
Work begins on ‘Greater Ghaziabad' plan; Khoda, Loni, Muradnagar likely to merge
The Ghaziabad district administration has begun preparing a roadmap for the proposed 'Greater Ghaziabad' project, under which local bodies such as Khoda, Loni, and Muradnagar may be merged into the Ghaziabad municipal corporation. The move comes following directions from Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath, who floated the idea during a visit to the district on Thursday, officials said. According to officials, the Ghaziabad Development Authority has already included Ghaziabad, Loni, Muradnagar, and Modinagar in its integrated draft Master Plan 2031. (HT Archive)
The chief minister was in Ghaziabad to inaugurate a data centre at Central Electronics Limited and to visit Kailash Mansarovar Bhawan in Indirapuram. Addressing an event, he emphasised integrated development and proposed the formation of a larger municipal entity named Greater Ghaziabad. The proposal will require both legislative approval and a cabinet nod, with the final decision resting with the state government.
'On directions of the chief minister, we have asked the officials of the district administration and the corporation to chalk out a plan, which will then be submitted to the state government,' said Deepak Meena, district magistrate of Ghaziabad. 'The final decision will be taken at the state government level and will also involve the state cabinet.'
The Ghaziabad district currently comprises nine local bodies—one municipal corporation, four Nagar Palikas (Khoda, Loni, Modinagar, and Muradnagar), and four Nagar Panchayats (Patla, Dasna, Faridnagar, and Niwari).
In 2023, ahead of the inauguration of the Regional Rapid Transit System (RRTS) priority section in Ghaziabad, BJP MLAs Sunil Sharma (Sahibabad) and Nandkishor Gurjar (Loni) had raised concerns about civic issues in Khoda and Loni to the chief minister.
While BJP leaders support the proposed merger, some political opponents have criticised it as a reaction to electoral losses. Former MLA Amarpal Sharma, whose wife Mohini Sharma currently chairs the Khoda Nagar Palika, said, 'After the BJP lost the Khoda chairperson seat in 2023, its politicians floated the concept of merger. The corporation itself struggles to manage its jurisdiction areas, and managing Khoda and Loni would be a tough task. People in Khoda are yet to get tapped water supply and face many other civic issues like bad roads, sewerage disposal, proper drainage, etc., after repeated promises for years.'
In the May 2023 civic polls, the BJP won the Ghaziabad mayoral seat but lost the chairperson elections in Loni, Khoda, and Muradnagar Nagar Palikas. The party managed to retain only the Modinagar chairperson seat.
Nandkishor Gurjar, BJP MLA from Loni, dismissed allegations of political motivation. 'The local bodies proposed by the CM for merger under the corporation suffer many issues like water-logging, bad roads, drinking water shortages, sewerage problems, among others,' he said. 'Since these areas will see massive housing development in the future, it is vital that these areas also get developed like Ghaziabad city. Further, they will also be able to receive big funds for development. So, it is vital that they become part of Greater Ghaziabad.'
Meanwhile, Ranjita Dhama, the chairperson of Loni Nagar Palika, did not respond to requests for comment.
According to officials, the Ghaziabad Development Authority has already included Ghaziabad, Loni, Muradnagar, and Modinagar in its integrated draft Master Plan 2031.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hans India
35 minutes ago
- Hans India
Odisha BJP chief poll put on hold
Bhubaneswar: Hours after initiating a process for the election of its Odisha unit chief, the BJP on Sunday put it on hold in view of a stampede during the Rath Yatra festivities in Puri. Three persons, including two women, were killed and over 50 others injured in the stampede near Shree Gundicha temple early on Sunday. Balasore MP Pratap Chandra Sarangi, who has been appointed as the State returning officer for the party's organisational poll, said that the election for both State president and national council members from Odisha has been 'put on hold'. An unfortunate incident took place in Puri, and three devotees lost their lives, and many others are undergoing treatment, Sarangi said. 'Such a tragic incident has disturbed all of us. We express our deepest condolences to the families of the deceased devotees,' he said. 'In view of the stampede, the elections of the State president and national council members from Odisha, which were scheduled to be held on July 1, have been put on hold,' he said. Information about the election will be shared later, said Sarangi.


