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March
2010 |
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Flyover’s
impact on Neela
Hauz ignored

The public works
department (PWD)
did not
undertake an
environmental
impact
assessment
before
constructing the
flyover that
straddles the
centuries-old
Neela Hauz in
south Delhi.
This fact came
to light
following a
Right To
Information
(RTI) query. The
flyover was
opened to the
public last
month by the
Delhi
government.
Stunned by the
RTI disclosure,
the Delhi high
court (HC)
directed the
state government
earlier this
week to explain
why no
environmental
impact
assessment was
carried out to
take into
account the
ecological
damage that the
water body
beneath the
flyover might
suffer. The
division bench
comprising
acting chief
justice Madan B
Lokur and
justice Mukta
Gupta was acting
on a PIL. Neela
Hauz is a
natural water
body that has
been in
existence for
centuries in the
vicinity of
Sanjay Van in
south Delhi.
Filed by Malvika
Kaul, a resident
of Vasant Kunj,
through her
lawyer Bankey
Bihari, the PIL
cites the RTI
reply by PWD to
back up its
allegation that
ecological
concerns were
disregarded
while
constructing the
flyover. It
informed the
court that the
PIL spoke for an
entire group of
concerned locals
from Vasant
Kunj, Mehrauli
and even JNU
seeking the
court’s
intervention to
preserve the
water body. The
RTI that led to
the admission by
PWD was filed by
Sudha
Bhattacharya, a
JNU professor.
Pointing out how
the government
had violated the
rulings of the
Supreme Court
and its concept
of “sustainable
development” by
ignoring
environmental
concerns, the
PIL prayed for
directions by
the HC to the
government to
spell out plans
for restoration
and preservation
of Neela Hauz.
|
|
1 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
Railways
prunes plan for
commercial space
in CP

New Delhi: After
Delhi Police,
Delhi
Development
Authority (DDA)
seems to be
playing the
spoilsport for
Indian Railways.
After being told
that renovation
work at the
Minto Road
Bridge could
stall traffic in
Connaught Place,
the Railways
have ‘‘agreed’’
to give up
commercialization
of over 1.5 lakh
sqm of prime
land in the
area. ‘‘We are
concerned that
the project of
upgrading the
New Delhi
station into a
world-class
facility will
never take off
until we agree
to certain
compromises. We
are willing to
accept some of
DDA’s proposals
to get this
project off the
shelf,’’ said a
senior officer
at Rail Bhawan.
‘‘The plan is
being revised
and a new one
will be
submitted to DDA
soon,’’ a senior
railway ministry
official said,
adding, ‘‘the
land-owning
agency has
agreed in
principle to
approve the
project on
certain
conditions.’’
Northern Railway
sources claimed
UTTIPEC — the
nodal agency for
government
policy on
traffic and
transport — has
been approached
and a
‘‘formula’’ has
been worked out.
According to the
revised plan,
50% of the area
meant for
commercial
utilization on
the Paharganj
side will be
reduced to get
approval from
DDA. According
to the earlier
plan, the
Railways had
earmarked 5.5
lakh sqm area
for commercial
utilization in
the
non-operational
area. ‘‘It is
expected to be
reduced to about
4 lakh sqmt in
the revised
plan,’’ the
official said.
Sources at
Northern Railway
headquarters and
railway
ministry,
however,
expressed
apprehensions
about raising
the money. ‘‘It
is a PPP project
in a prime
location.
UTTIPEC had
asked us to
reallocate the
1.5 lakh sqm
space in other
areas. But
unless the
process is
commercially
viable, we
cannot expect a
good response,’’
said a source.
Though Railways
had submitted
their plan to
DDA two years
back, it did not
get approval,
resulting in
cancellation of
the tendering
process for the
Rs 12,000-crore
New Delhi
station project
twice.
DDA has objected
to the massive
commercial
utilization plan
on the ground
that it would
create a huge
traffic
bottleneck in
the area. ‘‘We
will begin the
tendering
process
immediately
after we get the
DDA and Delhi
Traffic Police
nod,’’ added the
official.
However, the
operational
area, including
circulating
area, platforms
and booking
area, remain
intact in the
revised plan at
4.5 lakh sqm.
There are plans
for creating
various
facilities like
shopping arcade,
eateries and
forex exchange
booths in the
non-operational
areas at New
Delhi Station.
The Railways
propose to
develop 49
stations,
including
Howrah, Patna,
Lucknow, Mumbai,
Bangalore and
Bhubaneswar as
world-class
stations.
|
|
4 March 2010,
Times City Times of
India
|
World Bank
to help save
maili Ganga

With several
crore rupees
going down the
drain and the
Ganga still
remaining
‘maili’, the
World Bank (WB)
has proposed a
project of over
a thousand crore
rupees to the UP
Government to
cleanse the
mighty river.
Top WB officials
conferred with
Chief Secretary,
Atul Kumar Gupta
last week and
proposed the
project worth a
whopping Rs
1,112 crore to
clean the sacred
river by
improving the
quality of
effluents being
discharged into
it at different
places.
The proposed
project targets
three cities of
UP - Varanasi,
Kanpur and
Allahabad -
where domestic
and industrial
discharge into
the river is the
maximum.
Principal
Secretary,
Environment and
Urban
Development,
Alok Ranjan, who
attended the
meeting, said
that the talks
were fruitful.
“A detailed
presentation was
made about the
capacity of
Sewage Treatment
Plants (STPs)
and sewage line
network in
Allahabad,
Varanasi and
Kanpur. The WB
team understood
our poblem and
have promised to
help us,” Ranjan
told The
Pioneer.
A proposal
seeking
assistance of Rs
527.70 crore for
Kanpur (City),
Rs 426 crore for
Varanasi and Rs
159.20 crore for
Allahabad was
submitted.
The project
focuses on
improvement and
up gradation of
STPs, laying new
sewage lines and
connecting them
with branch
lines.
“The Union
Ministry of
Environment and
Forest, has
recently revised
the effluent
standards of
STPs. As the
existing STPs
are not designed
for these
values,
therefore there
improvement or
upgradation is
urgently
required to
achieve the
desired effluent
standards,” the
official said.
Under the
proposed
project, over Rs
400 crore in
Kanpur would be
utilised in
sewerage work.
This includes
laying of over
500 km long
sewer line in
the city. The
Sewer line in
Kanpur was first
laid in 1876 and
was renovated
for the first
time in 1923.
The city being
the first
industrial town
of UP, Kanpur
witnessed
emergence of
leather
industry. The
untreated
effluent of
these industries
were poured
directly into
the river Ganga.
“The focus would
be at Jajmau
where three
Central Effluent
Treatment Plants
would be
upgraded,” the
official said.
The CETPs were
set up in
industrial areas
where industrial
discharge of two
or more leather
units were
treated before
their discharge
was released
into the river.
In Allahabad the
scheme proposes
to upgrade
Sewage Treatment
Plant (STPs),
built under
‘Ganga Action
Plan -I’ at
Naini and Salori
areas.
While in
Varanasi,
besides up
gradation of
STPs at Dinapur
and Bhagwanpur,
new branch sewer
lines would be
laid at BHU
basin and Varuna
basin areas.
Over Rs 200
crore would be
spent on
strengthening of
branch sewer
network in
Varansi.
|
|
4 March 2010,
Pioneer
|
ASI Sufi
fest finds way
into city’s
cultural
calendar

Last week,
director-designer-writer
Muzaffar Ali
wowed the Delhi
audience with
his brainchild,
Jahan-e-Khusrau
— a three-day
festival to
commemorate the
death
anniversary of
Sufi saint
Hazrat Amir
Khusrau.
Now, the
Archaeological
Survey of India
(ASI), in
collaboration
with Aga Khan
Trust for
Culture, Central
Public Works
Department and
the MCD brings
its first ever
heritage
festival —
Jashn-e-Khusrau
— as part of the
Urban Renewal
Programme
undertaken by
ASI and the
Trust.
The festival,
starting on
Thursday, will
be set against
the resplendent
backdrop of
Chaunsath Khamba
located in
Hazrat
Nizamuddin Basti
and the lawns of
the Humayun’s
Tomb —
incidentally,
this is where
Khusrau started
the quwwali
music tradition
in the 13th
Century.
“Monuments are
not just tourist
destinations.
The concerts to
be held at
heritage sites
will have
arrangements for
almost 2,000
people. I am
sure it is going
to be an
invaluable
addition to the
city’s cultural
calendar,” ASI
Superintending
Archaeologist
(Delhi) K K
Muhammed said.
The festival has
invited six
groups of
Khanqahi
quwwals, of
which two are
from Pakistan.
Farid Ayaz, Abu
Muhammad and
their group from
Karachi will
perform the
repertoire of
Khusrau’s qalaam
on March 10.
Khanqahi quwwals
from Uttar
Pradesh and
Delhi will also
participate in
the festival.
“Khanqahs were
hospices for
Sufi travellers.
The quwwals
would then sing
in these
dargahs. The art
form is almost
dead now as
Khanqahi quwwals
are not concert
artistes in
India. If this
art form can be
revived through
this festival,
it will prove a
big achievement
as they do not
have any source
of livelihood,”
says Irfan
Zuberi,
consultant with
Aga Khan Trust
for Culture.
|
|
4 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Makeover For
Ring Road
Marshland Is
MAGIC AT
MAYAPURI
Delhi irrigation
and flood
control
department
stirred into
action after
matter reached
high court. It
drew up a plan
which has been
reviewed by the
state govt
A thriving water
body with
walkways and
landscaped
greens spread
over 12-odd
acres. The
marshland
wasting away
along the busy
Ring Road in the
Mayapuri area is
finally on a
path that
promises all
this and more.
For years, the
wetlands had
been neglected
with the
authorities
turning a blind
eye to them. But
the irrigation &
flood control
department of
the Delhi
government has
finally been
assigned the
task of
resuscitating
the water body
and has
submitted a Rs
4.5-crore
conceptual plan
to develop the
water body
alone.
It took the
intervention of
the Delhi High
Court to get the
government to
take stock of
the wetland.
Though the water
body is one
without any
historical
significance, it
had emerged on
the urban map as
a fallout of
infrastructure
development and
needs to be
restored. The
PWD had dug out
soil from this
patch of land
during the
construction of
the first
flyover at
Naraina.
Following that,
this large ditch
over the years
grew into a wet
area marked by
marshy patches.
With the matter
reaching the
Delhi High
Court, the
government —
which was not
even aware of
the existence of
the wetlands —
was asked to
take charge of
the situation.
According to
sources, PWD and
Delhi Tourism &
Transportation
Development
Corporation
refused to take
the
responsibility
for developing
the water body.
And eventually,
the irrigation
and & flood
control
department was
entrusted with
the task of
restoration. On
Thursday, the
department made
a presentation
on the proposed
revival and
development plan
before chief
secretary Rakesh
Mehta.
Located off the
busy Ring Road
in Mayapuri
area, the marshy
lands and
ditches that
have deepened
into rainwater
pools will now
be developed
into a protected
water body. The
total area is
spread over
16.527 acre of
which 4.5 acre
has been handed
over to Delhi
State Industrial
and
Infrastructure
Corporation
where the Common
Effluent
Treatment Plant
is located.
The remaining
area — over 7.73
acre — is wet
and marshy with
stagnated sewage
and rainwater.
This is proposed
to be developed
as a water body.
The revival and
development of
the water body,
including its
peripheral path,
will cost Rs 4.5
crore. The water
area is
currently about
2-3m-deep. It is
proposed to
develop the
water body by
deepening,
removing the
wild growth and
slush. Also, the
water body will
be recharged
using treated
effluent and
waste water so
that it can be
developed into a
clean lake.
Slide slopes
will be made and
pebbles will be
used to
stabilize the
flow.
To develop the
water body as a
tourist
attraction,
small huts are
proposed to be
erected along
the lake with
benches on all
the sides. The
plan asserts on
substantial
lighting
arrangements
around the water
body and a
landscaping plan
will be drawn up
to green up the
space with
attractive
plantation.
For the plan to
become a
reality, the
next step is the
conceptual and
financial
approval by the
government.
After the
approvals, PWD
would have to
hand over the
land to
irrigation and
flood department
after making it
free of
encroachment for
execution of the
plan, sources
said.
|
|
6 March 2010,
Times City, The
Times of India
|
Ganga
clean-up gets Rs
1,394cr boost
$1bn WB Loan
Also On Cards:
Ramesh
New Delhi: In a
boost to the
Ganga cleaning
programme, the
government has
cleared projects
worth Rs
1,394.11 crore
for the states
of Uttar
Pradesh, Bihar,
West Bengal and
Uttarakhand.
While the Union
government had
allocated Rs 500
crore for the
2010-11 fiscal,
the empowered
steering
committee of the
National Ganga
River Basin
Authority
(NGRBA) as part
of the first
phase of the
project has
provided Rs 800
crore to Uttar
Pradesh, Rs 440
crore to Bihar,
Rs 105 crore to
West Bengal and
Rs 45 crore to
Uttarakhand.
The money will
be spent by the
states on
projects that
include
development of
sewer networks,
sewage treatment
plants and
sewage pumping
stations,
electric
crematoria,
community
toilets,
development of
river-fronts,
resuscitation of
canals, and
public
campaigns. Union
environment and
forest minister
Jairam Ramesh
said, “In
addition to
these measures,
we are
negotiating a
major loan of
about $1 billion
with the World
Bank for Ganga
cleaning, which
is progressing
on track.”
The first
meeting of NGRBA
was held on
October 5, last
year, with Prime
Minister
Manmohan Singh
as chair at
which it was
decided that no
untreated
municipal sewage
and industrial
effluents would
be allowed to
flow into the
Ganga by the
year 2020. In
December 2009,
the authority
created the
empowered
steering
committee with
the environment
and forests
secretary as
chair to
sanction
projects. The
committee
includes members
representing
other Union
ministries,
Central
Pollution
Control Board,
Central Water
Commission and
the states
concerned.
Ramesh said,
“These measures
signify the
importance and
urgency that we
are placing on
the river
Ganga.”
|
|
6 March 2010,
The Times of India
|
Ranthambhor
tigers in danger

Seasoned
conservationist
Harsh Vardhan
has cautioned
the Rajasthan
authorities
against more
tiger deaths on
account of
man-animal
conflict in the
environs of the
world famous
Ranthambhor
tiger reserve.
About a dozen
tigers in
Ranthambhor
National Park
stand the danger
of meeting the
same fate as the
two young tigers
that were
poisoned to
death three days
back by
villagers after
they had strayed
out of protected
territory, he
warned.
“Only a drastic
change in the
style in
conservation
strategies at
Ranthambhor,
which should
include
soliciting the
support of
stakeholders in
the
neighbourhood,
would prevent
such a
disaster,” Mr.
Vardhan said in
a letter to
Chief Minister
Ashok Gehlot.
Man-animal
conflict had
been on in and
around the
Project Tiger
area in
Ranthambhor for
years, he added.
The State
Government in
these years had
confirmed
information
about tigers,
tigresses and
cubs straying
out of the park
and devouring
the domestic
cattle of
villagers but it
did precious
nothing to
resolve the
conflict, Mr.
Vardhan said.
“What could be
the reason that
the issue was
not settled in
the mutual
interest of the
project and the
villagers
inhibiting its
vicinity when
the Government
could very well
do it?” he
wondered.
The letter
pointed to acute
shortage of
staff in the
prestigious
park. “The
upkeep and
monitoring of
the park have
been left to the
forest guard
level staff
whose number too
is not adequate
and who are not
provided even
with basic
facilities. This
is when they are
expected to work
24 hours a day.
The condition of
senior employees
among them is
well known,” he
pointed out.
“In the Project
Tiger area more
attention is
paid to the
tourists
reaching there
than the
conservation of
tiger, India's
national animal
for which the
project is there
in the first
place,” Mr.
Vardhan said.
|
|
6 March 2010,
Hindu
|
Centre steps
in to prevent
languages from
dying out

Boa Sr last
month took away
with her one of
the oldest
languages, Bo,
for little had
been done to
rescue it from
the looming
extinction
threatened by
receding numbers
of the Great
Andamanese
tribe.
Boa Sr was the
last of the
Great Andamanese
tribe, which is
down to 52
members, who
spoke the Bo
language.
Jolted by such
losses to
cultural
diversity, the
government plans
to stop
vulnerable
languages from
falling into
disuse by giving
them importance
in day to day
lives. It plans
to provide
facility for
translation of
all important
government
communication
into minority
languages at
different levels
of
administration.
Government
rules, notices
and decrees can
be sought in any
minority
language at the
level of tehsil,
municipality and
district. The
condition would
be that speakers
of minority
languages form
15% or more of
the local
population in
the said pocket.
The minority
affairs ministry
may also give
priority for
research
fellowship to
work on these
vulnerable
languages.
While attempts
in the past to
address the
issue have
proved a
non-starter,
Union Budget
2010-11 has
announced a
scheme to help
linguistic
minorities. A
modest opening
allocation of Rs
90 lakh has been
made under
“promotional
activities for
linguistic
minorities” and
the scheme will
be formulated
this year.
Minority affairs
minister Salman
Khurshid told
TOI, “Most of
these languages
are spoken
either in hilly
areas or Assam.
Some of them are
spoken by a
handful of
people and
others in small
pockets of a
district.”
It is a diverse
linguistic
demography that
has to be
catered. The
1961 census
identified 1,652
‘mother tongues’
in the country.
However, the
1991 census
registered only
those spoken by
10,000 or more
people. An
interesting
comment came
from Justice
Ranganath
Misra-headed
national
commission for
religious and
linguistic
minorities. It
said that use of
population
benchmark in
1990-91 census
to register a
language was a
deviation from
the Constitution
as it did not
recognise such a
condition.
The commission
pointed to the
flaw, arguing
‘Mahal’ was the
only language
spoken in
Minicoy Island
of Lakshadweep
but the entire
island
population was
less than
10,000,
disqualifying
Mahal from a
place in the
census report.
|
|
7 March 2010,
Times of India
|
Dredgers to
clean Dal Lake

Chief Minister
Omar Abdullah
has said his
government would
give full
attention to
revive the past
glory of the
world famous Dal
Lake here. Omar
gave this
assurance while
launching two
latest amphibian
multi-functional
dredgers for
cleaning the Dal
Lake here today.
These Finnish
company made
machines cost
around Rs 8
crore along with
attachments and
could venture
into such areas
of the Dal Lake
where no other
self-propelled
machine had been
able to enter.
“The Dal Lake,
which is the
epitome of
beauty of the
Kashmir valley
since times
immemorial and
has attained
world fame as a
favourite
tourism
destination,
shall be given
full attention
by the
government so
that its past
glory is
revived,” he
said.
Omar said a
multi-pronged
approach was
being executed
for the
conservation of
the lake. He
said apart from
carrying
dredging and
removal of weeds
and land mass in
the Dal Lake,
sewage treatment
plants were
under
construction to
ensure the
treatment of
sewage from the
catchment areas
of the Dal Lake.
He said there
was a need to
start
afforestation in
the Dal
catchment areas
and also speed
up the
rehabilitation
of Dal dwellers.
He expressed
hope that with
the
operationalisation
of new machines
there would be a
good impact on
ground and a
discernible
change would be
visible.
|
|
7 March 2010,
Tribune
|
Hanuman
Mandir upgraded

The New Delhi
Municipal
Corporation
(NDMC) is done
with its Rs
5.5-crore
project of
upgrading
ancient Hauman
Mandir in
Connaught Place
and Yusuf Zai
market in the
outer circle.
The inauguration
will be held on
Monday by Chief
Minister Sheila
Dikshit.
The renovated
mandir has a
modern two-level
plaza to
separate the
temple area from
the rest of the
surroundings.
There are
designated areas
for foodstalls,
shoe rooms,
churiwalas,
phoolwalas,
mehendiwalas,
prasad
distribution and
beggars.
Apart from this,
a guided entry
and exit to the
temple, parking
provision for
about 50 cars at
the temple rear
and two toilet
blocks have been
constructed.
The Yusuf Zai
market has two
pillars in front
of each shop as
a unique
character which
is easily
identifiable.
|
|
7 March 2010,
Tribune
|
Theatre
director to
stage shows at
Red Fort, Quli
Khan Tomb

