Salem-Chennai highway not for benefit of any individual: TN CM

Tamil Nadu chief minister K Palaniswami has denied charges that the Salem-Chennai expressway project was meant to benefit private miners and termed it someone’s ‘figment of imagination’

The Salem-Chennai expressway project is not meant for the benefit of any individual but for the overall development of Tamil Nadu, chief minister K Palaniswami said, on June 30, 2018. “It (the question) itself is a figment of imagination, to bring bad name to the government,” he told reporters at Salem Airport. He said some people, out of ‘political vendetta’, were trying to stop the Rs 10,000-crore eight-lane project by provoking people. Palaniswami was responding to a query on reports that the expressway project was meant to favour private miners.

See also: Plea in HC, to nullify land acquisition for Chennai-Salem highway project

Stating that the road was a central government project and the state was assisting in its implementation, he said the Tamil Nadu government was taking steps, to get adequate compensation to those from whom the land was acquired. Not only Salem, but the nearby districts of Erode, Karur and Coimbatore, would also progress industrially, once the road is laid, he noted. Nearly 16,214 lives have been lost on this stretch in road accidents and the state government was bound to provide a quality road to the public, using modern technology, he added.

Noting that a large expanse of land was acquired during the rule, Palaniswami said the present government was offering more compensation, than that given during the DMK dispensation, as the guideline value had increased. In view of the increasing fuel prices and considering the last six months’ average, he claimed diesel prices could increase further and said the transport sector will, therefore, benefit from the eight-lane project, as the distance will be reduced. A lorry can save up to Rs 1,050 on diesel, with the reduction of distance by 60 kms, which also minimises wear and tear, the chief minister said.

Amid opposition, Palaniswami had recently asserted in the state assembly that the highway project would boost economic growth and its gains far outweighed other factors. The 277.3-km-long eight-lane greenfield project, under the centre’s ‘Bharatmala Pariyojana’, would stimulate growth like the Mumbai-Pune and Delhi-Agra expressway projects, he had said.

 

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