new delhi 22 feb

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THE TIMES OF INDIA, NEWDELHI MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2016 3 TIMES CITY | QUOTA CAULDRON Gurgaon:This wasn’t the kind of the pre-marriage jitters they had expected. Young men and women from other cities scheduled to tie the knot fear being marooned by the Jat protests ahead of their wed- dings scheduled over the next few days. Those getting married in Gurgaonaren’timmunefromanx- iety either. They aren’t sure rela- tives living in ot her parts o f the state will reach in time for the cere- monies. Gurgaon hasn’t seen the worst of the protests but has a huge w ork- ing population whose travel plans havebeenaffectedbythequotaagi- tation that flared up over the week- end. Saurabh Gaur, an IT profes- sional from Rajasthan’s Barmer, wedding is on February 25 and functionswillstart fromFebruary 23, but now I don’t know how I’ll re- ach home,” Prema said. She was keeping her fingers crossed that a thaw in the protests will allow her to take a cab or a bus home. Prema is not the only one who is racing against time. This being peak wedding season, many mar- riages are scheduled to take place over the next few days. Pooja Aro- ra, a Gurgaon resident, is getting married on Monday, but her rela- tives have still not turned up. “To- day (Sunday) is my sangeet cere- mony , but till now, most of my rela- tives have not reached. They are stuck due to the protest,” said Poo-  ja. S he ho ped t here woul d be a let- up in protests that will help them reach Gurgaon by Monday. was still figuring out how to get home on Sunday. His wedding is scheduled for Wednesday. “I have no option but to take a longer route butthatisgoingtobe veryexhaust- ing and tak e a lot of time,” said Gaur, adding he feared he wouldn’t reach in time for the big day. “The wedding of two other pe o- ple in my company who are from othercitiesidalsoscheduledin the next few days. All of us are in trou- ble due to cancella tion of trains androadblockades,”Gauradded. Prema Singh, an automobile engineer, spent the last month pre- paring for her wedding. She was to board a train for her hometown in Uttarakhand from Delhi this week- end. But her train got cancelled and she couldn’t get a Shatabdi ticket because of the ru sh. “My  F or som e, p rot ests ma y turn ‘jodi-br eaker’ Photos: Indranil Das Gurgaon hasn’t seen the worst of the protests but the residents are worried Bagish.Jha@timesgroup.com New Delhi: With the Jat agi- tators blocking roads and ra- ilway lines, the one-way air- fares between the affected places like Chandigarh, Am- ritsar and Jaipur, and the ca- pital have shot up even up to a lakh. The regular fares on these routes range between Rs 3,000 and Rs 4,000. Despite four big airlines  —Air India, IndiGo, Je t Air- waysand SpiceJet—runnin g extra flights following an av- iation ministry order, the price s have hi t the roof on theseroutes.Forinstance,all flights from Chandigarh to Delhi got sold out for Monday by Sunday afternoon. For Tuesday, the fares ranged from Rs 12,700 to Rs 15,100 for a non-stop flight to over Rs 31,000 for a one-stop flight via Mumbai. For the Delhi-Chandi- garh route, the Monday price was Rs 15,167 for a non-stop flight and Rs27,400 for flights with a stop in Mumbai. For Tuesday, the non-stop fa res ranged from Rs9,200 to Rs 15,200 but the one-stop flight cost over Rs27,500. Travel portals even sho- wed one-way tickets costing up to Rs99,000 through multi- ple flights. The Delhi-Jaipur non- stop flights for Monday cost Rs 5,000 to Rs 8,000 and one- stop options were costing between Rs 9,000 and Rs 10,000. The non-stop flights for Tuesday were going for Rs 6,400 to Rs 9,000 while the one-stop ones cost up to Rs 10,000. From Jaipur to Delhi, the Monday price ranged bet- ween Rs 7,800 and Rs 25,000. To fly from Delhi to Am- ritsar on Monday, the tickets went up to Rs 16,600 but for Tuesday, the price dropped to Rs 7,000. No seats were avai- lable on the Amritsar-Delhi flights for either Monday or Tuesday. Air India on Sunday cap- ped fares fo r some routes. “AI is charging a nominal all-in- clusive fare. The one-way fa- re between Delhi and Chan- digarh is Rs 3,339 while it is Rs 3,960 between Delhi and Amritsar,” it said. Jet Airways said most di- rect flights on these routes had been sold out. “Some fa- res seen on third-party travel portals are calculated by tho- se websites by combining the last-available seats on indirect routes. These fares are not available on our web- site.” The airline added, “We are working with these por- tals to not show such rounda- bout itineraries with the last-available premiere ca- bin seats.” Extra Flights Added On Affected Routes Rail, roads blocked, airfares hit the roof PROTEST EFFECT TIMES NEWS NETWORK Ghaziabad:Security was beefed up on Sunday at the head regulator of Upper Ganga Canal in Muradnagar to prevent any attempt by Jat reser- vation agitators from cutting down water supply. In June 2010, protes- ters had laid siege to the regulator and shut it down for several hours. The district administration and the police department have been direc- ted to keep round-the-clock vigil at the regulator. About 470 cusecs of Ganga water is supplied to Delhi through two pi- peline Delhi. While 270 cusecs are supplied to the Sonia Vihar water treatment plant, 200 cusecs are supplied to the Bhagirathi plant. On Sunday , one company of Pro- vincial Armed Constabulary, per- sonnel from four police stations along with their station house offi- cers and two circle officers