The Indian
Tourism
Development
Corporation
(ITDC) has roped
in renowned
theatre director
Aamir Raza
Husain to stage
shows at Red
Fort and Quli
Khan tomb in
Mehrauli during
the Commonwealth
Games.
As part of the
cultural
programmes to be
held during the
Games,
light-and-sound
shows will be
organized at Red
Fort, Old Fort
and Quli Khan
tomb, said ITDC
Director Rajiv
Makin. Husain
has been
assigned the
responsibility
for the Red Fort
and Mehrauli
shows, while a
film company has
bagged the
contract for the
shows at the Old
Fort.
Titled
Dasatan-e-Dilli,
the 45-minute
Mehrauli show
will be about
the story of the
city of Delhi.
“This is the
first time such
a show is being
held at the
Mehrauli Fort,”
Makin said.
While the Old
Fort show is
about the six
cities of Delhi,
the Red Fort
show will begin
from the
Shahjahanabad
days to the
Mughal era. It
will take
viewers through
the freedom
struggle and
culminate at
Independence.
“The
light-and-sound
shows at the Red
Fort were
conceived almost
20 years ago,
but technology
has changed a
lot since then.
We will use the
latest laser
technology and
the presentation
will be entirely
different,” said
Makin.
The Tourism
ministry is
planning more
such cultural
evenings during
the Games and
will launch a
massive
publicity
campaign to woo
tourists during
the mega sports
event in the
Capital.
“We are
participating in
the ITB Berlin
Travel and
Tourism Fair to
showcase the
Commonwealth
Games and have
rented 870
square feet of
area at the fair
for setting up a
pavillion. It
will be themed
on be the
Commonwealth
Games,” a
ministry
official said.
|
|
8 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
To Prevent
seepage, Govt
mulls plastic
lining for
Naraina lake
Opinion divided
on the use of
plastic
component,
especially as
the High Court
has said there
should be
natural
restoration
Months after the
High Court
called for the
revival of water
bodies based on
a public
interest
litigation
(PIL), the Delhi
government in a
meeting on
Thursday
approved a Rs
5-crore plan for
restoring a
7.7-acre water
body in Naraina.
For this
project, the
government is
also
contemplating a
first-of-its-kind
measure:
layering the
now-defunct
water body with
a
plastic-cellulose
layer to avoid
seepage.
Pegged as an
‘environment
friendly’
solution, a
private company
has proposed to
the Delhi
government to
line the layers
and the bottom
of the water
body so that the
water stays in.
Officials,
however, are
divided over the
use of a plastic
component,
especially as
the High Court
has said
restoration
should be by
natural means.
The government
is, meanwhile,
also speculating
the idea of
layering just
the sides of the
water body.
Officials said
the depth of the
water body,
which is
presently filled
with sewage,
will be
increased from
existing 2
metres to 3
metres. The
Flood and
Irrigation
department
decided during
the Thursday
meeting that the
lake will be
refilled with
treated water
from an effluent
treatment plant
after the depth
has been
increased.
The final plan
is to create a
tourist complex
in the area
complete with a
jogging track
and water
treatment
facilities, with
the help of the
Delhi Tourism
and
Transportation
Development
Corporation.
The High Court
had earlier
ordered for a
committee to be
set up for
restoring water
bodies with
Chief Secretary
Rakesh Mehta at
the helm.
“We are debating
lining the lake
with a plastic
coat as proposed
by DuPont. We
are in
discussions with
the Flood and
Irrigation
department and
hope to take a
decision soon.
Lining the
entire
body—walls and
bottom — may not
be wise, we may
settle for only
lining the
sides,” Mehta
told Newsline.
“This is also to
stabilize the
slopes of the
water body, and
this experiment
has been tried
in South India,”
he said.
According to the
Chief Secretary,
the water body
will be fully
restored in six
months. “We will
also create
walking and
jogging tracks
along the water
body so it can
be a tourist
spot.”
Another plan of
developing a
baraat ghar with
a parking area,
to be
constructed by
Municipal
Corporation of
Delhi at a cost
of around Rs 4.7
crore, was also
mooted during
the meeting.
With pressure on
restoration of
the lake, this
plan has
temporarily been
shelved,
officials said.
|
|
8 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Makeover
complete for
Yusuf Zai Market

Famous for its
eating joints
like the Kake Da
Hotel and
Hyderabadi
Biryani House,
the Yusuf Zai
Market on
Connaught Place
Outer Circle is
ready to unveil
its new look.
The sheet
covering the
newly tiled
buildings
started being
unwrapped on
Wednesday,
revealing the
new, shiny
exterior.
Post-renovation,
uniform signages
have replaced the
haphazardly placed
ones, and pillars
have been given a
fresh coat of
plaster. The biggest
change is seen on
the building’s front
— levelled and
aligned, with a
smooth finish.
‘Jaalis’ have been
carved on the top
floor for
ventilation, and
glass panes have
replaced the wooden
windows.
“It took a year
to finish the
project and it
has been
satisfactory,” H
S Moti, the
president of
Connaught Circus
Municipal Market
Association,
said. Work on
the project
began in
December 2007.
The New Delhi
Municipal
Council (NDMC)
and the
shopkeepers have
shared the
expenses — each
shop pitched in
with Rs 30,000
for the
renovation. The
market has 102
shops.
The Yusuf Zai is
one of the nine
small markets
being restored
by the NDMC
ahead of the
Commonwealth
Games. The
others are:
Shankar Market,
Basurkar Market,
Begum Zaidi
Market, Netaji
Nagar Market,
Nauroji Nagar
Market, Lodhi
Road Market,
Kidwai Nagar
Market (South
and Central),
and Laxmi Bai
Market.
All these
markets are more
than 50 years
old, and have
been neglected
for long. After
renovation,
while interiors
of the shops
will remain
untouched, the
façade will be
revamped by
using uniform
tiles on the
walls and
repairing the
pillars,
wherever
present.
The renovation
will be on the
lines of the
Janpath Market
and Momo Market
in Yashwant
Singh Place that
were the first
markets in NDMC
area to be
revamped.
“The Yusuf Zai
Market will be
inaugurated on
Monday but work
on the footpaths
still remains.
That and the
underground
laying of
electrical wires
will be
undertaken after
the
inauguration,”
an NDMC official
said.
|
|
8 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Migratory
bird count falls
sharply in Delhi
Existing
habitats will be
gone unless the
Yamuna basin is
protected, says
Asian Water Bird
Census-2010
With the Asian Water
Bird Census-2010 in
Delhi revealing a
marked fall in the
arrival of migratory
birds, the report of
the State
Coordinator Delhi
for Wetlands
International South
Asia has cautioned
that until the
general public
becomes aware about
conservation and the
Government takes
immediate steps for
protection of the
Yamuna river basin,
the existing
habitats of water
birds in Delhi will
become completely
degraded and get
converted into dry
lands in the near
future.
The bird census
was conducted at
four sites
across Delhi
during the
scheduled period
between January
9 and January 24
by AWC Delhi
State
Coordinator with
the help of a
volunteer team.
State
coordinator T.K.
Roy said this
year a number of
factors affected
the arrival of
birds. “The
winter was late
and the arrival
of migratory
water birds was
less both in
number and
species. Even
otherwise the
migration rate
of water birds
has been
gradually
declining in
Delhi region
during the last
few years.''
Mr. Roy said
while overall
effects of
global warming,
climatic changes
and degradation
of habitats were
the major reason
behind declining
rate of
migration of
water birds all
over the world
as per reports
of the
scientific
organisations,
in Delhi a
number of local
factors have
also contributed
to this worrying
trend.
He said among
the four Asian
Water Bird
Census sites in
Delhi, the four
square km area
of Okhla Bird
Sanctuary is the
only major
habitat in the
heart of
polluted Delhi
that still
attracts a large
number of
migratory water
birds from
diversified
species during
winter. However,
he said, the
census found an
alarming drop in
their numbers
this year. Only
112 bar-headed
geese came this
year compared
with 212 in
2009. Similarly
the number of
gadwal was down
to 72 from 302;
northern
shoveler to 484
from 854;
northern pintail
172 instead of
272; only 231
common coot were
spotted in place
of 355 in 2009;
the mixed flock
of brown-headed
and black-headed
gull dropped to
345 from 877
while the
Eurasian widgeon
came down to 15
from 18.
While the number
of grey-leg
geese remains
almost the same
at 411 instead
of 416 in 2009,
the number of
Eurasian
spoonbills
increased to 16
from six. The
only species
which showed a
marked increase
in arrivals was
the common teal
which increased
to 184 from 78
in 2009.
However, the
number of common
pochard fell
drastically to
28 from 320 in
2009; while the
tufted pochard
also dropped to
just four from
236 in 2009. The
local resident
species of
greater
flamingos this
time suddenly
disappeared
during January
and 20 were
later tracked.
The other
species that
gave Delhi a
miss this time
included avocet,
bar-headed and
black-tailed
godwits, comb
duck and
garganey among
others.
As for the local
conditions which
adversely
impacted the
arrival of these
birds, Mr. Roy
said the water
level of the
sanctuary was
higher during
winter and the
smaller islands
and marshlands
remained almost
submerged. Due
to this most of
the common wader
species did not
camp in Delhi
this winter as
they could not
find suitable
habitat to walk
on water and
feed.
Still some of
the waders like
wood sandpiper,
green shank,
spotted green
shank, common
Redshank, little
stint and
temminck's stint
did arrive in
small numbers to
areas downstream
of the Okhla
Barrage.
On the western
bank of the
Yamuna, Mr. Roy
said, while the
sanctuary
provides a much
better habitat
to the waders,
as it has
marshlands, the
disturbance
caused by the
frequent
movement of
people and
cattle kept them
away.
“Almost the
entire habitat
for water birds
along the
stretch of the
Yamuna in Delhi
region is badly
degrading
(except upstream
of Wazirabad and
Okhla barrage)
due to winter
cultivation on
the river bed
and islands and
extreme water
pollution due to
direct flow of
industrial and
domestic sewage,
through canals
and drains, into
the river.
Dumping of
non-biodegradable
waste into the
river and rapid
development
works pertaining
to construction
of roads and
bridges for the
upcoming
Commonwealth
Games are all
affecting the
arrival of
birds,'' he
said.
Though following
the census, many
of migratory
species like
northern
shoveler,
northern
pintail, common
coot, common
teal, gadwal,
brown-headed and
black-headed
gulls and
Eurasian
spoonbill came
to the
sanctuary, he
said, this was
primarily
de-migration as
the temperatures
went up sharply
in the early
part of
February.
|
|
8 March 2010, The
Hindu
|
Great new
look for Hanuman
temple complex
in CP

The Hanuman
Mandir Complex
on Baba Kharak
Singh Marg in
Connaught Place
has been given a
facelift.
Following the
redevelopment
work of the
complex area, a
vatika (Hanuman
Vatika) with an
underground
court has also
been installed.
In the newly
constructed
area, dedicated
spaces for a
food court,
flower seller
stalls, mehandi
stalls and sweet
shops beside an
exclusive space
for shoes and
prasad
distribution
have been worked
out. At the
lower plaza of
the temple
complex six
additional shops
has been
constructed.
The façade of
shops and stalls
of the bangle
market situated
in the vicinity
has also been
refurbished.
With seating
arrangements,
walkways and
ramps, a plaza
in the front of
the main temple
building has
also been
constructed.
Delhi Chief
Minster Sheila
Dikshit on
Monday
inaugurated the
complex in the
presence of
Parimal Rai,
Chairperson, New
Delhi Municipal
Council and its
vice chairperson
Tajdar Babar. On
the occasion,
Karan Singh
Tanwar, member
of the council
including senior
officials were
also present.
Soon after
revealing the
renovated
complex, Dikshit
examined the
entire compound
including market
and praised the
efforts of the
council. "I hope
the old glory of
Connaught Place
will return once
the entire
project for
renovation of
the CP is
completed," she
said.
The drainage,
sewerage and
water supply
system has been
improved beside
ornamental
lighting
facilities
around the
temple complex.
It took almost
two years to
complete the
development work
at whopping cost
of Rs 5.40
crore. The
Mandir complex
is connected
with a subway
through the
lower plaza and
from Baba Kharak
Singh Marg
through the
upper plaza.
On Monday, the
CM also
inaugurated
Yusufzai Market
on the outer
circle of
Connaught Place.
In view of the
forthcoming
Commonwealth
Games-2010, NDMC
has taken up
façade
improvement of
various
Municipal
Markets in its
area.
The
six-decade-old
Yusufzai market
has 106 shops
and has an
aesthetic façade
similar to
Connuaght Place
at a cost of Rs
1.20 crore.
Under this
renovation, the
uniform circular
column, glass
show window,
circular false
ceiling, CFL
light fittings,
jails
(perforated
concrete slab),
and column
pedestal in
granite has been
added.
Later, Dikshit
also distributed
chip-based smart
cards among
hawkers and
vendors. These
biometric
smartcards will
serve as
identity cards,
which contain
data regarding
personal
information of
each and every
vendor. The
chip-based
identity
card-cum-biometric
smartcard will
curtail
unauthorised
squatters
sitting with
fake papers or
tampered
documents. These
smartcards can
be read and
verified by the
smartcard
readers.
|
|
9 March 2010,
Pioneer
|
Mughal-era
Monument painted
white
Even as the tomb
waits for a govt
notification, it
has fallen prey
to encroachers
who claim it’s
Waqf property
At a time when
the Delhi
government is
busy sprucing up
monuments in
time for the
prestigious
Commonwealth
Games, a
Mughal-period
tomb in Mehrauli
Archaeological
Park has been
encroached by
locals and its
facade has been
painted white.
According to
conservationists,
the tomb is in
the list of 92
monuments,
identified by
Delhi
government’s
state department
of archaeology
for conservation
and protection.
It is unclear
when the
monument was
taken over, but
sources said it
happened in the
last few months.
‘‘The tomb has a
very impressive
structure with
typical Mughal
architecture.
Now its front
exterior painted
white, it looks
very ugly,’’
said a
conservationist.
Sources said the
monument is
government
property as the
preliminary
notification for
the structure
has been
completed. It is
also listed by
INTACH Delhi
Chapter as A in
terms of
archaeological
value. When
contacted, a top
official of the
state
archaeology
department said
the department
was in the
process of
taking legal
action to free
the monument
from
unauthorized
occupation.
‘‘All monuments
identified by
the state
archaeology
department will
be protected by
the government.
Final
notification of
these monuments
is still in
process. We do
not know who is
responsible for
the vandalism at
this monument
but we will be
visiting the
site shortly and
take action
accordingly,’’
said an
official.
There are
indications this
monument has
fallen prey to
extremist groups
who want it to
be handed over
to the religious
institutions.
‘‘The monument
is Wakf Board
property as it
is a Muslim
monument,’’ said
a person,
claiming to be
the caretaker of
the structure.
Government
officials said
monuments being
taken over in
the name of Wakf
Board has become
a common
practice in the
city. ‘‘First,
there was the
problem of
prayers being
forcibly held in
protected
mosques. The
practice was
ultimately
stopped by the
police. Then in
the last several
months, there
have been
incidents of
unprotected
tombs and
mosques taken
over by certain
groups and
painted green
and white,’’
said an official
who did not want
to be quoted.
Mehrauli
Archaeological
Park is high on
the priority
list of the
state
government’s
archaeology
department that
wants to make it
a tourist
destination.
Apart from
ASI-protected
monuments like
Jamali-Kamali
and Rajon ki
Baoli, the park
has small
monuments from
Mughal and Lodi
Dynasty. ‘‘There
are many
monuments in the
park area and if
they are
conserved and
maintained well,
they can become
a big draw. It
falls in the
buffer zone of
world heritage
site Qutub Minar
and people who
visit the Minar
will definitely
be interested in
seeing the park
if it is
maintained
properly,’’ said
a senior
official.
|
|
9 March 2010,
Time City, Times of
India
|
Squabble
over heritage
structures
CONFLICT Wakf
Board and
Archaeological
Department at
odds over fate
of 39 monuments
Two government
bodies, the
Delhi State
Archaeological
Department and
the Delhi Wakf
Board, are at
loggerheads over
the fate of
several heritage
monuments in
Delhi.
Of the 39
monuments, for
which the former
has issued a
preliminary
notification for
pro- tection and
conservation,
the Delhi Wakf
Board has raised
objections over
25 heritage
structures
regarding
ownership
issues. The Wakf
Board claims
that these
monuments have
already been
notified as Wakf
properties, so
the department
cannot notify
them again.
"We have
received
objections from
the Delhi Wakf
Board for 25 of
the 39
monuments," con-
firmed
Archaeology
Department's
Surveyor Jaspal
Singh.
However, he
refused to
elabo- rate any
further. The
Delhi State
Archaeological
Department had
issued
preliminary
notifications
under the
provisions of
the Delhi
Ancient and
Historical Mon-
uments and
Archaeological
Sites and
Remains Act,
2004, for 39
monuments in
July, August and
September 2009
and January
2010.
The Delhi Wakf
Board has raised
objections over
the tomb of
Mohammed Quli
Khan and Bagichi
Ki Masjid (both
in Mehrauli);
Haji Langa's
Gumbad and a
domed building
(both in sector
4, R K Puram);
Munda Gumbad and
tomb of Shaikh
Salahuddin
Darwesh and
Majlis Khana
(both in Sheikh
Sarai village)
among other
monuments,
sources said.
A Wakf board
official, on
conditions of
anonymity, said,
"These and
several other
properties were
notified in 1970
under the
Central Wakf
Act. If any
objections had
been raised
within one year
of the
notification,
they were taken
care of then,
but now, these
are identified
as Wakf
properties."
"What we want is
that these
tombs, gumbads
(domes) and
mosques should
remain as wakf
(the granting or
dedication of
property in
trust for a
pious purpose)
and not be used
as mere
monuments," he
added He also
said that the
Wakf Board
wanted the
government to
allow regular
prayers at all
Wakf heritage
properties.
Government
officials have
started
ascertaining
actual ownership
of the land,
irrespective of
notifications by
the Wakf Board
or by the
Archaeological
department.
Director of the
State
Archaeological
Department
Keshav Chandra
is slated to
hear all
objections at a
pre- decided
hearing date
soon, thus
paving way for a
final
notification of
these monuments.
|
|
9 March 2010,
Hindustan Times
|
Tigers,
elephants
getting pushed
into `conflict'
zone
Corridors have
shrunk forcing
elephants to
wander into
fields.
Shrinking
habitat for
wildlife is
making tigers
and elephants
vulnerable to
man-animal
conflict. As
many as 31
elephants and
five tigers have
died because of
this conflict in
the past year,
data released by
NGO Wildlife
Protection
Society of India
(WPSI) said.
The issue
cropped against
last Sunday with
two tiger cubs
allegedly
poisoned to
death in a day
by villagers in
outskirts of
Ranthambore
tiger reserve.
State Chief
wildlife warden
R.N.
Mehrotra said at
least four cubs
have been
wandering for
the last four
months in the
outer areas of
the reserve and
may have killed
some goats as
prey.
In retaliation
the villagers
poisoned two
cubs.
In January this
year, a tiger
was allegedly
poisoned in
Pench Tiger
Reserve in
Madhya Pradesh
and another died
of suspected
poisoning in
Bareilli
district of
Uttar Pradesh.
"Both tigers
were victims of
revenge killing
by villagers,"
said an
environment
ministry
official.
Data with the
environment
ministry has
shown that
forest areas for
tigers and
elephants have
shrunk by 15-20
per cent in the
last two
decades. India
has 88
identified
elephant
corridors
connecting
habitats of
27,000
elephants, whose
population is
rising since
2000.
"The corridors
have shrunk
forcing
elephants to
wander into
agriculture
fields. And, it
has caused
conflict in
Uttarakhand and
West Bengal,"
said A.N.
Prasad, director
of Protect
Elephants in the
environment
ministry. The
result of this
has been death
of 31 elephants
and injury to
many more.
The wildlife
experts,
however, find a
thin difference
between revenge
killing and
poaching. "Last
year, a water
hole was
poisoned in
Central India
killing 20-25
animals. It was
basically an
attempt to poach
a tiger," said
Tito Joseph of
NGO WPSI.
Problem of
shrinking
habitats is more
in reserve with
good wildlife
population such
as Corbett Tiger
Reserve.
Of the 39
monuments, for
which the former
has issued a
preliminary
notification for
protection and
conservation,
the Delhi Wakf
Board has raised
objections over
25 heritage
structures
regarding
ownership
issues. The Wakf
Board claims
that these
monuments have
already been
notified as Wakf
properties, so
the department
cannot notify
them again.
"We have
received
objections from
the Delhi Wakf
Board for 25 of
the 39
monuments," con-
firmed
Archaeology
Department's
Surveyor Jaspal
Singh.
However, he
refused to
elaborate any
further. The
Delhi State
Archaeological
Department had
issued
preliminary
notifications
under the
provisions of
the Delhi
Ancient and
Historical
Monuments and
Archaeological
Sites and
Remains Act,
2004, for 39
monuments in
July, August and
September 2009
and January
2010.
The Delhi Wakf
Board has raised
objections over
the tomb of
Mohammed Quli
Khan and Bagichi
Ki Masjid (both
in Mehrauli);
Haji Langa's
Gumbad and a
domed building
(both in sector
4, R K Puram);
Munda Gumbad and
tomb of Shaikh
Salahuddin
Darwesh and
Majlis Khana
(both in Sheikh
Sarai village)
among other
monuments,
sources said.
A Wakf board
official, on
conditions of
anonymity, said,
"These and
several other
properties were
notified in 1970
under the
Central Wakf
Act. If any
objections had
been raised
within one year
of the
notification,
they were taken
care of then,
but now, these
are identified
as Wakf
properties."
"What we want is
that these
tombs, gumbads
(domes) and
mosques should
remain as wakf
(the granting or
dedication of
property in
trust for a
pious purpose)
and not be used
as mere
monuments," he
added He also
said that the
Wakf Board
wanted the
government to
allow regular
prayers at all
Wakf heritage
properties.
Government
officials have
started
ascertaining
actual ownership
of the land,
irrespective of
notifications by
the Wakf Board
or by the
Archaeological
department.
Director of the
State
Archaeological
Department
Keshav Chandra
is slated to
hear all
objections at a
pre- decided
hearing date
soon, thus
paving way for a
final
notification of
these monuments.
|
|
10 March 2010,
Hindustan Times
|
Protest
Against Road
Widening in Siri
Fort

