Fund shortage hinders irrigation projects

Irrigation facilities have been provided to only 16,000 hectares of the total 59,500 hectares of arable land in Kanchanpur district while the remaining are dependent on rain water.

Irrigation facility available in the district has so far been provided at the initiative of the Mahakali Irrigation Project, District Irrigation Office and Kanchanpur District Development Committee.

Meanwhile, the District Irrigation Office, Kanchanpur has been running three projects—Siddhanath Irrigation Project, Tilachauda, Baijanath Irrigation Project, Daiji and Chunepani Musepanui Irrigation Project. About 75 per cent of the projects have already been completed. These projects on completion is said to provide irrigation facilities to an additional 223 hectares of land in the district.

These projects were to be completed within this fiscal year but delay in sanctioning of the remaining amount of budget which caused delay in completion, says Mahendra Bahadur Gurung, Dvision engineer at District Irrigation Officer, Kanchanpur.

Besides this, the Krishnapur Irrigation Project is also under construction and is expected to be completed next fiscal year. This project will provide irrigation facility to 150 hectares of arable land.

It has been learnt that the District Irrigation Office has also proposed to the central level for additional five irrigation projects for the fiscal year 2002/2003.

The District Irrigation Office has also been carrying out programmes for river control. The office has been since the previous fiscal year running five ‘river control’ projects in different rivers - Mohana, Doda, Sunbara Syali, Chaudhar and Jogbudha.

The Office also performed embankments along the Khaniyam, Bangaon, Sunbara and Banara rivers.

However, delay in approval of budgets allocated for the programmes and the rumour of integrating the district irrigation offices into the irrigation division of the water resources ministry has been hindering the irrigation as well as river control works carried out in the district, adds Gurung.

Rastriya Samachar Samiti

Kathmandu, May 21

Nepal Telecommunications Corporation has revised telecommunications tariffs with effect from Tuesday. As per the revised tariff, the monthly charge for 175 calls is Rs 200. The rate for extra calls has been retained at Rs 1 per call. The time limit for a call is from two to eight minutes. As for international calls, tariff has been fixed by classifying calls into three categories from 0 to 50 km, 50 to 200 km and above 200 km instead of the previous five categories. The minimum tariff has been fixed from Rs 1 to 9 on the basis of distance and time. Likewise, the monthly rate for mobile telephones has been fixed at Rs 500. The maximum tariff for one outgoing call per 15 seconds has been fixed at Rs 1 and one incoming call per second at Rs 0.50 per second. After studying the proposal presented by the corporation for telephone and mobile phone tariffs in July last year and April this year, Nepal Telecommunications Authority has approved the revision of tariffs, it is stated in a press release issued here on Tuesday. According to the approved new tariff, the tariff for South Asian countries including India has been retained at Rs 75 per minute.