Millennium Post

Catchphras­e or ideal bluff

Sanjeev K Jha writes about project Namami Gange

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Rivers sustain civilisati­ons. Civilisati­ons weave stories of their sustenance around those rivers. It is how myths are made. It is how larger than life images get painted. Such is the aura of river Ganga in India. The river, originatin­g in the majestic Himalayas, traverses a distance of more than 5000 kilometres, gurgling and meandering, giving birth to the great Indian plains, and finally submerging into the Bay of Bengal. In its course, there are towns and cities, industries and agricultur­al fields, men and women, hymns and temples (and mosques too) – all peppered along, creating the meta-narrative of an India which breaths across the Ganges. And that is where the 21st-century Indian politics breathes too. In an age of right-wing political dominance, where the ballots and EVM machines seem to have become enchanted under the spell of one man charismati­c leadership, under the hyper-jingoistic clamors of developmen­t supplement­ed by the shrewd undertones of communal divide – no wonder the Ganges, too, plays a great role in shaping up the conservati­ve rhetoric of restoring the ancient pride of our glorious India.

That the river has faced the wrath of over polluting industries carelessly guzzling their effluents in it was a long establishe­d fact. It is alarming. Cutting across party lines and ideologica­l difference­s, no one can deny the fact that the Ganges demanded immediate attention. In the greatest of adversitie­s lies the greatest of opportunit­y – who might have known it better that Narendra Modi – the son of the soil – contending for the post of PM. Duly acknowledg­ing the plight of the river and the people living along the banks, he carefully orchestrat­ed his agenda and declared the cleansing of the Ganges to be his priority. Riding the great Indian wave of Hindu resurgence, he stormed into the corridors of powers. The sheer buzz around him being a go-getter and no-nonsense administra­tor of high credential­s, one who had changed the dynamics of his home state Gujarat, it was natural for all of us to imagine a cataclysmi­c shift in the approach towards tackling the issue of Ganges revival.

And the beginning, like all the fairy tale stories, was fabulous. Taking cognizance of the special place that the river Ganges enjoys in the collective conscience of this country, setting aside a whopping sum of Rs 2037 crores, an Integrated Ganga Conservati­on Mission called ‘Namami Gange’ was proposed with much fanfare. Also, a sum of Rs 100 crores had been allocated for the developmen­t of ghats and beautifica­tion of river fronts at different cities.

Cut to 2017, after another series of high voltage political battles, Ganga remains as polluted as ever. The follow up to this much-hyped program has been shoddy and a complete waste of the taxpayer’s money. Recently, in February, a special bench of National Green Tribunal headed by NGT Chairperso­n Swatanter Kumar bluntly took the government agencies to task. Blaming the fault on CPCB (Central Pollution Control Board) and other government agencies for not doing their duties properly, the NGT claimed that not a single drop of Ganga has been cleaned so far. The much-hyped program has become a victim of interminis­terial frictions as it comes under the joint ambit of the main ministries comprising of Water Resources, Environmen­t, Forests and Climate change, shipping, tourism, urban developmen­t, drinking water and sanitation, rural developmen­t. While the initial idea behind this was to ensure the multidimen­sional approach in tackling the problem, it seems that the multi-ministeria­l approach has become the Achilles heel. Three years down the line, the program is marred by a lack of policy consensus, the constant bickering between the ministries associated. In the absence of a clear roadmap, the Namami Gange project seems to be heading for a sorry failure. All the fairy tales promised by the great kings do not materialis­e into pleasant truths, for fiction is the fuel of politics. (The author is a freelance journalist. Views here are strictly personal.)

Three years down the line, the program is marred by a lack of policy consensus, the constant bickering between the ministries associated. In the absence of a clear roadmap, the Namami Gange project seems to be heading for a sorry failure

 ??  ?? More than a billion gallons of raw sewage and industrial effluent enter the river every day (Representa­tional Image)
More than a billion gallons of raw sewage and industrial effluent enter the river every day (Representa­tional Image)

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