CM Uttarakhand Sanctions ₹16.49 Lakh for Cremation Ground Wall
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Uttarakhand announced on Thursday, 25 June 2026 that the Chief Minister has sanctioned ₹16.49 lakh for the construction of a boundary wall at the Mevad Nagad cremation ground (shamshan ghat) in the Piran Kaliyar assembly constituency of Haridwar district.
Context
The official post by the Chief Minister's Office of Uttarakhand (@ukcmo) stated: 'मुख्यमंत्री द्वारा जनपद हरिद्वार की विधानसभा पिरान कलियर हेतु मेवड़ नागड़ के श्मशान घाट में बाउण्ड्रीवॉल के निर्माण हेतु ₹ 16.49 लाख की धनराशि स्वीकृत किया गया है।' — meaning the Chief Minister has approved a sum of ₹16.49 lakh for the construction of a boundary wall at the Mevad Nagad shamshan ghat for the Piran Kaliyar assembly segment in Haridwar district.
Piran Kaliyar is an assembly constituency in Haridwar district, covering rural and semi-urban localities, and is home to the well-known Piran Kaliyar Sharif dargah, a significant religious site that draws pilgrims from across the country. The Mevad Nagad locality, where the cremation ground is situated, serves the everyday civic needs of the surrounding community.
Policy Backdrop
Sanctioning modest funds for basic civic infrastructure — such as boundary walls at cremation grounds — through the Chief Minister's discretionary allocations is a standard practice across Indian states, including Uttarakhand. These approvals address fundamental community needs around dignity, safety, and upkeep of public spaces in rural and semi-urban pockets.
Cremation grounds in India are governed under municipal and panchayat regulations, and their maintenance is often dependent on state-level discretionary grants when local body funds fall short. A boundary wall serves practical purposes: it delineates the site, deters encroachment, and provides a measure of privacy and security for grieving families using the facility.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of this sanction are the residents of Mevad Nagad and the broader Piran Kaliyar constituency who rely on the cremation ground for last rites. For local communities, a properly enclosed and maintained shamshan ghat is considered a matter of civic dignity.
Village communities in Haridwar district — one of Uttarakhand's most populous and religiously significant districts — have long sought upgrades to basic public infrastructure. Approvals such as this one form part of ongoing local area development efforts channelled through the state government's discretionary fund mechanism.
What's Next
With the ₹16.49 lakh sanction now in place, the next steps involve tendering, contractor appointment, and construction of the boundary wall at the Mevad Nagad shamshan ghat. Completion timelines will depend on local administrative processes in Haridwar district.
Similar discretionary sanctions for civic infrastructure across other assembly constituencies in Haridwar and the wider Uttarakhand region are expected to follow as the state government continues its local area development cycle. The pace of fund utilisation and project completion will be a key indicator of on-ground delivery in the run-up to the next state election cycle.