The students of
Kamla Nehru
College (KNC)
along with
residents of
Siri Fort
Institutional
area, neigh-
bouring Anand
Lok and Gulmohar
Park on Monday
staged a silent
protest against
the government's
plan to widen
the Siri Fort
road and the
adjacent August
Kranti Marg
ahead of the
Commonwealth
Games.
The students
also tied
ribbons on trees
as a mark of
protest.
"We think this
`Munnabhai'
approach will
have an effect
on the
government,"
said Mishika
Singh, a KNC
student.
"The government
wants to cut
trees and widen
the roads by
making the
pedestrian walk-
ways narrow.
"Pedestrians are
already
suffering and
they want to
take away the
right to walk
safely on the
road from them,"
said Krishan
Sharma, RWA
secretary, Asiad
Village Society.
"Siri Fort road
has five schools
and two
colleges. We
need
well-maintained
walkways here,"
he said.
"The authorities
call the
Commonwealth
Games the `green
games'. What is
so green about
these games if
you are going to
cut down trees
and damage the
ecology?" said
Arpana Caur, a
resident of Siri
Fort.
|
|
10 March 2010,
Hindustan Times
|
Govt gives
heritage new
lease of life
MCD’s 9-Year-Old
List Of 767
Monuments
Notified By
Delhi
Government, LG
New Delhi: Jama
Masjid, Town
Hall and
Fatehpuri Masjid
finally have
government
protection to
save them from
vandals or
encroachers.
Almost ten years
after the
Municipal
Corporation of
Delhi (MCD) came
out with a
public notice of
775 heritage
structures,
Delhi government
on Thursday
notified 767
structures in
the Delhi
Gazette under
section 23 of
the Delhi
Building
Bye-Laws, 1983.
Chief secretary
Rakesh Mehta
told TOI: ‘‘The
list has been
approved by the
government and
the LG’s
office.’’ Six
properties from
the original MCD
list have not
been included in
the notification
list as the
heritage
conservation
committee (HCC)
has asked for
clarifications
on them and one
building (a
hospital) has
been deleted
from the list.
‘‘Now that these
structures are
notified
buildings, any
alteration or
repair work
there will
require the
written consent
of HCC or other
appropriate
body. Any
demolition
proposal for
these buildings
will require
written
permission from
the MCD
commissioner,’’
said an
official. ‘‘In
addition, there
are several
incentives for
owners of
private heritage
properties like
havelis that
have been
notified. If
their property
is located in a
residential
zone, they can
use it as
commercial
office or turn
it into hotel
after getting
HCC’s approval.
This is subject
to the owner
agreeing to
conserve the
heritage
character of the
building,’’ said
an official.
The notified
list comprises
many prominent
structures like
Mirza Ghalib’s
in-laws house,
tomb of Razia
Sultan, Old
Delhi railway
station, Namak
Haram Ki Haveli,
Firoz Shah’s
Mosque, St
Stephen’s
Church, Sunehri
Masjid,
Gurudwara Sis
Ganj, Bhagirath
Palace,
Anglo-Arabic
Public School,
City Wall,
Shroff Eye
Hospital, Jain
Temple, Delhi
Gate in
Najafgarh,
Northern and
Eastern gateways
of Chiragh Dilli,
St Jame’s Church
etc.
‘‘Many of the
structures on
this list have
more or less
disappeared or
have been
vandalized in
the last few
years. For
instance, near
Andheria More
there are the
remains of a
Lodi period
monument that
have been used
by locals to
construct
another
building,’’ said
a heritage
conservationist.
The notification
has opened new
avenues for the
listed heritage
buildings.
‘‘There is a
provision the
government may
include new
structures in
this list on a
suo motu basis
after inviting
public opinion
and not
necessarily have
to wait for a
recommendation
from any
agency,’’ said a
government
official.
Experts said
this provision
would cut down
delays in the
future. A
heritage expert
said even though
some monuments
were included in
the list by MCD
10 years ago,
they could not
be preserved due
to delay in
notification.
They said the
capital has lost
several
monuments due to
vandalism and
encroachment in
the recent years
and in future if
the government
could notify
heritage
structures on a
suo motu basis,
delay would be
avoided.
Officials also
said that
avenues were
being considered
to notify the
precinct of
heritage
buildings along
with the main
structure.
Officials said
there is plan to
include more
havelis in the
notification as
most of them
have unique
architecture and
considered
historically
very
significant. For
this purpose,
MCD has
identified
around 400
havelis in the
Walled City. The
NDMC heritage
list with 141
structures in it
was recently
notified by the
government. With
both the
agencies lists
being notified,
many of Delhi’s
most crucial
heritage
buildings now
have legal
protection.
TYPES OF
STRUCTURES
Havelis, tombs,
mosques,
schools, police
stations,
gateways, banks,
private
residences,
churches,
colleges &
hospitals
MCD came out
with with
heritage list in
2001 and sought
public opinion.
It took 9 years
for the list to
be notified MCD
is now planning
to push for
notification of
more heritage
structures,
mostly havelis
The gazetted
notification
leaves scope to
notify more
buildings suo
motu in future
without seeking
recommendation
of any body
PROMINENT
STRUCTURES
- Jain Mandir
- Jama Masjid
- St Stephen’s
Church
- Union Bank
building in
Chandni Chowk
- Namak Haram Ki
Haveli
- Mirza Ghalib’s
in-laws house
- Sunehri Masjid
Old Delhi
railway station
- Hardyal
Municipal Public
Library
- Hauz Kasi
mosque
- Town Hall
- City Wall,
Daryaganj
|
|
12 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
‘Ranthambhor
tigers in
danger'
JAIPUR:
Seasoned
conservationist
Harsh Vardhan
has cautioned
the Rajasthan
authorities
against more
tiger deaths on
account of
man-animal
conflict in the
environs of the
world famous
Ranthambhor
tiger reserve.
About a dozen
tigers in
Ranthambhor
National Park
stand the danger
of meeting the
same fate as the
two young tigers
that were
poisoned to
death three days
back by
villagers after
they had strayed
out of protected
territory, he
warned.
“Only a drastic
change in the
style in
conservation
strategies at
Ranthambhor,
which should
include
soliciting the
support of
stakeholders in
the
neighbourhood,
would prevent
such a
disaster,” Mr.
Vardhan said in
a letter to
Chief Minister
Ashok Gehlot.
Man-animal
conflict had
been on in and
around the
Project Tiger
area in
Ranthambhor for
years, he added.
The State
Government in
these years had
confirmed
information
about tigers,
tigresses and
cubs straying
out of the park
and devouring
the domestic
cattle of
villagers but it
did precious
nothing to
resolve the
conflict, Mr.
Vardhan said.
“What could be
the reason that
the issue was
not settled in
the mutual
interest of the
project and the
villagers
inhibiting its
vicinity when
the Government
could very well
do it?” he
wondered.
The letter
pointed to acute
shortage of
staff in the
prestigious
park. “The
upkeep and
monitoring of
the park have
been left to the
forest guard
level staff
whose number too
is not adequate
and who are not
provided even
with basic
facilities. This
is when they are
expected to work
24 hours a day.
The condition of
senior employees
among them is
well known,” he
pointed out.
“In the Project
Tiger area more
attention is
paid to the
tourists
reaching there
than the
conservation of
tiger, India's
national animal
for which the
project is there
in the first
place,” Mr.
Vardhan said.
|
|
12 March 2010,
Hindu
|
Sita and
Mother Earth
There are very
few temples
dedicated to
Sita, Lord
Rama’s wife. The
famous Sita Devi
Temple, near
Bangalore, has
become a place
of pilgrimage
for people, who
seek her
blessings for
good health and
prosperity,
writes
Papri Sri Raman
FIREFLIES, a
small farm about
30 km from
Bangalore, has
become home to
feminism in a
gentle,
innovative way.
"Mother Earth is
the deity here,"
says Aravind
Menon, campus
resident and a
media
consultant. He
is right.
Whether it is
the rare Sita
Devi Temple,
where villagers
from all around
come to worship
the mother
goddess as the
force that
protects their
crops and
cattle, their
plantations and
fields, or the
various
depictions of
the 12th century
savant Akka
Mahadevi in
granite, or the
more modern and
controversial
stone and copper
works by artists
like UK-based
Caroline
Mackenzie,
obvious tributes
to feminism in
one form or the
other are
aplenty in these
sylvan
surroundings.
Menon points
out: "There are
very few temples
dedicated to
Sita, the
devoted wife of
Lord Rama, the
hero of the
Hindu epic, the
Ramayana, while
Ram temples are
there in
plenty." Even
social
scientists,
feminists and
filmmakers
visualise the
character of
Sita as
ambiguous, to
say the least.
Sita is seen as
a symbol of the
devoted wife,
the epitome of
docility. She is
seen as the
sacrificing soul
who embraces
fire and
disappears into
Mother Earth
without a fight.
Her sacrifice
makes her an
"ideal" wife.
Her silence is
her eloquent
fight.
One of the few
Sita temples in
the subcontinent
is in a village
in Haryana
called Sitamai.
Here an old
temple site is
supposed to be
where Sita was
swallowed by
Mother Earth.
Another
controversial
Sita temple is
in central Sri
Lanka’s Nuwara
Eliya. Sita was
supposed to have
been confined in
the Ashoka
orchards here by
demon king
Ravana.
But at Sita Devi
Temple at
Fireflies, which
is small and
fronted by a
terrace,
villagers from
all around come
to worship the
mother goddess —
a force that
will protect
their
plantations and
fields. Each
year, there is a
Sita Devi
festival that is
celebrated on
April 22, also
commemorated as
World Earth Day.
Besides that,
there is also a
tradition of
puja once a
month on full
moon. It is a
"re-interpretation
and
re-experience of
Sita" through
personal, social
and ecological
terms, says
social scientist
Siddhartha and
his friends, the
brains behind
the Fireflies
project.
As per
mythology, Sita
lived in the
forest and was
an exemplary
mother. Today,
mothers here
seek her help
when their
children are
sick or need
guidance. Women
also look to her
to find a way
out of their
personal
difficulties, or
health problems,
and farmers seek
her blessings so
that there is
good rain and,
hence, a good
crop yield.
"The
construction of
the temple at
Fireflies was
the result of
long
interactions and
discussions with
farmers, women
and youth living
near the site
about the
meaning of the
nature of Mother
Earth. Now we
have a place to
celebrate Sita
Devi as Bhoomi
Thai and respect
the earth along
with her," says
Siddhartha, the
creator of
Fireflies, who
believes in
sustainable
social
empowerment and
balanced
ecology. "Our
purpose in
re-interpreting
the Sita Devi
festival is to
show that the
fervent
veneration of
the goddess is
connected to a
fervent practice
of agriculture
that is
sustainable," he
adds.
"So, along with
calling for a
celebration of
Sita Devi, there
is also a
calling to
return to the
commitment of
practicing
sustainable
agriculture.
This includes an
overall larger
goal of moving
towards forms of
development with
zero carbon
emissions. It is
also an
acknowledgement
that Sita Devi
is indeed the
earth, that our
earth is,
therefore,
sacred and that
we cannot
continue to
despoil her
soil, water,
air, trees,
mountains and
glaciers," he
emphasises.
The temple
aside, the farm
also houses a
stone sculpture
and painting of
Akka Mahadevi, a
controversial
12th century
savant belonging
to the
Veerashaiva
Bhakti movement,
known for her
poems in
Kannada. This
defiant woman
from Bidar, who
had Allama
Prabhu as her
guru, scoffed at
society and
tradition, and
like nude male
sages of that
era, refused to
cover her body.
It is said that
so true a
devotee was she
that Shiva
covered her with
her own
luxuriant hair.
In a
translation,
thus goes one of
her famous
hymns:
"People, male
and female,
blush when a
cloth covering
their shame
comes loose;
When the Lord of
lives, lives
drowned without
a face in the
world, how can
you be modest?
When all the
world is the eye
of the Lord,
looking on
everywhere;
What can you
cover and
conceal?"
Beside Akka
Mahadevi in
granite, the
Fireflies farm
has also offered
shelter to
controversial
stone and copper
works (2004-05)
by UK-based
artist Caroline
Mackenzie, in
collaboration
with Indian
sculptors T.N.
Muniyandi, M.
Elumalai, P.
Elango, Mahesh,
Azad, Viju,
Baiju, Ramesh
and several
others. "The
biggest tribute
to our work is
that they have
found such a
tranquil home,"
says Baiju, a
resident artist.
Mackenzie’s
sculpture "Male
Parenting" —
essentially
showing man as
the nurturer,
protector of the
girl child,
administering
childbirth —
proved
controversial a
few years ago,
and found no
pedestal in any
Indian city. The
"Lion Lady" is
the woman-lion
incarnation —
distinct from
the man-lion
incarnation of
Vishnu.
Another work is
the "Birth of
the Divine
Girl," which
shows the girl
child being
sheltered by
Bird Man
(Garuda) and
received by
Earth Woman
(Bhoo Devi),
while the mother
and father flank
her equally. The
artist writes:
"The girl child
could be seen as
being born from
the rock," and
the man and
woman
representatives
of people "who
are receiving a
new sense of the
consciousness"
of self and
earth.
|
|
14 March 2010,
The Tribune
|
An
incredible
journey: Basti
to heritage
guide

