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A new water harvesting model promises to help Rajasthan’s farmers

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An aerial view of a farm pond in Jaipur’s Kukas village. As many as 50 such ponds have been dug up in the area.

An aerial view of a farm pond in Jaipur’s Kukas village. As many as 50 such ponds have been dug up in the area.
| Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

In the dry heartland of Rajasthan, a transformative rural water conservation model is set to benefit farmers in the upcoming monsoon. Those behind the initiative, which relies on 50 scientifically designed and climate-resilient farm ponds at Kukas village in the State capital of Jaipur, claim it has a 10-crore-litre seasonal monsoon run-off conservation potential.

The village panchayat in Jaipur district’s Amber block is the second place in the State selected for the rainwater harvesting enterprise, following the successful installation of farm ponds in the rainfed land of Dausa district. As many as 250 ponds dug in the agricultural land of Dausa have enabled the farmers to get perennial crops.

Nearly 99.4% of the agricultural cultivable land in Jaipur is dependent on groundwater for irrigation. The district extracts 2.22 times the water recharged through rain every year. The project in Kukas emphasises the sustainability and livelihoods of peasants, with a focus on the availability of water for irrigation.

The initiative involves constructing 10-foot-deep, plastic-lined ponds on 5% of each farmer’s land, reinforced with fencing.

The ponds are designed to capture rainwater, ensuring year-round irrigation for rabi and kharif crops and enabling the return of sustainable livestock rearing and high-value horticulture.

Person behind initiative

An alumnus of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kharagpur, Vipra Goyal, who has been working with the farmers, said while the construction of 50 ponds had been completed recently, 25 more were being dug to secure sustainable water supply to the rural households, which would help about 50,000 villagers in the region in the long-term.

Farmer Ram Phool of Kacherawala village, near Kukas, told The Hindu that he planned to sow crops like groundnuts and chaula (cowpeas) following the inflow of water into the pond installed at a corner of his land spread across eight bighas (nearly five acres). “One has to dig as much as 500 feet to extract groundwater in our area. I was growing bajra earlier as it needs less water,” said the 58-year-old farmer.

Kukas sarpanch Radheyshyam Meena said the sustainable irrigation model will help farmers in his area to diversify into cultivating more profitable and water-efficient crops. “The model offered to us has great potential to make farmers self-reliant. They are set to get a better yield with the year-long water supply,” said Mr. Meena.

Catching rainwater

Mr. Goyal said 14 lakh to 21 lakh litres of good seasonal monsoon run-off was flowing unutilised at every farm of one hectare in Jaipur. “In areas like Amber block, lacking river and canal networks, farm ponds offer the most viable solution. The continuous irrigation will also help in recharging the groundwater,” he said.

The IITian, who had earlier organised awareness programmes about farm ponds through ward sabhas, gram sabhas, and camel cart rallies in Dausa, said the continuous availability of water could pave the way for dairy and food processing units, as well as market linkages for agricultural produce. He has sought the Central government’s endorsement to partner with multilateral agencies for grant-based infrastructure and capacity building.

Mr. Goyal previously worked with the NITI Aayog. He has partnered with a two-wheeler manufacturing company to raise funds for the installation of ponds in Kukas.

India

India debunks claims of U.S. using Indian airspace for Iran strikes, PIB Fact Check confirms

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This image is used for representational purpose only.

This image is used for representational purpose only.
| Photo Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto

India on Sunday (June 22, 2025) dismissed as “fake” claims by certain social media handles that the U.S. fighter jets used Indian airspace to launch strikes against Iran.

Also read: Israel-Iran conflict updates

The U.S. bombed three nuclear sites in Iran on Sunday (June 22, 2025), with U.S. President Donald Trump warning of additional strikes if Iran retaliates.

“Several social media accounts have claimed that Indian airspace was used by the United States to launch aircraft against Iran during Operation #MidnightHammer. This claim is fake,” PIB Fact Check said in a post on X.

“Indian Airspace was NOT used by the United States during Operation #MidnightHammer,” said the fact check unit of the Press Information Bureau that functions under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.

It said that the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Gen. Dan Caine had explained the route used by U.S. aircraft during a press briefing.

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Tripura government gives jobs to 18 next of kin of victims murdered in political violence

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Tripura Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ratan Lal Nath claimed that several families couldn’t even file FIRs with police, and many case records are missing.

Tripura Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ratan Lal Nath claimed that several families couldn’t even file FIRs with police, and many case records are missing.
| Photo Credit: X/@RatanLalNath1

The Tripura Government has started the process of distributing job offers to families whose members were killed in incidents of political violence before the incumbent alliance government came to power in 2018. Jobs were handed to 18 next of kin of the victims, which an official on Sunday (June 22, 2025) described as the first phase of such recruitment.

“A committee was constituted to provide government jobs to persons whose family members were victims of political murders. So far, the panel has received 39 applications, and out of these, 18 persons have been given jobs,” Tripura Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ratan Lal Nath said at a press conference.

