How Narainia Delhi Village shrank into the halls of darkness – News2IN
Delhi

How Narainia Delhi Village shrank into the halls of darkness

New Delhi: Being on Lap Sylvan Ridge Center, Narina Village is often ignored by a traveler on the Ring Road.
This village is the one closest to the Prime Minister’s office, right in the middle of the center of Central Delhi, but is very contrast to the surrounding luxury, the village of Urbanization is the construction of Blackspot.
The narrow bylane of the four-line ring road leads to chaos, Naraiaa – Clusters of Haphazard, multi-floor house, some are built on the slightest plot of 25 square meters, a series of endless electrical cables, some of which are even on the arm of the distance from the window and balcony , Most of the village lines are very narrow so that the car cannot approach them.
The pile of rubbish lying until the city corporation disappeared them blocking the main entrance to the village.
The village, which is believed to have been established around 1300, not a nightmare for a century ago.
Spreading in 2,900 hectares framed by wooded areas, which now forms a ridge, Narainia is a growing village of happy farmers whose income is mainly from carrot plants.
Destiny Naraina determined when England decided to shift the Indian capital of Calcutta to New Delhi in 1911.
British acquired almost half of the village village to establish Delhi Cantonment.
Remote village turned overnight into a premium land.
When the capital of the newly independent country developed, the authorities of land-edged in the village.
“Land acquisition with clay prices continues after independence as the new government established the planned industrial and housing plan.
The developing environment and the village shrank shrank that day,” Aditya Tanwar’s businessman said.
Some decades later, villagers felt the period of the period every day.
“People who settled in the colonies built on the land obtained from us treated villagers such as second-class citizens and they thought that they were better than us, rural people,” said Anil Kumar Tanwar, a resident Village that won a gold medal.
In Kabaddi at the 1990 Asian Games in Beijing, China.
Many households in the village have not received tap water.
With a population up, there are new needs.
People want health care centers, parks, community halls, playgrounds for children and freedom from choking waste lines.
“The village has shrunk but the family grows.
Previously, land ownership was divided among brothers, now the floor is divided among brothers and children we must divide the rooms on the floor,” Ruped Paras Tyagi, Social Activists, and Founders Indian Cycle NGO, which seeks to implement public policy.
“Because the village is Lal Dora, people do not need approval of city authorities to build houses.
But the government also does not have a construction cut plan in the village.
This must change.
Dermawan village that handed its land for capital development deserves a better deal.” Residents Narainia village felt that the draft Master Delhi 2041 plan ignored the villages of the capital urbanization.
“MPD21 emphasizes a comprehensive plan to develop villages, but nothing materializes,” said Tyagi.
“MPD41 draft doesn’t even talk about such an approach.” The villagers want a vision for the development of the capital villages that are included in the master plan and a new project carried out by priority by the authority of the citizenship.

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