New Delhi:
Eighteen-year-old
Moninuddin was
born and brought
up in Basti
Nizamuddin. But
it’s been just
18 months since
he learnt about
the area’s
historical and
cultural
significance.
Moninuddin is
one of 15
teenagers from
the Basti who
have been
trained to
impart local
knowledge as
tourist guides.
After nearly two
years spent
identifying the
tangible and
intangible
heritage of the
Basti, the young
people were
trained to
conduct heritage
walks. It’s part
of a project
launched during
the ongoing
Jashan-e-Khusrau
festival here.
The project,
called the
heritage
volunteer
programme, is
part of the Aga
Khan Trust for
Culture ‘s
(AKTC)urban
renewal plans .
The teenagers
have formed a
selfhelp group —
Sair-e-Nizamuddin
— which aims to
share the
Basti’s cultural
heritage with
visitors. They
have spent
several months
studying Delhi’s
history,
enhancing their
speaking skills
and learning
English — thanks
to the British
Council — in
order to be able
to interact with
foreign
visitors. Those
who have been on
heritage walks
are impressed.
Roots found,
dreams take wings
For The 15
Young Guides,
It’s Not Just An
Earning But A
Learning Process
New Delhi:
Fifteen
teenagers from
Basti Nizamuddin
have been
trained to
impart local
knowledge during
heritage walks
as part of a
project launched
during the
ongoing
Jashane-Khusrau
festival here.
‘‘No doubt, this
is giving the
locals a sense
of pride for
their homeland
and giving them
a new means for
employment.
Their
involvement in
these heritage
walks has added
a special, new
dimension,’’
said Farida
Singh, who took
part in the walk
on Saturday with
her friend Pria
Devi.
TOI went on one
of these
heritage walks
through the
bylanes of the
Nizamuddin basti
on Saturday
morning. The
groups were
small, with
eight to 10
participants,
and were led by
two young
guides. They
displayed
up-todate
knowledge of
each monument, a
keen interest to
ensure that
every
participant in
the walk could
understand the
history and
significance of
the structure,
and fluent
spoken English
to interact with
foreign
participants.
The walk started
at Shiv Mandir
in the basti and
culminated at
Nizamuddin
baoli. The
one-hour walk
covered Hazrat
Nizamuddin
dargah, Kalan
Masjid, Atgah
Khan’s tomb,
Chausath Khamba,
Mirza Ghalib’s
tomb and
Phoolwali Gali
archway, which
is the only
gateway
surviving of the
original
enclosure wall
that once
surrounded the
settlement. The
guides answered
questions with
insight and
managed to keep
all the
participants
interested.
Spanish
journalist Elisa
Reche, a
participant,
visiting India
to study sufism
said the walk
gave her a new
insight about
the history of
the basti.
‘‘There is so
much history
engraved in
every stone
here. I am glad
the local
children are
making an effort
to share this
knowledge with
others,’’ she
said. Her
thoughts were
echoed by
another foreign
national, Hilda
Lubig from
Germany, who
said: ‘‘The
whole concept of
the walk being
led by young
inhabitants of
the settlement
is an excellent
way of
encouraging
young people to
take pride in
their roots.’’
The local lads
were themselves
brimming with
confidence and
enthusiasm. As
20-year-old
guide Nabir Khan
said: ‘‘I grew
up in the basti
and spent my
childhood
playing in the
precint of Atgah
Khan’s tomb or
near Nizamuddin
baoli. But I
never really
understood what
they
represented.
Ever since I
became a part of
this programme,
I have been
studying and
reading all
about the
basti... I am
proud to have
been born
here.’’ Another
young guide,
Amir Ahmed wants
to become an
architect and is
hoping that
being a heritage
guide can
provide him with
some financial
help. ‘‘Apart
from helping us
earn our
livelihood and
support our
families, we now
understand where
we come from and
how enriching is
the history of
the basti,’’ he
said.
‘‘It is hoped
that the walks
will help people
of Delhi
understand the
unique cultural
traditions of
Hazrat
Nizamuddin
Basti,
especially the
Dargah of Hazrat
Nizamuddin
Auliya and
Dargah of Amir
Khusrau. Some of
the local guides
also
participated in
an ongoing
British Council
programme for
English Language
training and
some have now
received
scholarships
from the British
Council,’’ said
Tara Sharma from
AKTC. The walks
will be held on
Saturdays and
Sundays at 8 am
and on Thursdays
at 5 pm till 15
April, and begin
to be conducted
again in
October.
|
|
14 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
Restoration
project for
century-old
heritage bridge
finds no bidders
Specialised
conservationists
sought for work;
heritage body
now extends
deadline for
tenders by three
weeks
Restoration work
on the
Centrally-protected
Mangi Bridge, a
century-old
heritage
structure
connecting Red
Fort with
Salimgarh Fort,
seems to have
run into a
roadblock.
After bricks
from the inner
arch of the
bridge, located
on the busy Ring
Road, gave way
in April last
year, the
Archaeological
Survey of India
(ASI) had taken
up superficial
restoration of
the bridge.
During the
process,
however,
cavities were
found inside the
bridge and it
was decided that
conservationists
with specialised
knowhow need to
be called in for
the restoration
work.
The tendering
process, begun
in mid-January
by the ASI, has
failed to bring
in any response.
The ASI has now
extended the
last date for
the tendering
process by three
weeks — from
March 4 to March
23, a senior ASI
official said.
“No one came
forward to bid
for the project,
so we had to
extend the date.
The project is
getting delayed
because we
haven’t been
able to find the
right consultant
to take it up,”
the official
said.
According to ASI
officials, there
is no dearth of
funds — an
estimated sum of
Rs 3 crore has
already been
sanctioned for
the project.
Considering the
location of the
structure, work
on the bridge is
also important
in view of the
Commonwealth
Games.
“Restoration of
this bridge
involves
specialised
technical work.
We are looking
for conservation
architects who
have tie-ups
with
international
restoration
bodies. The
complexity of
the work
involved here is
comparable to
that of the
Colosseum in
Rome. We want
the best
architects to
take it up,” K K
Muhammed,
superintending
archaeologist,
ASI Delhi
Circle, said.
The project has
already been
delayed
considerably,
with the ASI
having had
several rounds
of deliberations
with the Public
Works Department
(PWD) and the
Traffic Police
but failing to
arrive at any
decision.
Last year, ASI
officials
maintained that
overloaded heavy
vehicles plying
underneath the
bridge scraped
off the walls of
the inner arch.
They also cited
the frequent
road re-laying
work undertaken
by the PWD as a
reason behind
the damage.
After the PWD
and Traffic
Police refused
to lower the
road level,
which would
result in
blocking of
traffic on the
Ring Road, ASI
had decided to
superficially
restore the
inner arch.
During the
process,
however,
cavities were
found inside the
bridge and the
work had to be
stopped.
“Internal
cavities were
found in the
bridge during
the restoration
work we had
undertaken.
Special steel
structures have
to be inserted
to reinforce the
arches, which
have to be
imported from
England,”
Muhammed added.
Over the last
year, while the
bridge awaits
restoration,
part of the road
under the bridge
stands blocked
and traffic
diverted.
|
|
15 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
There's Hope
For Yamuna
The river that
has been Delhi’s
lifeline for
centuries is
crying for
attention - not
just of the
government but
also of civil
society. As a
group of
volunteers takes
on the humongous
task of cleaning
the ghats of
what was once a
mighty river and
has now been
reduced to a
drain, Times
City takes a
trip down the
years to chart
Yamuna’s course
in the past and
the present.
Here’s to a
better future...
It’s a river
that has
sustained Delhi
over centuries –
today it’s
gasping for
breath. It has
been defiled,
desecrated and
left for dead.
It has been
reduced to being
a stinking drain
and its sanctity
and ecological
significance
will soon be the
stuff of legend.
Unless, of
course, people
join hands with
the government
to undertake the
Herculean task
of reviving it
and infusing
life into its
water.
This week, a
group of
dedicated
volunteers under
the auspices of
the Art of
Living
Foundation will
make a humble
beginning by
launching a
citizens’
movement for
cleaning the
river’s ghats.
You can join
them in an act
of penance and
exhort others to
do so. The
Commonwealth
Games deadline
was never
achievable for
this river
that’s our
lifeline. It
will need faith
and persistence
to stay the
course and
ensure that the
government gets
all the support
it needs in its
endeavour to
clean the river.
It has pinned
its hope on the
interceptor
sewage system
which will bring
results by 2014.
Hopefully, it
will reduce the
pollution load
in the river and
take us one step
closer to
keeping the
river alive. In
fact, till
Wazirabad – the
point at which
it enters Delhi
– the river is
not in such a
pathetic state.
This is where it
is diverted into
two main canals
which take its
water to various
treatment plants
for supplying it
to the city.
Having extracted
whatever we
could from the
river, we mount
a scandalous
assault on it
all through its
22-km journey
across the
Capital. Sewage
and industrial
effluents are
dumped into the
river by
numerous drains
that carry the
city’s filth.
According to
Central
Pollution
Control Board
(CPCB), Delhi is
single-handedly
responsible for
about 70% of
Yamuna’s
pollution. The
river suffers
because on its
banks is a large
city with
insufficient
sewage treatment
infrastructure,
poor maintenance
of existing
treatment plants
and sewage
carrying
channels and no
fresh water for
most part of the
year.
The interceptor
system is
pending
clearance with
the cabinet and
work can kick
off earliest by
July, say
officials. It
would take at
least three
years to
complete it.
Delhi,
therefore,
cannot expect a
clean Yamuna
till about 2014.
Ramesh Negi,
CEO, Delhi Jal
Board (DJB) says
this is the most
viable solution
to the sewage
problems till
the entire city
is not connected
via sewerage.
In April 2001,
the Supreme
Court had asked
Delhi government
to ensure that
the dissolved
oxygen (DO)
level in the
water be a
minimum of 4
mg/litre by
March 31, 2003.
Seven years
after that
deadline, large
parts of the
river in the
city have no DO.
Faecal coliform
levels run into
crores at
several points,
against a
maximum of
5,000/100 ml,
recording a high
of 2,300
crore/100 ml
where the river
meets the
Shahdara drain
(June 2009).
This indicates
the presence of
a massive amount
of faecal matter
in the water.
This when about
Rs 1,400 crore
has already been
spent in trying
to clean the
Delhi stretch.
DJB, the
implementing
agency in the
city for the
Yamuna Action
Plan, has
planned an
expenditure of
around Rs 4,000
crore for the
interceptor
project that
envisages laying
of parallel
drains along the
three main
drains of the
city —
Najafgarh,
Shahdara and
Supplementary.
The parallel
drains will
intercept the
outflow of all
small drains
that would
otherwise meet
the main drains,
carry the sewage
to sewage
treatment plants
(STP), treat it
and only then
allow it to flow
into the river.
‘‘This includes
an 11-year
maintenance
contract with
Engineers India
Limited (EIL),
the implementing
agency for the
project. This
way we are
ensured of
quality work,’’
said Negi.
There are those
who believe that
the plan is
flawed. Ranjit
Kumar, the
amicus curiae in
the case, told
TOI that against
an average flow
of 2,100 million
litres per day
(mld), EIL came
up with an
estimate of
1,600 mld. This
too was the dry
weather flow and
the monsoon flow
was much more.
‘‘The maximum
flow received in
August 2008 was
3,400 mld. Out
of 188 drains,
the project also
talks of
intercepting
only 107 which
would mean that
only 1,148 mld
of sewage would
be carried to
STPs instead of
2,207 mld. DJB
has accepted in
court that only
71% of the
drains will be
intercepted
while 85% of the
sewage generated
will be
treated,’’ he
said.
This is what DJB
claimed in
court: ‘‘It’s a
fact that even
this project
will not restore
the river to
Class C bathing
quality and it
can only be
possible if
adequate
quantity of
fresh water is
released by the
Upper Yamuna
River Board.’’
The biochemical
oxygen demand
(BOD) will come
down from 41 to
12 but not
improve to the
required level
of 3 mg/l. Negi
says that till
the time a
dedicated
sewerage master
plan for the
city is ready,
DJB ‘‘will
ensure that
sewage is
treated to a
level of 5-10
mg/l of BOD,
against the
parameter of 20.
All new STPs
will be created
with this in
mind.’’
Fresh water flow
is not something
that can be
wished for
easily. Rajendra
Singh, India’s
waterman, says
that in 1995
five states had
signed a treaty
to ensure that
10 cumec water
from Hathnikund
should be
released into
the river as
‘ecological
flow’. However,
the city’s
growing demand
and decreasing
groundwater
levels have left
it entirely
dependent on the
Yamuna. To make
matters worse,
the
DJB-maintained
pipe network is
in such a poor
shape that the
city loses about
54% of its
treated water
through leakages
and pilferage.
‘‘Delhi’s per
capital
consumption of
water is much
more than the
average and most
of it is being
consumed by the
rich. Water
should be
distributed more
equitably. There
is no
utilisation of
waste water
either. River
and sewer should
be kept separate
and treatment
plants should be
decentralised,’’
said Singh.
The city does
have sewage
infrastructure
that is not
being utilised
fully or very
intelligently.
Delhi has 40% of
the total
installed sewage
treatment
capacity in the
country despite
which the
‘treated’ sewage
that enters the
river does not
meet standards.
Common effluent
treatment plants
are also working
under capacity,
allowing a
massive amount
of toxic
industrial waste
to enter the
river unchecked.
‘‘Delhi records
about 3,600 mld
sewage
generation while
its treatment
capacity is
2,230 mld. Of
this, only 1,478
mld is being
utilised. At
various places,
drains carrying
treated sewage
are met with
drains that
carry untreated
sewage. These
are re-treated
at another point
and put back in
the drain where
more untreated
sewage mixes
with it. So much
money is being
wasted on
treating and
re-treating the
same sewage with
no result to
show,’’ says
Sunita Narain,
director, Centre
for Science and
Environment
(CSE).
DJB officials
contend that the
city’s
population has
grown beyond
anyone’s
imagination.
Several illegal
and unauthorised
colonies exist
where there is
no sewage
system. It is in
the process of
connecting such
colonies but
that process
would take at
least a few
decades.
‘‘Only about 60%
of the city is
sewered and most
of the waste is
going into
drains
directly,’’ said
Negi. ``In the
present
scenario, about
30-35% cannot be
sewered at all.
We are in the
process of
coming out with
a Master Plan
2031 for sewage
which will
address this
problem. This
separately would
need an
investment of Rs
15,000-20,000
crore. But if we
want our system
to work, we need
an efficient
solid waste
management
system in the
city for which
other civic
agencies would
also have to
pitch in.’’
None of the
other agencies
has taken its
role in cleaning
the river
seriously
either. The high
court had
mandated
creation of 13
enclosures for
immersion of
idols and pooja
samagri but
three years down
the line, only
one has been
made.
Under YAP-III,
Municipal
Corporation of
Delhi, with a
budget of Rs
34.5 crore, is
going in for
work like
mapping of the
river to
determine which
stretch requires
most attention.
However, experts
say that it is
time for
concerted effort
on the entire
river and not
piecemeal
efforts that do
more harm than
good.
|
|
15 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
Assam
Rifles, Intach
spar over
Aizawl’s vintage
cannons

A battle is on
in Aizawl
between the
INTACH and the
Assam Rifles
over two British
cannons,
supposed to be
of early
nineteenth
century vintage,
which have been
shifted out of
the city where
it had been
adorning the
Assam Rifles
Quarter Guard
since 1893.
“The two field
cannons are
Aizawl’s
heritage and
part of the
history of
establishment of
this city. They
have been
missing since
the 1 Assam
Rifles Battalion
moved out of
here,” said P
Rohmingthanga,
convenor of
INTACH’s Mizoram
chapter.
However, Major
Rajat Bhatt of
the Assam Rifles
Mizoram Range
headquarters
said the cannons
were “intact and
safe” with the 1
Assam Rifles
which is
currently in
Tuensang in
Nagaland. “The
cannons came
from somewhere
and were kept in
the Quarter
Guard that
belongs to the
Assam Rifles.
How can they
become part of
Aizawl’s
heritage?” he
asked.
But
Rohmingthanga, a
former IAS
officer, has his
contentions: “We
are grateful to
the Assam Rifles
for having built
the Quarter
Guard,
Commandant’s
Bungalow and the
old barracks
that today
constitute part
of Aizawl’s
heritage. But
that does not
mean that the
cannons were war
trophies of its
1st Battalion,”
he complained.
While the Home
Ministry had
earlier written
to Yogendra
Narain, member
secretary of
INTACH, that the
cannons were
property of the
British Indian
Army and
thereafter of 1
Assam Rifles,
INTACH’s Mizoram
chapter refuses
to accept this.
“The cannons
were installed
in its Quarter
Guard by the
head of the
civil
administration
and not by the
then Commandant
or any British
military or Army
officer of the
Lushai Hills MP
Battalion. It is
also crystal
clear that it
does not belong
to the 1 Assam
Rifles that came
into existence
here much later,
in 1917,”
Rohmingthanga
said.
It was Lt Col J
Shakespear, a
British Army
officer who, as
the first
district head of
the then
newly-created
Lushai Hills
district, had
got them up from
Lunglei (in
south Mizoram)
after they were
fished out of
the sea near
Chittagong port.
Lt Col
Shakespear, in
his book The
Making of Aijal,
written in 1939,
had said that
while the two
cannons were
part of the
armament of a
ship of war
stationed at
Chittagong, they
were thrown
overboard in
1857 to ensure
they did not
fall into the
hands of the
mutineers of the
34th Native
Infantry.
“Later, these
were fished out
and fitted with
wheeled
carriages and
eventually found
their way to
Rngamati, whence
they were sent
to Lunglei
during the
troubled times
of 1892. It
struck to me
that these aged
guns, one of
which from it
date might have
been fired at
Waterloo, would
for a suitable
addition to the
memorial of the
great Queen, so
I had brought
them over (to
Aizawl),” Lt Col
Shakespear
wrote. The
cannons were
placed flanking
the Queen
Victoria
Memorial Porch
in the Quarter
Guard, the
oldest building
of Aizawl.
“The Assam
Rifles, the
oldest
paramilitary
force in the
world, is
setting up a
museum in
Shillong to mark
its 175th year
of
establishment,
and the two
cannons are
being shifted to
the museum
soon,” said
Major Bhatt. But
Rohmingthanga is
determined and
says he will
continue to
fight till
Aizawl gets its
canons back.
|
|
15 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Govt admits
Ganga plan
flawed, yet
gives Rs 15, 000
cr

Twenty-five
years on and Rs
2,000 crore
later, the
ambitious
project to clean
up the Ganga has
not yielded the
desired results.
The govern-
ment, however,
hasn't lost its
zeal.
In its
submission
before the
Supreme Court,
the Centre has
claimed that it
proposes to
spend Rs 15,000
crore over the
next 10 years to
ensure that no
untreated sewage
or industrial
effluent flows
into the Ganga.
Additional
solicitor
general Mohan
Jain told the
bench headed by
Chief Justice
K.G.
Balakrishnan
that the
government was
committed to its
mission to clean
the river.
The government
also said it had
sought
assistance from
the World Bank,
which has "in
principle"
agreed to
support the
National Ganga
River Basin
Authority
(NGRBA) as its
priority
project.
The Centre has
approved new
projects worth
Rs 1,400 crores
that include
setting up of
sewage treatment
plants and aims
at water
conservation.
The extension of
the Ganga
project, earlier
known as the
Ganga Action
Plan, and
investment worth
crores of rupees
is despite the
fact that the
Centre has
failed to
control the
rising pollution
levels in
rivers.
During a
discussion on
the project
early this
month, the
ministry of
environment and
forests admitted
there were
shortcomings.
The report
submitted before
the Supreme
Court admits
that even after
setting up 58
STPs in 73
towns, 2,900
million litres
per day (mld) of
municipal sewage
generated from
major towns
along the Ganga
remain
untreated.
Of the total
expenditure Rs
900 crore was
spent in set-
ting up the STPs
that have a
treatment
capacity of just
1,025 mld.
The government
has accepted
that coliform
levels in the
river are
"unacceptably
high".
|
|
15 March 2010,
Hindustan Times
|
Illegal
mining in
sanctuary

On March 9, a
social worker,
Rishipal
Badhana, sent a
written
complaint to
Assistant
Commissioner of
Police (Ambedkar
Nagar) Mahipal
Singh, alleging
that Station
House Officer of
Sangam Vihar,
Satpal, allowed
illegal
operations
inside the
sanctuary.
On ACP Singh’s
instructions,
Inspector
Rajkumar Shah
from Ambedkar
Nagar police
station
conducted the
raid.
Post-raid, a
case under Mines
and Minerals Act
was registered
the same day
(Newsline has a
copy of the
FIR).
According to a
highly placed
source,
subsequent
investigations
have found a
well-networked
operation in
place.
Cross-border
activity
A senior
investigating
officer said the
initial probe
found illegal
mining of
Badarpur stone
in Haryana’s
Anangpur area,
just next to the
sanctuary, and
transported
through Asola
Sanctuary to
Gupta Colony in
Sangam Vihar.
The
investigating
officer said:
“The mining is
done about 10
feet from the
sanctuary walls,
in Anangpur. The
Badarpur stone
is then loaded
on camels, as
vehicles like
tractors and
tempos are not
allowed inside
the sanctuary,
and transported
to Delhi.
“The miners have
broken the
sanctuary’s
boundary wall on
the Sangam Vihar
side — here, the
illegally mined
stones are
loaded on trucks
and tractors and
taken to Gupta
Colony for
storage.”
They are
transported and
sold to builders
from there, the
investigating
officer added.
Questioning of
the arrested
truck driver and
further probe
into the mining
racket have
revealed that
trees were cut
and Badarpur
stones were
mined and
transported in a
similar fashion
from within
Asola Sanctuary.
Forest guards
‘helpless’
Forest
officials
said
operators
now use
unmanned
camels to
transport
the quarried
stones
through the
sanctuary
after a few
persons
manning the
animals were
caught in
the recent
past. The
arrested
persons were
let off by
court with
penalty,
officials
said.
According to
the
investigating
officer,
while
several
camels have
been
impounded,
the MCD did
not take in
the animals.
A “helpless”
senior
forest
official at
Asola
Sanctuary
said: “We
have 12
guards
posted in
the whole
sanctuary,
while we
need at
least 159.
We control
what we can
but the rest
is a law and
order
problem and
we have
written to
the police
on several
occasions
but no
action has
been
forthcoming
till date."
Complaints
to cops
* On March
4, 2008,
then ranger
in Asola
Sanctuary,
Ajay Sharma,
wrote to
Sangam Vihar
police about
illegal
activities
inside the
sanctuary
* On March
12, 2009,
ranger
Dharam Singh
wrote that
some
residents of
Anangpur,
Haryana,
were cutting
trees inside
the
sanctuary
and
transporting
them on
camels
* On March
25, 2009,
ranger Singh
wrote again,
saying he
suspected
illegal
traders of
wood
attacked a
security
guard inside
the
sanctuary
for
complaining
against them
(Newsline
has copies)
Mining Badarpur
stone *
Extra-deep mining of
Badarpur stone has
reduced the water
table in nearby
areas, including
Asola Sanctuary
* On May
8, 2009, the Supreme
Court ordered
suspension of all
mining activities —
both quarrying of
building materials
known as ‘minor’
mining, and
traditional
minerals, known as
‘major’ mining — in
the 448-sq km, or
1,500 hectares, of
Aravalli range in
Faridabad, Gurgaon
and Mewat districts
of Haryana.
|
|
16 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Paravur
synagogue to be
restored

Paravur
(Kerala): The
dilapidated
Jewish Synagogue
in North Paravur,
Kerala, one of
the oldest in
India, is set
for restoration.
“Work will
commence this
week and about
Rs. 63 lakh will
be spent to
restore it,”
said K.K.
Mohanan Pillai,
Director, Kerala
State Department
of Archaeology.
The date of
arrival of the
Jews in the
Malabar Coast
has not been
precisely
established yet.
Some accounts
date it back to
the days of King
Solomon, while
others place it
in the 1st
century CE.
North Paravur, a
small town about
20 km north of
Kochi, was one
of the places
where the Cochin
Jews, as they
were
collectively
known, settled.
The Cochin Jews
like the other
Jews in India
never faced any
anti-Semitism
and were an
integral of part
of the
multi-cultural
milieu. As the
10 {+t} {+h}
century copper
plates of
Bhaskara Ravi
Varman indicate,
some of them
even enjoyed
special
privileges.
The early
synagogues built
in Kerala are
now lost and
only those built
after the 16
{+t} {+h}
century survive.
Studies state
that there were
eight Jewish
communities in
Kerala and each
had their own
synagogues. The
extant ones
could be found
in Kochi,
Ernakulum, Mala,
North Paravur
and
Chennamangalam.
The Mattancherry
synagogue in
Kochi is the
most well known
of them.
The Paravur
synagogue
located on the
Jew Street of
the town was
built in 1615
CE, but
traditional
accounts hold
that it was
built on the
ruins of an
early synagogue
constructed in
1165 CE, making
it the earliest.
The services in
the Paravur
synagogue
continued till
1988.
The
International
Survey of Jewish
Monuments (ISJM),
an independent,
non-profit
educational
organisation,
reports that the
original bimah
(an elevated
wooden platform
from which the
Torah is read)
and the ark (a
chest or
cupboard in the
synagogue where
the Torah
scrolls are
kept), were
taken from
Paravur to
Israel in 1995.
Though the
Paravur
synagogue was
declared a
protected
monument in
1996, the
structure was
not well
maintained. It
was only last
year that the
Department of
Archaeology took
possession of
it, government
officials told
The Hindu.
The Jews started
immigrating to
Israel in 1949,
after the State
of Israel was
formed. By 1954,
most of them had
moved out of
Kerala severely
affecting the
upkeep of the
Jewish heritage
structures.
The idea to
conserve Jewish
heritage sites
in Kerala was
mooted in the
1990s and the
Chennamangalam
synagogue was
the first major
site to be
renovated by the
Department of
Archaeology in
2005.
“The restoration
of Paravur
synagogue which
is expected to
be completed in
September is
part of the
Muziris Heritage
Project,” says
S. Hemachandran,
Superintending
Archaeologist
and Special
Officer, Muziris
Project.
|
|
16 March 2010,
Hindu
|
Mining mafia
builds a sandy
grave

