This Article is From Aug 13, 2014

On PM's Pet Project to Clean Up Ganga, Move Faster, Says Supreme Court

On PM's Pet Project to Clean Up Ganga, Move Faster, Says Supreme Court

The 2,500 km river stretching from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal is full of industrial effluent and untreated sewage.

New Delhi: The government has been given two weeks to explain how it plans to clean up the Ganga, with irate Supreme Court judges asking, "Are you saving the Holy River? You are showing no urgency in this matter, only in other matters. " (Germany Keen to Advise, Assist India for Ganga River Clean-Up)

That remark was seen as a jibe at the government's attempts to change the law on how judges are appointed.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi was elected in May to Parliament from the 3,000-year-old riverside city of Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh. "Now it is time to do my bit for Maa Ganga," he said after his victory in a speech from one of the ghats, "Maa Ganga is waiting for her son to free her from pollution." (All Rivers as Divine as Ganga, Says Uma Bharti)

The Supreme Court has been dealing since 1985 with a Public Interest Litigation or PIL that demands the restoration of a river that has been reduced to a sewage line. (Demand in Rajya Sabha for a Comprehensive Plan to Clean Rivers)

Mr Modi's government announced an additional Rs 2,040 crores for a new "Ganga Mission" in its first budget .

Though Hindus bathe in the Ganga in an act of ritual purification, the 2,500 km river stretching from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal is full of industrial effluent and untreated sewage, its banks strewn with garbage. (Ganga Action Plan May Be Extended to Other Rivers: Government)

In June, Uma Bharti, Minister for Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation said she needed a few weeks to come up with detailed proposals for the project, dubbed "Ganga Manthan" - manthan signifies a deep contemplation and churning of facts that leads to enlightenment. (Ganga Rejuvenation Plan to Commercially Exploit the River: Scientists)

India's first highly-publicised effort to clean its most sacred river was in 1986, when the Ganga Action Plan was launched. (Expertise from IITs to be Utilised for Cleaning Ganga: Uma Bharti)

Environmental activists estimate thousands of crores have been poured into clean-up efforts over the last three decades with few, if any, results.
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