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Naveen Patnaik in safe waters, Orissa in a shambles
By Prafulla Das
BHUBANESWAR, JUNE 11. The Biju Janata Dal-Bharatiya Janata Party
coalition Government in Orissa, under the leadership of Mr.
Naveen Patnaik, completes 100 days in office on Monday. But it
has very little to flaunt in terms of achievements.
Consider this: seven months after the killer cyclone struck the
14 coastal districts, life is yet to get back to normal; millions
are still homeless; roads that got washed away are in a state of
disrepair; and a large number of villages remain without power.
If reconstruction and rehabilitation of the cyclone- devastated
State was Mr. Patnaik's top priority, he has certainly failed in
his task. Though the alliance rode to power on an anti-incumbency
wave and by highlighting the failure of the previous Congress(I)
regime in providing help to the cyclone-affected, its leaders
have not been able to do much.
Over 18 lakh houses were affected by the storm. As against seven
lakh houses that need to be rebuilt, the Government has managed
funds for only 2.5 lakh houses. Worse, even these funds have not
resulted in any houses.
Most families continue to live in extreme discomfort in jhuggies
with polythene roofs. Shortage of bricks and other building
materials as well as masons has nearly brought construction
activity to a halt. The arrival of monsoon has worsened things.
Farmers in the cyclone-affected areas have not been provided
seeds and bullocks. As a result, many have turned daily
labourers. The Government has also not been able to start food-
for-work programmes in many areas.
As against the reported number of over 31 lakh cattle deaths, the
Government has supplied only 1,100 cows. Though nearly 10,000
human deaths were reported, ex-gratia payments have been made to
the kith of about 3000. Power supply has not been restored to
over 800 villages and hundreds of lift irrigation points. Many
breaches in the river and saline embankments have not been
repaired even though monsoon has already arrived. And now, the
spectre of floods now looms large.
As the State reels and totters, Mr. Patnaik has been busy
cornering leaders of his own party. After expelling his main
adversary, Mr. Bijoy Mahapatra, on the eve of his filing
nomination papers for the February Assembly polls, Mr. Patnaik
has recently succeeded in ensuring that the Rajya Sabha MP, Mr.
Dilip Ray, lost his berth in the Union Cabinet.
With the Ministers wielding little clout, all authority is
currently concentrated in the hands of Mr. Patnaik and a few
chosen bureaucrats. The BJP Ministers, who are unhappy with Mr.
Patnaik's style of functioning, however, have little room to
protest openly as the BJD is an important ally of the NDA
Government at the Centre. The impression that Mr. Patnaik shares
a good rapport with the Prime Minister, Mr. A.B. Vajpayee, keeps
them silent. The Government, however, continues to be on a strong
political footing thanks to the thin presence of the Opposition
in the Assembly. The ruling alliance has 106 MLAs (BJD 68 and BJP
38), while the main Opposition, the Congress(I) has only 22. As
accusations of non-performance pile up, mass adulation for Mr.
Patnaik is giving way to general indifference. It is time Mr.
Patnaik pulled up his socks and started delivering.
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