were pos- ted the regulator . “Personnel of the Rapid Action Force have also been deployedattheregulator onSunday. The situation is completely normal as of now though the regulator will continue to remain under vigil for the next few days. The exact details of securi ty arrang ement s put in place cannot be disclosed,” said Ra- kesh Kumar Pandey, SP (Rural). Officials of UP Jal Nigam, which is in charge of the regulator , confir- med that full quota of 470 cusecs has been released to Delhi on Sunday. “The district administration is completely prepared to deal with any untoward incident or conting- ency .Wewilltakeall measurestoen- sure that no inconvenience is cau- sed to the citizens,” said Ghaziabad DM Vimal Kumar Sharma. Security beefed up at Gzb canal Ayaskant.Das @timesgroup.com Police are keeping round-the-clock vigil Umesh Kumar RESERVA TION RUCKUS: Protesters were seen threatening auto drivers out on the road in Gurgaon New Delhi: A grou p of at le - ast 100 Jat men from Matiala village condemned the de- mand for reservation and sa- id only those who are financi- ally disadvantaged are eligib- le for it. The group held a march on Sunday morning opposing the protests and re- lated violence. “Jats have always had a prosperous history and don’t need reservation or any such privilege. We are fighters and can fight our way to success without any special help,” sa- id Vikas Dahiya, who led the march and runs a coaching institute for schoolchildren in Tilak Nagar. Dahiya said reservations willfurtherdivide thesociety. “If our demand is acce pted, tomorrow Gurjars will rise or some other community . On what ground will the go- vernment refuse them? Shall protest be the criteria to atta- in reservations?” Dahiya as- ked. TNN Some Jats don’t want quota WEATHER Max 26.2°C / Min 15.8°C Moonrise:Monday – 06:01pm Moonset:Tuesday – 07:02am Sunset:Monday-06:16pm Sunrise: Tuesday - 06:53am Mainly clear sky, Mist/ shallow fog is very likely to occur . Maximum & min temperatur eonMondaywill bearound 26°C&14°C.Maximumhumidityon Sunday was 96% and minimum 43% New Delhi: Roads in the northern and western parts of the city bo rdering Hary a- na were choked due to the agitations by Jat groups on Sunday. Protesters blocked the highways and forced shopkeepers to down their shutters leading to a shorta- ge of esse ntial supplie s in some parts of the city. Traffic jams were repor- ted from Rohini, Narela, Nangloi, Mundka and Najaf- garh. The agitations on the Delhi-Sonipat, Delhi-Baha- durgarh and Delhi-Jhajjar roads added to the woes. Police officials said the Ring Road near Madhuban Chowk was choked for near- ly two hours in the afterno- on after a gr oup of prot es- ters parked their vehicles across the road and blocked it. Some of them also tried to disrupt Metro services but were prevented from ente- ring the station. Trucks carrying essenti- al supplies in the night were prevented from entering the city leading to major shorta- ges in supplies in most are- as. Blockades were put up at key locations to paralyse other roads as well. “Our men are deployed at all major intersections to ensure that there is no vehi- cular movement. We won’t indulge in violence, but we won’t allow normal life to go on either until our demands are met,” said Karambir Singh, one of the Jat l eaders protestingnearRohini. Some protesters even threatened to storm into Pi- tampura Metro station, af- ter which police closed the gates for a while. In some areas, protesters clashed with police while they were being removed. However, most other protests were pe- aceful. Protesters blocked major roads like NH-10 and GT Kar- nal Road by parking tractors and trucks across them. The ripple effect of these snar ls choked the Ring Road and Delhi-Rohtak Road. Vehi- cles heading to Chandigarh and Dehradun were stalled due to the protests. The agitation led by Jats demanding reservation un- der the economically back- ward classes, reached Delhi on Saturday bringing the ca- pital to a standstill for hours, a day after three men died al- legedly due to police firing.  T r affic st a ll ed , sh ops forced to down shutters DELHI Najafgarh Road | Bahadurgarh border to Inderlok due to protests at Narela market NH-57 | Delhi- Haridwar road blocked because of agitation near Muradnagar NH-10 | Delhi- Rohtak Road till Mundka Metro station blocked due to protests on Jhajjar Road NH-1 | Singhu Border to Samaypur Badli on GT Karnal Road; Ring Road also affected till Madhuban Chowk NO WAY OUT Traffic jams were reported from Rohini, Narela, Nangloi, Mundka and Najafgarh. Agitations on Delhi- Sonipat, Delhi-Bahadur- garh and Delhi-Jhajjar roads added to the woes TIMES NEWS NETWORK Gurgaon: Miscreants tried to sabotage the Delhi-Jaipur railwa y line for a second day by dumping a cement bench on the railway track and setting fire to a ticket booking of- fice. Police said there were no witnesses to the crimes and could not confirm who was behind the acts. Both incidents took place at Basai-Dhan- kot railway station during the early hours of Sunday. The cops were able to remove the bench from the tracks around 7.30am. They found the ticket office gutted when they reac- hed the station around 7.40am. Station office  burnt in G gn TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Protests paralysed traffic in Ghaziabad, police said. Jat leaders assembled at Hapur  junction, at Duhai on NH-58 and near the Lal Kuan Atma Steel factory on NH-24 and halted road traffic. A group of Jats also blocked road traffic at Loni. PTI Protests paralyse traffic in Gzb

