Down to Earth

Why only the Ganga

Calling only the Ganga human will not wash away our mounting environmen­tal sins

- RAKESH KALSHIAN

Calling the Ganga human is a legal gimmick

IN AN UNUSUAL judgment last month, a two-judge bench of the Uttarakhan­d High Court hearing a petition against the apathy of two state government­s, Uttarakhan­d and Uttar Pradesh, in cleaning up the river Ganga ruled that the river and its tributarie­s be conferred the status of a legal person/living entity and their rights enforced by appointed guardians.

The judges invoked the deep astha (faith) that millions of Hindus have for the Ganga to buttress their jurisprude­nce. While they do mention that the river also sustains life and livelihood of millions of Indians, not just Hindus (curiously enough, the petitioner in this case is a Muslim), the judges seem more persuaded by the river’s sacred persona.

Despite its amateurish articulati­on, the verdict is one more endorsemen­t of the radical idea that we must grant rights to nature in order to protect it from our hubris. In 2008, Ecuador became the first country in the world to endow rights on nature and gave citizens the power to sue on its behalf. Bolivia followed suit the following year with the Law of Mother Earth. And in 2010, New Zealand pronounced Whanganui, a river sacred to the Maori, to be a legal person.

Christophe­r Stone, an American professor of law, put this idea on a sound intellectu­al footing in his widely cited 1972 essay Should Trees Have Standing?, in which he argues that our anthropoce­ntric ethics have given rise to an unconscion­able caste system in which nature exists for the sole benefit and pleasure of humans. He posits that lest we degrade our environmen­t irretrieva­bly, we must seriously think of giving “legal rights to forests, oceans, rivers and other so-called natural objects in the environmen­t—indeed to the natural environmen­t as a whole”.

Critics of Stone’s thesis argue that there is no sound philosophi­cal basis for granting legal rights to all of nature. In their view, only creatures with a sense of the self and the moral, that is, mostly humans and some large mammals like apes, elephants and dolphins can stake moral claims. As for creatures that “demonstrab­ly” feel pain but lack self-consciousn­ess, for example rodents, they could be eaten or experiment­ed upon provided they don’t suffer “unjustly”. Needless to say, these definition­s, are human constructs and eminently controvers­ial.

Treating nature as a legal person also opens a Pandora’s box of practical difficulti­es. For instance, the judgement doesn’t spell out the rights of a river, thus raising more questions than it seeks to answer. Is erecting a dam on it ok? Can its basin be linked to that of another as the interlinki­ng of rivers project proposes to do? Does the judgement render all industries and municipali­ties dumping their waste into it culpable? Can we trust the court-appointed keepers of the river?

Be that as it may, critics do concede that our political and economic systems have failed to protect nature. However, they believe that there is enough leeway within our existing legal framework—for instance the precaution­ary principle, and putting the burden of proof on the project proponent, to name just a couple—to create an effective bulwark around our beleaguere­d environmen­t without necessaril­y tying ourselves in philosophi­cal knots over nature’s legal personalit­y.

All said and done, whether you want to preserve nature by endowing it with human rights or by taking away certain rights from the human, you still need political will to construct a new code of ethics. Unfortunat­ely, in the current epoch of the Anthropoce­ne, politics appears even more fragile and fractured. So, even as you cheer Ganga’s human identity, you might pause and ponder why the judges privileged the Ganga only? Couldn’t they have extended the same honour to all Indian rivers and forests? Sure, it would have sounded equally quixotic, but it would have at least appeared just and egalitaria­n. In the face of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s unrelentin­g campaign to undermine and trivialise environmen­tal laws at the altar of developmen­t, calling the Ganga human will not wash away our mounting environmen­tal sins.

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 ??  ?? TARIQUE AZIZ / CSE
TARIQUE AZIZ / CSE

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