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          Patna, Jan 19 (IANS) Until two-and-a-half years ago, Parvatia Devi and Kamla   Devi were among the poorest of the poor. They worked as farm labourers and did   odd jobs to eke out a living. But today they are proud owners of land and part   of the silent revolution through which nearly 30,000 women have been provided   land across Bihar. |  
  
      
	  
	  
	  The state government has distributed over 14,000 acres of land among the poor   and landless women in the last three years. 
 "The state government has   distributed 14,722.22 acres of 'bhoodan' (redistributed) land in the last three   years (2007 to 2010)," an official of the chief minister's office said   here.
 
 A revenue department official told IANS here that for the first   time, land ownership rights of the bhoodan lands were being given to women in   Bihar.
 
 Last year, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar announced that the state   government will provide land ownership rights to women in landless   families.
 
 He said the decision will strengthen women's position in   society. "It will give them (women) more power," he said.
 
 And if Parvatia   and Kamla's examples are anything to go by, the initiative seems to be bearing   fruit.
 
 Owning around half acre of land each, the women, residents of the   drought-hit Gaya district, supplement their income from the farm   produce.
 
 And with the economic independence, however marginal, they are   also seeing an improved social status, and are respected both by their families   and their communities.
 
 Vimla Devi, who works as a wage labourer, said it   was a great feeling to be able to own land.
 
 "I am thankful to the state   government for it because now I have my own place in my family and society,"   said Vimla, who lives in a village near Naubatpur in Patna.
 
 Another   beneficiary, Shakuntala Devi, said having ownership rights will help women be   more assertive of their rights.
 
 "At last, we can have a say in   decisionmaking," she said.
 
 Bihar Bhoodan Yagna Committee president   Shubham Murti said distribution of bhoodan land among women had been made   possible by the positive approach of the government.
 
 The land   distribution programme is one of the Bihar government's many women empowerment   initiatives.
 
 A total of 50 percent of seats in village panchayats, block   development committees and district boards are reserved for women. Three years   back, the government also reserved 50 percent of teaching vacancies in   government-run primary and secondary schools for women.
 
 
      
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