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Page 1: new delhi 22 feb

7/24/2019 new delhi 22 feb

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/new-delhi-22-feb 1/1

THE TIMES OF INDIA, NEWDELHIMONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2016 3TIMES CITY | QUOTA CAULDRON 

Gurgaon:This wasn’t the kind of the pre-marriage jitters they hadexpected. Young men and womenfrom other cities scheduled to tiethe knot fear being marooned bythe Jat protests ahead of their wed-dings scheduled over the next fewdays. Those getting married inGurgaon aren’t immune from anx-iety either. They aren’t sure rela-tives living in other parts of thestate will reach in time for the cere-monies.

Gurgaon hasn’t seen the worst

of the protests but has a huge work-ing population whose travel planshave been affected by the quota agi-tation that flared up over the week-end. Saurabh Gaur, an IT profes-sional from Rajasthan’s Barmer,

wedding is on February 25 andfunctions will start from February23, but now I don’t know how I’ll re-ach home,” Prema said. She waskeeping her fingers crossed that athaw in the protests will allow herto take a cab or a bus home.

Prema is not the only one whois racing against time. This beingpeak wedding season, many mar-riages are scheduled to take placeover the next few days. Pooja Aro-ra, a Gurgaon resident, is gettingmarried on Monday, but her rela-tives have still not turned up. “To-day (Sunday) is my sangeet cere-

mony, but till now, most of my rela-tives have not reached. They arestuck due to the protest,” said Poo-

 ja. She hoped there would be a let-up in protests that will help themreach Gurgaon by Monday.

was still figuring out how to gethome on Sunday. His wedding isscheduled for Wednesday. “I haveno option but to take a longer routebut that is going to be very exhaust-ing and take a lot of time,” saidGaur, adding he feared he wouldn’treach in time for the big day.

“The wedding of two other peo-ple in my company who are fromother cities id also scheduled in thenext few days. All of us are in trou-ble due to cancellation of trainsand road blockades,” Gaur added.

Prema Singh, an automobileengineer, spent the last month pre-

paring for her wedding. She was toboard a train for her hometown inUttarakhand from Delhi this week-end. But her train got cancelledand she couldn’t get a Shatabditicket because of the rush. “My

 For some, protests may turn ‘jodi-breaker’ Photos: Indranil Das

Gurgaon hasn’t seen the worst of the protests but the residents are worried

[email protected]

New Delhi: With the Jat agi-tators blocking roads and ra-ilway lines, the one-way air-fares between the affectedplaces like Chandigarh, Am-

ritsar and Jaipur, and the ca-pital have shot up even up to alakh. The regular fares onthese routes range betweenRs 3,000 and Rs 4,000.

