Ipn Mutp Final

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ipn Mutp Final Report No. 34725 Investigation Report India: Mumbai Urban Transport Project (IBRD Loan No. 4665-IN; IDA Credit No. 3662-IN) December 21, 2005 About The Panel The Inspection Panel was created in September 1993 by the Board of Executive Directors of the World Bank to serve as an independent mechanism to ensure accountability in Bank operations with respect to its policies and procedures. The Inspection Panel is an instrument for groups of two or more private citizens who believe that they or their interests have been or could be harmed by Bank-financed activities to present their concerns through a Request for Inspection. In short, the Panel provides a link between the Bank and the people who are likely to be affected by the projects it finances. Members of the Panel are selected “on the basis of their ability to deal thoroughly and fairly with the request brought to them, their integrity and their independence from the Bank’s Management, and their exposure to developmental issues and to living conditions in developing countries.”1 The three-member Panel is empowered, subject to Board approval, to investigate problems that are alleged to have arisen as a result of the Bank having ignored its own operating policies and procedures. Processing Requests After the Panel receives a Request for Inspection it is processed as follows: · The Panel decides whether the Request is prima facie not barred from Panel consideration. · The Panel registers the Request—a purely administrative procedure. · The Panel sends the Request to Bank Management, which has 21 working days to respond to the allegations of the Requesters. · The Panel then conducts a short 21 working-day assessment to determine the eligibility of the Requesters and the Request. · If the Panel does not recommend an investigation, and the Board of Executive Directors accepts that recommendation, the case is considered closed. The Board, however, may approve an investigation against the Panel’s recommendation if warranted. · Three days after the Board decides on whether or not an investigation should be carried out, the Panel’s Report (including the Request for Inspection and Management’s Response) is publicly available at the Bank’s Info Shop and the respective Bank Country Office. · If the Panel recommends an investigation, and the Board approves it, the Panel undertakes a full investigation, which is not time-bound. 1 IBRD Resolution No. 93-10; IDA Resolution No. 93-6. i · When the Panel completes an investigation, it sends its findings and conclusions on the matters alleged in the Request for Inspection to the Board as well as to Bank Management. · The Bank Management then has six weeks to submit its recommendations to the Board on what actions the Bank would take in response to the Panel’s findings and conclusions. · The Board then takes the final decision on what should be done based on the Panel's findings and the Bank Management's recommendations. · Three days after the Board’s decision, the Panel’s Report and Management’s Recommendation are publicly available through the Panel’s website and Secretariat, the Bank’s Project website, the Bank’s Info Shop and the respective Country Office. ii Table of Contents ABOUT THE PANEL ...................................................................................................................................................I TABLE OF CONTENTS .......................................................................................................................................... III FIGURES, TABLES, BOXES AND PICTURES ................................................................................................ VI ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................................................. VIII ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS ...............................................................................................................IX EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .......................................................................................................................................XI PART I: INTRODUCTION..........................................................................................................................................1 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION.........................................................................................................................2 A. EVENTS LEADING TO THE INVESTIGATION..........................................................................................2 1. Requests for Inspection..............................................................................................................................2 2. Management Response..............................................................................................................................8 3. Eligibility of the Request.........................................................................................................................12 4. The Board Decision..................................................................................................................................13 B. DESCRIPTION OF THE PROJECT............................................................................................................13 1. The Setting .................................................................................................................................................13 2. The Project Objectives.............................................................................................................................14 3. Financing and Legal Structure of the Project.....................................................................................15 4. The Project Design...................................................................................................................................16 5. Resettlement under the Rail Component..............................................................................................21 6. Resettlement under the Road Component............................................................................................22 C. APPLICABILITY OF BANK OPERATIONAL POLICIES AND PROCEDURES TO THE PROJECT.....23 D. THE INVESTIGATIO N...............................................................................................................................24 PART II: SOCIAL