POLITICS OF THE PARLIAMENT BUILDING OF INDIA
post by Sreevidya Balasubramaniam @BaluSreevidya
https://twitter.com/BaluSreevidya/status/1339457464316489728?s=20
The political culture of our country is becoming increasingly toxic. Never before have we seen such a binary situation where the opposition parties believe their only job is to oppose everything the government does. This thread exposes them.
It does not matter if the issue is:
~ for the common good ~ something they themselves had planned ~ affecting security and safety of our country or people Latest in this hall of shame is the opposition to the new Parliament building which @narendramodi did bhumi puja this week.
I am analysing this issue from three major angles. 1. Why a new Parliament building? 2. What is the politics around this? 3. What does this mean to Indian polity? For my first and second angles, I will share excerpts from three stalwarts in their discussion in Kolahala TV.
They are, Padmashri TK Vishwanathan (Retd Gen Secretary of Parliamentary A), Sri K. Srinivasan , Retd Director (Reporting), and Sri R Rajagopalan, senior journalist who has reported from the Parliament for over 40 years. Why the new building? See the shocking reasons below.
1. Health & Safety: The current building is very old, unsafe and used a. IIT Roorkee's study reveals that the building will not withstand an earthquake magnitude of just 6 RS b. The building does not have a fire clearance certificate. The fire department refused to certify.
During UPA, the kitchen was moved to adjacent building as the 50 gas bottles were ticking time bombs in the building c. When it rains outside, slabs keep falling inside. Dust fell from the roof on Late PV Narasimha Rao when he was replying to a member when Rajiv Gandhi was PM.
A net was placed below the ceiling to stop big pieces of slab from falling. On the II floor, slabs fall often. Few years ago, big part of the ceiling fell near Room 62 d. There is dangerous gas emanating from the sewage under RS and in other places, and that gives a foul smell.
Poisonous gases circulate in the chambers and at least two leaders have swooned due to this. You will be shocked to know that one was Sonia Gandhi, who is now opposing the new building. The other was Najma Heptulla
e. There are wires hanging everywhere (II floor especially) - short circuit risk is very high especially in hot summer when the temperature hits 52 degrees C. The entire wiring is a century old and it poses serious risk of fire from short circuit any time
f. Third floor has very narrow pathways. Once
's clothes got caught in one of the cupboards on the way and the cupboard fell. She could have been seriously harmed. g. Kitchen is full of cockroaches, spiders, and rats. Cats and dogs roam many parts of the building
Monkeys visit the third floor often. Once a cat bit DMK MP Vetriselvan. It's like a zoo. h. Mulayam S Yadav once fell in the building tripping on a fallen brick i. Toilets in very unhygienic conditions j. Speaker's chamber smells foul
k. When Bush visited, his security quoted IIT Roorkee's report to advise that Indian Parliament building was unsafe - a reason why India does not invite foreign delegates there. We help other countries build their Parliament houses, but our own is in very shabby condition.
2. Space - People in the parliament - MPs, staff, and visitors have increased significantly in the last 100 years. a. Staff are bout 6500, incl security. MPs, their staff will be another 1500 b. MPs sit cramped up, and no new MPs could walk in without tripping on the other
d. The building was not designed to withstand so much stress for 93 years from the increased footfalls e. Parliament is growing with more MPs by 2026, and the space is just not enough f. All MPs don't have their own rooms let alone a meeting place for visitors
3. Preservation of information and knowledge a. Parliament is a paper-less office now. So, all information is stored in computers. A short circuit or electrical outage could cause loss of data and information. This is a risk for the country
4. Maintenance a. We spend a lot of money - crores - on maintaining the current building. Despite that, the risks remain b. In order to refurbish this building, the contractors need it vacant for 2 full years - this is not a remote possibility
What is the politics about this? We see how Congress goes 180 degrees on their own promises. Parliament building debate is another such shame for them. Why? I quote Sri @RAJAGOPALAN1951
Congress initiated, participated in, and approved a new building during their tenure.
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