Authorities urged to operate NMR as regular service by RailXpert on 15 July, 2012 - 03:01 PM | ||
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RailXpert | Authorities urged to operate NMR as regular service on 15 July, 2012 - 03:01 PM | |
It is seven years since the World Heritage Committee of UNESCO approved the World Heritage Site status for the Nilgiri Mountain Railway (NMR). The NMR was declared as a World Heritage Site on July 15, 2005 during the 29th session of the World Heritage Committee held at Durban in South Africa.Railway enthusiasts feel that the authorities have not done much to popularise and improve the NMR even after it was conferred the status. Like the annual mandatory government exhibitions, they operate a special mountain train every summer, but forget the NMR till the next summer. What is even sadder is that the special train is just operated between Mettupalayam and Coonoor, leaving the tourists, so to say, half full. They will content only if the train is run up to OotySays 76-year-old veteran lawyer K V Krishnan, who authored a book about important happenings in the Nilgiris, “The NMR plied regularly between Ooty and Mettupalayam, with two or more first class bogies, with almost all white passengers, four other bogies, and a parcel service. White turbaned waiters with tea pots, red turbaned porters carrying luggage, and Dodge taxis arriving one after the other, was a sight to behold. The NMR also carried goods. Cordite from the Aruvankadu factory was sent by the NMR in specially made wagons.”“At a time when we are all talking about a third road (the two existing roads being Ooty-Coonoor-Burilar-Mettupalayam and Ooty-Kotagiri-Mettupalayam) to the Nilgiris, we should remember that the NMR is the real third road’. It’s high time the railway was given more importance and used as an alternative route to the Nilgiris,” Krishnan said. |