http://in.news.yahoo.com/071004/48/6lke9.html

Doomed, say scientists, as MLA-MP bulldozer closes in

By IE
Friday October 5, 02:33 AM
Stunned scientists have begun counting their impending losses: 5253
plants of different varieties of mango and litchi, 6,500 trees more
than 30 years old, eight greenhouse nurseries, each with 4000-5000
plants of guava and jackfruit and a gene bank developed over 20 years
to have a germplasm base of 239 varieties of mango and litchi.

The Ranchi-based Horticulture and Agro Forestry Research Programme
(HARP) - under the aegis of the Indian Council of Agricultural
Research (ICAR) - is set to lose all these if the Jharkhand government
goes ahead with its plan to acquire land from the institute to build
bungalows for over 115 MPs and MLAs.

This also flies in the face of a letter from Union Agriculture
Minister Sharad Pawar earlier this year asking Chief Minister Madhu
Koda to shelve the plan and instead issue mutation certificate of this
land whose title was transferred to the ICAR by the Ranchi Deputy
Commissioner in 1976. In 1979, HARP was set up with 100 percent
funding by the Union government.

As reported in The Indian Express today, the plan, cleared by the Koda
government, envisages taking over more than 288 acres of HARP's land
and slicing away 88 acres (from ICAR's Farm 2) for the Vidhayal Evam
Sansad Grih Nirman Swawlambi Sahkari Samiti Ltd, a housing society
registered by the legislators.

'This will destroy our field laboratory for ever," says HARP scientist
R S Pan. His colleague, senior scientist Vikas Das says: "Our
germplasm bank assiduously nourished and grown over the past two
decades is the foundation for carrying out our research on the gene
order of these varieties. Once we lose Farm 2, we are doomed."

Not just that. "The gene bank of these valuable fruit-bearing tress
will be destroyed for ever. It will seriously affect horticulture
prospects of the farmers in this belt," says HARP's Principal
Scientist Shivendra Kumar.

Even Pawar had underlined the benefits: "This research centre (HARP)
has been working on different projects for the past 27 years...It has
developed 29 new varieties of fruits and vegetable crops and Jharkhand
farmers are benefiting from its techniques developed here. So my
request is to settle this land where this institution is situated."

But Koda clearly ignored this. While he declined to comment, Speaker
of the Jharkhand Assembly Alamgir Alam - one of the beneficiaries if
the plan goes through - says that the government is committed to
taking the land. "The state Land Revenue Department has to transfer
the title of this land to the housing society. We have asked officials
to do the needful," said Alam.

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