Parched throats can bring down governments; hence leaders rush to claim credit for ‘water ATMs’ set up in villages
Tumakuru/ Bagepalli (Karnataka): Early in 2016, in the grip of drought for the fourth straight year, people of Pathapalli were in a rage. Surrounded by barren flatlands and rocky hills along the Andhra Pradesh boundary, the village had been facing an acute drinking water shortage. The people went on a protest demanding a comprehensive drinking water scheme in Chikkaballapur town, the district headquarters, and by March, the anger boiled over.
Over 10,000 farmers landed in Bengaluru and headed to the Chief Minister’s house, where they were lathi-charged and arrested.
But now, the people have access to at least five drinking water units that purify water drawn from deep borewells. All of these have been set up in the past year and provide 15 litres at ?2.
“Before, we had to scrounge for water and had no option but to drink flouride-contaminated water,” says Venkatarammappa from the neighbouring Thullapalli village.
According to National Rural Drinking Water Programme, three in four samples of water in the village were biologically or chemically contaminated.
In the district, however, assurances given after the massive protest have not been met. A ?13,000-crore project to divert water from the tributaries of the Nethravati on the Western Ghats (which helped the Congress win the 2014 Lok Sabha election here) is still in the construction phase, while a ?1,300-crore project to treat sewage from Bengaluru has not seen a drop of water yet.
In a State where lack of drinking water access can bring down governments, this anger had to be calmed down. The scheme of “water ATMs” — small water dispensers that serve a community — has thus come in handy.
The State government says it has constructed 10,191 such units across the State, while Opposition MLAs have used a significant portion of their local area funds to set up their own units that cost between ?5.5 lakh and ?15 lakh.
In the Chikkanayakahalli constituency in arid Tumakuru, the government has built 62 units. The Janata Dal(S) MLA, Suresh Babu, says he has built another 40. “These units are to show my concern, and are not to gain votes,” he says.
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