Hindustan Times (East UP)

Space tough to come by for saplings in Delhi’s ‘garden of forgivenes­s’

- QJasjeev Gandhiok jasjeev.gandhiok@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The sight of thousands of fresh saplings greets visitors to Delhi’s Central Ridge – a notified forest area adjacent to Sardar Patel Marg – thanks to court orders to assorted offenders to help the forests and wildlife department plant trees using fine amounts imposed on them.

The cluster that houses several native plant varieties has come to be commonly known as Maafi Bagh – garden of forgivenes­s – as part of the forestatio­n has been undertaken as court-ordained penance by those falling foul of the law. But, a spot check reveals operationa­l constraint­s have overshadow­ed the novel garden. Congested plantation has led to saplings wilting away for lack of sunlight, left stunted with no space to grow.

In March 2019, justice Najmi Waziri of the Delhi high court imposed a fine of ₹80 lakh on a pharmaceut­ical company for breach of court orders, ordering it to use the amount for the “larger public good” and create a green area of 140,000 saplings in the Central Ridge.

Complying with the orders, the department of forests and wildlife said in its submission that it could plant just 3,500 saplings in the area, citing lack of space in the ridge’s rocky terrain. But, with the court warning of contempt proceeding­s, the department scaled up the number to over 15,000 saplings in that case, and also carried out compensato­ry plantation in nearly 50 more such matters since then. To be sure, since March 2019, over 45,000 saplings have been planted in the cluster.

To compensate for the poor living conditions for the plants and lack of space, a similar area for compensato­ry plantation was created in Delhi’s Southern Ridge, called Insaaf Bagh (garden of justice). The new site has reignited hopes of a green revival as a close look at the saplings planted in the original Maafi Bagh showed that nearly half of those are in bad shape. Each tree has been meticulous­ly numbered and tagged, but with the saplings growing too close to each other, there isn’t adequate sunlight, forest officials say.

Officials working in the area say efforts are made to find spots where there are openings in a larger tree canopy, but with the invasive Vilayati Kikar variety covering large patches of the Central Ridge sunlight doesn’t percolate down.

“These are two Kadamb trees, both planted at the same time. While one of them now stands at a height of nearly 12 feet, the other has barely touched 4 feet. The former receives plenty of sunlight but the latter is growing in a shaded area under a Vilayati Kikar and is finding it tough to spread out or grow,” explains a forest official watering a patch of 26,000 saplings planted as part of the Aparna Bhat vs Sakshi Singh case in the Delhi high court.

To create room for fresh saplings to be planted in each new case, the ground vegetation is the first to be cleared, before pits are dug at gaps of four to 10 feet to accommodat­e them. Another forest official says the mortality rate is around 20%, largely due to plants not receiving enough nutrients and sunlight despite earnest efforts. “We are watering each patch using borewells and STP (sewage treatment plant) water. Plenty of manure is provided to the plants, but some are simply unable to grow,” says the official, adding that it is difficult to prune the Kikars to allow passage of sunlight as the area is a notified forest.

Experts believe not only is the lack of ground vegetation damaging to the overall ecology of the forest, but not all trees are likely to survive the plantation process.

“A lot of saplings are unable to grow properly as they are growing close to each other. Other species will dry out as soon as they stop receiving water as the Ridge’s rocky, thin top-soil ecology only supports a fixed number of species, environmen­talist Pradip Krishen, says.

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