Just 22km
upstream from
the Okhla
barrage, the
Yamuna is a
different river.
Upstream of
Wazirabad in the
north, it is a
big, healthy
river in which
fish swim and to
which birds come
for water. Over
the next 22km,
it gets reduced
to a giant sewer
because of a
number of
reasons, the
biggest being
the city puking
out tones of its
refuse into the
river.
We, however,
look at a
different aspect
here — an aspect
often overlooked
in endless (and
often insincere)
debates on
saving the
Yamuna. It is
pillage of the
river sands,
often so
rapacious that
the deep
channels caused
by mechanized
illegal mining
are leading to
the Yamuna
changing its
course at
certain places.
If the process
goes unchecked,
the river might
shift eastwards,
triggering a
disaster.
Just before the
river reaches
Wazirabad, at
Palla village,
where mining is
rampant, the
river has
shifted,
inundating land
that was earlier
being used for
farming. This is
well known and
acknowledged by
authorities on
both side of the
river, Delhi and
Uttar Pradesh.
But neither take
action under the
garb of
jurisdiction
issues.
Activists say
it’s not just
petty matters of
jurisdiction,
but the fact
that illegal
sand mining is
today a multi-crore
business that
has led to
official
inaction. The
sand mafia carts
away truckloads
of sand daily
that are sold to
the construction
companies. And
it all happens
in front of
everyone’s eyes.
Huge machines
are stationed at
the edge of the
river to dig out
sand not only
from the banks
but also from
within the
river. In the
Palla area, a
temporary bank
was recently
created in the
middle of the
Yamuna to trap
sand,
effectively
shifting its
flow more
towards the
Delhi border and
creating a small
sand island in
the middle of
the river.
Why the
officials still
don’t act, and
why no one at
the top does not
step up to
settle disputes
of jurisdiction,
if any, is a
mystery. Just
how ridiculous
the situation is
can be gauged
from the fact
that on a day
when a bunch of
miners were
finally caught,
it took more
than seven hours
to figure out
whether they
were to be
booked by Delhi
or UP.
Says Manoj Misra
of Yamuna Jiye
Abhiyan, ‘‘Usage
of machinery is
causing a change
in the natural
topography. Deep
digging and
drilling leads
to formation of
ponds and when
the river floods
at any point of
time, there is a
danger of it
changing its
course. This can
prove to be
catastrophic for
the city
infrastructure
as well.’’
|
|
17 March 2010,
Times of India
|
River Needs
Space to Breathe
Building on the floodplains of the Yamuna deprives it of room
to wax and wane
with the
seasons. That’s
not just a
problem for the
river. It also
means seriously
disrupting the
process of
groundwater
recharge that
would otherwise
happen
naturally.
Unfortunately,
government
agencies like
the DDA have
taken the lead
in violating
this space,
reports Neha
Lalchandani
Everyone,
including every
government
agency, is
committed to
save the Yamuna.
And yet,
everything is
being done to
strangle the
already gasping
river. This
schizoid
behaviour is
manifest in
virtually every
dealing of ours
with the river.
We take here
just one aspect
— how we are
dealing with the
Yamuna’s vast
floodplains.
When you cross
the bridge over
the river and
drive east
towards
Ghaziabad, you
go past pleasing
green fields.
These are the
floodplains that
extend right
along the river.
When the rains
are heavy during
monsoons, much
of the
floodplains get
inundated.
Otherwise, it’s
beautiful but
also very
tempting for
real estate
developers to
grab a piece of
it, build
embankments, and
create acres of
prime property.
Guess who has
done exactly
that and shown
the way to the
real estate
sector? It’s
none other than
the government.
The DDA, for
instance, helped
the Akshardham
Temple to come
up without
initial
clearances,
despite protests
by civil society
groups. A bandh
was constructed
to restrict the
spill of the
flooded river
and ensure that
the crores spent
on the temple
would not be
washed away when
the river
flooded.
Later, using the
bandh as a
shield, the DDA
went ahead and
earmarked still
more space right
behind the
temple to build
the Commonwealth
Games Village.
In other words,
one act of
callousness,
committed
perhaps in the
name of faith,
became the basis
for another such
act, which in
turn could now
lead to several
such acts of
callousness. And
before we
realize what’s
happening, the
floodplains
would be gobbled
up by land
sharks.
Is protection of
the Yamuna
floodplains just
a hobby horse of
the ‘‘loony’’
green fringe? Is
it at all
necessary to
have the verdant
fields in the
middle of the
city when the
space can be
used up to build
much-needed
housing? Yes,
according to
experts, for the
sake of the
Yamuna. For the
river, this is
apparently a
matter of life
and death.
Unlike the
Thames which has
perennial flow,
the Yamuna is a
seasonal river.
In summer
months, it
shrinks to a
thin stream, but
in the monsoons
it can swell up
into a broad,
mighty river.
The floodplains
allows it to wax
and wane; they
allow the Yamuna
breathing space
which would
taken away if
both sides of
the river is
shored up by
concrete banks
as is the case
with the Thames,
and as has been
proposed by the
venerable Metro
Chief, E
Sreedharan.
And it’s not
just giving the
river breathing
space. The vast
floodplains play
a crucial role
in allowing
groundwater
recharge. Apart
from the
Himalayan snow
melt and rain
water, rivers of
the Gangetic
plains,
including the
Yamuna, get
replenished by
groundwater
flowing through
aquifers. These
moisten up the
layer under the
river bed —
which is like a
wet rolled towel
— to impart it
steady water
flow and good
health.
These aspects
are being
overlooked by
government
agencies and it
would appear,
wilfully. Manoj
Misra of the
Yamuna Jiye
Abhiyan says
that in the
three years that
it took to
finalize the
site for the
Commonwealth
Games Village,
several studies
were conducted
and almost all
were initially
against the
project on the
proposed
riverbed site.
‘‘However, in a
remarkable flip
flop, the DDA
managed to get
the required
go-ahead by even
the ministry of
environment and
forest (MoEF)
which had
initially
expressed
apprehension
over the site.
Certain other
permissions,
like those from
the Central
Ground Water
Authority and
the Yamuna
Standing
Committee, were
never received.
The Nagpur-based
National
Environmental
Engineering
Research
Institute
(NEERI), which
had earlier said
that no
construction
should be
permitted on the
river bed, in
January 2008
went against its
own report to
say that the
bandh created
for the
Akshardham
Temple was
sufficient to
prevent flooding
of the area,’’
said Misra.
Later on, DDA
also classified
the river bed as
zone ‘‘O’’ in
its Master Plan
2021, the
objective of
which was to
augment water
supply, contain
pollution and
have
eco-friendly
‘‘green’’
development.
However, with
respected
figures like E
Sreedharan
asking for the
river to be
channelled
between two
embankments like
the Thames, the
government’s
resolve has
weakened.
Experts say
enough damage
has already been
done by the
government’s
uninformed
approach towards
the floodplains,
and the time has
come for a
zero-tolerance
policy towards
encroachments on
it. Experts are
calling for the
entire
floodplain to be
notified so that
each successive
government does
not have the
leverage to play
around with the
floodplain’s
land use.
|
|
17 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
Metro
ignores DUAC
advice
UNDERGROUND PARKING Work continues in full swing despite arts
panel's
stop-work
directive
More than three
weeks after the
Delhi Urban Arts
Commission
(DUAC) asked the
Delhi Metro Rail
Corporation
(DMRC) to stop
work on a
multi-level
under- ground
parking on Sher
Shah Suri Marg,
work continued
in full steam on
Tuesday.
DMRC had given
an under- taking
in a meeting
with DUAC on
February 17 to
stop work and
first go ahead
with plans for
safety of an
unidentified
Mughal-era tomb.
"Preparatory and
mobilizing work"
was what the
DMRC described
as the deep
digging and iron
grid work at the
site.
Prompted by the
possible threat
to the
unidentified
tomb due to
heavy-duty
drilling and
digging, the
DUAC had visited
the site on
February 10.
Pointing out
that work goes
on at the site
unabated, Ratish
Nanda, a
conservation
architect and a
DUAC member,
said, "The
parking and the
access as
designed will
cause
irreparable
damage to both,
a 15th century
monument and the
Lutyen's
Bungalow Zone."
"It is shocking
that the con-
tractors -- DMRC
-- continue to
construct
illegally and
despite strong
reservations
from NDMC and
DUAC," Nanda
fumed.
DMRC officials
said, "We are
ready to do
whatever the
archaeological
experts suggest
for preserving
and conserving
the monument."
As far as
"stopping" work
is considered,
the DMRC
officials
maintained,
"DUAC
observations
related to
requirements of
clearances from
other bodies
such as Central
Vista Committee,
Chief Fire
Officer, the
Archaeological
Survey of India
and the Heritage
Conservation
Committee (HCC).
We already have
these."
Sources in the
Heritage
Conservation
Committee said
the project
proposal that
was given a
go-ahead
restricted to
only the
multi-level
parking.
"The proposal
for underpass
never came to
us," the sources
added.
High Court's
Registrar
General Rakesh
Kapoor said,
"The High Court
is concerned
only about
NDMC's approval
and not with
anybody else."
"Once the NDMC
gives per-
mission, our
contractor can
go ahead. There
is no need for
DUAC or UTTIPEC
permissions," he
added.
The Officer on
Special Duty in
the Lt
Governor's
office, Ranjan
Mukherjee, said
the proposal was
considered twice
and given a
clearance in
Delhi
Development
Authority's
Technical
Committee in May
2005 and July
2008
respectively.
An NDMC
spokesperson
confirmed, "The
plan for the
underpass is
being forwarded
to the UTTIPEC
soon."
But even when
the proposal
remains to be
approved, there
has been some
digging going on
bang in the
middle of the
road on Sher
Shah Suri Marg.
"This work is
not for under-
pass but for
shifting utility
services,"
defended DMRC
officials.
|
|
17 March 2010,
Hindustan Times
|
On sale:
Nizam’s
100-yr-old
palace

Hyderabad: Is
the Nazri Bagh
Palace, home of
Hyderabad’s last
Nizam Osman Ali
Khan, up for
grabs ? Highly
placed sources
indicate that
the grandson of
the last Nizam
of Hyderabad,
Mukarram Jah,
was in the city
last week to
strike a deal to
sell off the
100-year-old
palace, a
notified
heritage
monument. Jah
was in talks
with at least
three parties,
city-based R R
Masala and MBS
Jewellers and a
construction
firm from
Mumbai, during
his week-long
visit, sources
told TOI.
Jah — who now
lives in Turkey
— has been
planning to sell
the 5-acre
property for
some time now.
Going by the
market rate, the
land value alone
of the entire
palace premises
is estimated at
Rs 100-150
crore, but
industry
observers say
heritage
buildings fail
to fetch a good
price given that
the price of
restoration is
high and the
structure cannot
be demolished.
For those not
familiar with
Hyderabad, Nazri
Palace is not in
the old city –
it’s located in
the congested
Abids area.
While the
present deal has
not been
finalised,
sources say that
Jah, during his
visit, held
negotiations
with Md Hameed
of R R Masala
but no papers
were signed. The
same sources
reveal that a
deal had almost
been struck with
a Mumbai-based
construction
firm.
The companies
bidding for the
Nazri Bagh
palace refused
to confirm their
interest in the
property. An
official of RR
Masala said that
while the owner
was in the
business of
converting
palaces into
function halls,
he hadn’t bought
the Nazri Bagh
palace as yet.
The owner of MBS
Jewellers,
Sukesh Gupta,
couldn’t be
reached for
comment.
Nazri Bagh
palace was built
in 1909
Hyderabad: The
famous Nazri
Bagh Palace may
be up for sale.
Hyderabad’s last
Nizam Osman Ali
Khan lived in
the palace,
built in 1909,
until he died in
1967. The last
Nizam held court
in this palace
and it was then
converted into
the office of
the Nizam’s
private estate.
The Nazri Bagh
palace was known
by the curtain
that draped its
entrance. This
curtain, though
tattered with
time, had
remained an
important part
of this palace.
Historians say
this curtain was
lifted each time
the Nizam went
out and drawn
when he was
inside the
palace. This was
the western part
of the much
larger King
Kothi palace
complex that
currently stands
unchanged, with
the eastern
block (of King
Kothi palace)
converted to a
maternity
hospital and a
part of it
demolished about
30 years ago.
Historians and
aides of the
Nizam say that
Mukarram Jah’s
worth would
still be in
millions of
dollars or more
if one were to
consider his
assets alone.
|
|
18 March 2010,
Times of India
|
Walled city
off sealing, for
now

The sealing
drive of the
Municipal
Corporation of
Delhi (MCD) has
been postponed
for a while for
the walled city.
The drive,
however, is
expected to
continue in rest
of the city.
The walled city
has been
declared
protected in the
Master Plan 2021
and sealing
cannot be
undertaken in
the area unless
its
redevelopment
plan is
finalised.
"The area was
given three
years' exemption
for its
redevelopment
which has
already ended.
The appeal for
the extension of
the exemption
will be made
again," said
Deep Mathur, MCD
spokesperson.
The MCD has
sealed over
19,000
properties
during its
various phases
of sealing since
2006. Till
December 2009,
it has collected
Rs 499.35 crore
as conversion
charges, Rs
225.88 as
parking charges
and Rs 3.04 as
registration
charges from
traders and
shopkeepers
running their
business on
notified roads.
A total of 2,538
stretches were
declared mixed
land-use and
commercial
stretches under
the MPD 2021.
"We have
succeeded to a
large extent,
but are giving
the traders a
chance to clear
their dues, as
our focus is to
collect
conversion
charges rather
than sealing
properties. The
traders are
paying the
charges after
getting notice
from us," said a
senior MCD
official.
|
|
18 March 2010,
Tribune
|
Encroachments
removed at
Jantar Mantar

Activists and
protestors in
the capital will
have to look for
a new place to
hold protests as
in its
encroachment
removal drive,
the New Delhi
Municipal
Corporation
(NDMC) today
removed most of
the tents at
Jantar Mantar.
“The permanent
tents that had
been encroaching
space for a long
time on the
footpaths have
been removed. No
more
encroachment in
the name of
protests will be
allowed,” said
NDMC
spokesperson
Anand Tiwari.
Jantar Mantar
has been giving
face to
protests,
rallies and
dharnas in the
national capital
for over 15
years now. But
over time, it
also ended up as
a shelter for
certain groups
who have been
staying here for
years now.
As many as 25
permanent groups
are currently
stationed at
Jantar Mantar,
apart from the
floating
population that
comes for
short-term
protests.
However, those
stationed at
Jantar Mantar
for short-term
protests have
not been asked
to move.
Tiwari said,
“These people
have been asked
to go back. We
have made no
provisions to
relocate them.
These were land
encroachments
and I see no
point in
reallocation of
space to them.”
Madhav (name
changed), a
shopkeeper at
the Jantar
Mantar, said,
“It was high
time for these
tents to be
removed. It all
began with
setting up small
tents outside
the street
pavements and
slowly household
luggage found
space
inside—right
from bedsheets,
carpets, and
clothes to even
kitchenware.
There were some
who would cook
on their own,
while most of
them ate at
Bangla Sahib
Gurudwara.”
“Jantar Mantar
should remain a
symbol for
freedom of
expression and
not for
encroachments
plaguing the
footpaths,” he
added.
|
|
19 March 2010,
Tribune
|
Award for INTACH

Indian National
Trust for Art
and Cultural
Heritage has
been selected by
the jury for the
EMPI-Indian
Express Indian
Innovation
Awards for 2010.
The jury
unanimously
decided to award
the gold trophy
to INTACH.
A citation for
doing “exemplary
innovative work”
will also be
given.
|
|
20 March 2010,
Hindu
|
PM moots
conservation
bodies in
protected areas

Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh
has expressed
concern over
more and more
species being
entered into the
list of
endangered
animals and
exhorted the
state
governments to
revamp their
structures to
enhance
conservation.
Chairing the
fifth meeting of
the National
Board of
Wildlife (NBWL)
at his official
residence on
Thursday
evening, the
Prime Minister
mooted the
formation of a
conservation
foundation in
each of the
protected areas
(PAs) on the
lines of the
tiger
foundations
being set up in
each tiger
reserve, Dr
Bibhab Kumar
Talukdar, a
member of NBWL,
told The Tribune
today.
The meeting also
decided to have
separate
departments of
forest, wildlife
and environment
within the
Ministry of
Environment and
Forest (MoEF).
Union
Environment and
Forest Minister
Jairam Ramesh
informed NBWL
members that the
ministry was
open to
providing 50 per
cent of the
salary of newly
recruited
frontline staff
in the states
for the next
five years, but
state
governments
would have to
bear the
remaining
expenditure.
|
|
21 March 2010,
Tribune
|
Reduce water
demand & wastage
to revive river

What should and
can be done to
clean the
Yamuna? What is
the strategy for
business-unusual
so that we can
spend more money
but this time
get returns of a
living and
breathing river.
One, we need to
change the art
of pollution
control. First,
we must
understand that
rivers need
water to
assimilate our
waste. Today,
Delhi takes
water from the
river, upstream
of Wazirabad,
and returns only
sewage to it.
Between the two
barrages —
Wazirabad, when
the river enters
Delhi till Okhla,
where it exits
Delhi — there is
no water. There
are only some 17
drains that
bring sewage
into the river.
Even if we were
to treat every
drop of waste
before it
reaches the
river, it will
do nothing. The
river must have
water to dilute
waste. And to
live.
There are two
ways for Delhi
to get water in
the river. One,
it can demand
that Haryana
should give it
more water. But
this will be
difficult. All
cities, up or
downstream, do
what Delhi does.
They take every
drop of water
the river has
and give it only
their waste. All
cities are
desperate for
water.
The second
option is that
Delhi can begin
to reduce its
own water
demand, so that
it can allow
water to flow in
the river. This
can be done.
Delhi, today has
the highest
water
availability in
the country —
already over 250
litres per
person per day.
The richest
cities of the
world, like
those in
Denmark, have
roughly 110
litres per
person per day.
Delhi needs so
much water
because it
wastes half the
water in
distribution.
This must be
stopped or at
least minimized.
But importantly,
money for river
cleaning must
incorporate this
target — how
much will Delhi
do to reduce
water use. Water
is part of the
sums of waste.
This also means
we have to use
less water in
our homes, so
that we
discharge less
waste. We have
to be part of
the solution to
the river.
Remember our
flush is
enjoined to the
Yamuna.
Then we must
change the
science of river
cleaning. We
know the river
will not be
clean till we
treat all the
sewage of the
city. And the
only way we can
treat the sewage
is by making
solutions more
affordable. In
the current
situation, Delhi
government does
not even recover
the cost of
water supply,
forget sewage
disposal. We
must demand
technologies
that we all can
pay for. This
will drive the
change in
approach.
The second
agenda is to
fully utilize
the capacity of
our sewage
treatment
plants. Delhi
has capacity to
clean 2330
million litres
of sewage each
day —enough to
treat 70-90% of
current waste,
depending on the
estimate you
take. This will
mean bringing
waste to the
plants, by
lifting it from
open drains, not
just waiting to
build new ones
or building and
repairing more
drains. The
hardware
approach needs
to go.
The third agenda
is connected and
critical. The
treated effluent
must not be put
back into the
same open drain,
which carries
the untreated
waste of the
majority. It
must be reused
and recycled, as
far as possible
locally so that
costs of pumping
are reduced.
Today, we spend
huge money in
first pumping
sewage long
distances for
treatment and
then waste this
effort by
dumping the
cleaned water in
unclean drains.
In other words,
sewage must be
reused in
gardens, in
lakes or in
industry. Sewage
treatment plants
must be built
only when they
have planned for
reuse.
Just consider.
Today, sewage is
treated at the
Yamuna Vihar
plant in east
Delhi and
disposed of in
the drain
carrying
untreated waste
outside the
plant. Then the
same waste is
treated further
down in the
Kondli treatment
plant. Cleaned
effluent is then
dumped in a
drain, which
flows past the
new growth
colonies of
Noida with huge
discharge. By
the time it
reaches the
river, there is
sewage, no
water. Get
serious, for
heaven’s sake.
Fourth, we must
treat sewage
directly in the
open drains that
criss-cross the
city. Instead of
waiting for
every open
stormwater drain
to go
underground and
disappear, the
system will
ensure all waste
is treated and
cleaned as it
flows through
the city. This
would mean using
innovative
technologies for
bio-remediation
green plants and
oxidation to
decompose and
degrade sewage.
Get real.
Fifth, we should
build sewage
treatment plants
as close to the
bank of the
river to treat
what remains in
the drains. This
will need
technologies,
which need less
land to treat
sewage. The
design is not to
discharge
anything but
treated effluent
in Yamuna.
All this will
require our
involvement. We
must demand an
effective action
plan for
cleaning our
river. Never
forget, we all
live downstream.
1. The river
must have water
to dilute waste
2. Delhi can
demand water
from Haryana,
reduce its own
water demand
(availability
250 litres per
person daily,
highest in
country)
3. Delhi must
stop/ minimize
wasting half its
water in
distribution
4. Delhiites
must use less
water at home,
so that they
discharge less
waste
5. Change
science of river
cleaning by
making solutions
more affordable.
Must demand
technologies
that we all can
pay for
6. Fully utilize
capacity of
sewage treatment
plants. Need to
lift sewage from
open drains
instead of
building more
infrastructure.
7. Treated
effluents must
not be put back
into open drain
which carries
untreated waste
of majority. It
must be reused
and recycled as
far as possible
locally
8. Treat sewage
directly in open
drains with
innovative
technologies
should build
sewage treatment
plants close to
the bank of the
river to treat
what remains in
the drains
|
|
21 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
After years of
neglect, park
gets heritage
tag

