Harit Pradesh

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Harit Pradesh
Proposed state
Location of Harit Pradesh in India
Location of Harit Pradesh in India
Country India
RegionNorthern India
Proposed capitalAgra, Meerut
Proposed Divisions
LanguageKhariboli, Haryanvi, Hindi, Braj Bhasha, Kannauji, Punjabi, Urdu

Harit Pradesh is a proposed new state of India comprising the western parts of Uttar Pradesh state.[1] Harit means Green which signifies the agricultural prosperity of the region and Pradesh means state.

The region has some demographic, economic and cultural patterns that are distinct from other parts of Uttar Pradesh, and more closely resemble those of Haryana, Punjab and North Rajasthan areas.

History[]

In his 1955 critique of the proposed States Reorganisation Act, Thoughts on Linguistic States, B. R. Ambedkar had advocated the division of Uttar Pradesh into three states – Western, Central and Eastern, with capitals at Meerut, Kanpur and Allahabad respectively – in order to prevent excessively large states from dominating politics at the national level.[2] The act was passed in 1956, however, keeping Uttar Pradesh intact as a single state.

Later, socialists like Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, Jayaprakash Narayan, Acharya Kripalani and others favoured re-drawing of the administrative map of India. But, Jawaharlal Nehru, the then prime minister, supported the States Reorganisation Commission (SRC) recommendation of re-forming states on linguistic basis. Dr K.M. Panikkar, in his dissenting note to the SRC report, however, opposed linguistic states and favoured formation of a state of west Uttar Pradesh.[3]

Later, in 1972, fourteen MLAs in the Uttar Pradesh state assembly moved an unsuccessful resolution to divide the state into three units (Braj Pradesh, Awadh Pradesh and Purvi Pradesh).[4]

  • During the 1975–77 Emergency, Sanjay Gandhi almost succeeded in carving out a new state of western Uttar Pradesh with Agra as capital. The new state was to include parts of Haryana too.
  • BSP-led UP government had on 23 November 2011, passed a resolution in the state assembly for creating Purvanchal, Bundelkhand, Awadh Pradesh and Pashchim Pradesh out of UP. The resolution was forwarded to the UPA government at the Centre but no action was taken.
  • After, Congress working committee passed a resolution to recommend formation of a new state of Telangana on 31 July 2013, demand for Harit Pradesh gained momentum. Sh. Jairam Ramesh suggested that UP's reorganisation was necessary as it is difficult to run such a big state effectively. "Purely from an administrative point of view, a state of over 200 million people, 75 districts, over 800 blocks...It's just not governable. It is my personal view...Its politics is a separate issue," he said.[5]

Geography[]

Soil conditions[]

Western Uttar Pradesh's soil and relief has marked differences from that of the eastern part of the state.[6] The soil tends to be lighter-textured loam, with some occurrences of sandy soil.[7] Some loess soil is continuously deposited by winds blowing eastwards from Rajasthan's Thar Desert.[8]

Precipitation[]

Harit Pradesh receives rain through the Indian Monsoon and the Western Disturbances. The Monsoon carries moisture northwards from the Indian Ocean, occurs in late summer and is important to the Kharif or autumn harvest.[9][10] Western Disturbances, on the other hand, are an extratropical weather phenomenon that carry moisture eastwards from the Mediterranean Sea, the Caspian Sea and the Atlantic Ocean.[11][12][13][14] They primarily occur during the winter season and are critically important for the main staple of the region, wheat, which is part of the Rabi or spring harvest.[12]

The proposed state contains Upper Ganga and Yamuna Doab region which is considered one of the most fertile lands in the country. River Yamuna forms a natural border between Harit Pradesh and Haryana.

Administrative divisions[]

Divisions which form part of Harit Pradesh are numbered as 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 11

Western Uttar Pradesh includes 22 districts in six divisions:

  1. Saharanpur division: Saharanpur, Muzaffarnagar, Shamli districts.
  2. Moradabad division: Moradabad, Bijnor, Rampur, Amroha, Sambhal districts.
  3. Bareilly division: Bareilly, Badaun, Pilibhit districts.
  4. Meerut division: Meerut, Bulandshahr, Gautam Buddha Nagar, Ghaziabad, Hapur, Baghpat districts.
  5. Aligarh division: Aligarh, Hathras districts.
  6. Agra division: Agra, Mathura, Firozabad districts

Education[]

