ChinaToday
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For our politicians, there's something truly addictive about the Chinese that goes beyond slurping down noodles. First, foreign minister Salman Khurshid visited China just after its forays into Ladakh made Indians see red. But Khurshid used purple prose for China's Reds, waxing eloquent about Shanghai's infrastructure, adding chilli peppers to our wounds by remarking how much he'd love living there!
Now, Karnataka chief minister Siddaramaiah's returned, similarly Red Star-struck. Siddaramaiah went to Dalian, China, to attend a World Economic Forum summit. His dalliance with Dalian left him agape at China's infrastructure, especially its bullet trains and pothole-free roads. Siddaramaiah's stated Karnataka too must enjoy such silken streets and instructed engineers to study how the Chinese pull off this marvellous feat, apparently tougher for our government than even rocket science.
However, while Siddaramaiah's enthusiasm for wrinkle-free roads is commendable, he's looking in the wrong place for the way forward. The answer lies not with new engineering plans but old contractors filling in the blanks, using iron and concrete that turn to sand and slush when the next monsoon occurs. So that they can win the next contract for maintenance, with built-in obsolescence of the roads they lay, and relay, and relay all over again assured. Surely the technology for laying roads that can survive the next monsoon isn't such a mystery. Other countries get monsoons and heavy rains as well but easily accomplish this feat. But in India even stretches like the Delhi-Jaipur highway, vital for tourist traffic and good only a few years back, deteriorate into a medieval commute that an antique Mughal might recognise. No wonder there's such a distance from Chandni Chowk to China. We're several centuries behind and catching up via our potholes, sorry roads, will take a while.
Time to travail: Chinaâs bullet trains shoot into the future â Indiaâs roads amble into the past - Times Of India
Now, Karnataka chief minister Siddaramaiah's returned, similarly Red Star-struck. Siddaramaiah went to Dalian, China, to attend a World Economic Forum summit. His dalliance with Dalian left him agape at China's infrastructure, especially its bullet trains and pothole-free roads. Siddaramaiah's stated Karnataka too must enjoy such silken streets and instructed engineers to study how the Chinese pull off this marvellous feat, apparently tougher for our government than even rocket science.
However, while Siddaramaiah's enthusiasm for wrinkle-free roads is commendable, he's looking in the wrong place for the way forward. The answer lies not with new engineering plans but old contractors filling in the blanks, using iron and concrete that turn to sand and slush when the next monsoon occurs. So that they can win the next contract for maintenance, with built-in obsolescence of the roads they lay, and relay, and relay all over again assured. Surely the technology for laying roads that can survive the next monsoon isn't such a mystery. Other countries get monsoons and heavy rains as well but easily accomplish this feat. But in India even stretches like the Delhi-Jaipur highway, vital for tourist traffic and good only a few years back, deteriorate into a medieval commute that an antique Mughal might recognise. No wonder there's such a distance from Chandni Chowk to China. We're several centuries behind and catching up via our potholes, sorry roads, will take a while.
Time to travail: Chinaâs bullet trains shoot into the future â Indiaâs roads amble into the past - Times Of India