27
Jan
IGNTU IGNTU VC Tripathi spearheading the revolution New Delhi (India), January 27: This February, more than 100 farmers in the heartland of tribal India, besides the birthplace of the Narmada river in the Anuppur district of Madhya Pradesh, will harvest lemongrass, a non-indigenous sedge, in their maiden attempt towards realizing the socio-economic potential in the global map. “Anuppur is on the brink of socio-economic revolution,” says Shriprakash Mani Tripathi, the Vice Chancellor of Indira Gandhi National Tribal University (IGNTU) at Amarkantak, spearheading the revolution in the region. The rocky terrain of Amarkantak in the Anuppur district of Madhya Pradesh has been throbbing with…
