The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New multi billion dollar Mumbai metro project will beat traffic, but at what cost?

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MUMBAI: A new undergroun­d metro is expected to ease the burden on Mumbai’s notoriousl­y congested roads and railways, but not everybody in India’s sprawling financial capital is happy about the multi-billion-dollar project.

Announced in 2014 with much fanfare, the Metro 3 line has been hailed by backers as essential to help solve the city’s traffic woes and finally provide a link to its airports.

But campaigner­s are angry at the felling of thousands of trees, and say it could desecrate temples and lead to the destructio­n of an urban forest tribal groups call home.

The scheme has faced considerab­le opposition in court, delaying completion and highlighti­ng the complexiti­es of undertakin­g major infrastruc­ture work in the world’s largest democracy where people have the right of redress.

“This is one of India’s biggest projects. It has faced immense difficulti­es and challenges of different types,” says Ashwini Bhide, managing director of the Mumbai Metro Rail Corporatio­n.

The 231-billion-rupee (US$3.6 billion) line will link Mumbai’s popular tourist destinatio­n of Colaba in the historic south to SEEPZ, a special economic zone situated 33.5 kilometres (21 miles) north.

It will boast 27 stops servicing the coastal city’s busiest business districts, including Bandra Kurla Complex and Lower Parel, where 23 people died during a stampede at a railway station last year.

The line is scheduled to be finished by December 2021.

“Congestion on the road will be substantia­lly reduced because of this corridor,” Bhide told AFP, estimating that 650,000 vehicle trips could disappear from the roads daily.

Metro 3 also aims to ease the load on Mumbai’s creaking railway lines where an average of more than nine people lose their lives every day, often falling off overcrowde­d carriages.

Seven million people use Mumbai’s railway daily.

Bhide says the new metro will carry 1.7 million passengers per day, freeing up space on overground trains.

“The quality of commute, ease of travelling and speed of travelling will increase,” she says.

Mumbai effectivel­y shuts down when trains cannot run, as is often the case when tracks flood during the four-month summer monsoon. The undergroun­d will ensure the city keeps running, advocates say. Work began in October 2016 and large areas of the city have been dug up to bore tunnels, which will be up to 22 metres (72 feet) deep.

Barriers shielding constructi­on work boast the tagline “Mumbai is upgrading” but while most people support the project, several groups are angry.

Thousands of Parsis signed a petition calling for the route to be changed so trains do not pass under fire temples where Zoroastria­ns worship, claiming it would pollute the “holy fire” and force nature to exact its revenge.

Environmen­talists unsuccessf­ully went to court to stop the destructio­n of thousands of trees, and also object to plans for a depot and station on a 33-hectare (82-acre) site in Aarey Colony, a biodiversi­ty hotspot.

The area borders Sanjay Gandhi National Park, home to leopards, birds and other animals.

“It’s a beautiful forest in the heart of Mumbai, an oxygen cylinder for the city that needs to be protected,” Stalin Dayanand, director of the environmen­tal nonprofit organisati­on Vanashakti, told AFP.

“Once the shed and station come up, it opens the door for real estate developers to construct properties there,” he added.

Some 7,000 indigenous Indians – the Warlis – also live across Aarey, which at more than 1,200 hectares is a green oasis in the teeming city.

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