more months to be completed. Once done, Bhairon Marg will also become signal free, said officials.
The corridor is funded entirely by the central government. Speaking at the opening ceremony, Modi said the Centre’s main aim behind developing the infrastructure was to provide ease of living to residents of Delhi and the NCR. He also said the Pragati Maidan tunnel and the six underpasses will help save 55 lakh litres of petrol, as per an estimate.
Narendra Modi, Pragati Maidan, Pragati Maidan tunnel, Pragati Maidan tunnel underpass, Delhi news, Delhi city news, New Delhi, India news, Indian Express News Service, Express News Service, Express News, Indian Express India News Narendra Modi, Pragati Maidan, Pragati Maidan tunnel, Pragati Maidan tunnel underpass, Delhi news, Delhi city news, New Delhi, India news, Indian Express News Service, Express News Service, Express News, Indian Express India News PM Modi inaugurated the tunnel and five underpasses on Sunday. Abhinav Saha
“I want to congratulate all the people of Delhi, Ghaziabad, Noida, and others from across the country who travel to Delhi. Today, Delhi has got a beautiful gift of modern infrastructure from the central government… Constructing such a marvellous tunnel in such a short period despite facing several hiccups like Covid-induced lockdown and labour crunch is not an easy thing. The tunnel passes beneath seven railway tracks and the stretch around Pragati Maidan sees heavy traffic but despite all of that, the engineers completed the project on time,” he said.

Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal, who also attended the inaugural event, hit out at the Delhi government saying that it had refused to pay its 20% share in funds for the construction.
He said initially, the project was to be executed jointly by the Centre and the Arvind Kejriwal government where the Delhi government had to pay 20% and the Centre had to bear 80% cost. “ITPO (India Trade Promotion Organisation) officials were repeatedly writing and communicating with the state (for payment of their share of funds). But the state government (Delhi government) completely ignored saying we will not give money (for the project),” Goyal said.
“When the state government did not show any concern towards the project, the PM said that the central government will bear the entire cost of the project. So I give the credit of completing the project on time to the prime minister who keeps on thinking about easing the lives of the people,” he said. (with PTI inputs)

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Will address water issues in Rajinder Nagar: Kejriwal

Will address water issues in Rajinder Nagar: Kejriwal

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal Sunday said that his government will work to solve the persistent water problems in Rajinder Nagar constituency.
Acknowledging that water shortage was a problem being faced by residents, the CM during a road show in the area said, “A lot of development work has been done in the area but I acknowledge that some issues need to be addressed. There is a shortage of water supply but I am working on it and I assure that it will get fixed soon.”
Bypolls in Rajinder Nagar are scheduled for June 23. The seat fell vacant after erstwhile area MLA Raghav Chadha was elected to the Rajya Sabha from Punjab. Chadha was also the Delhi Jal Board vice- chairperson.
AAP MCD in-charge and Political Affairs Committee member Durgesh Pathak is AAP’s candidate from the constituency. He is up against BJP’s former councillor Rajesh Bhatia and Congress’s former councillor Prem Lata.Best of Express PremiumReading RSS chief’s remarks: The vishwaguru fantasyPremiumAgnipath shadow looms over bypolls: From Sangrur to Azamgarh to RampurPremiumTo rev up EV push, battery solutions per Indian needsPremiumIndia will be critical driver of demand in next 30 yrs, international arr...Premium
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Kejriwal concluded his road shows on Sunday, during which he visited Inderpuri and Pandav Nagar areas of the constituency.
The BJP has been running a high-power campaign in the area, with 15 leaders, Lok Sabha MP Gautam Gambhir, Rajya Sabha MP Dushyant Gautam, state president Adesh Gupta, union minister Meenakshi Lekhi, leader of opposition in Delhi assembly Ramvir Singh Bidhuri and former mayor Jai Prakash campaigning for the party last week.
AAP leaders, including Kejriwal, ministers Manish Sisodia, Gopal Rai and Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Singh addressing public gatherings and road shows over the past week.

