Rani Khera was alert to dipping her legs on land land – News2IN
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Rani Khera was alert to dipping her legs on land land

Rani Khera was alert to dipping her legs on land land
Written by news2in

New Delhi: 2 km of turning the road to Rohtak’s jam which connects the Mundka Industrial Area and the Bahadurgarh satellite city ending in the flooded fields and open meadows.
One of the lucky bags in the capital with a land surface of 0.8 meters high, a small village dominated by JAT from Rani Khera has become part of the city’s discourse to succeed in fighting garbage disposal.
In 2017-18, the villagers of the relatively prosperous hamlet thwarted the creation of landfill in their rural stretches.
While awareness about the side effects of high waste mounds, not many are known to the villagers of the Delhi development authority scheme despite the numbers of Rani Khera among 95 villages that are notified for businesses.
Maybe it might be because the villagers are wary of urbanization.
“Nothing came to explain the policy to us,” said 75-year-old Singh Bharadwajwaj said, a retired principal.
“However, we do not want to end up living as a crowded urban village.
Quality of life has been destroyed in villages and livelihoods such as it depends on renting rooms to migrant workers.
The type of development is not desirable,” the old man snorted.
But still not urbanization is not guaranteed at Rani Khera.
Bharadwaj said the development process was not planned.
This was seen in a large number of realty outlets on the lane and the board on the main road Rani Khera promised “plot hai plot”.
The village sat in the middle of an open field, flanked by Rasulpur Village and a series of illegitimate colonies such as Bhagya Vihar and Neel Vihar.
Ravindra Kumar lives near the only Johad (pool) at Rani Khera and has with a mushrooming of the new Kacchi colony.
“There is no drainage in places like Bhagya Vihar,” he said.
“And because our village is a lowland location, water flows from the whole around, causing inundation.
Local houses and schools are flooded regularly and only the use of pumps help restore the normal state.” Abhishek, 16, who lived at Ujung Johad said that his house was is the first every year to be flooded when water overflows.
“The fields in our village are regularly influenced by water and stagnant plants even destroyed,” added the teenager.
Roopchand Pradhan, the last holding the position of Sarpanch Village between 1972 and 1992 before Pancahayats was abolished in Delhi, said the absence of local self-governance had allowed property dealers and free hand constructors.
“What did Rani Khera come out of the removal of Panchayat?” The 94-year-old asked.
“Now nobody listens to us even when our crops are destroyed by floods every year.” Although no one knows when the village was founded, residents say people from Dabas Caste settled in Rani Khera after migrating from Rajasthan around 700 years ago.
Mohit Singh, a local activist, said the household, most of the government, is a government employee, by teaching many com.
Given their modern needs, Singh said, “When MPD 2041 is being imagined, the planner must realize that every village also requires stadiums and playgrounds to encourage sports, waste disposal and construction of drainage and drainage.” In the last five years, the corporation of the North Municipal Delhi has various plans in Rani Khera for Waste Management Factory, Development & Demolition of Waste Factories and the City of the City of Baby Babies, nothing materialized.
But the outskirts of the village continue to get new concrete pillars as DDA and DSIIDC limit the plot for development projects.
Mahaveer Dabas, a Grazier, appointed a row of gray pillars and wondered what his village would come out of what the development was called.
This is the most rural thing also speculates about the city plan for the next two decades.

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