Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
India

Parliament House getting worn: Should a new one be built?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Nov, 2014 01:54 PM
    From the outside it looks imposing and its unique circular shape makes it one of the landmarks of the Indian capital and a prime tourist attraction. But the 87-year-old Parliament House, a heritage building and India's "temple of democracy", is falling into disrepair with leaking pipes, damp walls, space crunch and much wear and tear leading many to ask whether it is safe to continue in this building. .
     
    But the government said there is no proposal yet despite the fact that the idea to shift was proposed in a meeting of a committee comprising MPs and parliament officials.
     
    According to well informed sources, at a recent meeting of the budget committee comprising Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha M. Thambidurai, Public Accounts Committee Chairman K.V. Thomas and Estimates Committee Chairman Murli Manohar Joshi and other officials, it was suggested that the proposal to shift should be considered.
     
    Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said there was no official proposal to shift as of now.
     
    "There is no official proposal to shift Parliament House. Individual suggestions keep on coming from time to time though," Naqvi told IANS. "We cannot say as of now if there is need for a new building," he added.
     
    But Congress leader Thomas told IANS: "We should think of a new parliament building. It is old. We should think of the next 100 years."
     
    "This building was built by the British. There could be more members and they would need to provide them facilities," said Thomas, who is member of the budget committee that looks after expenditure on maintenance and other expenditures related to Parliament House.
     
    "The minutes of the meeting held a week back will go to the speaker (Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan) and she will take the final decision," Thomas told IANS. He added that a similar suggestion was mooted when Somnath Chatterjee was speaker. But nothing happened.
     
    When contacted many MPs told IANS they would not want to be shifted from the heritage building.
     
    K.C. Tyagi, Rajya Sabha member from Janata Dal-United, told IANS: "This is not just a building, it is our heritage. We need to preserve it. It is an issue of maintenance. 
     
    "This is our heritage, the constitution was made here. There is no sense in moving away. There is so much technology and this building is not even 100 years old."
     
    Senior Congress member and former deputy chairman of Rajya Sabha K. Rahman Khan agreed that maintenance was at the root of the problem.
     
    "More attention to maintenance is needed. There are several other democracies which have parliament buildings much older than ours... British parliament for example is older," Khan told IANS.
     
    "They have maintained their building and so I feel with some more attention we can maintain ours too," he said.
     
    But ask a parliament building staff member for whom maintenance of the massive building is a daily routine. "Maintenance is done all the time; but the building is huge and it is very difficult to remove the dampness that has seeped inside," an official told IANS on condition of anonymity.
     
    "The pressure (to house everyone) is increasing every day. There are more political parties now, which has spurred the need for more rooms. But any modification in the building is difficult as it is very old, and a heritage building at that. We need permission to even put a nail," he said.
     
    Spread over six acres, the majestic structure is built with pink and red sandstone.
     
    The foundation stone of the Parliament House building was laid in 1921. Constructed at a cost of Rs.83 lakh, it was inaugurated in January 1927.
     
    Designed by British architects Ediwn Lutyens and Herbert Baker, the building has several rooms that house political parties, Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha officials' offices, rooms for committee meetings, and offices of ministers and functionaries.
     
    Also, there are rooms for media, canteens, other offices, along with toilets, which have increased from 24 to 48, according to official data. Some rooms are being used for dumping old junk or files.
     
    Though there have been minor incidents, it was only when in 2009, a part of the ceiling fell in Room No. 37, which belonged to then petroleum minister Murli Deora, that suggestions to shift first started emerging.
     
    Deora was not in the room at that time.
     
    The cause was later found to be cooking gas cylinders piled on the floor above.
     
    This led to a ban on cooking in the main parliament building, and the food in the canteens is now brought from the adjacent parliament library.
     
    In 2012, the sitting of Rajya Sabha was disrupted on two days, May 10, and May 18, due to foul smell coming from a drain. The overpowering stink created panic, with some members suspecting it to be leaking cooking gas, or even a gas attack.
     
    In July 2012, former Lok Sabha speaker Meira Kumar was quoted as saying that the building was "weeping". She ordered a high-powered committee to be set up to suggest an alternative complex.
     
    However, not much progress happened on that front.
     
    A study by the Central Building Research Institute, Roorkee, suggested a slew of measures, beginning with water-proofing to arrest further damage.
     
    However, it is just not dampness and maintenance work; there is also need for more space.
     
    Khan suggested a way out.
     
    "One option could be to shift the offices of political parties and others to the parliament library building, and keep the main building only for sittings of the two houses," Khan told IANS.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Genital mutilation against Islam sanctity: Indian clerics

    Genital mutilation against Islam sanctity: Indian clerics
    The reported order passed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) militants for girls and women in and around Mosul in Iraq was Friday condemned by Indian Muslim clerics who said that such an order is "completely against Islam" and has brought "shame" to the religion.

    Genital mutilation against Islam sanctity: Indian clerics

    Sikhs will give befitting reply to Congress tactics: Badal

    Sikhs will give befitting reply to Congress tactics: Badal
    Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal Friday asserted that the Sikhs will not succumb to the "politically-motivated" tactics of the Congress to divide them by creating a separate committee to manage gurdwaras (Sikh shrines) in Haryana.

    Sikhs will give befitting reply to Congress tactics: Badal

    International flights allowed from Chandigarh

    International flights allowed from Chandigarh
    The defence ministry has cleared a proposal to allow international flights from Chandigarh airport, the Punjab government announced Friday.

    International flights allowed from Chandigarh

    Punjab, Haryana leaders head for showdown over HSGPC

    Punjab, Haryana leaders head for showdown over HSGPC
    It may not have anything to do with the general public but leaders in Haryana and Punjab are trying their best to flare up things over the controversy around the setting up of the Haryana Sikh Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (HSGPC).

    Punjab, Haryana leaders head for showdown over HSGPC

    India rescues 58 more nurses from troubled Iraq

    India rescues 58 more nurses from troubled Iraq
    India has rescued 58 Indian nurses from violence-hit Iraq in an "extremely difficult" operation, days after rescuing 46 Indian nurses who were in...

    India rescues 58 more nurses from troubled Iraq

    Bollywood inspired Indian stalker in Australia

    Bollywood inspired Indian stalker in Australia
    An Indian man, facing trial for stalking women in Australia, has told the court his acts were inspired by Bollywood movies...

    Bollywood inspired Indian stalker in Australia