COMPLIANCE..........................................................................................................................25 CHAPTER 2 THE PROJECT HISTORY AND FRAMEWORK...........................................................26 A. RETROSPECTIVE VIEW ON THE HISTORY OF THE PROJECT..........................................................26 1. Two Projects for Mumbai: the Resettlement Project and the Infrastructure Project...................26 2. Recommendation and Decision to Merge the Two Projects .............................................................40 3. Conclusion.................................................................................................................................................46 4. Public Consultation and Information Regarding the Merger Decision..........................................47 5. Issues Regarding Information Given to the Bank’s Executive Directors .......................................47 5.1 Differing Estimates of Number of People to be Resettled..................................................................... 47 5.2 Basis for Merging the Two Projects....................................................................................................... 49 5.3 Non-Disclosure of Resettlement Risks................................................................................................... 49 6. Insufficient Risk Analysis........................................................................................................................51 7. Downsizing the Organizational Set-Up for Resettlement..................................................................51 B. THE CURRENT POLICY AND INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK..........................................................54 1. The R&R Policy Framework for MUTP and the Link with the Slum Rehabilitation Provisions54 2. The Resettlement Action Plan.................................................................................................................57 3. Differences between Rail and Road Components of Project ............................................................57 4. Institutional Capacity and Delegation of Responsibilities to NGOs ...............................................58 CHAPTER 3 PLANNING FOR DISPLACEMENT AND RESETTLEMENT...................................62 A. SURVEYS OF PROJECT AFFECTED PEOPLE, BASELINE INCOME AND IMMOVABLE ASSETS ...62 1. The Surveys................................................................................................................................................62 2. Entities Conducting the Surveys............................................................................................................64 3. Methodology Used for Surveys ..............................................................................................................64 iii 4. Consequences of Problems in Methodology........................................................................................70 4.1 Conflicting Descriptions of Affected Population................................................................................... 70 4.2
Recommended publications
  • The Experiences of Low Income Communities in Mumbai Vis-À-Vis
    222 223 _Amita Bhide From The Margins: The Experiences of Low Income Communities In Mumbai vis-à-vis Changing patterns of Basic Service Delivery image credit_ Aditi Pinto image credit_ 224 chunk of urban population, which can no longer delivery has been considered a state arena by These are described below: 225 | | Basic service delivery - a be ignored or rendered invisible. As Robert Classical economists on the basis of potential The Phase of Negation AMENITY traditional function of urban local governments McNamara, the former President of the World private market failures. Partnerships through Slums were seen as unfit housing and dens of AMENITY represents one of the most concrete forms Bank said ‘If cities do not deal with the problems outsourcing and contracting attempt to get crime in the initial years of planning and the of governance for urban citizens. Thereby, of the poor in a constructive way, they will deal over these failures, through partial privatisation. concern was to demolish these and replace with changes in forms of local governance through with cities in a destructive way’. Addressing the (RCUES, 2005). Several cities in India have ‘acceptable’ housing. Thus, the Slum Clearance decentralisation and responses to globalisation issues of providing infrastructure to expanding, thus, engaged in partnerships in areas of Programme of 1956 vested the governments with can be expected to be operationalised through big and poor cities is the real challenge of date. service delivery such as electricity and water necessary powers to compulsorily acquire slum new modes of organising service delivery. supply, solid waste collection, transportation areas and redevelop them.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Indian Abattoirs Approved by Apeda
    A – APPROVED INDIAN ABATTOIRS-CUM-MEAT PROCESSING PLANTS / STAND ALONE ABATTOIRS S. No. Name of the Exporter and Unit(s) approved by APEDA Registration Products Registration Contact Person No. permitted validity up for export to 1. Cdr. Satish Subberwal M/s Al-Kabeer Exports (P) APEDA/16 Buffalo/ 26/08/2016 Director Ltd. Sheep and Goat M/s. Al Kabeer Exports (P) Ltd. Village : Rudaram meat 53, Jolly Maker Chamber No. 2 Patancheru Mandal Nariman Point, Distt. Medak, Mumbai-400021 Andhra Pradesh Tel: 022-22025768 Fax: 022-22028475 E-Mail: [email protected] 2. Mr. Afzal Latif M/s. Frigorifico Allana Private APEDA/20 Buffalo/ Sheep 30/11/2016 President Limited. and Goat meat M/s. Allanasons Private Limited. P.O. Box –14, Paithan Road, Allana Centre, Gevrai, Aurangabad-431002 113/115, M.G. Road, Fort, Maharashtra Mumbai – 400001 (Plant – I) Tel: 022-56569000, 22628000, 56569056 Fax 022-22641133, 22691133 E-Mail: [email protected]; [email protected] 3. Mr. Afzal Latif M/s. Frigerio Conserva Allana APEDA/21 Buffalo/ Sheep 30/11/2016 President Private Limited. and Goat meat M/s. Allanasons Private Limited. Survey No. 325, Allana Centre, IDA, Algole Road, 113/115, M.G. Road, Fort, Zaheerabad-520220, Distt.: Mumbai – 400001 Medak Tel: 022-56569000, 22628000, Andhra Pradesh 56569056 Fax 022-22641133, 22691133 E-Mail: [email protected]; [email protected] 4. Mr. Afzal Latif b. M/s Frigorifico Allana APEDA/23 Buffalo/ Sheep 30/11/2016 President Private Limited. and Goat meat M/s. Allanasons Private Limited. P.O. Box 564, Paithan Road, Allana Centre, Gevrai 113/115, M.G.
