I had been on a tour of Coorg last weekend. On my way back I visited the Harangi dam. It is a relatively big dam near Kushalanagar with hardly any villages nearby, so it is a nice, isolated place. Approach roads are quite good, so it is all nice and good till you reach there. Admission tickets are only Rs.2 per head. Then come the restrictions : Photography not permitted. Public are not allowed on the dam proper. Reason? Security. I was told that these measures started last year.
I find some of these restrictions pretty ridiculous. Especially the no photography one. We are living in an age where you can see an aerial photo of your home in Bangalore using Google Earth. Within a few years it may be possible to tell the brand of the ice cream sold at Harangi sitting at your desk in front of your computer. The other restriction about not lettting people on top of the dam was also quite meaningless. Especially considering the fact that they allow people at the base of the dam, right next to the wall of the dam. We could also go into the water on the other side of the dam, right upto the wall of the dam. You just don't get on the dam wall and you are fine :-)
When will the authorities realize the futility of such measures? The only purpose these measures are serving is to discourage tourists from visiting the place. That shows in the state of the garden around the dam, which appears to have been quite good once upon a time. The wisest thing to do would have been to develop the dam into a nice tourist place (garden, restaurant, water boats, the works) and provide basic security measures to ensure people don't walk in carrying any bombs/rocket launchers/artillery tanks! They could then bump up the entry fees to Rs.10 or 20 and people would be happy to pay that.
Well, I think the reason they don't allow people on the dam is for the security of the people themselves :). No suicides and no bungee jumping :)
ReplyDeleteRegarding photography, u and me know abt google earth but the governmnet officer sitting in the office prbly doesn't even has an email address :) . . . . .
Privitization has its own good and bad things so no comment there :)
take care
-M