On Sunday, Kejriwal attacked BJP and said, “I will get all your work done, I believe in working, I do not know how to fight or spread hate. BJP leaders only know how to fight, they sit on dharnas 24×7 in front of my house, there is no point in voting for them. AAP fixed government schools in Delhi to improve the future of your children. AAP is providing uninterrupted supply of electricity for free; women now get to travel for free in buses all over Delhi. I agree that there is a water problem, we are working on it. I will fix all your problems related to water too.”
He also spoke about the problems in crossing the railway line that falls in Budh Nagar, which residents say is a problem since they have to take a much longer way to reach the other side. A wall was recently built to prevent people from crossing the tracks. “A wall has been erected at the railway crossing in Inderpuri’s Budh Nagar and the bridge there has also been closed due to which people have trouble crossing the railway line, we will get it fixed,” he said.

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5-year-old girl tied, left under scorching sun ‘for not doing homework’

5-year-old girl tied, left under scorching sun ‘for not doing homework’

A five-year-old girl was tied and left on the roof of her house, allegedly by her mother, in Northeast Delhi Wednesday morning. A video purportedly shows the girl’s hands and legs tied with a rope, and her struggling under the beating sun. The Delhi Police said they have traced the family and initiated an enquiry against the parents.
In the video shot by a local, the girl is seen writhing as she tries to free herself and is also heard crying for help.
An initial probe has revealed that the girl was tied and put on the terrace as part of a punishment for not doing her school homework, an officer said, adding that she studies at a nearby school.
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Sanjay Sain, DCP (Northeast), said, “We took cognizance of the video going viral and started looking for the family. Teams were sent to Khajuri Khas and Karawal Nagar. After some time, one of the teams found the address. We went there and found the parents. An enquiry has been initiated in the matter. Legal action will be taken.”
The girl’s father works as a tailor and was out when the incident took place. The girl’s mother is a homemaker. “She will be questioned about the incident. No arrest has been made. A case is being registered,” said an officer.

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Explained: Engaging with the Taliban

