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          New Delhi, March 14 (IANS) With minor-to-moderate fare hikes,   96 new passenger trains and focus on safety, Railway Minister Dinesh Trivedi   tabled his ministry's budget for 2012-13 Wednesday, promising the highest   spending on projects worth Rs.60,100 crore ($12 billion).
 |  "I am asking an extra two paise per km on suburban and ordinary second class.   Similarly, an increase of three paise per km for mail and express trains,"   Trivedi said in his 105-minute budget speech, listing what will be the first   fare hike since 2002-03.
 "For sleeper class, I am asking only 5 paise   (increase) and for AC chair car and III tier, only 10 paise per km, and for AC   II tier 15 paise per km and AC I class by 30 paise per km," the minister told   the Lok Sabha in his maiden rail budget speech.
 
 Accordingly, over a   100-km run, the fares will go up by Rs.2 on suburban and ordinary II class   trains, Rs.5 for sleeper class, Rs.10 for AC chair car and III tier, Rs.15 for   AC II tier and Rs.30 for AC first class.
 
 "The proposed revisions will   have marginal impact on fares," the minister said, adding: "The proposed   adjustments do not even cover fully the impact of increase in fuel prices during   the last eight years."
 
 But there were some immediate reactions opposing   the fare hike.
 
 Trivedi's own Trinamool Congress whose chief and West   Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, long opposed to any exercise burdening   average travellers, has already demanded a roll back.
 
 But Prime Minister   Manmohan Singh said it was an exercise in the right direction. "The railway   minister has presented a forward looking Budget with emphasis on safety and   modernization of the Indian Railways," he said.
 
 The other highlights of   the budget proposals are airconditioned lounges and escalators at key stations,   regional cuisine at affordable rates, book-a-meal scheme through SMS and   bio-toilets in 200 trains and coin-operated ticket vending   machines.
 
 Trivedi, who referred to the word safety as many as 40 times in   his speech, said he had vowed to make railways accident free when he experienced   the pain of passengers and relatives after an accident in Uttar Pradesh soon   after he took charge of the ministry.
 
 "At that very moment, I took a vow   to eliminate recurrence of such painful happenings. I decided my entire emphasis   is going to be on strengthening safety, safety and safety. Deaths on rail tracks   just can never be tolerated and it is not acceptable," he said.
 
 "I vow to   target zero deaths," he said. "I also propose to set up an independent railway   safety authority, as recommended by an expert group headed by the former Atomic   Energy Commission chairman Anil Kakodkar."
 
 The minister listed four other   focus areas in the next five years: consolidation, de-congestion and capacity   augmentation of the network, modernisation and bringing down the operating   ratio. He also stressed on better hygiene and higher speed of   trains.
 
 Trivedi said the operating ratio of the railways -- amount spent   on running the network against revenues -- will be lowered to 84.5 percent from   the current 95 percent, and to 74 percent by the terminal year of the 12th   plan.
 
 This is key to the network being able to garner money for expansion   and modernisation.
 
 The minister said he was looking at the current budget   not as an exercise for the next fiscal alone, but also for the entire five year   plan, drawing from the Vision 2020 document of his predecessor and party chief   Mamata Banerjee.
 
 The Indian Railways run the third largest railroad   network in the world spread over some 64,000 km, with 12,000 passenger and 7,000   freight trains each day from as many as 7,083 stations to ferry 23 million   travellers and 2.65 million tonnes of goods daily.
 
 Along with the   networks in the US, Russia, China and Canada, the Indian Railways figures among   the top five in the world. Given its socio-economic role, Trivedi said it was   time for a national policy on railways on the lines of those for defence and   foreign affairs.
 
 According to the minister, Indian Railways will invest   Rs.7.35 lakh crore during the 12th Five Year Plan period (2012-17), against   Rs.1.92 lakh crore in the current one. By then, it will double its contribution   to India's gross domestic product to 2 percent.
 
 Trivedi said the outlay   of Rs.60,100 crore proposed for 2012-13 will be the highest ever and added that   the network will require as much as Rs.14 lakh crore in the next 10 years for   modernisation.
 
 He said the plan outlay will be financed by way of   Rs.24,000 crore through budgetary support, Rs.2,000 crore from safety fund,   Rs.18,050 crore from internal sources and Rs.16,050 from extra budgetary   resources, which will include market borrowings.
 
 Coming to specific   proposals, Trivedi said 85 new line projects would be be taken up during the   next fiscal year at a cost of Rs.6,870 crore, even as feasibility surveys would   be conducted for another 114 lines.
 
 He said an attempt will also be made   to increase train speeds to 160 km per hour from around 90-100 km per hour. With   that, he said, a journey from New Delhi to Kolkata will be brought down to 14   hours from 17 hours.
 
 
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