The Sunday Guardian

DELHI yET To sEE A sIngLE AAM AAdMI CAnTEEn

AAP government has also stopped Dikshit’s Jan Aahar Yojana.

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The Aam Aadmi Canteens that were promised by the Arvind Kejriwal government, have failed to see the light of day, even after the Aam Aadmi Party’s one year in power.

Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia, in his last year’s budget speech, had promised to open these canteens throughout Delhi with the aim of providing nutritious meals to people belonging to the weaker sections at a subsidised rate of Rs 5 to Rs 10. He had also promised to set aside Rs 50 crore in the budget for the purpose. However, it was not done at that time.

Delhi Dialogue Commission vice chairperso­n Ashish Khetan had, in fact, announced in July 2015 that the scheme would be operationa­l from September 2015.

In March this year, Manish Sisodia again announced the scheme in his budget speech and earmarked Rs 10 crore for these canteens in the budget proposal. However, not a single canteen has been opened till now.

Sources said that on one hand the Arvind Kejriwal government is not taking any initiative to open these canteens, and on the other hand, it is also winding up the Jan Aahar Yojana started by the erstwhile Sheila Dikshit government, which provided food at bus stands, railway stations, hospitals and other important locations, at the rate of Rs 18 per plate. The scheme was launched about 10 years ago and was being run with the help of NGOs.

These Aam Aadmi Canteens were to be opened on the lines of “Amma canteens” being run by the J. Jayalalith­aa government in Tamil Nadu, where people get food items at a subsidised rate. In fact, the Amma canteens, according to observers, played an important role in Jayalalith­aa’s return to power in the Assembly elections, results of which were announced on Thursday. Under this scheme, idlis are sold for Re 1, chapatis for Rs 5 and a plate of rice for Rs 5. Combinatio­ns like sambar rice, curd rice, lemon rice are also sold at the “Amma canteens”. The Delhi government is sitting on the Delhi Developmen­t Authority’s land pooling policy (LPP), stalling work on DDA’s Master Plan Delhi 2021 which aims to provide the ground for building 25 lakh new housing units in the national capital by 2021. No movement is expected on the matter this year, sources told this newpaper.

Sources in the Delhi government said, “The DDA requested the Delhi government to put out a notificati­on that would declare 95 villages as developmen­t areas and 89 out of them as urbanisabl­e areas or urban villages. The government is unlikely to put out the notificati­on this year. There is a lack of consensus and the department has kept the request on hold. We are discussing the issue with all the stakeholde­rs, primarily the landowners. It will take time. We don’t expect that we will put out the notificati­on anytime soon. There is a very minute chance of it coming out this year, but frankly I don’t see that happening.”

“You have to understand that we need to consider the interest of the landowners as well. Not every owner wants to give up his land,” the source said.

There is also a concern that many people have already invested thousands of crores of rupees in residentia­l projects proposed in these areas that are advertised widely

 ?? A man carries an air cooler on the back of a motorbike in Ahmedabad, on Friday. REUTERS ??
A man carries an air cooler on the back of a motorbike in Ahmedabad, on Friday. REUTERS

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