Hindustan Times
43 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2 review: A new blueprint as budget Android tabs keep improving
There is definitive momentum to Android tablets getting better, over time. Xiaomi's role in sustaining this trajectory is often under-realised, but recent efforts explain as much. It all started with the Xiaomi Pad 6 but then there was a serious step forward with the Xiaomi Pad 7 that also had a nano-texture display option, alongside the likes of the Redmi Pad Pro suggesting the improvement is percolating down the price bands. The Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2 may well be a culmination of those chapters, particularly from the pricing perspective. The Redmi Pad 2 will cost ₹ 13,999 for the Wi-Fi only variant that has 4GB memory and 128GB storage. (Vishal Mathur | HT Photo) The Redmi Pad 2 will cost ₹ 13,999 for the Wi-Fi only variant that has 4GB memory and 128GB storage, and ₹ 15,999 onwards for the Wi-Fi + Cellular alternative that may be a better bet since it gets two more powerful configurations — 6GB + 128GB and 8GB + 256GB (and another 2TB capacity, via memory card). Of course there is a broader accessory ecosystem play which sees the optional cover being priced at ₹ 1,299 and a Redmi Smart Pen (this is the stylus) that costs ₹ 3,999. The cellular option certainly delivers more in terms of longevity and variance of usage, and while this is 4G, it may just be the ticket for a tablet that remains connected even when away from a Wi-Fi envelope. Immediately impressive is the display, and even though it could have done with a bit more crispness, still delivers enough brightness to make this usable in most differing lighting conditions and colours that look good overall. Xiaomi has played the balance rather well with the 11-inch screen size, which in the current state of play, fits best for media consumption, web browsing, reading, and some workflows too. I don't believe the Redmi Pad 2 has a keyboard accessory for now, and that in a way streamlines the demographic this is largely appealing to. And its a wide scope anyway, including the ideal first tablet for a user, a tablet that can be shared between more than one family member, or even a secondary screen for catching up on emails and reading as you run shuffle meetings. The MediaTek Helio G-100 Ultra, and we tested this with the 8GB memory plus another 8GB set as RAM extension via the software settings, is par for course as far as performance is concerned. This will be able to handle most apps with ease, and get through some bit of multitasking without slowing perceptibly, but do not expect this to get you through any more. This is an entry spec tablet, and the limits to performance will begin to show if there isn't enough free memory or the processor has a lot to do. I am not entirely sure if this is a factor of the hardware that powers the Redmi Pad 2, but there are instances when the interface requires a second stab of a gesture to get it to respond. An optimisation that can be delivered via a HyperOS 2 update? We would hope so. Where the Redmi Pad 2 does really well is with battery stamina. This 9,000mAh capacity battery, which depending on how you use it, will last you anywhere between a day and three days. This is by far the most capacity that any Android tablet this side of ₹ 20,000 has delivered thus far. The 18-watt charging speed isn't by any means fast, but hardly a shortcoming. That isn't all. Xiaomi has done well to integrate Google Gemini powered Circle to Search, and the responsiveness is impressively smooth. Gemini assistant is very much available too. There's an AI suite beyond that as well — Live subtitles for conversations and meetings, for instance. As far as affordable Android tablets go, there's little to nitpick with the Xiaomi Redmi Pad 2. It isn't rewriting the approach, but has its finger very much on the pulse. Cellular connectivity, a thin and light (7.36mm and 510 grams) design as well as an 11-inch screen that's the perfect balance between an immersive experience and portability, give this tablet just the substance it needs. This is meant for a very specific set of audiences and use-cases, and within that paradigm, it really leaves no cards on the table.


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
BJP picks new state chiefs, moves closer to electing JP Nadda's successor
The BJP on Monday moved towards rolling out the exercise to have a new national president as the party elected chiefs in some states and is set to announce more on Tuesday that will put the requisite number of state heads at the helm for it to pick the replacement of J P BJP's constitution requires the election of its presidents in at least 19 out of its 37 organisational states before the process to elect its national president begins, and the ruling party is set to cross the threshold on P Ramalingam and K Beichhua were elected BJP presidents of Puducherry and Mizoram respectively on Monday, while single nomination for the post was filed in states like Maharashtra, Uttarakhand, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, making their election a mere formality on Tuesday. The BJP has now new state presidents, including some who were reelected, in 16 states, a figure that will rise on Tuesday. Some big states like Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh may also follow suit in the next few BJP has picked seasoned organisational men but with low public profile in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh in Ramchander Rao and P V N Madhav BJP working president and four-term MLA Ravindra Chavan is set to be elected president in place of Chandrashekhar Bawankule, a Cabinet minister in the BJP-led government in the state, while incumbent Uttarakhand president and Rajya Sabha MP Mahendra Bhatt is set to begin a new development has brightened the prospect for the BJP to elect its new national president to replace Nadda, a Cabinet minister in the Modi government, in choice, however, triggered a furious reaction from fiery Hindutva leader and MLA T Raja Singh, who resigned from the BJP. The elevation of Rao, a relatively low profile in the Telangana organisation riven with factionalism, is being seen as a balancing act and also a reward to old organisation BJP's decision to replace its Lok Sabha MP Daggubati Purandeswari as its Andhra president with a seasoned organisation man is driven by its leadership's wish to build the party in a state where it is an ally of the ruling TDP but remains a minor electoral the daughter of towering Andhra leader N T Rama Rao and sister-in-law of Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu, enjoys a certain stature due to her family background and long stint in politics during which she served as a Union minister in the UPA government when she was in the BJP sources said a thorough organisation leader like Madhav can be more helpful in building the party in the Rao is a Brahmin, Madhav is from the Backward Classes, giving the party a toe hold in a community outside the ones that form the bulwark of all major political players in the Uttarakhand, the party, having made a Thakur leader in Pushkar Singh Dhami as the chief minister, has opted for a Brahmin face in Bhatt as its president. Chavan is a Maratha, a powerful community in Maharashtra.- Ends