Hundreds of eco-activists clean up Yamuna
March 18th, 2012 - 5:31 pm ICT by IANSAgra, March 18 (IANS) Hundreds of young and old eco-activists turned up at the Yamuna ghats in this Taj city Sunday morning to pick up trash, mostly polythene bags, to mark the start of World Water Week March 18-25.
A joint initiative of the Rivers of the World Foundation and the Braj Mandal Heritage Conservation Society, the trash clean-up programme “was launched to pressure the new rulers of UP to accord top priority to cleaning up of rivers and community ponds”.
Programme coordinator Shravan Kumar Singh told IANS: “UP Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav is known for his love for environmental and nature conservation programme. Through our clean up exercise today we have sent out a strong message - that we want the cleaning up of Yamuna to be taken up at the earliest and on war-footing.”
Human rights activist Naresh Paras said: “How long will governments continue to neglect these critical issues that directly touch our lives and health.”
Another activist, Anand Rai said: “The laws are there in place but no one seems interested in implementing them. The polluters of rivers and ponds must be punished publicly. Yamuna has been reduced to a huge sewage canal, the flood-plains are under encroachment and the open drains are emptying directly into the river.”
Registrar of Central Hindi Institute Dr. C.K. Tripathi told IANS: “We have to sensitise the people of the Taj city and get them back to the river. They have forgotten there is a river in the city. Its our collective responsibility to ensure that our water resources remain clean and pure.”
Mahant of Mankameshwar Math, Yogesh Puri, said: “The religious leaders must wake up and tell their followers that to pollute the river was the ultimate sin. They should not be throwing garbage and domestic waste into the river.”
The trash clean-up programme was undertaken close to the controversial Taj Corridor, sandwiched between two world heritage monuments, the Taj and the Agra Fort.
Wake Up Agra president Shishir Bhagat said: “If they can not clean up the river close to such great monuments from which the government agencies and the tourism sector earns crores of rupees annually, what hope is there that they would do anything tangible or revolutionary to save Yamuna.”
Many of the young activists saw the river for the first time and were scared to touch the water..”Oh my god ! is this what they call a river?” reacted young Neha Rajora, a mass communication student.
Home-maker Padmini with a group of women who helped the clean up exercise picking up trash, said, “We the citizens are equally responsible for pollution and for murdering a living deity worshipped by millions of Sri Krishna bhakts.”
Subijoy Dutt of the Rivers of the World Foundation in the US told IANS on phone: “The trash clean up programme was being simultaneously held at Yangtze Kiang River in Wuhan City, China, Yamuna River in Agra, India, Yamuna River in Gokul, India, Yamuna River upstream near Dehradun, Ganges River in Rishikesh, India, Hooghly River in Kolkata, Daya River near Bhuvaneswar, Barak River, Silchar (Assam), River/Lake Restoration Awareness, Vizianagaram, South India, Iloilo River, Iloilo City, the Philippines, Bagmati River in Kathmandu area, Nepal.”
- 19 years on, water woes continue to haunt Taj city - May 21, 2012
- Yamuna clean-up operation begins in Taj city - Apr 20, 2012
- You call this a river! US green activist on Yamuna - Jan 16, 2010
- Rescue the dying Yamuna to save the Taj, appeal activists - Mar 25, 2012
- Through ponds, Agra to clean up Yamuna river - Jun 27, 2011
- Is there any hope for the Yamuna? (Comment - June 5 is World Environment Day) - Jun 05, 2012
- What happened to money spent on Yamuna, ask activists - Aug 26, 2012
- Restore Yamuna's health to protect Taj: Agra MP - Nov 27, 2011
- A thousand hands to save Yamuna in Taj city (March 22 is World Water Day) - Mar 22, 2010
- Hundreds of sadhus march to Delhi for clean Yamuna - Apr 02, 2011
- Agra begins to breathe easy, but clouds linger - Jun 13, 2011
- Taj sparkles in rain, Agra totters (Letter from Agra) - Aug 29, 2012
- Agra citizens demand firm action against encroachers - Mar 25, 2012
- Yamuna flowing along Taj, providing a rare spectacle (With Images) - Sep 15, 2010
- In Taj city, pavements taken over by vendors et al (Letter from Agra) - Jun 10, 2012
Tags: agra fort, akhilesh yadav, braj, chief minister, collective responsibility, conservation society, encroachment, flood plains, ghats, heritage conservation, mahant, nature conservation, polluters, rivers of the world, sewage canal, top priority, tripathi, world foundation, world heritage monuments, world water