125-acre plot in
Mehrauli to be
transferred to
ASI for
development,
integration with
Qutab Minar
complex
Lying neglected
for years, the
Mehrauli
Archaeological
Park might now
be developed and
integrated with
the Qutab Minar,
a World Heritage
Site, and the
adjoining
monuments in
Mehrauli to form
a larger
heritage zone.
At a meeting of
the Delhi Urban
Heritage
Foundation
(DUHF), chaired
by the
Lieutenant-Governor
Tejendra Khanna,
the Delhi
Development
Authority (DDA)
is learnt to
have agreed to
transfer the
125-acre plot to
the
Archaeological
Survey of India
(ASI) for
development and
maintenance.
The DUHF, set up
by the DDA in
1999 to frame
and implement
policies for
conservation of
the city’s built
and natural
heritage, has
been considering
ways of
developing the
park for
sometime.
According to
sources, the ASI
had written to
the L-G
expressing
interest in
taking up the
project.The L-G
had then
requested the
DDA, which
presently owns
the land, to
transfer it to
ASI. In a
meeting of the
Foundation held
in the first
week of March,
the DDA agreed
to transfer the
plot to ASI for
its development
and maintenance,
a DUHF member
told Newsline.
“We had been
planning to
develop and
integrate the
park with the
Qutab Minar as
it already falls
in the buffer
zone of the
World Heritage
Site and is also
in proximity
with several
other
significant
monuments in
Mehrauli. The
entire area,
from the remains
of the Lal Kot
wall to the park
encompassing
other heritage
structures in
Mehrauli, can be
developed
together into a
heritage zone
with a linked
history,” a
senior ASI
official said.
“We will
restrict entry
to the park and
build fencing
around the
larger heritage
zone. We are
waiting for an
official
notification
from the DDA to
start drawing up
a final plan.”
According to ASI
officials,
conservation of
the Lal Kot wall
— the remains of
the
fortification
wall around the
first city of
Delhi — had run
into trouble.
The DDA owned
the land
adjoining the
wall and the ASI
was seeking its
transfer too.
If this proposal
comes through,
the ASI will be
able to develop
the entire area.
The Mehrauli
Archaeological
Park, which has
already been
identified as a
heritage zone
under the Delhi
Masterplan 2021,
is riddled with
issues like
encroachment and
a lack of
effective
supervision due
to involvement
of multiple
agencies.
Multiple
ownership
While the park,
which houses
roughly 70
heritage
structures, is
owned by the
DDA, around 15
of these
monuments are
protected by the
ASI; over 12
have been
notified by the
state Department
of Archaeology.
The Wakf Board
too owns some of
the mosques and
tombs in the
park.
“The heritage
structures here
range across
different
periods in
history. Several
of these
monuments have
been encroached
upon. Only
piecemeal
development of
the park has
been possible,
with different
agencies
involved,” said
A G K Menon,
Convenor, Delhi
Chapter, Indian
National Trust
for Art and
Cultural
Heritage.
Officials of the
state Department
of Archaeology,
which offered to
take up the
project earlier,
maintained the
department is
still keen on
developing the
area and there
is no dearth of
funds. The ASI,
officials said,
had, however,
shown a lukewarm
response towards
taking up the
project.
|
|
22 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
City water table
dipping 2m/yr

The alarm bells
are ringing
right below our
feet. Delhi and
portions of
Rajasthan
falling in the
National Capital
Region (NCR)
extract almost
double the
amount of
groundwater
recharged every
year. The
situation is
equally bad in
NCR parts of
Haryana,
particularly
Gurgaon and
Faridabad, which
largely depend
on groundwater.
A status report
on groundwater
by the NCR
Planning Board
says the water
table in Delhi
is dipping by 2
metres every
year. The city
currently draws
0.47 billion
cubic metres (bcm)
of water from
the ground every
year while only
0.28 bcm gets
recharged. That
means Delhi
loses a whopping
0.19 bcm of
groundwater in a
year.
In the case of
Rajasthan, the
report says the
annual
extraction is
1.14 bcm against
the available
0.79 bcm.
Haryana draws
2.72 bcm whereas
the annual
availability is
2.64 bcm.
The report says
groundwater
resources in
seven of nine
blocks in Delhi,
25 of 42 blocks
in Haryana and
all four blocks
in Alwar
(Rajasthan) are
over-exploited.
Overall, NCR
uses up 7.59 bcm
of groundwater
in a year
against
availability of
8.47 bcm. The
numbers look
good only
because of high
recharge rates
in NCR parts of
UP: Bulandshahr,
Ghaziabad,
Meerut, Khurja
and Gautam Budh
Nagar together
draw 3.25 bcm
against the
available 4.76
bcm.
‘‘Though more
availability of
surface water in
UP region has
saved us so far,
rapid
urbanization in
districts
adjoining Delhi
will push up
demand. That may
lead to a huge
crisis, with no
surplus
availability,’’
said NCRPB
member secretary
Noor Mohammad.
Ponds key to
water table
recharge
A status report
on groundwater
by the NCR
Planning Board
(NCRPB) has
revealed that
the water table
in Delhi and
nearby areas is
dipping
alarmingly.
Groundwater is
the third major
source of water
in NCR. The
report mentions
that the total
water demand in
NCR for
domestic,
industrial, fire
fighting and
irrigation
purposes was
estimated at
33.39 bcm per
year in 2005.
And the demand
is likely to
increase steeply
in the future
due to
population
growth, rapid
urbanization, an
upward looking
economy and
rising standards
of living.
Mohammad said
the regional
planning board
has now prepared
a plan for
recharging
groundwater in
the region. The
report points
out that the
groundwater
level in NCR is
getting critical
in the absence
of a broad
framework for
rainwater
harvesting and a
plan to save the
disappearing of
ponds and lakes.
Though NCR
receives 22.54
bcm of rainwater
every year,
approximately
16.9 bcm falls
during the
monsoon season
alone. It is
estimated that
on an average,
6.27 bcm of
water is lost
due to surface
run-off. The
report points
out that
region’s
capacity to
store as much as
183.82 bcm of
groundwater
remains highly
unutilized.
Now, the
planning board
wants to reverse
the trend. It
has identified
45,000 recharge
structures which
could yield
approximately 1
bcm of
groundwater
annually. The
identified
locations
include areas in
the Aravali
ridge, abandoned
quarries,
village ponds,
urban areas, the
flood plains of
Yamuna, Ganga
and Hindon, and
institutional
and residential
buildings. This
can be done by
desilting ponds
and creating
artificial
recharge pits in
both urban and
rural areas.
The report has
proposed 100
basin recharge
structures and
100 river
recharge pits in
95sq km of the
Yamuna flood
plains in Delhi.
It also shows
that
approximately
250 trenches can
be constructed
along the ridge
to harvest 2.5
million cubic
meter (MCM)
rainwater
besides
restoring about
3,000 abandoned
quarries in
Aravalis for
channelizing
run-off
rainwater. Delhi
could also
improve its
groundwater
situation by
reviving 200
ponds with
vertical shafts
and desilting
500 existing
ponds, it says.
|
|
22 March 2010,
Times of India
|
Footpaths, roads
in Lutyens’
Delhi get new
look for Games

Roads and lanes
in Lutyens’
Delhi will soon
be a walker’s
paradise.
Apart from the
streetscaping
project for 11
roads leading to
Commonwealth
Games venues,
the New Delhi
Municipal
Council (NDMC)
has taken up
renovation of
footpaths of at
least 41 roads
in areas under
its jurisdiction
before the
October event.
The footpaths
will be given
nearly identical
look, with
sandstone or
pre-cast
concrete slabs
being used for
the work.
Work on all 41
roads is in
progress and
most are
expected to be
ready by
September.
Renovation of
the footpaths of
the C-hexagon,
the road
bordering India
Gate, is
expected to be
among the first
to be completed.
While civil work
is almost
complete,
horticultural
work is expected
to start soon.
According to an
NDMC official,
the civic body
is trying to
avoid wastage of
resources by
re-using stones
that are “in a
good condition”
from existing
footpaths.
Footpaths on the
main roads are,
meanwhile, being
relaid using
fresh stones.
“Most lanes in
the area have
undamaged
stones, but the
surface has
become uneven.
For these lanes,
the stones are
being dug out,
the footpath is
being levelled
and the same
stones are being
used to cover
it,” he said.
In February, the
municipal body
had approved the
tenders for work
on a set of
footpaths inside
lanes and for a
set on the
roads. The lanes
include Hailey
Lane, Connaught
Lane, Pt Ravi
Shankar Shukla
Lane, Copernicus
Lane, Balwant
Rao Lane and the
lane branching
off from Mahatma
Jyoti Rao Phule
Marg. The roads
include
Sikandara Road
and Hailey Road,
including the
Mandi House
roundabout.
Other places
where footpaths
are being relaid
include Dr Zakir
Hussain Marg,
Pandara Road,
Shershah Suri
Road, Ferozeshah
Road, Tolstoy
Marg, Jantar
Mantar Road,
Safdarjung Road
and Akbar Road.
Work has been
taken up under
two plans —
Pavement
Improvement Plan
and Lane
Improvement
Plan.
A senior NDMC
official said
care has been
taken to ensure
the trees lining
the pavements
are not harmed.
This has been
done by
introducing
“sieve covers”.
The area around
a tree is
covered with a
slab with
perforations in
it to ensure the
trees are not
surrounded by
concrete and can
be watered. This
has been done on
Lodhi Road and
Max Mueller
Marg.
|
|
22 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Hundreds of
chinar trees
face the axe

World Forestry
Day-Widening of
Roads
Even as World
Forestry Day is
being observed
today, hundreds
of Chinar trees
in the Kashmir
valley face the
axe in the name
of development.
With the state
government
undertaking a
massive project
of widening
various roads,
including the
national highway
and the Narbal
Tangmarg Road,
hundreds of
Chinar trees en
route will be
axed.
A large number
of these trees
had been cut in
the past to lay
a railway line
in the Kashmir
valley and now
many more face a
similar fate in
the name of
development.
“Chinar is the
identity of the
Kashmir valley.
In the recent
past, the number
of such trees
has dwindled
considerably and
instead of
protecting
these,the
government would
be cutting
them,” Nisar
Ahmed, an
environment
expert, said.
Recently the
‘unscientific
pruning’ of
hundreds of
Chinar trees by
the authorities
of University of
Kashmir on the
Nasim Bagh
campus of the
university
attracted a lot
of criticism
from various
social circles
and
environmentalists.
Surveys
conducted by the
government and
various NGOs
have found that
the number of
Chinar trees in
the Kashmir
valley has
decreased
considerably.
The grandeur of
Chinar trees add
to the beauty of
the Kashmir
valley,
especially
during autumn
when the mighty
trees shed
leaves giving a
fire-like- hue
to the
surroundings.
The government
has undertaken
the project to
widen the roads
from Srinagar to
Tangmarg where
the world famous
tourist resort
of Gulmarg is
located.
However, the
state government
says it has
undertaken
wide-scale
plantation drive
to save Chinar
trees.
“We have started
a plantation
drive to
increase the
number of Chinar
trees, which
have been cut
indiscriminately
in the past two
decades. The
plantation
drive, which was
launched a few
days ago, will
continue till
March 31,”
director of the
Floriculture
Department GS
Sarwar Naqash
said.
|
|
22 March 2010,
Tribune
|
Old norms
killing
saplings, green
cover in Aravali
range

Illegal mining
and the felling
of trees are not
the only reasons
why the Aravalis
are fast losing
their forest
cover. The
other, perhaps
the biggest,
problem is the
government’s
plantation
schemes which
are grossly
inadequate for
the sustainable
development of
green cover.
Under Haryana’s
plantation
schemes, funds
are allotted for
the watering of
saplings only
three times a
year as compared
to the Delhi
government’s
norms which
provide funds
for the watering
of saplings
three times a
week during the
first year of
plantation.
This was
recently
revealed in an
answer to an RTI
application.
Senior forest
officials say
this is because
of an archaic
law formulated
40-50 years ago
when climatic
conditions were
very different
from now and
when Haryana got
more rainfall
and its water
tables were
higher. Now,
because of
drastic changes
in both, the
survival rate of
plantations has
plummeted to
20-25% from an
earlier 70-75%.
‘‘Under the
government’s
urban forestry
scheme, about Rs
16,000 is
allotted per
‘running
kilometre’ for
the care of 166
saplings. The
scheme
stipulates that
saplings be
watered a
maximum of three
times a year.
The Centre’s
forest
development
scheme allots Rs
12,800 per
hectare, using
which we are
required to
water plants
twice a year,”
said D K Sinha,
conservator of
forests,
Gurgaon.
Forest officials
say the norms
need severe
revision. ‘‘We
have been
writing to
higher
authorities
asking that
changes be made
to policy
because
conditions have
changed
completely. The
region is
getting more
arid by the day
because of
scanty rainfall,
which leads to
depleting water
tables, and
because of which
it has become
difficult for
plants to
survive,” Sinha
said.
Other factors
are also
responsible for
the depletion of
forest cover.
‘‘Since most
areas of the
region are
managed by local
communities and
panchayats, the
forest
department
cannot develop
them the way it
wants to.
Grazing and tree
felling are also
rampant,” Sinha
added.
Forest officials
said the funds
crunch has also
affected the
quality of trees
planted.
‘‘Earlier we
used to plant
dhak, dhok,
khairy, ronjh,
hingota, salar,
gugal, mesquite,
papri saplings,
which had high
leaf cover and
timber value.
Now we plant
only wild trees
like the keekar
which have low
leaf cover and
no timber
value,” said
Devendra Rao,
forest range
officer, Gurgaon
range.
If the survival
rate of
plantations is
less than 70%,
lower-rung
officials are
made scapegoats,
and the lost
money recovered
from them by
cutting their
salaries. ‘‘It
is difficult to
carry out
operations like
earth works,
soil
preparation,
weeding, water
supply, etc with
the meagre funds
we get,” said
Rao.
Environmentalists,
meanwhile,
express concern.
“At a time when
issues like
global warming
and climate
change are on
top of every
country’s agenda
— even our own
politicians and
officials are
talking about
the adverse
effects of
deforestation —
the information
released by the
forest
department shows
the government
is not serious
about the
issue,” said
Vivek Kamboj, an
environmentalist.
“It is very
important to
plant saplings,
but our
responsibility
does not end
there. We have
to make certain
the saplings are
kept alive and
healthy. Which
will not happen
if immediate
measures are not
taken to change
existing laws,”
said Kamboj.
Environmentalists
said the
existing norms
are not really
helping. ‘‘While
the National
Forest Policy
says every state
should have 33%
of its area
under forest
cover, Haryana
scores a dismal
7%. The state
did not even
meet the 10%
target which it
had set for
itself,” Kamboj
added.
|
|
22 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
On this day, 79
yrs ago, all
eyes were on
Lahore

The execution of
Bhagat Singh,
Shivram Rajguru
and Sukhdev on
March 23, 1931,
changed the
course of the
freedom
struggle.
Sentenced to
death for the
murder of
British police
official JP
Saunders in 1929
following the
Lahore
Conspiracy Case
trial, the three
were lodged in
the Central
Jail, Amritsar.
The atmosphere
in Lahore was
charged.
“Khun ka badla
khun” cried
posters of the
Punjab Inquilabi
Party stuck on
walls all over
Lahore,
justifying the
killing of
British police
official
Saunders.
Members of the
Bhagat Singh
Appeal Committee
were knocking at
every door
gathering
memorials from
residents
addressed to the
Viceroy. The
Elphinstone
Theatre on
Mcleod Road was
showing “Murder:
Who killed Edna
Druce” but no
one seemed
interested. The
Naujawan Bharat
Sabha volunteers
were out on the
streets
protesting
against the
death sentence.
On March 1, The
Tribune reported
the death of
Chandra Shekhar
Azad in a clash
with the police
at Allahabad.
The same day we
had an exclusive
blow-by-blow
account of
Bhagat Singh’s
case as argued
before the Privy
Council. The
Gandhi-Irwin
talks that
occupied the
front page of
The Tribune for
several days
that month too
belied all hopes
of amnesty for
the three.
On March 25, our
headline, read:
Bhagat Singh,
Rajguru and
Sukhdev
executed.
“Bhagat Singh,
Sukhdev and
Rajguru were
executed at 7.15
pm on Monday.
Earlier in the
day two
petitions filed
in connection
with their case
had been
rejected by the
High Court.
Counsel
telegraphed to
the Viceroy to
stay execution
as they were
moving the Privy
Council against
the orders of
the High Court.”
The report gave
a detailed
account of the
execution and
how the
relatives did
not even get to
see the bodies
of the martyrs.
“It is reported
that the bodies
were secretly
removed in motor
lorries from the
jail and
transported to
some place on
the banks of the
Sutlej near
Ferozepur where
they were
disposed of at
the dead of the
night”
The Tribune that
day also quoted
from Bhagat
Singh and his
comrades last
letter to the
Punjab governor:
“The only thing
we want to point
out,” they said,
is that
according to the
verdict of your
court we are
said to have
been waging war
and are
consequently war
prisoners.
Therefore we
claim to be
treated as such,
i.e. we claim to
be shot dead
instead of
hanged. It rests
with you now to
prove that you
seriously meant
what your court
has said and
prove it through
action.”
The Tribune,
Lahore
March 18,
1931:
Kishen Singh,
father of Sardar
Bhagat Singh
received the
following letter
from Mohammad
Akbar, deputy
superintendent,
Lahore Central
Jail: “Dear Sir,
I am directed to
inform you that
your interview
with condemned
prisoner Bhagat
Singh has been
fixed for the
March 23, 11 am.
You should
arrange to bring
all your blood
relations with
you.” Another
notice to the
same effect but
with the words
“that interview
will be the last
interview with
Bhagat Singh”
was received
through the
tehsil
officials.
Similar notices
were received by
the mother of
Rajguru. Kishen
Singh sent a
telegram to
Mahatma Gandhi:
“Just received
Viceroy’s order.
Relation’s mercy
plea rejected.
Last interview
with Bhagat
Singh on 23rd”.
|
|
23 March 2010,
The Tribune
|
IGNCA archivist
cries foul over
misuse of rare
pictures

DVD of rare
photos worth
hundreds of
crores
A digital video
disc (DVD)
containing rare,
invaluable
images clicked
by the doyen of
Indian
photographers
Raja Deen Dayal
in the 19th
Century and
estimated to be
worth hundreds
of crores is
causing much
rumbling within
the Indira
Gandhi National
Centre for Arts
(IGNCA). So much
so that the
matter has even
reached the
Prime Minister.
IGNCA deputy
archivist Himani
Pande has sought
permission from
centre’s member
secretary Prof
Jyotindra Jain
to lodge an FIR
against the
wrongdoers,
‘outsiders’ who
she alleged have
taken the DVD of
archival images
outside the
IGNCA premises
for printing at
a commercial
studio without
her knowledge
and consent.
Pande has been
the IGNCA
archivist for
the last two
decades and
in-charge of the
collections.
In her letters
(in possession
of The Pioneer)
written on
February 22 and
March 10, 2010
to Jain and
simultaneously
sent to the
Prime Minister,
his Principal
Secretary,
Cabinet
Secretary,
Culture
Secretary
besides the
President and
all the trustees
of IGNCA, Pande
has alleged she
fears the
high-resolution
DVD could be
grossly misused
for personal
gains given the
exhibiting and
sale value of
the images.
Sources pointed
out that the DVD
contains around
2,500-3,000
images clicked
by the ‘prince
of Indian
photographers’
and the IGNCA
plans to put
around 300 of
them at an
exhibition in
the next few
months. “A date
for the
exhibition
hasn’t been
finalised as
yet,” they
maintained.
Pande has cited
two instances to
back her
apprehensions.
Firstly,
consultant
Pramod Kumar KG
and a project
trainee Kanika
Samra, who were
appointed by the
IGNCA to manage
the exhibition,
were paid their
dues overlooking
a request by
Pande to
withhold payment
till they had
returned the
images.
Secondly, the
IGNCA entered
into an
agreement with
one Kaushik
Ramaswamy
through a tender
for digital
restoration and
colour
restoration of
300 images and
taking
photographs of
these images in
different sizes.
Pande expressed
surprise how the
images could
have gone out of
the archival
section without
her knowledge.
“I have been
totally kept
away from all
this which
raises several
suspicions,” she
stated, adding
that she was yet
to get a
response to her
request for
permission to
file the FIR.
However, when
contacted, Pande
refused to
comment on the
issue.
But Prof Jain,
who’s in France,
categorically
rubbished the
allegations. “No
DVD is missing.
It’s safe in my
cupboard in my
office. As for
printing is
concerned, if
someone wants to
do it, he can
simply copy the
DVD.
The allegations
have no basis.
In fact, it was
Pande herself
who gave the
high resolution
DVD to Pramod
though she was
asked to give a
low resolution
one,” Jain told
The Pioneer.
Jain, in fact,
asserted that
Pande herself
could not be
above board just
because she’s a
Government
employee. “Can
she herself not
be a suspect for
circulating the
DVD? She never
wants to allow
public access to
the archives,
which we are
planning. We
will be
instituting an
inquiry against
her for the
current state of
the archives,”
Jain said.
On his part,
taking a strong
exception to
Pande’s
allegations,
consultant
Pramod Kumar KG
said: “The DVD
is back with the
IGNCA and I have
a signed receipt
for it. I was
appointed for
research and
selection of
images from the
collection of
about 3,000 of
them for the
exhibition.
Pande is
mentally
unstable. It’s
surprising how
she’s making
such allegations
when the fact
she is the one
who got me the
contract.”
While the two
sides continue
to take on each
other, sources
said the more
serious issue as
to whether the
images have
actually been
misused should
be inquired into
given their
immense market
and historical
value.
|
|
23 March 2010,
Pioneer
|
Bihar puts best
foot forward