The proposed Harit Pradesh has a long tradition of education, although historically it was primarily confined to the elite class and religious schools. Sanskrit-based learning formed the major part of education from the Vedic to the Gupta periods. As cultures traveled through the region they brought their bodies of knowledge with them, adding Pali, Persian, and Arabic scholarship to the community. These formed the core of Hindu-Buddhist-Muslim education until the rise of British colonialism. The present schools-to-university system of education owes its inception and development in the state (as in the rest of the country) to foreign Christian missionaries and the British colonial administration. Schools in the state are either managed by the government or by private trusts. Hindi is used as a medium of instruction in most of the schools except those affiliated to the CBSE or the Council for ICSE boards. Under the 10+2+3 plan, after completing secondary school, students typically enroll for 2 years in a junior college, also known as pre-university, or in schools with a higher secondary facility affiliated with the Uttar Pradesh Board of High School and Intermediate Education or a central board. Students choose from one of three streams, namely liberal arts, commerce, or science. Upon completing the required coursework, students may enroll in general or professional degree programs.

School Location Established Comment Ref.
Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh 1920 Aligarh Muslim University is a public university funded by the Government of India. It was originally established by Sir Syed Ahmad Khan as Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College in 1877. [15]
Chaudhary Charan Singh University Meerut 1965 The university is named after Chaudhary Charan Singh, the fifth Prime Minister of India. [16]
Dr B. R. Ambedkar University Agra 1927 This university was formed as Agra University and renamed in 1996. [17]
Gautam Buddha University Greater Noida 2002 [18]
M. J. P. Rohilkhand University Bareilly 1975 M.J.P. Rohilkhand University was established in 1975 as an affiliating University. The senior faculty members of different disciplines in Humanities, Science and Technology are running research projects funded by various agencies and so far 49 projects funded by UGC, AICTE, DST, CST, ICAR, ICHR, MIF have been completed. [19]
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel University of Agriculture and Technology Meerut 2004 [20]
Glocal University Saharanpur 2012 Glocal University is a private and coeducational institution located in Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India. It is situated in the foothills of Shivalik mountains. [21]
Shobhit University Meerut, Gangoh 2006, 2012 Shobhit Institute of Engineering & Technology, Meerut (Shobhit University, Meerut), Shobhit University, Gangoh, Saharanpur. [22]
Invertis University Bareilly 2010 [23]

Research institutions[]

Special Economic Zones[]

  1. Noida
  2. Greater Noida
  3. Saharanpur
  4. Moradabad
  5. Bulandshahr
  6. Bareilly

Transport networks[]

The region is a hub of excellent highways, freeways, expressways and touristways. There are further developments going on in these fields. Major State and National highways passing through the proposed Harit Pradesh are:

The major highways running through intrastate region include

  • NH 87, Rampur-Rudrapur-Pantnagar-Haldwani-Nainital-Ranikhet Highway
  • NH 73, Roorkee-Saharanpur-Yamunanagar-Saha-Panchkula Highway
  • NH 74, Haridwar-Najibabad-Dhampur-Afzalgarh-Jaspur-Kashipur-Rudrapur-Kichha-Pilibhit-Khatima-Tanakpur Highway
  • NH 3 The Agra-Gwalior-Indore-Dhule-Nashik-Mumbai Highway
  • NH 11, The Agra-Jaipur Touristway
  • NH 93, The Internal Highway to Farrukhabad

Upper Ganga Canal Expressway[]

The Upper Ganga Canal Expressway is an eight-lane controlled-access expressway proposed for the right bank of upper Ganga canal from Sanauta bridge (Bulandshahr district) to near Purkazi (Muzaffarnagar district) near the Uttar Pradesh–Uttarakhand border.

Delhi–Meerut Expressway[]

The Delhi–Meerut Expressway is a 96-kilometre-long (60 mi) controlled-access expressway, India's widest at 14 lanes, that connects Delhi to Meerut, via Dasna in Ghaziabad district. An old, 8-lane stretch of NH 24, up to UP Gate, was widened to 14 lanes; the road between UP Gate and Dasana will be also 14 lanes. This the smartest expressway in India.

Moradabad-Bareilly Expressway[]

This was built for fast track movement of the vehicles between Lucknow,Nainital and Delhi.