Despite four big airlines —Air India, IndiGo, Jet Air-ways and SpiceJet—runningextra flights following an av-iation ministry order, theprices have hit the roof onthese routes. For instance, allflights from Chandigarh toDelhi got sold out for Mondayby Sunday afternoon. ForTuesday, the fares rangedfrom Rs 12,700 to Rs 15,100for a non-stop flight to overRs 31,000 for a one-stop flightvia Mumbai.

For the Delhi-Chandi-garh route, the Monday price

was Rs 15,167 for a non-stopflight and Rs27,400 for flightswith a stop in Mumbai. ForTuesday, the non-stop fa resranged from Rs9,200 to Rs15,200 but the one-stop flightcost over Rs27,500.

Travel portals even sho-wed one-way tickets costingup to Rs99,000 through multi-ple flights.

The Delhi-Jaipur non-stop flights for Monday costRs 5,000 to Rs 8,000 and one-stop options were costingbetween Rs 9,000 and Rs10,000. The non-stop flightsfor Tuesday were going forRs 6,400 to Rs 9,000 while theone-stop ones cost up to Rs10,000. From Jaipur to Delhi,the Monday price ranged bet-ween Rs 7,800 and Rs 25,000.

To fly from Delhi to Am-ritsar on Monday, the ticketswent up to Rs 16,600 but for

Tuesday, the price dropped toRs 7,000. No seats were avai-lable on the Amritsar-Delhiflights for either Monday orTuesday.

Air India on Sunday cap-ped fares fo r some routes. “AI

is charging a nominal all-in-clusive fare. The one-way fa-re between Delhi and Chan-digarh is Rs 3,339 while it isRs 3,960 between Delhi andAmritsar,” it said.

Jet Airways said most di-rect flights on these routeshad been sold out. “Some fa-res seen on third-party travelportals are calculated by tho-se websites by combiningthe last-available seats onindirect routes. These faresare not available on our web-site.”

The airline added, “Weare working with these por-tals to not show such rounda-bout itineraries with thelast-available premiere ca-bin seats.”

Extra Flights Added On Affected Routes

Rail, roads blocked,airfares hit the roof 

PROTEST EFFECT

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ghaziabad:Security was beefed upon Sunday at the head regulator of Upper Ganga Canal in Muradnagarto prevent any attempt by Jat reser-vation agitators from cutting downwater supply. In June 2010, protes-ters had laid siege to the regulatorand shut it down for several hours.The district administration and thepolice department have been direc-ted to keep round-the-clock vigil atthe regulator.

About 470 cusecs of Ganga wateris supplied to Delhi through two pi-

peline Delhi. While 270 cusecs aresupplied to the Sonia Vihar watertreatment plant, 200 cusecs are

supplied to the Bhagirathi plant.On Sunday, one company of Pro-

vincial Armed Constabulary, per-sonnel from four police stationsalong with their station house offi-

cers and two circle officers were pos-ted the regulator. “Personnel of theRapid Action Force have also been

deployed at the regulator on Sunday.The situation is completely normalas of now though the regulator willcontinue to remain under vigil forthe next few days. The exact detailsof security arrangements put inplace cannot be disclosed,” said Ra-kesh Kumar Pandey, SP (Rural).

Officials of UP Jal Nigam, whichis in charge of the regulator, confir-med that full quota of 470 cusecs hasbeen released to Delhi on Sunday.

“The district administration iscompletely prepared to deal withany untoward incident or conting-ency. We will take all measures to en-

sure that no inconvenience is cau-sed to the citizens,” said GhaziabadDM Vimal Kumar Sharma.

Security beefed up at Gzb [email protected]

Police are keeping round-the-clock vigil

Umesh Kumar

RESERVATION RUCKUS: Protesters were seenthreatening auto drivers out on the road in Gurgaon

New Delhi: A group of at le-ast 100 Jat men from Matialavillage condemned the de-mand for reservation and sa-id only those who are financi-ally disadvantaged are eligib-le for it. The group held amarch on Sunday morningopposing the protests and re-lated violence.

“Jats have always had aprosperous history and don’tneed reservation or any suchprivilege. We are fighters andcan fight our way to success

without any special help,” sa-id Vikas Dahiya, who led themarch and runs a coachinginstitute for schoolchildrenin Tilak Nagar.