Explained: Engaging with the Taliban

When India sent an official delegation to Kabul earlier this week, it was the first time that New Delhi signalled that it wanted a formal engagement with the Taliban.
With this, it appears that the Indian foreign and security establishment is less divided about the need to engage formally with the Taliban and prevent getting marginalised in a country that New Delhi sees as vital to its strategic interests in the region, and where the people’s affection for India is legendary.
Although recognition of the Taliban government is not on the cards yet, Thursday’s visit may have paved the way for the reopening of the Indian embassy, albeit a downgraded one.
From 1996 to now, India’s journey from first opposition, then diffidence to engaging with the Taliban, to the resigned acceptance of its inevitability, is in no small measure a story of India’s problematic relationship with Pakistan.Best of Express PremiumExplained: Engaging with the TalibanPremiumUrban agriculture can help make cities sustainable and liveablePremiumThe dangerous intellectual fad of ‘civilisationism’PremiumExplained: NAS basics — how the survey to assess school learnings is cond...Premium
In 1996, when the Taliban fought their way through warring mujahideen factions into Kabul for the first time, India, fearing a spillover on Kashmir insurgency (there was indeed some), backed the Northern Alliance with money and weapons. As the scholar Avinash Paliwal has pointed out (My Enemy’s Enemy: India in Afghanistan from the Soviet Union to the US Withdrawal), New Delhi did briefly contemplate opening contacts with the group but dropped the idea as the establishment was divided on reaching out to a group tied to Pakistan.
India bore the brunt of this nexus twice. During the 1999 hijacking of IC814, when the Pakistani hijackers took the plane to Kandahar, the then ruling Taliban acted as a support arm of the hijackers. Second, in 2008, the CIA traced the bombing of the Indian Embassy at Kabul to the Haqqani group, part of the Taliban and deeply embedded with the Pakistani security establishment. The bombing was reported to have been carried out at the orders of the ISI. Moreover, Lashkar -e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed were increasingly reported to be present in Afghanistan.
Reconsidering the Taliban
After 9/11, under the US umbrella, India invested money and energy into the rebuilding of Afghanistan. But by 2010, with increasing doubts about the US continuance, India was once again considering reaching out to the Taliban.
In the final months of UPA-2, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef , who was the Ambassador in Pakistan in the Taliban’s first regime, made a splash at a literary event in Goa. He had been invited as the author of the bestselling My Life with the Taliban. Then Home Minister P Chidambaram was in a photograph that also included him. Then in the opposition, the BJP trained its guns at the government for keeping company with an Islamist extremist.
Media reports then quoted government sources as saying it was not Zaeef’s first visit, and that keeping a door open to the Taliban was necessary. The reasons were the same as they are today: New Delhi did not want to be left out or marginalised in the Afghanistan of the future. After getting Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in 2011, the Obama Administration was getting ready to declare an end to the war, and the US and the Taliban had already made tentative contact towards talks.
But with Pakistan continuing to loom large – the Pakistan security establishment, which had a huge role in the birth of the Taliban, had given Mullah Omar and other Taliban leaders sanctuary in Quetta after the 2001 US invasion, and sustained them with money and weapons — New Delhi did not have the will to pursue the plan seriously.
Pakistan shadow
As talks between the Taliban and the Trump Administration took off, the Indian establishment decided to put its weight behind President Ashraf Ghani and the government of Afghanistan, which had been left out of the talks. When it became increasingly clear that far from collapsing, the talks might actually lead to Taliban rule or at least a set-up in Kabul with a significant Taliban presence, India flagged “concerns” about terrorism, even as it looked for a seat at the table in any of the several regional groups, and also for openings to the Taliban.
One view was to build relations with factions in the Taliban that were opposed to Pakistan, but there was little clarity on how strong such factionalism was, and if such factions had any influence. An Indian diplomat who had been approached by a Taliban leader once in a foreign capital said talking to the Taliban was “the same as talking to the ISI”.
It was evident that India had missed the bus. Pakistan had delivered the Taliban to the Trump Administration for talks. Russia was backing the Taliban fully as the future ruler of Afghanistan, seeing in this sweet revenge for its own defeat in Afghanistan by US-financed, Pakistan-trained mujahideen; Iran, also glad at America’s defeat at the hands of the Taliban, hosted a delegation of the Shia-persecuting group in Tehran. China leveraged its relationship with Pakistan to get a foot into Kabul.
Nine months after the Taliban took over Kabul, 15 countries have a diplomatic presence in the country. Pakistan, China and Russia never shut down; others, including the EU, have re-opened to facilitate to humanitarian assistance. The Taliban regime is not recognised by any country yet. When members of the Shanghai Co-operation Organisation’s anti-terror sub-group met in Delhi recently to discuss the situation in Afghanistan, host India was the only one without a diplomatic presence in Kabul.
Counter-intuitive timing
India’s cautious opening to the Taliban has come at a time when the group has made it clear it has not changed from its previous mediaevalism. Restrictions on women have increased, from not being allowed to attend school to curbs on free movement in public spaces and at work. A UN Taliban monitoring committee has reported that the Taliban continue to remain close to al-Qaeda, with a significant presence of its multinational fighting force in Afghanistan. The report has also flagged JeM and LeT training camps in Nangarhar and Kumar, close to the Pakistan border. India is the chair of the Taliban sanctions committee.
However, a view that has gained ground in the Indian establishment is that it is time to de-hyphenate Pakistan from the Taliban, especially as the Pakistan security establishment is finding the going tough with the Kabul regime.
The Pakistani Taliban (TTP), which has spread terror in Pakistan since it came into existence in 2007, has found sanctuary in Afghanistan, and it has taken several rounds of negotiations mediated by the Afghan Taliban for the Pakistan security establishment to arrive at a ceasefire with the TTP. There are other disagreements between the Kabul regime and Pakistan, including over Durand Line as the border between the two countries.
Another reason advanced for India’s change in policy is that the Taliban in power are more divided than they were as a fighting force, and that the situation may provide room for a layered political and diplomatic engagement with different actors. It has also helped that the Taliban have made no hostile statements on Kashmir since taking over in Kabul.

