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India's Rivers Are Dying Due To Sewerage, Say Activists

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RestoreGore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-14-07 09:09 PM
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India's Rivers Are Dying Due To Sewerage, Say Activists
Edited on Thu Jun-14-07 09:14 PM by RestoreGore
This is a classic example of overpopulation and poverty and the effects it brings to our natural resources. As Himalayan glaciers continue to recede at an alarming rate with predictions that they could be gone within the next forty to fifty years, India cannot afford to continue polluting the water they have left. And this begs the question when rightfully blaming it on poor management: why are people not crying out for changing it? What has happened to our moral will to stand up for what is right? To stand up for our planet and for ourselves? To respect the lifeblood of our planet that is sacred? We are doing this to ourselves, and only we can change it...the question is, will we?

India's Rivers Dying Due to Sewage, Say Activists

INDIA: June 15, 2007

NEW DELHI - The daily dumping of millions of tonnes of sewage is killing India's rivers and threatening the lives of thousands of poor people, an environmental think-tank said on Thursday.

New Delhi alone produces 3.6 billion litres of sewage every day but due to poor management less than half is effectively treated. The remaining untreated waste is dumped into the Yamuna river. "We talk a lot about industrial pollution of our rivers, but sewage pollution is a big problem," Sunita Narain, director of the Centre for Science and Environment, told reporters.

"What is happening to the Yamuna is reflective of what is happening in almost every river in India," she added. "The Yamuna is dead, we just haven't officially cremated it yet."

According to the Central Pollution Control Board, around 70 percent of the pollution in the Yamuna is human excrement.

This results in water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea -- one of the biggest killers of children in India -- and affects thousands of poor people living near the river who drink the water and bathe in it.


snip

Climate change is also another threat to India's water supplies with Himalayan glaciers -- the source of many of India's rivers -- rapidly receding, and erratic rainfall predicted due to global warming.

Skirmishes are beginning to occur in parts of India where farmers have been protesting over rights to more water, Narain added.

Story by Nita Bhalla

About The Yamuna River


Water Is Life
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