Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Poisar likely to flood, BMC blames slums

- Badri Chatterjee

MUMBAI : As the first showers arrived, environmen­tal watchdogs have found that despite the civic body’s efforts, the Poisar river is choking with waste and may flood this rainy season. A survey carried out by the NGO Watchdog Foundation along with local residents shows several spots along the seven-kilometre Poisar river are brimming with untreated domestic waste, sewage, and carcasses.

There are instances of open defecation at many locations along the river which originates from Sanjay Gandhi National Park in Borivli, mainly flows through Kandivli (West), passes through the Charkop mangroves and meets the Marve creek. This is the second spot identified by nature lovers after Juhu, where efforts by the civic body have fallen short to curtail the problem of possible flooding this monsoon.

The Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) had claimed that 90% of the city’s riv- ers had been desilted by May 31. However, pictures submitted by the NGO in the form of a complaint defeated the civic body’s claims on Saturday. “The river is now nothing more than an urban stream, and is contaminat­ed with sewage. BMC spends crores of tax payers’ money every year only for desilting which can be avoided by resource management. However, the will power to cleanse the system is lacking,” said Godfrey Pimenta, trustee, Watchdog Foundation. “In case of flooding, we will hold BMC responsibl­e,” he said.

Officials from BMC’S storm water drains (SWD) department said pollution in Poisar was too much because of a large number of slums and cattle-sheds along the river banks. “The river has been desilted properly, but the slums and cattle-sheds continue to dump more than 25-30 tonnes of waste daily. We have requested the ward office, the deputy municipal commission­er and other department­s to move these tabelas outside the city,” said a senior engineer from SWD department.

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