Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Accidental damage to Yamuna already restored by nature’

- Joydeep Thakur joydeep.thakur@htlive.com

ART OF LIVING REPORT Counters NGT, claims removal of shrubs, tall grass, aquatic vegetation and reeds was good for ecology

scientific report prepared by Art of Living claimed that any ‘accidental damage’ to the ecology of the Yamuna floodplain­s caused by the Art of Living’s cultural event in 2016 has already been restored by nature.

This contradict­s the earlier findings by the National Green Tribunal-appointed seven-member expert committee, which claimed that it would take at least 10 years and ₹42 crore to fix the physical and biological damages caused to the river’s floodplain­s by the event.

“If at all any such accidental damage would have taken place during the event, in all probabilit­y they have already been reversed by natural processes. With the arrival of monsoon in 2016, all the lost plants and animals would have re-colonised the event site,” the foundation’s report has claimed.

Instead the foundation's report has hinted that removal of shrubs, tall grasses, aquatic vegetation and reeds from the event site, which the NGT panel had dubbed as harmful to the floodplain­s, is actually beneficial to the ecology as it also helped remove invasive exotic species such as water hyacinth.

Experts from both the NGT’s panel and the foundation’s team refused to comment on this ongoing war between scientists and experts of the two panels.

Art of Living had filed a 200page parallel report in the NGT to counter the allegation­s levelled against it. The foundation, founded by spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, which has been in the centre of controvers­y, had roped in at least 15 experts to prepare the report.

Experts in the Art of Living’s panel also alleged that satellite images, which forms one of the Possibilit­y of leaching of toxic substances from debris and other wastes

Debris comprised bricks, concrete and stones and hence not toxic Invisible loss to biodiversi­ty and several organisms were left homeless

No baseline data to prove such a habitat existed before the event

main pillars of the report submitted by the NGT-appointed panel, has been misinterpr­eted.

The NGT panel had used satellite images and ground reports while claiming that large tracts of wetlands and water bodies were filled up for the event.

“One of the most glaring mistakes made in the report is the declaratio­n of dry farmlands as huge tract of wetlands filled with water and several water bodies etc. Even the agricultur­al crops have been considered as wetland vegetation with shallow to deep water beneath them,” the foundation’s report has claimed.

The experts pointed out that even the Survey of India’s report and National Wetland Atlas prepared by Space Applicatio­n Centre have no mention of any such wetlands. The atlas had listed

The event site looks reddish most likely because of material used to level the ground

Reddish colour could be because of some bacteria

around 399 wetlands, including 301 micro wetlands in Delhi alone. The foundation’s report has also challenged the NGTpanel’s allegation­s that nearly 420 acres of Yamuna floodplain­s were damaged. Experts questioned how can an event, held over 25 acres of land, damage 420 acres of floodplain­s.

The NGT panel had accused the foundation of levelling and compacting the soil resulting in heavy damage to the floodplain­s as it stopped the soil’s gaseous exchange and played havoc with the ground water recharging system. Experts who prepared the foundation’s report, however, claimed that compaction if any was done much earlier when constructi­on of guide banks, DND and Barapullah drain were going on.

 ?? HT ?? The Yamuna bank after the World Culture Festival in 2016.
HT The Yamuna bank after the World Culture Festival in 2016.

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