    [Show full text]
  • Islam As a Lived Tradition
    Islam as a Lived Tradition: Ethical Constellations of Muslim Food Practice in Mumbai Een verklaring van Islam als een Levende Traditie: Ethische Constellaties van Moslim Voedsel Praktijken in Mumbai (met een samenvatting in het Nederlands) Proefschrift ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor aan de Universiteit Utrecht op gezag van de rector magnificus, prof.dr. G.J. van der Zwaan, ingevolge het besluit van het college voor promoties in het openbaar te verdedigen op woensdag 10 mei 2017 des middags te 2.30 uur door Shaheed Tayob geboren op 28 juni 1984 te Kaapstad, Zuid Afrika 1A_BW proefschrift Shaheed Tayob[pr].job Table of Contents Table of Contents ..................................................................................................................................... i Acknowledgements ................................................................................................................................ iv Abstract ................................................................................................................................................. vii Chapter One: Islam as a Lived Tradition: The Ethics of Muslim Food Practices in Mumbai .................................................................................................................. 1 From Bombay to Mumbai: The Shifting Place of Muslims in the City .................................................. 3 The Anthropology of Islam: A Discursive Analysis ............................................................................... 11 Talal
    [Show full text]
  • Standard Bid Document
    E-TENDER FOR Subject :- Work of replacement of pumps & blowers with Providing, Installation, Testing & Commissioning of new pump and blowers set for ETP at Deonar Abattoir. STANDARD BID DOCUMENT Website: portal.mcgm.gov.in/tenders Office of: General Manager (Deonar Abattoir), Opp. Govandi Rly Station Govandi,West Mumbai- 400 043 INDEX SECTION DESCRIPTION 1 E-TENDER NOTICE 2 ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA 3 DISCLAIMER 4 INTRODUCTION 5 E-TENDER ONLINE SUBMISSION PROCESS 6 INSTRUCTIONS TO APPLICANTS 7 SCOPE OF WORK 8 BILL OF QUANTITIES 9 GENERAL CONDITIONS OF CONTRACT 10 SPECIFICATIONS 11 FRAUD AND CORRUPT PRACTICES 12 PRE-BID MEETING 13 LIST OF APPROVED BANKS 14 APPENDIX SECTION 1 E-TENDER NOTICE MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER MUMBAI Deonar Abattoir No. GMDA/ / Exp E-TENDER NOTICE Sub : Work of replacement of pumps & blowers with Providing, Installation, Testing & Commissioning of new pump and blowers set for ETP at Deonar Abattoir. The Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM) invites e-tender to appoint Contractor for the aforementioned work from contractors of repute, multidisciplinary engineering organizations i.e. eminent firm, Proprietary/Partnership Firms/ Private Limited Companies/ Public Limited Companies/Companies registered under the Indian companies’ act 2013 , the contractors registered with the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai, (MCGM) in Class AA (Mech&Elect. category) as per old registration OR Class B (Mech &Elect. category) as per new registration and from the contractors/firms equivalent and superior classes registered in Central or State Government/Semi Govt. Organization/Central or State Public Sector Undertakings, will be allowed subject to condition that, the contractors who are not registered with MCGM will have to apply for registering their firm within three months time period from the award of contract, otherwise their Bid Security i.e.
