Delhi LG laments polluted Yamuna, says devotees again forced to offer Chhath prayers amid filth on riverbanks
New Delhi, Nov 20 (PTI) Delhi Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena on Monday lamented the condition of the froth, sewer and effluent-laden Yamuna on the culmination of the Chhath festival, saying promises to clean the river remain unfulfilled.
In a series of posts on X, Saxena also accused the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government in the national capital of 'convolutedly' getting the Supreme Court to modify a National Green Tribunal (NGT) order.
The work on cleansing the Yamuna had started pursuant to directions issued by the NGT.
No immediate reaction was available from the Delhi government to the LG's posts on the microblogging website.
In July, the Supreme Court stayed the NGT's order nominating the LG to head a high-level committee constituted for cleaning the Yamuna.
Saxena said the Chhath festival culminated on Monday with 'Arghya' offered to the Sun god. 'Chhathi Maiya' departed but the Yamuna remained dirty and polluted, he said, adding that the devotees were once again forced to offer prayers amid silt, debris and filth.
'Arghya offering in the Yamuna got prohibited yet Yamuna could not be cleaned,' the LG said in one of his posts on X.
Saxena had undertaken cleaning of the heavily-polluted Najafgarh drain that opens into the Yamuna and taken other initiatives for cleansing the river as the chairman of the high-level committee formed by the NGT.
'Even when some work starts under directions of Hon'ble NGT and things just begin to change in terms of cleaner floodplains, enhanced sewage treatment, land for new STPs and resultant slight improvements in water quality, the Govt co(n)volutedly gets Hon'ble SC to modify NGT's order,' the LG said.
'Year after year. One promise after another. Froth, sewer, effluent remain unchecked. The floodplains get turned into dump yards and open toilets. COD/BOD, Coliform, E Coli ... all markers damn the river,' he added.
In another post, Saxena said a blame game starts after Chhath or when the ammonia level goes up in the river or during floods and when there is a water shortage due to a low water level in reservoirs, but no one takes blame for years of 'inaction'.
'And ... the Yamuna flows festering..!!' he said.
The NGT formed the high-level committee chaired by the LG in January, noting that there was a huge gap between sewage generation and the available sewage-treatment facilities in the city. PTI VIT RC
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