A fortnight-long
exhibition to
mark the State's
Foundation Day
To commemorate
Bihar's
Foundation Day,
the State
Government is
for the first
time organising
a fortnight-long
handloom and
handicrafts
exhibition-cum-fair
that opened at
Pragati Maidan
here on Monday.
Housed in Hall
No. 15 of the
sprawling
exhibition
ground, “Bihar
Utsav” has on
view the State's
historical and
cultural
heritage, art
and its
developmental
initiatives to
attract domestic
and foreign
investment. A
special cultural
event will be
organised at
Hamsadhwani
Theatre of
Pragati Maidan
in which noted
singer Sharda
Sinha, fondly
known as ‘Bihari
Kokila', will
regale music
lovers.
Oldest surviving
rock cave
On entering the
hall, visitors
will pass
through the
Barabar caves
situated in
Jehanabad
district that is
the oldest
surviving rock
cave in the
country. The
entry to the
main hall is
through a model
of Bodhi temple
that was erected
by King Ashoka.
There are 42
stalls
displaying
Tikuli art,
Mithila
painting,
Motihari
terracotta
products, Nepura
silk from
Nalanda, Siki
products,
stone-crafted
elephants, jute
jewellery and
the famous
handloom
bed-sheets of
Bihar Sharif.
“The modern
State of Bihar
was carved out
of Bengal
presidency on
March 22, 1912.
To mark this
historical
occasion and
promote a sense
of pride and
belonging among
the people, the
Bihar Government
has decided to
celebrate the
Foundation Day
on March 22.
Gala functions
will be
organised across
the State.
Cultural
extravaganzas
are being
organised at
panchayat level
to involve
people's
participation in
large numbers,”
said Bihar
Industrial Area
Development
Authority
managing
director Anshuli
Arya addressing
a press
conference here
on Monday.
Informing that
the stall has
been segregated
into three
parts, Ms. Arya
said Bihar's art
and culture are
being showcased
in Section I,
highlighting
Bihar as the
motherland of
Lord Buddha and
Mahavira, the
arrival of
Sufism, episodes
from the life of
Guru Gobind
Singh and
contribution of
leaders from the
State in the
freedom
struggle.
Progress of
contemporary
Bihar is
depicted in the
second section.
The last section
has on sale the
best of Bihari
handicrafts,
handlooms and
books authored
by famous
writers, added
Ms. Arya.
Resident
Commissioner
Alok Chaturvedi
said that to
encourage
industrialists
to invest in
Bihar, the State
Government is
concentrating on
infrastructure
and repairing
roads in cities
and villages.
“However, we are
lagging behind
in national
highways as only
one project from
Patna to
Muzaffarpur has
been cleared. We
have tackled the
law and order
problem in the
State and are
now trying to
generate
electricity so
that industrials
can set up
units.”
For food
connoisseurs, a
cuisine corner
has been set up
at the Pragati
Maidan
exhibition by
Hotel Maurya,
Patna, which is
preparing a wide
assortment of
authentic
lip-smacking
dishes made of
sattu like litti
and parathas
apart from
various curries,
seekh kabab,
keema, khichdi,
kheer and halwa.
|
|
23 March 2010,
The Hindu
|
Tiger on its
last leg

The Madhya
Pradesh
government
remained in
denial mode for
years about the
declining number
of tigers in
Panna till the
wild cat went
locally extinct,
but its new
Forest Minister
has brought some
hope for the
beleaguered Park
with his
plainspeak.
Sartaj Singh’s
recommendation
for a Central
Bureau of
Investigation
(CBI) probe into
the Panna
fiasco, almost
countering the
findings of a
state inquiry
committee
report, is
surely not a
magic pill and
is definitely
not going to win
him any friends
in the
bureaucracy and
forest set-up.
But the
recommendation,
if followed up
by that by the
Chief Minister,
is surely a
welcome change
from the stand
taken by the
minister’s
predecessors,
who went blindly
by the figures
provided by the
forest
department
officers and
were
hyper-sensitive
to criticism.
The first
warning bells in
Panna were
sounded by
wildlife expert
Raghu Chundawat
several years
ago when the
then premier
Park’s priority
shifted from
protection and
monitoring to
tourism.
“Why should they
wait for the CBI
report? The
government can
take
administrative
action by fixing
responsibility,
because officers
continued to lie
for years,”
Chundawat told
The Indian
Express.
The decline
began in
mid-2002 when
the Park lost
its first
tigress and in
December that
year a breeding
tigress was
found dead.
Since then the
Park, spread
over 543 sq km,
continued to
lose wild cats
at regular
intervals and a
census by the
Wildlife
Institute of
India confirmed
in January 2009
that it had
none.
Till that time
the state forest
officials
blatantly used
to estimate the
number of tigers
between 10 and
20. In between
they wrote
articles about
how Panna was
being managed
well and how the
tiger count was
nearly two
dozen. Even last
year the then
minister of
state for
forests,
Rajendra Shukla,
had told the
state Assembly
that only four
tigers had been
poached in the
state between
2004 and 2009.
The government
blamed the
presence of
dacoits in the
region that led
to a lack of
vigil. But after
the tiger count
was found to be
nil, a Special
Investigation
Team set up by
the Union
Environment and
Forests Ministry
submitted its
report to the
state government
in June
concluding that
the tiger
population
showed decline
without any
ecological
reason and that
poaching was the
major cause of
extinction.
The Central
probe report
said the maximum
decline took
place between
2003 and 2005,
and accused the
Park management
of completely
ignoring the
warnings by
scientists,
individuals,
NGOs and even
the Central
Empowered
Committee. “The
advisories/
guidelines and
red alerts on
protection and
monitoring
protocols issued
by the National
Tiger
Conservation
Authority (NTCA),
time and again,
were not
followed in
action and
spirit,” the
probe report
said, alleging
that there was
no transparency
in utilisation
of funds
provided under
the Project
Tiger scheme.
The report
pointed out
that, on the one
hand, there was
staff shortage,
and on the
other, range
officers were
working in the
Park for more
than a decade
and insinuated
that they had
developed vested
interests over
and above their
duties. There
was complete
lack of
coordination
between the
police and civil
administration,
especially in
intelligence
gathering. The
report said
senior officers
of the rank of
the PCCF and the
Chief Wildlife
Warden and
Additional PCCF
visited Panna
several times,
but never
mentioned in
their tour
reports that the
Park was facing
problems, which
could be a cause
of disappearance
of tigers.
Almost
dismissing the
Central report,
the Madhya
Pradesh
government
formed its own
committee to
study
“biological and
administrative”
reasons for the
tiger’s
disappearance.
The committee
was given three
months to submit
its report, but
it took eight
months. The
report was
submitted to
Singh, only
because he
insisted.
The state probe
concluded that
skewed
male-female
ratio,
territorial
fights, revenge
killings and
unbridled
tourism were the
main reasons. It
said poaching
was one reason
but, if it took
place, it
happened outside
the Park’s core
area.
Former PCCF J J
Dutta, who was
part of the
state committee,
alleged that the
Central team had
arrived at its
conclusion
hastily unlike
the state team
that took months
to submit its
report by taking
a composite
view.
NTCA
Member-Secretary
Rajesh Gopal,
who was part of
the state
committee, has
not signed the
report as yet.
“I will sign it
only after
reading it
completely, as
it was
structured by
someone else,”
he said.
|
|
23 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
20,000 turned up
to clean Yamuna

Joined 8-Day
Initiative To
Draw Attention
To What Is Now A
Sprawling Drain
An engineering
student recently
came up with an
interesting
description of
the Yamuna: It
is like a
supermarket, you
can find
everything in
it. Shiva, a
final year
student of
Faridabad, who
spent eight days
attempting to
clean up the
Yamuna, said:
‘‘We have picked
out just about
everything from
the river so
far, from
plastics to
pooja samagri,’’
she said.
She, along with
over 20,000
people, joined
the ‘‘Meri Dilli
Meri Yamuna’’
initiative,
launched on
March 17 by the
Art of Living
Foundation, to
clean the
river’s ghats
and to drive
home a point to
the government —
the Yamuna needs
urgent attention
if it is to
survive.
And to show the
way, it
mobilised
thousands of
citizens to get
down to action.
While only a
whole-hearted
and sincere
effort by
government
agencies can
really make a
difference to
the health of
the river, this
citizens’ effort
has drawn urgent
attention to the
city’s sprawling
open drain that
was once a
glorious river.
To spread
awareness about
ways to lessen
the burden of
waste in the
river, public
outreach
programmes were
organised by
Delhi Jal Board
and the Art of
Living with
street plays,
puppet shows and
music to involve
even the most
disinterested
persons in the
people’s
movement to save
the Yamuna.
From March 18 to
March 24,
concerned
residents, NGOs,
corporates and
other volunteers
covered eight
ghats in the
city, raking up
tonnes of
rubbish and silt
that took over
200 tractor
trolleys to
remove. Akhilesh
Chhabra,
in-charge of the
cleaning at the
Okhla Dhobi
Ghat, and
otherwise an LIC
employee, said
that his worst
experience had
been at the
Yamuna Vihar
ghat, where due
to its proximity
to Nigambodh
Ghat, volunteers
actually had to
dodge dead
bodies in their
effort to pull
out rubbish from
the water.
At the Okhla
Dhobi Ghat on
Thursday, Rashmi
Paliwal, Art of
Livings’s north
India in-charge,
said that with
their
experiences of
the past eight
days, they would
be developing a
think tank along
with the
government, NGOs
and corporates
to come up with
practical
solutions for
cleaning the
river.
‘‘At the dhobi
ghat, we started
our cleaning
work 15 days in
advance. About
200 truck loads
of muck,
including
carcasses of
dogs etc, were
removed from the
banks of the
river. Through
our eight-day
journey, we had
numerous people
and groups, like
RWAs, NCC
cadets, social
clubs and
children, join
us,’’ she said.
For those who
went ghat to
ghat, trying to
give the dying
river some
semblance of
dignity, wading
into sewage that
is ostensibly
the river’s
water, was no
easy task.
However, this
was a mission to
prove a point
and they all
joined in, from
government
officials to
students and
housewives.
|
|
25 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
Will cricket
league spoil
Earth Hour
mission?

NO SHOW? Top
T-20 teams to
face off around
same time,
leaving
organisers a
worried lot
Will IPL-mania
kill the mission
to save planet
Earth from
global warming
on Saturday?
Two days prior
to Earth Hour
2010, this
question is
doing the rounds
as the city
gears up to turn
off lights on
Saturday, March
27, so that the
planet gets an
hour's breather
from greenhouse
gas emissions
that occur due
to the
generation of
(mainly thermal)
power.
On March 27,
Shah Rukh Khan's
Kolkata Knight
Riders are
taking on Preity
Zinta's King's
XI Punjab,
starting 8 p.m.
That's just 30
minutes prior to
the start of
Earth Hour at
8.30 p.m.
So, even if the
lights are
turned off, the
millions of TV
sets might spoil
Earth Hour's
party.
Realising this,
the proponent of
Earth Hour, the
World Wildlife
Fund-India (WWF-
India), is
trying to get
the IPL to make
a symbolic
contribution
during the
match.
“We are speaking
with the IPL
authorities
regarding this.
It would be
great if they
are on board,“
said Aarti
Khosla,
spokesperson,
World Wildlife
Fund-India
(WWF-India).
“We are also
appealing to
people to not
have lights or
other
non-essential
guzzlers of
electricity on,
even if they DO
watch the match
on TV during the
Earth Hour.“
Delhi, Mumbai
and Bengaluru
are the official
Earth Hour
cities in India,
among the 12 big
cities leading
the charge
globally.
The Delhi
government and
Hindustan Times
are its offi-
cial partners in
India.
As far as Delhi
is concerned,
power
distributing
companies, along
with the
government, are
ready with a
plan.
Last Earth Hour,
Delhi saved
around 600 mw.
This time, the
government is
aiming to top
that.
“We have held
meetings with
the labour
department, New
Delhi Municipal
Corporation (NDMC),
market and
traders'
associations,
malls, hotels
etc to get
everyone on
board,“ said
Delhi
Environment
Secretary
Dharmendra
Kumar.
Discom BSES has
sent Earth Hour
messages in its
newsletter,
copies of which,
pinned with the
power bills, go
to its 25 lakh
consumers across
Delhi.
Its
Tata-controlled
counter- part
North Delhi
Power Limited
(NDPL) has tied
up with resi-
dent welfare
associations and
around two lakh
students to
spread the word.
Power consumers
in BSES areas
will also
receive auto-
mated voice
messages and
bulk mails
urging them to
take part in the
initiative.
“We should all
strive for the
day when we will
not need an
Earth Hour to
heal the
planet“, says
Gopal Saxena,
CEO, BSES
Rajdhani,
Delhi's biggest
power
distributor.
A freak
thunderstorm
with rainfall
during last
year's Earth
Hour was also a
reason why power
consumption saw
a dip.
This year,
however, the
weath- erman has
not sounded out
any such good
news.
“This Earth
Hour, we hope
Delhiites will
make up for the
absence of
favourable
weather for
saving power,“
Kumar said.
Now, if only IPL
could chip in
too.
|
|
26 March 2010,
Hindustan Times
|
Law to protect
heritage could
hit living areas

Will Make It
Hard To Repair
Even Existing
Property
New Delhi: A
tough new law to
protect ancient
monuments passed
by Parliament
recently may
have some
unintended
consequences. It
can make
alterations,
repairs or
additions in
existing
properties in
many city areas
a tedious
process, with
violations
attracting a
stiff fine of Rs
1 lakh and a
two-year jail
term.
Hailed as a
much-needed
boost to
heritage
conservation,
the new law’s
provisions set
out tough norms
for areas that
fall within
100-metre and
300-metre zones
around a
protected
monument. It may
be difficult to
even move a
brick here if
the Ancient
Monument and
Archeological
Sites and
Remains
(Amendment and
Validation) Act,
2010 is
rigorously
implemented.
With 173 ASI-protected
monuments, areas
such as
Nizamuddin,
Mehrauli, Saket
and Feroze Shah
Kotla may be
affected.
Residential
areas range from
middle-class
housing to JJ
colonies and
unauthorized
clusters. For a
monument with a
100m radius,
area in the
prohibited zone
could be 94,200
sqm and 376,800
sqm in the
regulated area.
Hemmed In
Carrying out
renovation,
repairs in
properties
around an ASI-designated
monument will
need permission
from National
Monuments
Authority.
Prohibited zone
defined as 100m
in all
directions from
an ASI monument.
Regulated area
is a further
200m Only govt
officials can
carry out
construction in
a prohibited
area. Public
works in such
zones will need
special
exemptions.
Violations can
be punished with
fine of Rs 1
lakh and 2 years
in jail.
Too much power
for monuments
watchdog?
New Delhi: The
new heritage
conservation law
has set out a
two-year prison
term or a Rs 1
lakh fine or
both for any
construction in
both prohibited
and regulated
areas. A
prohibited area
is 100 meters
from the edge of
a monument and
the regulated
zone is a
further 200
meters beyond
the prohibited
area. Changes to
existing
properties in
these areas will
need prior
permission from
a proposed
National
Monuments
Authority.
The need to
overhaul the
original
Monuments and
Archeological
Sites and
Remains Act of
1958 has been
keenly felt as
heritage
structures have
been blatantly
encroached upon
and their
aesthetic values
defiled. But
unless some of
the new law’s
provisions are
further
clarified, there
could be a
danger of an
over-correction
with a new
regulatory
behemoth coming
into being.
The Act says
that anyone
owning property
in a prohibited
area wanting to
carry out repair
or renovation
must apply to a
competent
authority. In a
regulated area
this applies to
‘‘construction
or
re-construction’’
as well. The
competent
authority is a
director level
ASI officer who
will file a
report to the
National
Monuments
Authority.
|
|
26 March 2010,
Times of India
|
Bye guides:
Soon, info on
monuments on
your cellphone
Cellphones could
soon change the
tourism scenario
in the Capital,
if the Tourism
department has
its way.
For, Delhi
Tourism plans to
start coding all
major monuments
in the city. The
idea: tourists
can dial a
special number
on their
cellphone and
press the code
to get a
pre-recorded
voice narration
on the history
of a particular
monument, as
also interesting
facts about it.
The move,
officials say,
is meant to make
the city more
tourist-friendly
so that people
who do not want
to hire a guide
can get adequate
information on
monuments and
heritage
structures.
According to
Rina Ray,
managing
director of the
Delhi Tourism
and Transport
Development
Corporation
(DTTDC), one way
to make the
service more
attractive is to
provide
interesting
information. For
example, very
few know that
the Humayun’s
Tomb is a symbol
of a wife’s love
for her husband
— the monument
was built by
Humayun’s wife
Hamida Banu
Begam.
The pre-recorded
messages, Ray
says, will
provide such
anecdotal
information. “It
is an
interesting idea
that can be used
in Delhi as
everyone has a
cellphone
today,” Ray
says. “We will
tie up with a
service provider
to start the
initiative.”
The plan will
take a few
months to come
to practice but
senior officials
say it is part
of long-term
plans of the
tourism
department to
promote Delhi
even after the
Commonwealth
Games are over.
It will be a
paid service,
Ray says, but
tourists will be
charged for the
call, not the
content.
The idea has
been borrowed
from Madhya
Pradesh Tourism,
which was the
first and till
date the only
tourism
department to
implement the
scheme a couple
of years ago.
Ashwani Lohani,
former managing
director of MP
Tourism who is
at present
working as
divisional
manager (Delhi)
with the Indian
Railways, had
introduced the
scheme. “It
solved the
problem of
guides and was a
non-human
interface
solution,” he
says.
“Messages would last
for about three
minutes.”
Being a much
larger state
than Delhi, MP
had four area
codes — for
Bhopal, Gwalior,
Indore and
Jabalpur.
|
|
26 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Makeover for Dilli
Haats