    [Show full text]
  • Visceral Politics of Food: the Bio-Moral Economy of Work- Lunch in Mumbai, India
    Visceral politics of food: the bio-moral economy of work- lunch in Mumbai, India Ken Kuroda London School of Economics and Political Science A thesis submitted to the Department of Anthropology of the London School of Economics for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, London, March 2018 1 Declaration I certify that the thesis I have presented for examination for the MPhil/PhD degree of the London School of Economics and Political Science is solely my own work other than where I have clearly indicated that it is the work of others (in which case the extent of any work carried out jointly by me and any other person is clearly identified in it). The copyright of this thesis rests with the author. Quotation from it is permitted, provided that full acknowledgement is made. This thesis may not be reproduced without my prior written consent. I warrant that this authorisation does not, to the best of my belief, infringe the rights of any third party. I declare that my thesis consists of 98896 words. 2 Abstract This Ph.D. examines how commuters in Mumbai, India, negotiate their sense of being and wellbeing through their engagements with food in the city. It focuses on the widespread practice of eating homemade lunches in the workplace, important for commuters to replenish mind and body with foods that embody their specific family backgrounds, in a society where religious, caste, class, and community markers comprise complex dietary regimes. Eating such charged substances in the office canteen was essential in reproducing selfhood and social distinction within Mumbai’s cosmopolitan environment.
    [Show full text]
  • Global E-Tender For
    MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER MUMBAI GLOBAL E-TENDER FOR Name of Work: Modernization of Deonar Abattoir on Turn-Key Basis (Global Tender): Phase I (B) - Design, Engineering, Supply, Installations, Testing and Commissioning (SITC) of Slaughter House Machineries for Sheep/Goat, Buffalo and Pig including Civil works and Ten Years of Operation and Maintenance of Abattoir on plot bearing CTS No. 1(pt), 2(pt), 3 (pt) of Village Deonar and 7(pt) of Village Borla in M/E ward, Govandi, Mumbai. Website: www.portal.mcgm.gov.in/tenders Office of: Dy. City Engineer (B.C.), E.S. MCGM 6th Floor, Municipal Garage Building, MCGM Near Pantnagar Bus Depot, Ghatkopar (East), Mumbai- 400 075, MODERNIZATION OF DEONAR ABATTOIR ON TURNKEY BASIS (GLOBAL TENDER): PHASE I (B 1 MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER MUMBAI INDEX (VOLUME I) SECTION DESCRIPTION PG NO 1 GLOBAL E-TENDER NOTICE 3-10 2 ELIGIBILITY AND EVALUATION CRITERIA 11-18 3 DISCLAIMER 19-22 4 INTRODUCTION 23-29 5 E-TENDER ONLINE SUBMISSION PROCESS 29-34 6 INSTRUCTIONS TO APPLICANTS 35-54 7 SCOPE OF WORK 55-68 8 OPERTATION AND MAINTENANCE 69-76 9 SCHEDULE OF PAYMENTS 77-82 10 GENERAL CONDITIONS OF CONTRACT 83-136 11 SPECIAL DIRECTIONS TO TENDERER 137-148 SPECIFICATIONS AND SELECTION OF 12 149- 152 MATERIALS 13 FRAUD AND CORRUPT PRACTICES 153-158 14 PRE-BID MEETING 159-162 15 LIST OF APPROVED BANKS 163-168 16 APPENDIX 169-193 MODERNIZATION OF DEONAR ABATTOIR ON TURNKEY BASIS (GLOBAL TENDER): PHASE I (B 2 MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER MUMBAI SECTION 1 GLOBAL E-TENDER NOTICE MODERNIZATION OF DEONAR ABATTOIR ON TURNKEY BASIS (GLOBAL TENDER): PHASE I (B 3 MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER MUMBAI Kept Blank Intentionally MODERNIZATION OF DEONAR ABATTOIR ON TURNKEY BASIS (GLOBAL TENDER): PHASE I (B 4 MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER MUMBAI MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER MUMBAI Global E-TENDER NOTICE e- Tender No.