The ban on girls’ high-school education is reported to have brought out rifts in the open between hardliners led by supreme leader Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada and others seen as pro-West Taliban, such as Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai. In all this, the Haqqani are projecting themselves as the true moderates.
Gautam Mukhopadhaya, a former Indian Ambassador to Kabul, said the hardening of the regime, widening internal rifts, and the resistance against the Taliban getting more organised made for a “far from stable Taliban rule”.
As long as the move helps the Afghan people, facilitating humanitarian assistance through international organisations, and paving the way for access to consular services, Mukhopadhaya said it was a step in the right direction.
“It is a good move towards Afghan people, provided the [Afghan] opposition is being taken into confidence and is kept in touch with on a parallel track, and basic principles are not sacrificed for formal relations,” Mukhopadhaya said.

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Delhi Budget increased by 2.5 times in seven years: Kejriwal

Delhi Budget increased by 2.5 times in seven years: Kejriwal

“In 2015, when we presented the first Budget, it was Rs 31,000 crore. Now it’s Rs 78,000 crore. There has been a 2.5-fold increase in seven years. This is no less than a miracle,” he said.
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Thanking Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia – who also holds the finance portfolio – for the Budget, he added, “We aim to create 20 lakh new jobs in the next five years. Just saying it takes courage. This was not an electoral promise, this was the Budget. And we have presented the framework to create jobs. This is an innovative and bold Budget.” The government will focus on eight sectors for job creation – retail, food and beverages, logistics, supply, travel and tourism, entertainment, real estate and green energy.

Addressing the issue of unification of the three municipal corporations in Delhi, Kejriwal said, “The MCD Bill has been brought to stop the elections. There are two main things in the Bill. One, the number of wards has been reduced from 272 to 250. What is the benefit? There is no logic. There is only one reason, there will be delimitation. Had the number been same, there would be no delimitation. If that happens, the elections will be pushed for 1-2 years. Second, the entire MCD will be run by the Centre, this is against the Constitution. Once the Bill comes, we will study it. If need be, we will challenge it in court.”
Kejriwal briefly outlined the government’s plan to redevelop five traditional markets, create a bazaar portal which will open up global markets to Delhi traders, setting up a garment hub in Gandhinagar, developing traditional food hubs and food trucks that will operate till 2 am, and redevelopment of non-conforming industrial areas.

The chief minister said the Budget not only takes into account job creation, but also takes care of increasing costs by providing free education, free health, free electricity, free water, and free travel for women. He also spoke about creating roads, sewer systems and water pipelines in unauthorised colonies as well as cleaning up the Yamuna.
When asked about his statement on the controversy surrounding the film The Kashmir Files, he said during the press conference, “In the last 20-25 years since the Kashmiri Pandit exodus, the BJP has been at the Centre for 13 years. In the last eight years, the BJP has been at the Centre. Has even one family been rehabilitated in Kashmir? No one. What the BJP has done is politicise the issue,” he said.

“And now after that, they want to earn crores by making a movie on their pain. Over Rs 200 crore has been earned. It is criminal to make money with a picture on the pain of any community. This is not right. The country will not tolerate it. We only have two demands: put this movie on YouTube so everyone can watch it; second, whatever has been earned should be used for the rehabilitation of Kashmiri Pandits. And third, concrete steps should be taken so that Kashmiri Pandits can go back to their homes,” he asserted.

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