Languages[]

The major languages spoken are Standard Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi, and English. However major dialects of Hindi are spoken in different parts of the state with few sub-dialects also being spoken here. It can be classified according to their divisions -

  • Saharanpur Division - Puadhi Punjabi and Gujari are spoken in Saharanpur along with the combination of Haryanvi-Khariboli in Muzaffarnagar and Shamli.
  • Meerut Division - Gujari, Haryanvi-Standard Khariboli in Baghpat, Meerut, Ghaziabad, Noida, and Bulandshahr.
  • Moradabad Division - Standard Khariboli-Gujari in Amroha and Moradabad, Garhwali and Khariboli in Bijnor, Rohailkhandi Khariboli in Sambhal and Rampur.
  • Bareilly Division - Rohailkhandi Khariboli and Kumaoni in Bareilly and Khariboli in Badaun.Few regions in Pilibhit speak Khariboli.
  • Aligarh Division - Khariboli-Brajbhasha in Aligarh, Braj Bhasha in Hathras.
  • Agra Division - Agra and Mathura speak mainly Braj Bhasha-Haryanvi and few speak Khariboli and Hindi.

Demographics[]

Religions in Harit Pradesh
Religion Percent
Hindus
71.41%
Muslims
24.21%
Sikhs
3.41%
Christians
1.71%
Others†
1.38%
Distribution of religions
Includes Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, Jains.[24]

As per the Census 2011 data, total population of the proposed state is 71,740,055.

The population of Western Uttar Pradesh is composed of a varied set of communities and tribes, including Brahmin 5% including Bhumihar, Jats – 20 to 25%, Rajputs – 8%, Yadav/Ahir – 6%, Gujjars – 11%, Lodhi – 5%, Saini – 5%, Dalits – 17%, Kayastha – 1.2%, Kurmis – 2%, Kashyap/ Baghel – 4%, Baniya – 2%, Rohilla Pashtuns – 6%, Muslim Rajput - 6%, Ranghar/Jojha – 5%, Rayeen – 4%, Muley Jats/Muslim Jats – 3%,Gaur Muslims/Muslim Tyagis – 1%, Jat Sikh - 0.4%.[25]

Most populous cities in Harit Pradesh
  City District Population   City District Population
1 Ghaziabad Ghaziabad 2,381,452 7 Saharanpur Saharanpur 705,478
2 Agra Agra 4,418,797 8 Noida Gautam Budh Nagar 637,272
3 Meerut Meerut 1,309,023 9 Muzaffarnagar Muzaffarnagar 495,543
4 Bareilly Bareilly 898,167 10 Mathura Mathura 601,894
5 Moradabad Moradabad 889,810 11 Budaun Budaun 369,221
6 Aligarh Aligarh 874,408 12 Rampur Rampur 325,248
Source: Census of India 2011[26]

The region's Rohillas are descended from immigrant groups from centuries ago, and a large subregion of Western Uttar Pradesh, Rohilkhand, takes its name from that Pashtun tribe.[27]

Sikhs from West Punjab, who migrated from Pakistan after partition, also settled in this area in large numbers.[28]

Role of specific rural communities[]

In recent decades, which has a large population and spread in Uttar Pradesh.[29] Jats, who are a dominant agricultural community spread across Pakistan, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh, have found themselves in a "politically disadvantageous position" in Western Uttar Pradesh.[29] A separate Harit Pradesh would likely become a prosperous smaller state similar to Haryana and Punjab.

The most prominent current-day advocate for the creation of the new state is Ajit Singh, the leader of the Rashtriya Lok Dal party and a Jat besides many Gurjar leaders. Pushpendra Singh, former General Secretary of Youth wing of Rashtriya Lok Dal, has also recently launched a political party by the name Harit Pradesh Party for the agenda of creating a separate State of Western UP. Other Jat leaders, such as Om Prakash Chautala of neighboring Haryana state and the leader of the Indian National Lok Dal have also made efforts to involve themselves in the politics of creating a separate state.[30] Since the Muslim population in Western Uttar Pradesh (25%–34%, according to various sources) is higher than in Uttar Pradesh as a whole (17%), the Harit Pradesh proposal has found support from Muslim-affiliated organizations.[31][32][33][34] Of the other main political forces in Uttar Pradesh, the Bahujan Samaj Party has supported the demand in principle, the Samajwadi Party has opposed it, and the Indian National Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party have adopted a non-committal stance.[35] From the Bahujan Samaj Party, Mayawati have been vocal about their support.

Rashtriya Lok Dal alleges that "Western UP contributes to a large chunk – nearly 72% – of the state's total income. In turn, what western UP gets is not enough. Just 18% of the state's budget is spent on developing west UP. This anomaly, understandably, makes the people of this area dissatisfied".[36] There are allegations that in most years, funds allocated to west UP were never spent. According to Professor Jates only 20% of the total Government employees, less than 10% of employees in the secretariat, and less than 5% of department heads in the Uttar Pradesh government are from west UP.