    [Show full text]
  • 1. Councillors & Officers List
    Yeejleer³e je<ì^ieerle HetCe& peveieCeceve-DeefOevee³ekeÀ pe³e ns Yeejle-Yeei³eefJeOeelee ~ Hebpeeye, efmebOeg, iegpejele, cejeþe, NATIONAL ANTHEM OF INDIA êeefJe[, GlkeÀue, yebie, efJebO³e, efncee®eue, ³ecegvee, iebiee, Full Version G®íue peueeqOelejbie leJe MegYe veeces peeies, leJe MegYe DeeeqMe<e ceeies, Jana-gana-mana-adhinayaka jaya he ieens leJe pe³eieeLee, Bharat-bhagya-vidhata peveieCe cebieueoe³ekeÀ pe³e ns, Punjab-Sindhu-Gujarata-Maratha Yeejle-Yeei³eefJeOeelee ~ Dravida-Utkala-Banga pe³e ns, pe³e ns, pe³e ns, pe³e pe³e pe³e, pe³e ns ~~ Vindhya-Himachala-Yamuna-Ganga mebef#eHle Uchchala-jaladhi-taranga peveieCeceve-DeefOevee³ekeÀ pe³e ns Tava Shubha name jage, tava subha asisa mage Yeejle-Yeei³eefJeOeelee ~ Gahe tava jaya-gatha pe³e ns, pe³e ns, pe³e ns, Jana-gana-mangala-dayaka jaya he pe³e pe³e pe³e, pe³e ns ~~ Bharat-bhagya-vidhata Jaya he, jaya he, jaya he, Jaya jaya jaya jaya he. Short version Jana-gana-mana-adhinayaka jaya he Bharat-bhagya-vidhata Jaya he, Jaya he, jaya he jaya jaya jaya, jaya he, PERSONAL MEMORANDUM Name ............................................................................................................................................................................ Office Address .................................................................................................................... ................................................................................................................................................ .................................................... ..............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Cost of MUTP and Bank Financing by Component
    Report No. 34725 Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Investigation Report India: Mumbai Urban Transport Project (IBRD Loan No. 4665-IN; IDA Credit No. 3662-IN) Public Disclosure Authorized December 21, 2005 Public Disclosure Authorized About The Panel The Inspection Panel was created in September 1993 by the Board of Executive Directors of the World Bank to serve as an independent mechanism to ensure accountability in Bank operations with respect to its policies and procedures. The Inspection Panel is an instrument for groups of two or more private citizens who believe that they or their interests have been or could be harmed by Bank-financed activities to present their concerns through a Request for Inspection. In short, the Panel provides a link between the Bank and the people who are likely to be affected by the projects it finances. Members of the Panel are selected “on the basis of their ability to deal thoroughly and fairly with the request brought to them, their integrity and their independence from the Bank’s Management, and their exposure to developmental issues and to living conditions in developing countries.”1 The three-member Panel is empowered, subject to Board approval, to investigate problems that are alleged to have arisen as a result of the Bank having ignored its own operating policies and procedures. Processing Requests After the Panel receives a Request for Inspection it is processed as follows: · The Panel decides whether the Request is prima facie not barred from Panel consideration. · The Panel registers the Request—a purely administrative procedure. · The Panel sends the Request to Bank Management, which has 21 working days to respond to the allegations of the Requesters.
    [Show full text]
  • Spatial Shifts in the Location of Slaughterhouses in Mumbai City
    South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies ISSN: 0085-6401 (Print) 1479-0270 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/csas20 Cow Politics: Spatial Shifts in the Location of Slaughterhouses in Mumbai City Shireen Mirza To cite this article: Shireen Mirza (2019): Cow Politics: Spatial Shifts in the Location of Slaughterhouses in Mumbai City, South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, DOI: 10.1080/00856401.2019.1644766 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/00856401.2019.1644766 Published online: 20 Aug 2019. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 37 View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=csas20 SOUTH ASIA: JOURNAL OF SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES https://doi.org/10.1080/00856401.2019.1644766 ARTICLE Cow Politics: Spatial Shifts in the Location of Slaughterhouses in Mumbai City Shireen Mirza School of Undergraduate Studies, Ambedkar University, New Delhi, India ABSTRACT KEYWORDS This article explores the spatial politics of situating slaughter- Butchering; caste among houses at the margins of Mumbai city enacted by the sanitary Indian Muslims; caste civic state and the caste labour of the butcher community. While labour; colonial sanitary the sanitary state mobilises colonial discourses of sanitation that state; cow slaughter; spatial states; spatial politics; deem animal slaughter unhygienic and so needing to be located urban space at the shifting periphery of the city, an ethnography of the Muslim sub-castes of mutton and beef butchers suggests that ani- mal slaughter is a form of caste labour that involves cultivating hereditary skills of working with flesh, bone and blood, which the Mumbai butchers refer to as ‘karigari’ (artisanship).
