The Sunday Guardian

DdA’S BIOdIVeRSI­Ty PARKS wAIT FOR AudIT

Rs 40 cr was spent from 2004 to 2017 on three biodiversi­ty parks.

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The Delhi Developmen­t Authority (DDA) has spent over Rs 40 crore on Yamuna Biodiversi­ty Parks in the capital, but no internal audit of the parks has been carried out in the last 13 years.

Interestin­gly, the Project Incharge of Biodiversi­ty Parks, C.R. Babu, is part of the Expert Committee of National Green Tribunal (NGT), which has prepared the report on the alleged damage caused by the Sri Sri Ravishanka­r’s Art of Living (AoL) event—World Cultural Festival—organised on the banks of Yamuna in the capital last year.

As per a reply received through RTI, internal audit of the Biodiversi­ty Parks is performed by University of Delhi. However, when the petitioner­s Anand Mathur and Gautam Vij , approached the DU, he got a shocker as it emerged that no internal audit of the parks has ever been conducted.

Biodiversi­ty Parks are owned and funded by the DDA, while their day-to-day operations are taken care by the Centre for Environmen­tal Management of Degraded Ecosystems (CEMDE), University of Delhi. This Centre is also supposed to do the internal audit. Interestin­gly, after the RTI was filed, CEMDE Director Inderjit Singh has reportedly written a letter to DU Registrar requesting inclusion of CEMDE in the Internal audit.

Biodiversi­ty Parks have been part of the public discourse for a long time. Every year, thousands of foreign tourists, students from schools, colleges and universiti­es and government officials visit these parks. Recently, President of Nepal Bidhya Devi Bhandari visited the Yamuna Biodiversi­ty Park.

As per RTI informatio­n, as much as Rs 40 crore was spent from 2004-2017 on the three biodiversi­ty parks—Yamuna Biodiversi­ty Park, Yamuna Biodiversi­ty Park Phase II and Aravalli Biodiversi­ty Park—but so far, there has been no internal audit of this amount spent by the CEMDE, which manages these parks.

“Why was there no mechanism for the last 13 years for internal audit of a project which was receiving crores of rupees of public money? If a strong monitoring mechanism was operationa­l, why should there be a need to write to the Registrar to save the face now after the RTI was filed?” asked RTI activist Gopal Prasad.

Interestin­gly, University of Delhi’s website has details of Biodiversi­ty Parks only for the years between 2004 and 2011. However, the details for the rest of the years have been furnished only after the RTI request, which, according to Prasad, is clearly a violation of Section 4 of the RTI Act because under Section 4, any and every informatio­n related to a public department should be available on the department website within six months and lack of such informatio­n there amounts to an indication of “financial irregulari­ty”.

Regarding the AoL event, according to various reports submitted to the National Green Tribunal by the Expert Committee, the damage has varied from Rs 120 crore to Rs 13 crore and Rs 42 crore from time to time. The Art of Living has maintained that the expert committee, including Babu, is “clearly biased”.

Prasad said: “No effort was made to do the internal audit of Rs 40 crore spent on the parks. No effort was made to ascertain how the project benefited the Yamuna river. Also, how would imposing penalty on AoL help Yamuna become clean? Instead, it would have been better had the NGT asked the organisati­on specifical­ly to carry out ‘purificati­on’ work.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? A cobbler takes shelter to protect himself from the sun inside an abandoned electric box on a hot summer day in Kolkata on Tuesday.
REUTERS A cobbler takes shelter to protect himself from the sun inside an abandoned electric box on a hot summer day in Kolkata on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? A Yamuna Biodiversi­ty park.
A Yamuna Biodiversi­ty park.

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