Dahiya said reservationswill further divide the society.“If our demand is accepted,tomorrow Gurjars will rise orsome other community.On what ground will the go-vernment refuse them? Shallprotest be the criteria to atta-in reservations?” Dahiya as-ked. TNN

Some Jats don’t want quota WEATHER

Max 26.2°C / Min 15.8°CMoonrise:Monday –06:01pmMoonset:Tuesday –

07:02am

Sunset:Monday - 06:16pm

Sunrise:Tuesday - 06:53amMainly clear sky, Mist/ shallow fog isvery likely to occur . Maximum & mintemperature on Monday will be around26°C & 14°C . Maximum humidity onSunday was 96% and minimum 43%

New Delhi: Roads in thenorthern and western partsof the city bordering Harya-na were choked due to theagitations by Jat groups onSunday. Protesters blockedthe highways and forcedshopkeepers to down theirshutters leading to a shorta-ge of essential supplies insome parts of the city.

Traffic jams were repor-ted from Rohini, Narela,Nangloi, Mundka and Najaf-garh. The agitations on theDelhi-Sonipat, Delhi-Baha-durgarh and Delhi-Jhajjarroads added to the woes.

Police officials said theRing Road near MadhubanChowk was choked for near-ly two hours in the afterno-on after a group of protes-ters parked their vehiclesacross the road and blockedit. Some of them also tried to

disrupt Metro services butwere prevented from ente-ring the station.

Trucks carrying essenti-al supplies in the night wereprevented from entering thecity leading to major shorta-ges in supplies in most are-as. Blockades were put up atkey locations to paralyseother roads as well.

“Our men are deployedat all major intersections toensure that there is no vehi-cular movement. We won’tindulge in violence, but wewon’t allow normal life to goon either until our demandsare met,” said KarambirSingh, one of the Jat leadersprotesting near Rohini.

Some protesters eventhreatened to storm into Pi-

tampura Metro station, af-ter which police closed thegates for a while. In someareas, protesters clashedwith police while they werebeing removed. However,most other protests were pe-aceful.

Protesters blocked majorroads like NH-10 and GT Kar-nal Road by parking tractorsand trucks across them. Theripple effect of these snarlschoked the Ring Road andDelhi-Rohtak Road. Vehi-cles heading to Chandigarhand Dehradun were stalleddue to the protests.

The agitation led by Jatsdemanding reservation un-der the economically back-ward classes, reached Delhion Saturday bringing the ca-pital to a standstill for hours,a day after three men died al-legedly due to police firing.

 Traffic stalled, shops

forced to down shutters

D E L H I

Najafgarh Road |

Bahadurgarh borderto Inderlok due toprotests at Narelamarket

NH-57 | Delhi-Haridwar roadblocked becauseof agitation nearMuradnagar

NH-10 | Delhi-Rohtak Road tillMundka Metrostation blockeddue to protestson Jhajjar Road

NH-1 | SinghuBorder to SamaypurBadli on GT KarnalRoad; Ring Roadalso affected tillMadhuban Chowk

NO WAY OUT

Traffic jams werereported from Rohini,Narela, Nangloi,Mundka and Najafgarh.Agitations on Delhi-Sonipat, Delhi-Bahadur-garh and Delhi-Jhajjarroads added to the woes

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Gurgaon: Miscreants tried to sabotage theDelhi-Jaipur railway line for a second day bydumping a cement bench on the railwaytrack and setting fire to a ticket booking of-fice. Police said there were no witnesses tothe crimes and could not confirm who wasbehind the acts.

Both incidents took place at Basai-Dhan-kot railway station during the early hours of Sunday. The cops were able to remove thebench from the tracks around 7.30am. Theyfound the ticket office gutted when they reac-hed the station around 7.40am.

“We are investigating and have regis-tered a case under sections 151of the RailwayAct, 4 of the Prevention of Damage to PublicProperty Act and 436 of the IPC,” said in-spector Arvind Chauhan, SHO, Gurgaonrailway station police.

Members of the Jat community visited

the nearby Patli-Hajipur railway stationaround 9.30am. They stated they would holdpeaceful protests till their demands are met.

Station office burnt in Ggn

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi: Protests paralysedtraffic in Ghaziabad, police said.Jat leaders assembled at Hapur junction, at Duhai on NH-58 andnear the Lal Kuan Atma Steelfactory on NH-24 and halted roadtraffic. A group of Jats alsoblocked road traffic at Loni. PTI

Protests paralysetraffic in Gzb