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 Home > 150th Issue > Jagjivan Ram
  150TH ISSUE
Jagjivan Ram
Envisioned connectivity to villages
Thursday, December 07, 2006
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Being fresh from the colonial experience, fresh from Gandhiji's and grounded in the socialistic policies of the day, one of the most-remembered acts of Jagjivan Ram, was the inauguration of the Calcutta–London direct wireless telegraph service, on 12 March 1953. He also worked to increase the network of post offices in the rural India. What he has not been credited for is the fact that he also continuously advocated the setting up of public call offices in the villages of India. In 1956, when the total number of telephones in the country was less than 2 lakhs, visualizing public phones in the villages would have been like asking a teledensity of 20 in rural India. His desire of a public phone in every village has finally been achieved.

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Jai P Bhagat
Jaswant Singh
Jayshree Ullal
 





 

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