“Several families couldn’t even file FIRs with police, and many case records are missing,” he claimed.

The BJP-led government in December 2020 announced a scheme to provide jobs to next of kin of those killed in political violence over a period of 46 years with 2018 as the cutoff year. Thereafter, some jobs were disbursed to the affected families, but not blockwise like now.

A State Government official said 18 aspirants who were selected from the list recommended by a committee which was earlier set up to identify the victim families. “The primary consideration for recruitment is based on the financial condition of the families, but all those lost kin would also be considered in the next phases,” the official stated.

The apparent policy of the State Government is to support only non-left families who fell prey to violence during previous CPI(M)-led governments. The victims, according to the official assessment, had been connected with the Congress party, as it was the main Opposition party in the state before 2018.

CPI(M), now in opposition, alleged that the policy of providing government jobs only to non-left families is “inhumane”, as scores of left supporters were killed in political violence. A party leader pointed to targeted killings of left leaders, workers and supporters during the “repressive” five-year rule of the Congress-TUJS alliance government from 1988 to 1993.

(With PTI inputs)

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Of two contesting models of social justice

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Recently, in village in Bhojpur district, Bihar, which is dominated by Most Backward Castes (MBC), I heard a sohar (birth song) sung by a few unlettered women. It goes, “Babua hamar DM hoyihe, okara upar CM hoyihe (My son will become a District Magistrate and he will also become Chief Minister)”. I also heard a slogan during a political rally in Sasaram town, which goes, “Vote se lenge CM, PM, Aarakshan se lenge Collector, DM (I will become Chief Minister with votes and District Magistrate with reservation)”. Both these expressions reflect aspirations for social justice. They also show how the aspirations of backward communities becomes the essence of their politics. Together, these anecdotes illustrate how social justice is the driving force in grassroots development and politics in Bihar.

In north India, for several centuries, the Bhakti movement challenged social hierarchies and promoted equality and inclusivity. But the road to social justice has nevertheless been long and fraught. Leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi, B.R. Ambedkar, Mahatma Phule, and Ram Manohar Lohia have had their own visions and versions of social justice; these various imaginations continue to co-exist in India.

While in most parts of India, the social justice discourse remains mostly centred around Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, in Bihar the most dominant social justice discourse is of Other Backward Classes (OBCs). According to the Bihar caste survey of 2023, OBCs and Extremely Backward Classes comprise more than 63% of State’s population.

This is not new — Bihar politics has always been largely dominated by OBC politics. OBC communities, particularly the Yadavs, Kurmis, and Koirees, began emerging as lower and middle peasants due to various land-based reforms implemented in both pre-independent and independent India. The leaders of these three communities formed the Triveni Sangh in 1934 and began asserting their voice for political representation. Other leaders echoed the aspirations of OBC communities in later years as well. Apart from the OBC social justice discourse, Bihar has other social justice models, which can be loosely categorised as Gandhian, Congressi, Nehruwadi, Ambedkarite, Lohiyaite, and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led social justice model (samgra samajik nyay model).

Bihar is set to go to polls later this year. I have found during my fieldwork that the contest is set to take place primarily between two models. The first is the social justice model crafted by selective interpretations of the views of Ambedkar and Lohia. It emphasises caste-based historical inequality. The propagators of this model are Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad, RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav, and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi. The RJD and Congress are part of the Mahagathbandhan. This model appears to be unilinear as it focuses on the demand for a caste census and the extension of reservations.

The second is the samgra samajik nyay model. It combines the arguments of caste-based historical inequality with other forms of horizontal social inequalities that emerged during the process of distribution of democratic resources. The BJP, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, promotes this model, which combines the visions of Swami Vivekananda, Deendayal Upadhyaya, and Ambedkar. In Mr. Modi’s book Samajik Samrasata, we may find the traces of the evolution of this model of social justice. This model combines historical injustices with developmental injustices. It tries to address vertical and horizontal injustices faced by marginal communities. Social justice appears to be a multi-pronged strategy to counter backwardness of various forms. Countering caste-based injustice is tied to beneficiary politics, which refers to the use of government welfare programmes and benefits for targeted communities. Beneficiary politics emerged through the implementation of various social support schemes for backward castes, Dalits, Adivasis, and women.

Thus, both the alliances have two different yet overlapping social justice models. The difference is that the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance has a few advantages. Both Mr. Modi and Chief Minister Nitish Kumar enjoy a positive image. On the other hand, the Mahagathbandhan is represented by Mr. Lalu Prasad, whose regime was perceived as corrupt. The image of Deputy Chief Minister Tejashwi Yadav as a popular youth leader does not seem to have served as a counter-balance yet. And the benefit of the caste census, which the RJD-led Opposition was advocating, has been minimised by the Union government’s announcement of a caste enumeration in the Census.

Badri Narayan is Director, Govind Ballabh Pant Social Science Institute

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