Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Public participat­es when officials are accountabl­e

- Bharati Chaturvedi letters@hindustant­imes.com (The writer is founder and director of Chintan Environmen­tal Research and Action Group)

NEW DELHI:

For years we have been hearing the term: citizens’ participat­ion in green matters. As we stand here in 2018, what does this even mean?

Why would anyone participat­e in any kind of activity if there’s no knowing what the officials will later do about it?

But we can change that, starting with wetlands, ponds and water bodies. Increasing­ly, these are being encroached upon and used as trash dumps. We all know that these must be conserved to ensure flood prevention, groundwate­r recharge and carbon sinking.

What if water bodies and wetlands were identified by every- day people, their uses enumerated, and the mapped water bodies monitored by local villagers? Not the panchayat members — who might have a vested interest— but those who live the closest? And what if the villagers who preserved all of their water bodies were rewarded?

To hold officials accountabl­e, we would need a district level official responsibl­e for this, by name, submitting reports every year-to the panchayats, the state government and available online, so that we can constantly monitor their action.

We can no longer expect any kind of genuine public participat­ion if we don’t act on their observatio­ns and ideas. We will lose our greatest green army, andour natural assets. We have to re-imagine how people can be part of conservati­on in a mutually useful way.

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