Uttaranchal
is carved out of 13 districts of northern Uttar Pradesh. The state
has an area of 51, 125 sq.km, governed from the popular hill station
of Nainital. The state is bordered by Nepal to the east, while
the lower Himalayas separate China in the north. The states of
Haryana and Himachal Pradesh border it in the west and northwest
respectively.
The state earns most of its revenues from tourism, for long its
main and often the only source of income, bringing in Rs. 250 crore
every year. The other source of income for most families in this
region is the money order remittance from migrants to other states.
Indeed, the region has been, for long, a popular draw for tourists,
trekkers and pilgrims alike. But the legislators to the new assembly
will try and develop the IT industry, and set up power projects
to generate revenue. Fruit processing units and medicinal plants
too have potential for development. In the colonial period, the
numerous districts of present Uttaranchal were ruled over by petty
hill princes, who owed their allegiance to the British. Some of
the earliest educational institutes like the Roorkee engineering
college and schools like Sherwood College and Doon school draw
many students here. With independence in 1947, they were made
a part of the much larger state of Uttar Pradesh. Among the prominent
nationalist figures who emerged from this region, that of Gobind
Vallabh Pant stands out. The town of Pantnagar in Nainital district
has been named after him. Since the 80s, the region has been at
the forefront of the environmental movement, spearheaded by Sunderlal
Bahuguna and Chandi Prasad Bhatt. There has also been much opposition
to the proposed Tehri Dam in the district of Tehri Garhwal that
threatens to wipe away entire villages.