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Jat stir, Sakshi's olympic win, SYL row kept Haryana in news in 2016

As the year comes to an end, here are some key events from Haryana that will be etched in our memories

Jat community members shout slogans during their agitation for reservation in Ambala

Jat community members shout slogans during their agitation for reservation in Ambala

Press Trust of India Chandigarh
Haryana was on the boil for most part of 2016 due to the Jat quota stir, but Sakshi Malik's Olympic win, the SYL issue and improvement in gender ratio brought cheers to the state, which completed 50 years of its existence.

The Justice S N Dhingra Commission of Inquiry, set up to probe the grant of land licences to some companies during the previous Congress regime, also submitted its report during the year.

Congress and principal opposition INLD kept up the attack on the government over its alleged failure on issues related to power, farmers, employees, law and order and governance with prominent leaders including former chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda, Randeep Singh Surjewala, Kiran Chowdhury, Ashok Tanwar and Abhay Singh Chautala leading the charge.
 
With 24-year-old Sakshi, the girl from Rohtak, making the country proud by winning a bronze medal at the Rio Olympics in wrestling, the Khattar government gave her a cheque of Rs 2.5 crore. Besides, she was also made the state's brand ambassador of Narendra Modi government's flagship 'Beti Bachao-Beti Padhao' programme.

Weeks later, 46-year-old Deepa Malik became the first Indian woman athlete to win a medal at the Paralympics in Rio and on "Haryana Day" on November 1, Prime Minister Narendra Modi felicitated her at a function in Gurgaon with a cash award of Rs 4 crore.

The state remained committed to give further boost to sports, with Health and Sports Minister Anil Vij promising to have facilities set up in villages.

However, it was the Jat quota stir which kept the government on tenterhooks. Large-scale violence during the agitation in the state claimed 30 lives and caused huge damage to property as well.

The violent turn to the Jat stir came barely weeks before the BJP government was to hold its first-ever mega global investor summit meet in Gurgaon in March.

Rattled by widespread violence and mounting Opposition attack, the state government appointed a committee under the chairmanship of a retired IPS officer, whose report in May stated around 90 officers including IAS and IPS officers were found indulging in "deliberate negligence" during the agitation, whose major impact was in Rohtak, Jhajjar and Sonipat districts.

Many heads rolled as the Khattar government got into damage control mode and in mid-May it ordered judicial inquiry to probe the conspiracy behind the incidents which pushed the state into unprecedented "turmoil".

In March end, Haryana Assembly unanimously passed a bill to provide reservation to Jats and five other communities in government jobs and educational institutions, but two months later the Punjab and Haryana High Court stayed the reservation while hearing a petition challenging the constitutional validity of the act.

Turning up the heat on two-time former chief minister Hooda, the State Vigilance Bureau registered a case of cheating and corruption against the then chairman of Haryana Urban Development Authority and some HUDA officials for illegally re-allotting a plot to Associated Journals Limited (AJL) in Panchkula in 2005.
Later, in connection with another case related to alleged

irregularities in acquisition of land in Gurgaon in which farmers were allegedly cheated to the tune of Rs 1,500 crore, CBI sleuths carried out search at Chandigarh and Rohtak residences of Hooda.

Hooda termed the action in both the cases as "political vendetta" unleashed by the BJP government against its opponents and stepped up his attack on the ruling dispensation on other issues including farmers and employees.

In November, in a shot in the arm for Haryana, which has over the years maintained that the Sutlej-Yamuna Link (SYL) canal was the lifeline for the state and its farmers, the Supreme Court held as unconstitutional a 2004 law passed by Punjab to terminate the canal water sharing agreement with neighbouring states.

As the slugfest over the SYL issue between the two neighbouring states continued, Punjab kept maintaining that it does not have any spare water to share with other states.

Haryana saw improvement in the skewed sex ratio, with the number of girls crossing the 900 mark, a development which happened for the first time in 10 years.

Modi lauded the steps taken by Haryana towards improving the adverse sex ratio and called upon the people of the state to take a pledge in its golden jubilee year to protect the girl child.

To mark Haryana completing 50 years of existence as a separate state on November 1, Modi inaugurated year-long celebrations of Haryana's Golden Jubilee from Gurgaon.

He also launched three new schemes for the state, declared seven rural districts of the state Open Defecation Free, eight districts as "kerosene free" and released the commemorative postage stamp of Haryana.

The state government also organised an International Gita Mahotsava in December, with the main function being held in Kurukshetra, famous for the epic battle of Mahabharata.

2016 also saw several soldiers from the state losing their lives while fighting for the country.

The Khattar government, which completed two years in office in October, also made a strong pitch to project Haryana as an ideal investment destination based on its strategic location, excellent infrastructure and supportive administrative system.

From the "Happening Haryana" global investor summit held in Gurgaon in March, the state garnered investment proposals worth nearly Rs 6 lakh crore.

The state jumped from 14th to 4th spot in terms of "Ease of Doing Business".

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First Published: Dec 16 2016 | 2:41 PM IST

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