Hot water; hotter tempers
On April 10, a hot sunny day, Chennai’s Chepauk stadium became a fortress. Yellow barricades, armed policemen and security vans surrounded the venue. The Indian Premier League was in town, and the Chennai
On April 10, a hot sunny day, Chennai’s Chepauk stadium became a fortress. Yellow barricades, armed policemen and security vans surrounded the venue. The Indian Premier League was in town, and the Chennai
It was a brain wave that brought results. The 'clean village' competition of the Maharashtra government was supposed to be just another scheme. Rural folk, however, embraced it with tremendous
Medha Patkar foes on a satyagraha as a hundred villages in Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra are about to be
As district collector of Mandasur, Anurag Jain felt that plain administration did not benefit anyone. He wished to do something worthwhile and decided to improve irrigation. Jain's initiatives for
Shahapur, another tribal village of Thane, Maharashtra, is facing severe water scarcity though the tehsil boasts of three major irrigation projects - Tansa, Vaitarana and Bhatsa. Hundreds of farmers
Every time a government vehicle arrives in a tribal village that is in danger of being submerged by the Maan dam, it spells devastation for the tribals. More than 1,200 tribal families are being
Sri Sathya Sai water supply project for Anantapur district in Andhra Pradesh has quenched the thirst of 800 villages. Thanks to the project, over a million people in Anantapur have potable water at
It just takes 2,600 hand pumps running for ten hours to suck Delhi dry of all its ground water. This is no doomsday theory but a fact of life staring at the face of the people in the Capital. In
On April 1, the government will do away with the administered price mechanism (APM) in the oil industry - a euphemism for following the command and control system while pricing petroleum products -
Mattamukundapur once used to repel visitors. Situated southeast of Behrampur in Orissa, it was a maze of mud huts, with dirty streets reeking of human waste, uncultivable land and unhealthy people.
In a cramped room in the Banaras Hindu University, where bulky books take centre stage, a silent revolution is taking place. Professor Onkarnath Srivastava, who spends 12 hours each day in this