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Questions & Answers - Agatha Sangma

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Agatha Sangma, at 28, is the youngest member of Parliament in India. Se was reelected from the Tura constituency in Meghalaya,, in India's northeast. She is minister of state for rural development in the newly elected Congress coalition government. Her father PA Sangma was a speaker in the Lok Sabha, India's Parliament. In India's system the cabinet minister has the biggest chunk of work and under him comes the minister of state. But considering how big the rural economy is in India, at over 40% of GDP and growing fast from a low base, its aposition of great responsibility for ayoung woman. Here she talks to Jyoti Malhotra of the WSJ. She is responsible for drinking water and sanitation. Access to drinking water, contamination of water, and water supplies for agriculture are a huge challenge for India. Agatha has studied environmental management in the UK, so she can bring knowledge of modern methods for managing water to her job. She likes to be responsible for implementing work in the rural areas, and has the youth and energy to travel and see things first hand for implementation. She says accountability is important for implementation and out in the field she can observe and ask questions. One of the problems she shees in implementation is properly using the funds allocated. This fund alone is 62,000 crores. And seeing that these funds are properly allocated and spent to generate the best use of the resources is critical for improving lives and meeting the needs for rural development. She sees room for experimenting, for innovation and bringing fresh ideas to this job. She seems to handle the interview questions quite well.

Winning the vote of the average farmer, the poor farmer in debt, the extremely poor in rural areas, and delivering on programs and economic growth in India.

02/17/2008

The task of building an organization behind competent and good government, and having programs to help the farmers in rural areas, the extremely poor, and farmers in debt, all work to build credibility and votes in India. This position has been taken by the Congress leaders prime minister Manmohan Singh, Sonia Gandhi, and Rahul Gandhi. Years of patient effort at the grassroots and for development if continued could payoff for the current leaders and for India.

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