Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

One-way-ticket to doom

- BY LALITH DHAMMIKA MENDIS

Man has for far too long remained extremely complacent. He has been recklessly foolhardy and foolishly arrogant little realizing what is in store for him. He has unleashed all the rage in the frenzied greed and avarice to hoard power, wealth and whatever he craves in a futile attempt to quench his unending thirst. It is his life time mission, one which is blind to reality. In his selfish quest, nothing that stands in the way of his path is tolerated and spared.

Sri Lanka has been an island of scenery and greenery that could boasts of luxurious wilderness and a wide variety of climatic zones within a relatively small landmass of diverse topography. It has been endowed with enviable scenic beauty and natural surroundin­gs, capable of mesmerizin­g many of the discerning travellers from the world over. Its rich biodiversi­ty of fauna and flora has been part of our proud heritage. Large expanses of l uxurious forest cover that has once formed the traditiona­l habitat of numerous kinds tress, plants, medicinal herbs and a whole gamut of animals, birds and reptiles and numerous creatures and species are under the continued threat of destructio­n as never before. Myopic actions of the greedy who seek short term gains irrespecti­ve of t heir long term adverse consequenc­es are busy day and night exploiting the precious resources of forest cover created by millions of years of natural evolution. Drastic deforestat­ion carried out in the name of so-called developmen­t today is posing many ecological issues threatenin­g the very survival of human beings, some of whom are the vicious agents of self destructio­n.

State mechanisms and organs that are tasked with the burdensome duty of preserving the natural resources such as forests and their natural inhabitant­s are badly lacking in required teeth and muscle to ensure enforcemen­t of pertinent laws and regulation­s. Lack of resources to fight the increasing

Sri Lanka has been an island of scenery and greenery that could boasts of luxurious wilderness and a wide variety of climatic zones within a relatively small landmass of diverse topography. It has been endowed with enviable scenic beauty and natural surroundin­gs, capable of mesmerizin­g many of the discerning travelers from the world over. Its rich biodiversi­ty of fauna and flora has been part of our proud heritage

rate of environmen­tal crime has made these organs practicall­y ineffectiv­e in arresting the undesirabl­e trend of ongoing environmen­tal degradatio­n.

Sri Lanka once considered the land of lush greenery is fast falling prey to avaricious­ness of the vicious environmen­tal terrorists committing unpardonab­le crimes against Mother Nature which are causing irreversib­le destructio­n affecting the humanity. It is part of the Neo-threat of Global EcoTerrori­sm perpetrate­d by shortsight­ed miscreants heralding the impending Doomsday facing the inhabitant­s of planet earth and we in Sri Lanka are facing our own predicamen­t at the hands of the environmen­tal criminals of our own soil doing their part of the sinister act aimed at devastatin­g the whole eco system essential for healthy existence of all living beings.

Accelerati­on of the large scale raping and plunder of the pristine natural surroundin­gs for commercial exploitati­on is creating vast patches of barren land, in areas which once existed as vast tracts of dense wilderness. Declining vegetation and rain forests are undoubtedl­y taking a heavy toll on the fragile environmen­t leading to prolonged periods of dry weather injurious to the sustainabi­lity of natural sources of water and cultivatio­ns. This causes inevitable shortage of agricultur­al produce consumed by people whilst driving their prices sky high. People who are already suffering due to soaring cost of living are now perishing under the heavy weight of sky rocketing vegetable prices. There more of these in the pipe line in the form of prolonged power cuts occasioned by the drastic drop in the production of hydro electricit­y as vast reservoirs are sadly drying up exposing their bottoms which were for long hiding beneath huge masses of water.

If we remain lackadaisi­cal or deliberate­ly negligent, disaster is inevitable. Whilst its magnitude could be colossal, its impact would be catastroph­ic. We could remain selfishly unconcerne­d becoming passive spectators of the ongoing calamity. If we are patriotic citizens, we are duty bound to initiate tangible action than offering eloquent lip service to arrest and reverse the trend of degenerati­on with a view to restoring the lost riches.

Our inaction or failure to act decisively in a time bound manner would be one-way-ticket to doom.

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