The meeting yesterday was chaired by Union Rural Development Minister Narendra Singh Tomar, who directed senior officials of the states to speed up the execution of the rural road projects to achieve full rural connectivity by March, 2019.
Under the scheme, about 1.78 lakh eligible habitations with a population of 500 in the plains and 250 in the hilly areas are planned to be connected by all-weather roads. As of March, 2014, 97,838 of such habitations (55 per cent of the target) had been connected.
This had been possible by speeding up the pace of road construction and habitation connectivity over the last three years, reaching 130 kms of construction per day in 2016-17, the highest in the last seven years, the meeting was informed.
The work was in progress in all but 1,700 remaining habitations and the proposal to connect these 1,700 habitations would also be approved by December-end, the meeting was told.
A major challenge was being faced in Assam, Jammu and Kashmir and Uttarakhand on account of the difficult terrain in these states, they said, adding that in Chhattisgarh, Malkangiri district of Odisha and a few areas of Jharkhand, the challenge was on account of left-wing extremism.
The ministry was constantly following up with all these states to ensure that the target was achieved by March 2019, the officials said.
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