The creation of three new states in 2000 (Jharkhand from the division of Bihar, Uttarakhand from the division of Uttar Pradesh and Chhattisgarh from the division of Madhya Pradesh) gave new impetus to the demand for Harit Pradesh.[29]

After coming to power in 2007, in the Bahujan Samaj Party government, Chief Minister Mayawati wrote letters to the prime minister regarding the partitioning of Uttar Pradesh into four different states, in 2007, March 2008, and December 2009.[37][38] Finally on 15 November 2011, Mayawati's cabinet approved partitioning Uttar Pradesh into four different states (Harit Pradesh, Awadh Pradesh, Bundelkhand and Purvanchal) for better administration and governance.[39]

Notable People[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Sajal Basu (2005), Regionalism, ethnicity, and left politics, Rawat Publications, ISBN 81-7033-930-8, ... perhaps only to strengthen his own demand of a separate Harit Pradesh comprising 23 districts from western UP ...A consequent demand for the separation of the more prosperous western districts of UP which have been the bastion of the green revolution, and have variously been named as Pashchim Pradesh or more recently as Harit Pradesh by Ajit Singh ...
  2. ^ Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar (1955), Thoughts on Linguistic States, ... The only remedy is to break up the Northern States of U.P., Bihar and Madhya Pradesh. How did this solution not strike the Congress Working Committee I am unable to understand ... My proposal with regard to the Uttar Pradesh is to divide it into three States. The three States of the Uttar Pradesh could have as their capitals (1) Meerut (2) Kanpur and (3) Allahabad ...
  3. ^ "Now demand to divide Uttar Pradesh picks momentum".
  4. ^ Boris Ivanovich Kluyev (1981), India: National and Language Problem, Sterling, ... For example, in May 1972 fourteen members of the Uttar Pradesh Assembly submitted a resolution for setting up three new States - Braj Pradesh, Awadh Pradesh and Purvi Pradesh. The resolution was defeated. Curiously enough, the arguments of those supporting division were essentially the same, although the representatives hailed from different regions of Uttar Pradesh ...
  5. ^ [1]
  6. ^ Aijazuddin Ahmad (2009), Geography of the South Asian subcontinent: a critical approach, Concept Publishing Company, 2009, ISBN 9788180695681, ... These differences are caused by the depositional work of rivers, local climates, natural vegetation cover and the soil. Even the difference between the plains of western Uttar Pradesh and eastern Uttar Pradesh is quite well marked ...
  7. ^ A.K. Kolay (July 2007), Soil Genesis, Classification Survey And Evaluation, Volume 2, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors, 2007, ISBN 9788126908035, ... ...
  8. ^ M. Hanif (2005), Encyclopaedia of Agricultural Geography, Anmol Publications Private Limited, 2005, ISBN 9788126124824, ... Loess is the finest particle of sand carried by winds from desert (Thar desert) to the neighbouring areas of Haryana, Punjab, Western Uttar Pradesh and western Madhya Pradesh. Here a thin layer of loess particles ...
  9. ^ Vidya Sagar Katiyar, "Indian Monsoon and Its Frontiers", Inter-India Publications, 1990, ISBN 81-210-0245-1.
  10. ^ Ajit Prasad Jain and Shiba Prasad Chatterjee, "Report of the Irrigation Commission, 1972", Ministry of Irrigation and Power, Government of India, 1972.
  11. ^ "Western disturbances herald winter in Northern India". The Hindu Business Line. 17 November 2005. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
  12. ^ a b Bin Wang, "The Asian Monsoon", Springer, 2006, ISBN 3-540-40610-7.
  13. ^ R.K. Datta (Meteorological Office, Dum Dum) and M.G. Gupta (Meteorological Office, Delhi), "Synoptic study of the formation and movements of Western Depressions", Indian Journal of Meteorology & Geophysics, India Meteorological Department, 1968.
  14. ^ A.P. Dimri, "Models to improve winter minimum surface temperature forecasts, Delhi, India", Meteorological Applications, 11, pp 129–139, Royal Meteorological Society, Cambridge University Press, 2004.
  15. ^ "Aligarh Muslim University || History". www.amu.ac.in. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  16. ^ "Chaudhary Charan Singh University, Meerut | About Us". ccsuniversity.ac.in. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  17. ^ "Dr B. R. Ambedkar University". dbrau.ac.in. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  18. ^ "About Us". gbu.ac.in. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  19. ^ "M.J.P. Rohilkhand University". mjpru.ac.in. Archived from the original on 31 July 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  20. ^ "Sardar Vallabha Bhai Patel University". svbpmeerut.ac.in. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  21. ^ University, Glocal. "Why Glocal | Glocal University". www.glocaluniversity.edu.in. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  22. ^ University, Shobhit. "SHOBHIT UNIVERSITY". www.shobhituniversity.ac.in. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
