BHOPAL: Residents of Karadia village in Sehore district dread monsoon- because heavy rain maroons the village and in absence of road connectivity it remains cut off from the mainland. Efforts by villagers to apprise local administration and elected representatives about the problem have failed to yield positive results.

Like inhabitants of 7,000 villages that have no connectivity with mainland, villagers in Karadia wake up with a prayer- no one in the village should fall ill. Carrying patients to the nearby hospital is an arduous task.

Karadia villagers including students are forced to risk their lives every day during monsoon to get to work or schools by crossing a flooded canal.

Official figures suggest that in 2000, a total of 19,346 villages without roads were identified. Of these, 7,000 villages still do not have proper roads.

Chief executive officer, of the

, Alka Upadhyaya said, “Work for construction of connecting roads in 4,161 villages could not be started. We are planning to include them in the work plan this year”.

Besides, in the other 2,600 villages constructions works are in pipeline and funds have been sanctioned, she added.

Sources said besides lack of roads in these villages, the villages where new road were laid were also either washed away or damaged in rain.

Interestingly, government statistics suggest that in 13 years only around 12,000 villages could be connected with roads at a average of around 1,000 village a year. In the light of this how road work would be completed in 7000 villages this year is anybody’s guess.