By IANS,
New Delhi : India will have over 146,000 km of new roads connecting thousands of villages across the country by 2010-11, Rural Development Minister C.P. Joshi said Tuesday.
Giving details of the progress of his ministry in the last quarter and future targets, Joshi told reporters here: “On the basis of verification from the states, 54,648 habitations would be connected and the road length will be 146,185 km.”
The minister said the work on this was already in advanced stages and up to March this year, 31,924 habitations had already been connected.
He said this was as part of the prime minister’s ambitious Bharat Nirman programme to improve rural infrastructure in the country. The rural roads programme is called Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (Prime Minister’s Rural Roads Scheme).
“The goal is to provide all-weather road connectivity to all unconnected habitations with a population of 1,000 persons and above in the plains and 500 persons and up in the hilly or tribal areas,” the rural development minister said.
Joshi informed that the rural roads programme also aims to upgrade the existing road network “to ensure full farm to market connectivity” to the farmers. Under this plan, the government’s target is to upgrade 194,130 km rural roads.
The minister said the financial outlay for the rural roads scheme for 2009-10 was Rs.18,500 crore and Rs.7,280 crore from it had already been released to the states and various agencies involved in it.