  23. ^ "Invertis University". UniRank. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  24. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 26 February 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  25. ^ T. V. Sathyamurthy (1995), Industry and agriculture in India since independence: Social change and political discourse in India Volume 2, Oxford University Press, 1995, ISBN 9780195634570, ... the Jats, Ahirs, Gurjars and Kurmis. These castes comprise nearly 40 per cent of the population in Meerut, Muzaffarnagar, Saharanpur, and Bijnor districts. Rajputs and Tyagis, also cultivate their own land.
  26. ^ (2011 Census of India estimate)"India: Harit Pradesh". City Population. Thomas Brinkhoff. 25 January 2014. Retrieved 23 February 2015 – via Population Census India.
  27. ^ Ghaus Ansari (1960), Muslim caste in Uttar Pradesh: a study of culture contact (Volumes 12–13 of The Eastern Anthropologist), Ethnographic and Folk Culture Society, 1960, ... confined primarily to the Rohilkhand and Meerut divisions of Uttar Pradesh. Pathans are generally considered to have come either from Afghanistan or from the Pashto-speaking tribes of the North-West ...
  28. ^ Bagaulia (2005), Encyclopaedia Of Human Geography (Set Of 3 Vols.), Anmol Publications PVT. LTD., 2005, ISBN 9788126124442, ... Sikhs also settled down in the Terai region of Uttar Pradesh, transforming this once malaria-infested wetland into a granary of northern India ...
  29. ^ a b c Jagpal Singh (4 August 2001), "Politics of Harit Pradesh: The Case of Western UP as a Separate State", Economic and Political Weekly, 36 (31): 2961–2967, JSTOR 4410945, ... It is spearheaded by the politicians, especially a section of Jats, belonging to western UP. Ajit Singh has been playing a pivotal role in it ...
  30. ^ "INLD bid to get foothold in UP", The Tribune, 5 July 2001, retrieved 24 July 2009, ... the move of the Indian National Lok Dal (INLD) supremo and Chief Minister of Haryana, Mr Om Prakash Chautala, to raise the demand of a separate ‘kisan pradesh’ out of western UP ... Since Mr Ajit Singh has also raised the demand of creating a ‘harit pradesh’ in the same region, the move by both Mr Chautala and Mr Ajit Singh is seen as only a political strategy to ‘outwit’ each other ...
  31. ^ "Minister's demand for Muslim Pradesh condemned", The Times of India, 19 July 2006, archived from the original on 24 October 2012, retrieved 24 July 2009, ... demand is neither feasible nor proper,"said Manzoor Ahmad, former vice-chancellor of Dr B R Ambedkar University, Agra ... Muslim population which is not more than 25% in Western UP. ...
  32. ^ "Ajit Singh struggling to retain Muslim vote", The Hindu, 12 February 2002, archived from the original on 5 November 2004, retrieved 24 July 2009, ... the Muslim presence in western U.P. is said to be about 34 per cent ...CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  33. ^ Khan, M.E., Patel, Bella, C., "Reproductive Behaviour of Muslims in Uttar Pradesh", The Journal of Family Welfare, March 1997. 43(1) p. 13-29. Available online at [2]
  34. ^ "Imams back campaign for 'Harit Pradesh'", The Hindu, 18 August 2001, archived from the original on 5 November 2012, retrieved 24 July 2009, ... campaign for `Harit Pradesh' ... appears to be gathering momentum with the All-India Imam Association, an influential body of Muslim clerics, today pledging support ...
  35. ^ "Mayawati joins issue with Paswan, Ajit Singh", The Hindu, 26 June 2001, archived from the original on 6 June 2011, retrieved 24 July 2009, ... She said the BSP stood for creation of Harit Pradesh ...CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  36. ^ "Ajit Singh reiterates Harit Pradesh demand", The Times of India, 10 January 2011, ...In turn, what western UP gets is not enough ...
  37. ^ "UP division Mayawati asks Congress, BJP to clarify stand".
  38. ^ "Chief Minister Mayawati said the Centre's inaction over a 2007 letter forced her government to take the matter to the House".
  39. ^ "Mayawati wants UP divided into four new states". zeenews.india.com. Zee News Ltd. 15 November 2011. Retrieved 2 July 2013.

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