With work on
stadia on
course, the
focus has now
shifted to
tourist
attractions.
Dilli Haats are
being spruced up
and Walled City
will soon get a
signage upgrade
After venues,
it’s the turn of
tourist spots in
the city to get
a Commonwealth
Games makeover.
Delhi government
is planning to
renovate and
upgrade both the
Dilli Haats — in
INA and
Pitampura. From
rejigging the
menu to setting
up paid toilets,
the government
is looking to
make both Haats
distinctive.
Said Rina Ray,
managing
director, DTTDC,
‘‘The renovation
is going to
start from the
first week of
April. We hope
to make both
complexes ready
for the Games by
August.’’
Interestingly,
the government
is looking to
make both Haats
different from
each other.
While Dilli Haat
at INA will be
refurbished
along with the
menu to make it
representative
of the various
states of India,
the Pitampura
Haat will be
more
international in
look and
cuisine.
Said Ray, ‘‘The
ministry of
external affairs
is setting up a
SAARC museum in
Pitampura. We
therefore,
decided that the
Haat would have
food from the
eight SAARC
countries as
well as
handicrafts and
cultural
programmes
intrinsic to
them.’’
As part of the
renovation
project, INA’s
Haat will see
the children’s
park within the
premises being
revived. The
park, which will
have a tree
house and other
features, will
be renovated
along with the
stage nearby.
Officials said
that the
government is
also planning to
build a new
air-conditioned
auditorium in
the premises,
which would be
rented out for
functions. Said
a senior
government
official, ‘‘The
air-conditioned
building will
also be used as
an alternative
space during
summers, where
visitors can can
come and
lounge.’’
The project will
also see a
complete
overhaul of the
menus in the
state stalls.
Sources said
over the years,
the stalls which
originally
offered cuisine
of a particular
state had
started selling
generic dishes.
That is now set
to change,
however, with
the city
government
pushing the
state
governments —
which were
ostensibly
running the
stalls — to
update the menu
to ensure only
cuisine of that
state was
available.
Admitted Ray,
‘‘We have asked
them to ensure
that a state
food stall will
offer cuisine of
that state only.
After all,
that’s the USP
of Dilli Haat.’’
To underscore
the national
flavour of the
INA Haat, the
government will
also be adding
more geospecific
artifacts, added
sources. For
instance, the
food stalls will
be decorated
with handicraft
from that state,
in the form of
murals and other
artifacts.
The two Haats
will also offer
radio cab
services, in
time for the
Games, Said Ray,
‘‘The emphasis
is on using
public
transport. So we
want visitors to
have the option
of either taking
a radio cab or
the Metro.’’
Also, valets who
will help
shoppers take
their
possessions to
the Metro will
be made
available at the
Haat, to make it
more
visitorfriendly,
added the MD.
‘‘Parking space
is scarce, so we
don’t want
visitors to be
caught up with
the travails of
finding parking
space,’’ added
Ray.
NDLS to look
‘dazzling white’
Work has begun
to give a white
makeover to the
New Delhi
railway station
ahead of the
Commonwealth
Games. ‘‘The
colour of the
50-feet high
building will be
changed from
existing light
brown to pure
white. Besides,
the portico will
have a new
design,’’ said a
senior Northern
Railway officer.
As per the
blueprint, black
granite will be
laid up to 10
feet from the
ground while
rest of the
building will be
fitted with
aluminium panels
to give it a
‘‘dazzling white
look’’, he said.
|
|
29 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
New colour code
for Old Delhi
streets
It’s not just
New Delhi that’s
getting all
spruced up for
the Commonwealth
Games. With
lakhs of
tourists
expected to
visit the city
in October, the
government is
hoping to turn
Old Delhi into a
major
attraction.
As part of the
beautification
project proposed
by the
Shahjahanabad
Redevelopment
Corporation (SRC),
streets in Old
Delhi will be
colour coded by
the government
in association
with local
traders’ bodies.
Savitur Prasad,
managing
director, SRC,
said: ‘‘The idea
is to make the
bylanes of Old
Delhi attractive
to tourists.
Each street will
have a different
colour signage
so that tourists
can move about
easily,’’ Prasad
said.
The proposal was
passed by the
SRC board last
Thursday. The
colour codes and
typography of
the signages
have been
selected by the
traders’
associations.
‘‘After a series
of meetings,
traders as well
as residents
decided on not
only the colours
but also the
physical
dimensions of
the boards,’’
said Gurbachan
Singh, president
of the Daryaganj
Traders
Association.
Singh said the
project was
welcomed by
almost all the
traders’
associations.
‘The cost will
be borne by us.
We want to be a
part of a
national event
like the
Commonwealth
Games. We would
like for
tourists who
visit Old Delhi
to have an
aesthetic
experience.’’
Naseer Ul Hasan
Jhinjhanvi, one
of the area’s
prominent
residents who
had pushed for
the project,
said it was the
first time that
traders had come
together to be
part of a major
government
project. ‘‘The
facade of over
2,000 shops will
be renovated by
traders,’’
Jhinjhanvi said.
The streets
include main
Daryaganj road,
Chitli Qabar
cloth market,
Urdu Bazaar,
Jama Masjid
Motor market,
Delhi Gate,
Turkman Gate,
Matia Mahal and
other bylanes.
Singh said:
‘‘Though there
are certain
obstacles like
showrooms
refusing to
change their
colour codes on
display boards,
the rest of the
traders
associations are
more than
willing.’’
|
|
29 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
Red Fort to Rajghat,
rickshaws stall
traffic

Want MCD To
Remove Cap As
Per HC Ruling
A cycle rickshaw
rally organized
in the heart of
the capital led
to jams on the
road network as
protesters took
to the streets,
along with about
2,000 rickshaws
and handcarts.
As they moved
from Red Fort to
Rajghat,
movement of
traffic was
affected on
major roads like
Jawaharlal Nehru
Marg and Ring
Road near Delhi
Gate and Rajghat
crossings around
noon.
The rally was
organized to
demand speedy
implementation
of the recent HC
order removing
the cap on the
rickshaws. The
court also
constituted a
special task
force to look
into the issue
and suggest
changes to
Municipal
Corporation of
Delhi (MCD)’s
rickshaw policy.
Several known
faces, like
former director
general, Punjab
Police, KPS
Gill, MP Maneka
Gandhi, retired
Major Generals
Lakhwinder Singh
and JP Gupta,
Dalit leader
Udit Raj,
advocates
Siddharth Luthra
and Indira
Unninayar,
economist Bibek
Debroy, urban
planners Pradeep
Sachdeva and AGK
Menon were
reportedly a
part of it.
Besides
abolition of the
cap on licences
for cycle
rickshaws,
protesters
demanded that
these be
available as
freely as other
motorised
vehicles, the
new cycle
rickshaw policy
proposed by
Manushi, which
organized the
rally, and
approved by the
expert committee
of the MCD be
implemented.
They also
demanded
separate tracks
for
non-motorized
vehicles,
promotion of
NMVs as a feeder
to Delhi’s
public
transport,
creation of
cycle stands all
over the city
and an end to
confiscation and
destruction of
cycle rickshaws
and handcarts by
the police and
municipal
authorities.
|
|
30 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
|
Exhibition of
contemporary tribal
art from India opens
on note of
controversy

The curator, who
spent three
years working on
this project,
has not been
given adequate
credit
Paris: ‘Other
Masters From
India —
Contemporary
Creations of the
Adivasis,' a
stunning
exhibition of
contemporary
tribal art from
India opened on
Monday at the
Quai Branly
Museum in Paris.
Conceived and
curated by
Jyotindra Jain,
the former
director of the
Crafts Museum in
New Delhi and
one of India's
foremost
historians and
chroniclers of
tribal art, this
exhibition is
not just a
visual and
aesthetic treat;
it has been put
together
diligently and
intelligently,
taking the
viewer down the
years, from the
time when tribal
art was
ritualistic and
iconographical,
confined to the
walls of Adivasi
homes, to the
present when art
has enabled
contemporary
artists to give
voice to their
existential
predicaments,
thus
transforming
their artistic
space.
The entire
credit for this
exercise goes to
Dr. Jain's
scholarship,
knowledge and
aesthetic
sensibility.
Most of the
writings and
several rare
photographs in
the detailed and
richly
illustrated
catalogue have
been contributed
by him. However,
the exhibition
has been marred
by the fact that
Dr. Jain, who
spent three
years working on
this project,
has not been
given adequate
credit for his
contribution.
The exhibition
begins by
examining, with
some fine old
prints and
photographs as
well as video
footage from
Bombay masala
films, the
representation
of the Adivasis
over time.
British colonial
times, when
anthropologists
working on
theories of race
measured,
recorded and
photographed
tribals as
belonging to
certain “racial”
types, gave way
to the calendar
art of the 1950s
and 1960s and
the caricatural
depiction of the
tribal by
Bollywood.
Section Two
entitled ‘The
People' presents
Adivasi
populations in a
non-linear
manner, each one
of them being
characterised by
its material,
ritualistic and
artistic
productions.
Gigantic Bhuta
sculptures from
Karnataka, made
of jackfruit
wood and used in
ancestor worship
or appeasement
have been
brought all the
way from the
Crafts Museum in
New Delhi. “Some
of these pieces
are about 150
years old and no
museum outside
India has a
piece of this
kind,” Dr. Jain
told The Hindu
in an exclusive
guided tour of
the exhibits.
There are
objects here of
incredible
beauty, grace,
colour and
cultural and
religious
significance:
Magical healing
amulets from the
Nicobar Islands,
votive
terracotta
figures from the
Ayyanar tribe in
Tamil Nadu,
bronze figurines
from Bastar
(Gond) and
Orissa (Kondh),
clay
storytelling
sculptures from
Sarguja in
Chhattisgarh,
votive tablets
from Rajasthan,
paintings from
the Rathwa tribe
in Gujarat or
the jadupatua
scrolls from the
Santhal tribes
of Bihar or West
Bengal.
But the most
interesting
section of the
exhibition is
the third one,
which
concentrates on
contemporary
artists and
offers visitor a
series of
popular
paintings with a
special emphasis
on two
remarkable
artists, Jivya
Shoma Mashe of
the Warli tibe
in Maharashtra
and Jangarh
Singh Shyam, a
Gond from Madhya
Pradesh who
tragically
killed himself
while working as
a artist in
residence in
Japan in 2001.
This section is
visually
extremely
gratifying in
the most
contemporary
“artistic”
sense, where
tribal art steps
out of the
confines of the
purely
ritualistic to
give voice to
concerns such as
urban
encroachment,
violence
practised by the
state, and the
influence of
modern
technology. In
one of the
Santhal scrolls,
Yama, the God of
death, is shown
wearing a
policeman's
uniform, a
telling comment
on how the
guardians of the
law are
perceived by a
largely
disenfranchised
and oppressed
population.
Trains,
airplanes (which
are part
mechanical, part
mythical
creature)
telephones,
mirrors, thus
mingle with
harvests, fields
and creatures of
the forest,
sometimes, as in
the case of a
train,
completing
cutting the
artistic space
in two.
Unfortunately,
the museum has
failed to fully
recognise Dr.
Jain's work.
Despite
assurances given
by the museum,
the erratum
sheet detailing
the missing
credits is not
an integral part
of the
catalogue. A
belated loose
leaf insertion
in no way
corrects the
error, for once
an exhibition
has been
dismantled, the
curator has only
the catalogue to
show for his
pains.
When questioned
by this
correspondent,
Helene Fulgence,
director of
exhibitions,
said that in the
French system,
when writers of
“notes” were not
identified, the
work was
automatically
presumed to be
that of the
overall director
of the
exhibition, its
curator.
However, she
suggested Dr.
Jain could have
been let down or
“betrayed” by
his assistant,
Vikas Harish.
Mr. Harish
placed the blame
firmly on the
Quai Branly
Museum: “I am
not responsible
for the errors.
I kept Dr. Jain
fully informed.
I was not in
charge of the
publication of
the catalogue.”
As the blame
game continued,
with a senior
museum official
very rudely
ticking this
reporter off for
“giving out the
wrong message,”
Ms. Fulgence
confirmed that
Dr. Jain had not
been shown a PDF
version of the
catalogue for
his approval.
She told The
Hindu that had
the museum
honoured its
commitments to
Dr. Jain, it
would not have
been able to
bring out the
catalogue in
time for the
“official
inauguration” on
Monday. The
exhibition opens
for the public
on Tuesday.
|
|
30 March 2010,
The Hindu
|
ASI loses
integration plot as
court orders stay
The
Archaeological
Survey of India
(ASI) might have
to shelve its
plans to
integrate the
11-acre plot of
land opposite
the Humayun’s
Tomb with the
world heritage
site for now.
Two-and-a-half
months after the
ASI had taken
over the land —
referred to as
Bharatiyam
Complex — to
develop it prior
to the
Commonwealth
Games, the Delhi
High Court
ordered a stay
on any further
activity on the
premises.
The High Court
order came after
the Delhi State
Bharat Scouts
and Guides (BSG),
who owned the
land earlier,
filed a petition
against the Land
and Development
Office and
others for
demolishing BSG
structures in
the premises.
On January 7
this year, the
Ministry of
Urban
Development had
handed over the
plot to the ASI,
ending a 12-year
battle between
the ASI and the
BSG. The
transfer was
meant to
facilitate the
conservation of
the two
Centrally-protected
monuments in the
premises and
their
integration with
the Humayun’s
Tomb.
Nearly four
years ago, a
Supreme Court
appointed
monitoring
committee had
sealed the
Bharatiyam
Complex, after
the BSG was
found guilty of
misusing the
property by
running
commercial
activities
within the plot.
The plot was
de-sealed for
the ASI to take
over but before
work could
begin, the BSG
reclaimed its
office and filed
a petition with
the High Court.
“We are awaiting
this very
valuable
archaeological
resource within
a world heritage
site to be
secured, so that
we are able to
restore the
Mughal complex
and integrate it
within the
Humayun’s Tomb
world heritage
site by the
Commonwealth
Games. But the
court notice
putting a stay
on any further
activity has
come as a big
hindrance. The
hearing is
slated for April
17 and we will
have to wait
until then,” a
senior ASI
official said.
The Bharatiyam
Complex houses
the Kunzru
Stadium, Camp
Office, VIP
Room, Sports
Complex, Bajpai
Memorial Hall
and the two
Centrally-protected
17th Century
monuments of
Bada Batashewala
Mahal and Chhota
Batashewala
Mahal.
Why the
Bharatiyam
Complex was
sealed?
In 1989, when
national
children’s meet
— Bharatiyam —
was held in the
complex,
temporary
arrangements
were made for
participants to
stay on the
premises. A
number of
modules (small
hutments) were
constructed on
the assumption
that they will
be demolished
after the event.
After the event,
however, the BSG
rented out the
modules to
several
organisations
and institutes,
including the
Indian National
Trust for Art
and Cultural
Heritage. In
2001, the
Parkland Club
entered into
collaboration
with the BSG to
build a club on
over 1.5 acres
of land and
operate it on
commercial
basis. Over the
last few years,
the modules have
been home to at
least seven
families of the
BSG employees.
|
|
30 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
No concrete
answer: CP project
mired in lime,
cement debate
The restoration
process in
Connaught Place
is caught in a
controversy
again with a
section of
conservation
architects
alleging the
disfiguration of
the heritage
structures due
to use of
cement. While
the
conservationists
maintain that
lime should have
been used to
retain the
aesthetics and
ensure
durability of
the buildings,
the New Delhi
Municipal
Council (NDMC)
claims that the
original
buildings were
made in
concrete.
NDMC
spokesperson
Anand Tiwari
said, “We did
conduct tests
and it was found
that the
original
buildings were
made of concrete
so we also
decided to use
cement. The
proposal (to use
cement) was
passed by the
Delhi Urban Art
Commission
(DUAC).”
Conservationists
refuse to buy
the argument.
“The restoration
process looks ad
hoc. Cement
plaster should
not be used in
instances of
lime-based
masonry. The
main buildings
were made of
lime but when
alterations were
made over the
years cement was
used. At least
during the
conservation
process this
time, lime
should have been
used,” said
Gurmeet Rai,
director,
Cultural
Resource
Conservation
Initiative, a
city-based
heritage
conservation
consultancy.
The issue has
sparked off a
debate with
several
conservationists
up in arms
against the
alleged
disfiguration of
heritage
structures.
“During a recent
visit to
Connaught Place
and Connaught
Circus, I was
shocked to find
that wall
surfaces,
colonnades,
ceilings and
details were
being
systematically
plastered with
cement. The use
of cement
plaster on the
historic fabric
of Connaught
Place is not
just an
aesthetic issue
but will soon
become a serious
construction
problem leading
to serious
deterioration of
these
buildings,”
Gaurav Sharma, a
conservationist,
said. He has
written to
several heritage
bodies and
conservation
architects to
take up the
issue and stall
work.
AGK Menon,
convenor, Delhi
Chapter, Indian
National Trust
for Art and
Cultural
Heritage
(INTACH), has a
different take.
“Cement might
have been used
in the original
buildings. It
cannot be
ascertained
whether lime or
cement was used
in original
construction as
no test has been
conducted by any
independent
body. We did
approach the
NDMC two years
ago and also
proposed a
conservation
plan but that
was not taken
into
consideration,”
he said.
When the INTACH
had taken up the
issue two years
ago, the
colonial
buildings were
not protected
and it was only
late last year
that the NDMC
notified them as
heritage
structures.
INTACH officials
had then found
it difficult to
push for a
conservation
plan as the
heritage
structures were
NDMC property
and not
notified. INTACH
officials
maintained that
though it would
have been ideal
to use lime
mortar as its
durability is
much more than
cement and it
also retains the
aesthetic look
of a heritage
structure,
stalling the
work was not
possible as it
was being taken
up by the NDMC
on its property.
“It is spilt
milk and the
civic body has
already
destroyed the
structures. They
wanted to
beautify the
buildings which
they have done
but with little
consideration
for their
heritage
conservation,”
an INTACH
official said.
A DUAC member
said, “We had
raised
objections over
the plinth of
the columns and
the flooring
that were not in
keeping with the
heritage value
but there has
not been any
serious concern
over the use of
cement.”
In another
aspect of the
controversy,
while the NDMC
maintained that
two conservation
architects have
been appointed
to oversee the
restoration,
members of the
New Delhi
Traders’
Association (NDTA)
alleged that the
appointments
were made on the
basis of lowest
bids and
competence of
the
conservationists
was compromised.
“Had lime been
used in
restoration, the
buildings would
have been more
durable. Cement
from some of the
recently
restored
buildings is
already chipping
off,” an NDTA
member said.
Robert Tor
Russell, chief
architect to the
Government of
India had
designed
Connaught Place
in 1932 based
upon an outline
by W H Nichollas
(the committee’s
architect from
1913-1917).
Connaught
Place’s apparent
Georgian
architecture is
modelled after
the Royal
Crescent in
Bath, England.
|
|
30 March 2010,
Indian Express
|
Palace their
playground

The
govt wants to
highlight Delhi’s
heritage at the
Games but it has
forgotten about the
remains of this 14th
century palace
Even as the
government gets
busy with its
preparations to
highlight the
city’s rich
heritage during
the Commonwealth
Games, the
forgotten
remains of a
14th century
Tughlaq-era
palace in south
Delhi’s
Panchsheel Park
area today serve
as a playground
for local
children.
Evidently, both
the
Archaeological
Survey of India
(ASI) and the
state
archaeology
department have
been apathetic
about the
monument. The
remains are
situated inside
a DDA park and
portions of the
facade are
falling off
because of
neglect and
vandalism by the
locals.
Surprisingly,
the monument is
not even
mentioned in
Intach’s
heritage listing
of the 1,200
rare monuments
in Delhi. This
oversight,
conservationists
claim, will
result in a big
loss for the
city. They say
that the remains
hint at what
could have been
a huge palace
complex and
excavation work
around the
structure could
bring a lot of
archaeological
evidence to
light.
Said British
writer Sam
Miller, who has
been pushing for
protection and
conservation of
the palace
remains:
‘‘Historians who
have visited the
site have said
the structure
appears to have
been built
either during
the Tughlaq or
Khilji period
and basically,
that it is the
remains of a
palace. The
architecture
clearly reveals
the monument is
from a pre-Mughal
era. While three
to four huge
portions of the
monument are
above ground, a
good part of the
remains are
underground and
should be
excavated.’’
Miller claimed
an ancient
mosque situated
near the
monument was
demolished a few
years ago for
development work
related to the
Commonwealth
Games. He
worries that
unless a
government body
brings the
remains under
its protection,
they could face
a similar fate.
The
fortification
wall of these
palace remains
appears to have
been built on
the same lines
as Siri Fort
wall — another
reason why
heritage experts
believe the
monument could
be of the same
era. Till a few
years ago, the
wall was only
partially
visible as it
was surrounded
by heavy green
overgrowth, but
that was
recently
cleared. ‘‘The
monument needs
to be studied
from a
historical
perspective and
conserved
properly. Locals
treat it as a
playing ground
and many
residents have
set up squatters
on one side of
the wall
remains. Crucial
archaeological
evidence can be
found here
through
excavation — as
is being done by
ASI in Siri
Fort. It can
also be
developed as a
prime tourist
destination,’’
said a heritage
expert.
Though the
monument is
technically a
property of the
DDA,
conservationists
said it was
essential that
the ASI or state
archaeology
department take
upon themselves
to protect it as
DDA had no
expertise in
heritage
conservation. A
senior
government
official said:
‘‘Normally in
cases where a
monument is not
under any kind
of legal
protection, it
can be brought
under the
protection of
the state or
central
government based
on the
recommendation
of an expert
committee or
through court
directions. For
this to happen,
a group of
experts needs to
visit the site
to assess the
archaeological
significance and
then start the
process of
notification
based on a
report.’’
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31 March 2010,
Times City, Times of
India
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