Skip to main content

To make Ganga and Yamuna clean, first clean their tributaries: Rajendra Singh

To make Ganga and Yamuna clean, first clean their tributaries: Rajendra Singh

By Deepak Parvatiyar - See more at: http://indiablooms.com/ibns_new/health-details/E/978/to-make-ganga-and-yamuna-clean-first-clean-their-tributaries-rajendra-singh.html#sthash.80szrG26.dpuf


New Delhi, June 10 (IBNS): The Waterman of India, Rajendra Singh, has cautioned that the clean Ganga and Yamuna project, which is high in the agenda of Narendra Modi government, could be a non starter unless there is an effort to clean the tributaries of the two rivers.

Singh, who recently won the prestigious Stockholm Water Prize, is on a visit to New Delhi to take up the cause of the highly polluted Hindon river with the authorities at a “Hindon, Yamuna, Ganga River Panchayat” to be held on Thursday, as part of his Jal-Jan Jodo Abhiyan – a mass movement to connect people with water that he had launched in April 2013.
“Before cleaning Yamuna & Ganga, one should clean other river, which end in Yamuna & Ganga River… This Hindon River only further converts Yamuna and Ganga River into drain,” he told IBNS.
Official figures show that Hindon is among the most polluted tributary of the Yamuna with a Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) ranging between an alarming 100 and 260 miligram/litre. The acceptable limit of BOD for safe drinking is around 2 mg/l.



“Observing this reality, we should first focus on cleaning of Hindon River before cleaning  Yamuna and Ganga. The present challenge of the state, Industrialist and Society is to clean Hindon River and protect the lives of people,” Singh said.

It may be mentioned that Hindon has a total run of 400 kilometres and it flows across the  Western Uttar Pradesh districts of Saharanpur, Muzaffarnagar, Shamli, Baghpat, Meerut, Ghaziabad and Gautam Buddha Nagar where it confluences with Yamuna.

While Hindon has 20 major industries – largely paper and sugar mills besides chemical industries and numerous slaughter houses – that discharge largely untreated waste into its waters, even Hindons two tributaries – Kali (West) and Krishni rivers are highly polluted.

In its total stretch of about 90 kms, Kali (West) river has 36 major polluting industries while the 130 km long Krishni river has 14 major polluting industries. Besides, the 52 km long Dhamola Nullah in Saharanpur, that meets Hindon, carries the entire city’s sewerage with it till the culminating point, sources alleged.

“The level of contamination of water in these rivers suggest that the Effluent Treatment Plants in these industries don’t function properly,” Singh said.

Officials at the Uttar Pradesh irrigation and Water Resources department conceded on conditions of anonymity that even the municipalities that fall in the routes too are guilty of discharging untreated sewerage in these rivers.

“It is in this context that the Jal Jan Jodo Campaign is coming forward and leading a public engagement and movement to rejuvenate the Hindon River as a collective responsibility,” Singh said.


The Thursday river panchayat is expected to be attended by Uma Bharti, Union Minister of Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation, as well as Uttar Pradesh’s Water Resources minister, Shivpal Singh Yadav, besides senior officials from their respective ministries, as well as water practitioners & experts, policy makers, media functionaries, researchers & academicians.


“The River Panchayat will focus on identification of solution for ensuring rejuvenation of Hindon and Ancillary Rivers,” Singh said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Maharashtra Assembly Polls 2014 : Implications of the End of Alliances

Maharashtra Assembly Polls 2014 : Implications of the End of Alliances By  Deepak Parvatiyar September 27, 2014 The time-tested political alliances — Shiv Sena-Bharatiya Janata Party, and the Indian National Congress-Nationalist Congress Party — collapsed like a pack of cards within a matter of hours in Maharashtra on Thursday, the 26th September. On the surface, the reasons seem common for both the break ups – each one of the alliance partners wanted to have a larger share of the pie and wanted to contest more seats than the other in the ensuing state assembly elections. Performances of Allies in 2009 Maharashtra Assembly Polls In the last assembly elections in 2009, the Congress had emerged as the largest party in the 272-member Maharashtra House by winning 82 of the 169 seats that it had contested. Its coalition partner, the NCP, had then won 62 of the 114 seats it had contested then then. You may also like to read Who will be the next Chief Mi...

Indian Elections: Hostage to Corrupt Politicians?

Indian Elections: Hostage to Corrupt Politicians By  Deepak Parvatiyar September 18, 2014 We often talk of corruption pervading the electoral system in our country. We rue the criminals entering politics as we point out that 13 cabinet ministers in the present Union government face various charges of corruption. Further, as many as 186 MPs got elected despite facing criminal charges. In desperation, we expect a messiah a la Anna Hazare to stem the rot. Yet, corrupt and criminal elements manage to win elections, because we, the voters, elect them, even though we are fed up with corruption and criminalisation of politics. Do People Patronise Corrupt Politicians? Given a choice, don’t we voters most of the time opt for a benevolent crook who we perceive as a smart go-getter? Don’t we loathe an idealist simply because (s)he tends to go “too much by the book”?   Ask the Reserve Bank of India Governor, Raghuram Rajan! While  delivering a speech at...

WANTED: A Leader

WANTED: A Leader EDITORIAL NEWS Share on facebook Share on blogger Share on linkedin Share on twitter More Sharing Services 31 WANTED: A Leader June 13, 2012 12:15 PM By Deepak Parvatiyar Do we really have any leader in our country who is above religion, caste, and sectarian politics and yet popular with the masses? Can you name any one name that is acceptable to the majority as a mass leader? My question assumes significance in the wake of what we witnessed last week. First, at the Congress Working Committee meeting the delegates raked up the issue of inaccessible ministers (how can they be leaders if they are inaccessible?) Yet, the most important issue was the lack of unanimity even within the ruling coalition itself over the choice of the next Presidential candidate. Thereafter, the BJP’s Gujarat satrap Narendra Modi delivered a power packed punch to claim the scalp of his little-known-much-discussed and elusive bête noire Sanjay Joshi. (Can Modi ...