Ganga activist Swami Gyan Swaroop Sanand ends fast. GOI keen to take care the “Save Ganga Mission”?
Ganga activist Swami Gyan Swaroop Sanand (Prof. G D Agrawal) ends fast.
Source: PTI | 05:03 PM,Mar 23,2012 |New Delhi |
Environment scientist - Ganga activist Swami Gyan Swaroop Sanand (Prof G D Agrawal)
today broke his fast after the government promised to convene the
meeting of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh-led National Ganga River Basin
Authority (NGRBA) next month. Agrawal, who was on a fast-unto-death
since March 8 to press for cleaning of Ganga, decided to take water and
liquid food after he was informed about the government’s decision to
convene the meeting of NGRBA on April 17 by Union ministers Sriprakash
Jaiswal and V Narayanasamy. “I will keep taking liquid but will not consume any solid food till any concrete work happens for cleaning of Ganga river,”
the 80-year-old activist told reporters here at AIIMS where he was
admitted two days ago in a critical condition. Demanding that the issue
of Ganga should be put in the “priority list” of government, Agrawal
said, “I am not in condition to
wait too long. I would be happy if it happens before the Prayag Kumbh
scheduled to take place in January, 2013.” Attacking the
government’s slow approach in preserving the river, he said, “All river
can not be placed in the same category with Ganga. Scientific studies
have proven that Ganga water has several qualities. But government’s
attitude can be ascertained as one minister increases the (rail) fare
and the other reduces it.” The biggest problem faced by Ganga is that 90
per cent of its “blood” (water) is sucked by dams and other illegal
activities taking place at its banks, Agrawal, who is also known as
Swami Gyanswaroop Sanand, said. Stating that the Prime Minister has
taken a note of the Sanand’s fast, Jaiswal said, “A
consensus emerged that the next meeting of NGRBA will take place in New
Delhi on April 17 and a delegation of Ganga Seva Abhiyanam will be
invited as special invitee there.” The agenda proposed
by Ganga Seva Abhiyanam will be discussed in the NGRBA meeting and it
shall be placed for discussion on priority, the minister said.
A curious mix of green and saffron.
Dinesh C. Sharma | New Delhi, March 22, 2012 | India Today.
It may sound a bit strange but that’s
what is happening in India of the twenty first century. The green
politics is getting a dose of saffron or you may say saffron politics is
acquiring a green hue. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) – the
fountainhead of all Hindu politics in the country – passed a resolution
at its Pratinidhi Sabha in Nagpur last week, criticising the draft
National Water Policy 2012 on key ecological and economic grounds.
The arguments put forth in the resolution
would gladden the hearts of any environmentalist, but for the excessive
focus on maintaining the sacredness of ‘rivers like Ganga and Yamuna’
by cleaning them up and the need to revive the ancient Saraswati. At the
same time, it is ironical to see that holy men and women have had to
fight the now-ousted BJP government in Uttarakhand to retain the
sacredness of the very same Ganga and its tributaries.
One of them, Swami Nigamanand, even had
to give his life up fighting against illegal mining in the Ganga
riverbed allegedly by a company owned by a RSS member.
Another swami, Gyanswarup Sanand, a
former professor at IIT Kanpur, is still on hunger strike fighting for
stopping work on all hydroelectric projects in Himalayan river valleys.
He had to be forcibly shifted from Varanasi to Delhi this week.
A closely linked issue, which has cropped
up once again thanks to a recent judgment of the Supreme Court, is the
interlinking of rivers. It was a pet project of the BJP-led NDA
government in early 2002 and was wholeheartedly supported by the saffron
brigade.
The interlinking was seen as a
nationalist project. The ecological fallout of constructing a series of
dams across the country to interlink rivers was conveniently overlooked.
Hopefully, at least now the saffron parties and their wings will now be
able to appreciate green side of this grandiose plan which was vocally
supported by President APJ Abdul Kalam then.
One can have no quarrel with anyone
taking up any environmental issue, be it river pollution, impact of
hydroelectric dams or the need for water conservation. But support to
green causes should not be selective and blinkered.
That’s what bothers mainstream
environmentalists. If RSS is against market-based mechanism for water
pricing, as it professes in its latest resolution, why are states run by
its political wing – the BJP – pursuing this very approach most
aggressively?
The Congress stand too seems to be
ambivalent when it comes to the Ganga. In response to the fast of Swami
Gyanswarup two years back, the central government stopped work on a
major hydroelectric project in the Alaknanda valley citing the need to
preserve holiness of the Ganga. Yet, the same government continues to
give green clearances in other river valleys in the state and constantly
ignores pollution in the river flowing in the plains.
Is the river less sacred in the plains or
is the reverence shown by the government limited to just one state?
Green and saffron can certainly co-exist but let the green override all
narrow political concerns.
Another Ganga devotee begins fast unto death in Varanasi.
Varanasi | Mar 23, 2012 | Star News: On
the 15th day of his fast-unto-death for the Ganga, Swami Gyan Swarup
Sanand (noted environmentalist Prof GD Agrawal) ended his fast in New
Delhi after he received a written agreement from the Government of India
on Friday. He, however, made it clear that he had not ended his
‘tapasya’ (austerity) and would take only liquid food till the promises
were fulfilled.
In the meantime, in continuation with the ‘Ganga Tapasya’, another Ganga devotee in Varanasi, Ganga Premi Bhikshu, began a fast unto death sans water at Kedhar Ghat on Friday.
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