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Death of a river
Source: The Hindu, Date: , 2013
The Yamuna has been dying,
silently and slowly but certainly for years and now it is dead. The flow that
you see is pollution and sewage, the river has no natural flow except for a few
days during the peak of monsoons when the Hathnikund barrage releases excess
water from its reservoir in the channel of the river. The Central Pollution
Control Board (CPCB) informed the Supreme Court on November 9 last year that
“For major part of the year, river Yamuna does not flow downstream of Wazirabad
barrage as all the river water upstream of the barrage is ponded (harnessed)
for water supply in Delhi. Yamuna flows after confluence of Najafgarh drain
downstream of Wazirabad barrage.”
In fact the Yamuna began dying as
far back as the 1880s. This was the year when the Chandrawal water works were
created to supply piped water to the citizens of Shahjahanabad. A move that
gradually weaned the population of the city away from their traditional sources
of water supply like the wells, step-wells, ponds, reservoirs and the Neher Ali
Mardan Khan -- the canal that brought to Delhi the water of the Yamuna from
Hansi and Hissar almost 130 km away.
The supply of piped water was
followed a few years later by an underground sewage system that began to carry
all the filth of the city to the river. The piped water and sewage system was
the gift of urban planning that our colonial masters gave us, they showed great
foresight in ensuring that the drains that carried the sewage into the river
were downstream of Chandrawal. They did not however care too much that Kosi,
Brindaban, Barsana, Mathura, Agra and scores of other cities and virtually
hundreds of villages lined the entire course of the Yamuna from Delhi to
Allahabad and they had to clean up the filth of Delhi before making the water
potable. But the British have been gone for three generations, for 66 years,
have we done anything to recover our rivers or have we just continued down the
same path of assured self-destruction?
During the 1890s and till a few
years later the Yamuna used to have a flow even in the driest of months and the
population of Delhi even in 1911was barely 240,000. The output of sewage would
not have been very high and the waters of the Yamuna managed to survive.
Today, the picture is totally
different — the population of Delhi has grown to cross 14 million, the short
sighted policy of building large dams and barrages along the course of every
big or mid-sized river has led to a situation that the river in Delhi has no
water once we discount the flow of untreated sewage.
This is the condition when yet
another project, called the Yamuna interceptor scheme, worth Rs. 1,800 crores,
has been launched to clean the Yamuna. This is one more of the scores of
schemes worth thousands of crores that have yielded little fruit. What needs to
be done is to set up a series of small water treatment plants all along the
course of the so-called nalas that criss- cross the city and to prevent
untreated sewage from entering the river, treat the sewage before it gets into
the streams/nalas and the streams and the river will live again.
Instead of doing that we are
hiding the filth by building roads and Dilli Haats on top of the nalas/streams
.These nalas/streams were the tributaries of the Yamuna not too many
decades ago. The construction will hide the filth from the eyes of the citizens
and untreated sewage will continue to empty into the Yamuna, even if the
interceptor works very efficiently the thousands of millions of litres of
sewage collected in settlement ponds will continue to leach toxins into the sub
soil.
All this we have learnt to take
into our stride, this has become common place and routine and we have stopped
caring. If you think that people need to be jolted out of their apathy, there
is a very simple thing to do — send them to Exhibit 320 at Lado Sarai.
There is an exhibition entitled
‘Sediments and other untitled…’ that approaches the issue of pollution and of
the pollution of life giving water in a way that only an artist can do. An
artist has the ability to present the quotidian in such a way that it gets
transformed beyond recognition, from the common place, routine, humdrum and
mundane, the subject is metamorphosed into something absolutely new, something
that acquires the quality to draw you in or to repulse you depending on the
emotions that the artist invests her work with.
Vibha Galhotra is a young artist
and her works constantly engage with life and its pitfalls, her latest exhibition
‘Sediments and other untitled…’ focuses on the sediments of a polluted river
and with water and its pollution. Go see her canvasses where she has used
congealed oil and other noxious elements gathered from the surface of the
Yamuna. She uses them as her paint. Go see it, I am sure you will be jolted
into doing something about it. The exhibition is on till March 18.
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