Cape Times

Bold steps to restore Taj Mahal

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NEW DELHI: India has proposed a ban on plastics, polluting factories and constructi­on around its 17th-century monument to love, the Taj Mahal, a government document showed, in an attempt to stave off pollution that is turning the structure yellow and green.

The white marble mausoleum is located around 210km from the capital, New Delhi, in the northern city of Agra, which the World Health Organisati­on rated in May as the world’s eighth-most polluted.

In a draft document submitted to the Supreme Court on Tuesday, authoritie­s in Uttar Pradesh state, where Agra is located, said that, to fight pollution, they would ban all plastics, switch to electric and hydrogen vehicles, and boost the green cover within the precincts of the Taj.

“Replacing present-day lawns with tree cover as existed originally will increase the biomass,” the document read.

This step would reduce water consumptio­n to maintain the surroundin­g garden and boost the water table, besides trapping dust to reduce pollution, the draft said.

India’s Supreme Court is driving the campaign to protect the country’s most famous monument, which was built by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan for his wife Mumtaz Mahal.

The document was submitted after the justices, in a fit of anger during a hearing two weeks ago, demanded that authoritie­s either restore the structure or tear it down.

One of the seven wonders of the world, the Taj Mahal is flanked by a rubbish-strewn river and is often enveloped by dust and smog from belching smokestack­s and vehicles.

Environmen­talists and historians have long warned about the risk of soot and fumes from factories and tanneries dulling the monument, which also faces attack from insects that stain its marble.

“There have been various studies, various plans, but they have not been implemente­d in right earnest in a co-ordinated manner,” said Divay Gupta, an official of the non-profit Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage.

The draft proposes an integrated environmen­tal and natural heritage management plan, with a special focus on checking air pollution, besides river and water management and conservati­on. – Reuters

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