Chattisgarh
Major tourist centres in the state are Amarkantak,
Banjari Baba, Bhoramdev, Champaranya, Chitrakoot, Dudhadharimath,
Indrawati National Park, Kangerghati National Park, Jagdalpur,
Bastar, Danteswari Temple, and many more.
On November 1, 2000, India gave birth to a new
state-Chhattisgarh. The new state is carved out of India’s largest
state of Madhya Pradesh with an area of 443,000 square kilometers.
Though Chhattisgarh with an area of 135,194 square kilometers
accounts for only 30 per cent of the total area of Chhattisgarh,
it is still a considerable size, which is equivalent to almost
sixteen times the size of Kerala.
The demand for the new state can be traced to
a meeting of the Raipur district Congress in 1924 when the idea
of a separate entity of Chhattisgarh was mooted. The leaders who
took part in that meeting were of the view that the region of
Chhattisgarh was culturally and historically distinct from the
rest of Madhya Pradesh.
The political leaders are hailing the creation
of the new state of Chhattisgarh as a right direction towards
bringing prosperity and stability of both the states concerned-
Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. However concerns are being voiced
from some quarters that the bifurcation of the largest state of
Madhya Pradesh may lead to opening of floodgates of similar more
demands from separatist groups cultural and historical uniqueness.
India’s latest state will have its Capital at
Raipur and the High Court at Bilaspur. The Capital may be shifted
later to Nandghat, about midway between Raipur and Bilaspur on
the banks of the Shivnad River.
Bastar, Bilaspur, Dantewara, Dhamtari, Durg,
Janjgir, Jashpur, Kanker, Kavardha, Korba, Mahasamund, Raigarh,
Raipur, Rajnandgaon, Sarguja and West Sarguja are the sixteen
districts of Chhattisgarh. Of the 320 MLAs in Madhya Pradesh,
90 belong to the districts of Chhattisgarh. They will become the
members of the Legislative Assembly of the new state. Lok sabha
will see 11 members from the state while Rajya Sabha will have
five members from the same state.
The newly formed state is richly endowed with
natural resources. Its forest revenue which alone accounts for
44% of the total state’s forest revenue has been the main source
of income of Madhya Pradesh. It has rich deposits of limestone,
iron-ore, copper-ore, rock phosphate, manganese ore, bauxite,
coal, asbestos and mica that contribute to around 48% of Madhya
Pradesh’s revenue from minerals.
Agriculture is the main activity for the population
of 1,76,00,000 of this landlocked state enveloped by Maharashtra,
Andhra Pradesh, Orissa, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh and of course
Madhya Pradesh. 80% of the population is engaged in agriculture
which is one crop a year. Known as the Rice Bowl of India, the
region of Chhattisgarh supplies food grain to 600 rice mills.
However, in spite of its abundant natural resources
and manpower pool, Chhattisgarh remains a poverty stricken and
socially backward region. A cursory look at some parameters will
reveal this fact. Take literacy rate, as high as 81.3 per cent
of the population above 19 years of the district of Bastar is
illiterate. The rest of the state is slightly better in this respect.
49% of the households do not have drinking water. 68% of the households
do not have an electricity connection (though it produces more
power than it consumes; Chhattisgarh contributes 35.66% of total
power generated in Madhya Pradesh). Infant mortality is high:
84 deaths per thousand live births against the national average
of 71%. 41% of the women worked as labourers in the grueling activities
(the national average is just 22.3).About half of its female population
gets married between the ages of 15 and 19.
Now with a new government in place for Chhattisgarh, there are
valid reasons to hope that the general condition of the state
will improve, if not dramatically.
Top
Chattisgarh - Information on Fairs &
Festivals, Wildlife, Excursion, Adventure, Weather, Travel, Tourism,
tours and Major Cities of Chattisgarh India