India / PM Modi urges nation to start a 100-day campaign for conserving rainwater

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday urged the citizens to start a 100-day campaign for cleaning up water bodies and conserving rainwater on 'Mann ki Baat'. He added, "The Jal Shakti ministry is also starting the Jal Shakti Abhiyan - 'Catch the Rain'. The basic mantra of this campaign is 'Catch the rain - where it falls, when it falls'."

Vikrant Shekhawat : Feb 28, 2021, 01:11 PM
New Delhi: With monsoon approaching, PM Narendra Modi urges Indians to prepare for rainwater conservation and calls for a 100-day campaign to clean nearby water bodies.

Underlining the importance of collective responsibility towards water conservation, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday called for a 100-day campaign to clean up all water bodies and prepare them for rainwater harvesting before the monsoon season starts.

In his monthly 'Mann Ki Baat' broadcast, Modi said water has been crucial for the development of humankind for centuries.

"We have to understand our collective responsibility towards water conservation," he said.

The Prime Minister also said that when people feel proud of indigenous products then Aatmanirbhar Bharat does not just remain an economic programme but becomes a national spirit.

Noting that monsoon will begin in many parts of the country by around May-June, the PM asked if there can be a 100-day public campaign to clean up all nearby water bodies and prepare those for rainwater conservation.

In this regard, the Union Jal Shakti Ministry is also launching the "Catch the rain" campaign and its main theme is "catch the rain, where it falls, when it falls", he said.

"This is the best time to think about water conservation in the summer months ahead," Modi said.

He added that there is a need to make science more popular across the country and asserted that science cannot be limited to physics-chemistry and labs. Modi called for expanding science with a mantra of 'lab to land'.

During the broadcast, the prime minister also rued not being able to make enough efforts to learn the world's oldest language, Tamil.

"In the run-up to Mann Ki Baat, I was asked if there was something I missed out on during these long years as chief minister and prime minister. I feel -- it is a regret of sorts that I could not make enough efforts to learn the world's oldest language Tamil. Tamil literature is beautiful," Modi said.