    [Show full text]
  • 2014 Livestock and Products Annual India
    THIS REPORT CONTAINS ASSESSMENTS OF COMMODITY AND TRADE ISSUES MADE BY USDA STAFF AND NOT NECESSARILY STATEMENTS OF OFFICIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT POLICY Required Report - public distribution Date: 9/12/2014 GAIN Report Number: IN4080 India Livestock and Products Annual 2014 Approved By: Jonn Slette Prepared By: Joshua Lagos and Radha Mani Report Highlights: For calendar year (CY) 2014 and CY 2015, the total cattle population is estimated to grow from 300.6 to 301.1 million head. The cattle population is revised based on 2012 livestock census data from the Government of India (GOI). CY 2014 and CY 2015 carabeef exports are forecast at 2 and 2.2 million tons carcass weight equivalent (CWE) on export pace and expectations of increased demand from the Middle East, Africa, and Southeast Asia. Executive Summary: For CY 2014 and CY 2015, the total cattle population is estimated to grow from 300.6 to 301.1 million head. The cattle population is revised based on 2012 livestock census data from the GOI. From approximately September 2013 to January/February 2014, there was a foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) outbreak in southern India, which restricted the interstate trade of livestock, particularly to the state of Kerala. CY 2014 and CY 2015 carabeef meat production is projected at 4.1 and 4.3 million tons CWE on improved weights due to better farm management and nutrition. CY 2014 and CY 2015 carabeef exports are forecast at 2 and 2.2 million tons CWE on export pace and expectations of increased demand from the Middle East, Africa, and Southeast Asia.
    [Show full text]
  • AA-Postscript 2.Qxp:Layout 1
    THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 INTERNATIONAL From AK47s to drones, Afghans ‘war rugs’ reflect bloody decades KABUL: More than three decades of war Kalashnikovs also feature. The US-led war Haref Fazli, another Chicken Street rug have damaged Afghanistan’s once-thriving in Afghanistan brought with it a flood of seller, said that just as traditional weavers carpet industry, but weavers are tapping expats-aid workers, diplomats and security depicted the natural world of flowers and into the bloody past to boost their fortunes contractors-bringing boom times for car- animals that surrounded them, so weavers with “war rugs” depicting guns, tanks and pet sellers. Now the expat population is now are showing war, because war is what warplanes. On Chicken Street, the most falling fast, the rug industry is struggling has surrounded them for more than three famous street in Afghanistan during the and the transformation in styles is an decades. “From long ago the carpet “hippie trail” tourist days of the late 60s and attempt to attract more business from a weavers would weave the map of 70s and still the place to come for souvenirs, dwindling band of foreigners. Afghanistan on rugs as a symbol of the some of the carpets in the shops look like country, but when war began, the war ele- pages of the country’s wartorn history. Rugging the changes ments such as guns, tanks and so on were Since the Soviet Union invaded in 1979 A carpet showing the map of Afghanistan added on the rugs,” he said. Carpets have Afghanistan has been in a state of near-con- with US fighter planes around it and the been a main source of income for millions stant conflict, and this strife is woven into words “terrorism”, “Pakistan”, “China”, “USA” of Afghans during the years of war, but the fabric-literally of the woollen rugs.
    [Show full text]
  • Report on Status of Civic Issues in Mumbai June 2021
    WHITE PAPER Report on Status of Civic Issues in Mumbai June 2021 Status of Civic Issues in Mumbai 1 Table of Contents I. Foreword ..................................................................................................................................................................... 6 II. Acknowledgement ..................................................................................................................................................... 8 III. Source of Data ........................................................................................................................................................... 9 Section I: Water Supply & Sewerage ............................................................................................................................. 10 Part 1. Water Supply ..................................................................................................................................................... 10 A. Key Highlights ........................................................................................................................................................... 10 B. Accessibility, Adequacy and Affordability of Water Supply in Mumbai ..................................................................... 11 Table 1: Water Supply and Conveyance Losses in Mumbai from 2016-17 to 2019-20 .................................................... 11 Table 2: Sources of Drinking Water in Mumbai (Census 2011) ......................................................................................
    [Show full text]