Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

A grim reminder, once again

The Malin tragedy shows that unsustaina­ble urbanisati­on is a dangerous practice

-

With bated breath, every summer India awaits for monsoon winds to soothe its parched landscape. Along with fulfilling its responsibi­lity of replenishi­ng the undergroun­d and overground reservoirs, watering swathes of bone-dry farmlands and calm our minds and bodies, it has the habit of teaching us lessons for not following a sustainabl­e way of life. If it was Uttarakhan­d in 2013, it is Maharashtr­a this year. Last week, Malin, a village near Pune, was flattened by landslides triggered by torrential rains, killing more than 75 people.

Like Uttarakhan­d, this tragedy could also have been avoided — or at least minimised — if the people and local authoritie­s listened to warnings and had been a little more conscious of the way they were implementi­ng a project plan. Environmen­talists have blamed the short-sightednes­s of the government in implementi­ng an employment generation scheme for tribals that required hill slopes be flattened and tress cut down to develop cultivable plot. The official data indicate that nearly 28,000 trees were cut for this project; unofficial figures put the count at 300,000. Malin was also marked as an ‘ecological­ly sensitive’ village by the Kasturiran­gan committee report on the Western Ghats last year. In 2013, the Union ministry of environmen­t and forests had notified it as an ecological­ly sensitive village and recommende­d a no-developmen­t policy but yet, as the tragedy shows, it was business as usual at Malin. It’s not only Malin that refused to learn from the Uttarakhan­d tragedy; even the Himalayan state seems to have forgotten last year’s tragedy. The state government is still pushing for hydropower projects that were blamed for upsetting the ecological balance of the area and it also restarted the Kedarnath Yatra — the rush of pilgrims can again put pressure on the fragile ecosystem of the area and this could lead to disastrous consequenc­es.

Every time there’s a natural calamity of this scale, there is clamour for better and effective early warning systems. But the people, as well as the government, fail to do anything about the man-made activities that accentuate such weatherrel­ated havoc. The early warning systems can only forewarn us about the extreme weather patterns, like heavy rain, but it cannot stop landslides from happening. To stop that, we need to plant trees on our barren hills. The writing on the wall is clear: The pace at which we are urbanising ecological­ly sensitive areas has dangerous consequenc­es, as we have seen in Uttarakhan­d and Malin. How many more deaths will it take for people to realise this truth?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India