All is not well with the wells

Published : Jan 16, 2009 00:00 IST

OCTOBER 2008: The fields of Mahua Tand in Jharkhands Deogarh district are full of wheat. Farmers and field hands are busy irrigating their lands. The rains have not been very helpful this year, and pumpsets and wells are the saviours of crops. Our social audit team is inspecting two NREGA projects in Mahua Tand, both involving the construction of a well on private land a common type of NREGA work in Jharkhand.

Taufique hails from a below-poverty-line (BPL) family and his sole source of income is the little agricultural land he owns. In the absence of a reliable source of irrigation, he is often at the mercy of unpredictable rain. Having heard that wells can be constructed on the land of BPL families under the NREGA, Taufique applied. Soon enough, he was informed that if he could pay Rs.2,500, a well would be allotted to him, he said. The NREGA mandates that a shelf of works be prepared in the gram sabha, but no such attempt was made in Mahaua Tand.

He said he paid the bribe and the well was sanctioned, and he became both the beneficiary and abhikarta (manager) of the project. As an abhikarta Taufique signed an agreement with the government and was in charge of executing the work. He was to fill the muster rolls, purchase materials and oversee the worksite. He also had to pay workers wages and for materials as the work progressed, but funds were often delayed and depended on his ability to pay the PC (percentage, a term for illegal commissions) to government functionaries. The PC had to be given in cash before the bill for his payment was passed, he alleged. Taufique took a loan of Rs.20,000, sold a buffalo and mortgaged his land to arrange for the PC and the construction costs.

For Taufique, this well was a chance to escape poverty but today, he says, he is struggling to make ends meet. Luckily, Taufique was not driven to suicide. But the whole PC system did push him into a web of indebtedness. Maybe for every Taufique who survives this gamble, there is a Tapas Soren who may not.

Kamayani Swami
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