ADVERTISEMENT

Honestly, none seems to care

October 13, 2012 11:55 pm | Updated October 18, 2016 12:50 pm IST

This refers to Professor Sanjeeva Raj’s article ( The Hindu , Open Page, September 23, 2012) on biodiversity and how it is a God-blessed gift to our great, tropical country.

However, how many do really understand and appreciate even the basics about it, forget the subtle aspects, including, or rather especially, the ill-educated, selfish, incompetent, corrupt politicians and rulers at the helm of affairs? Is CoP-11, now under way in Hyderabad, a fortnight of drama, fun and free lunch for thousands with practically nothing worthwhile achieved at the end of the day as was the outcome of the ‘great’ conference at Rio-de-Janeiro, nearly 20 years ago?

As to the protection of (let us say) Indian biodiversity — a big deal indeed — you will appreciate that it would require the sincere, honest efforts of educated, rather enlightened, masses; do we have them in our by and large illiterate (and nearly 100% educated) nation?

ADVERTISEMENT

Then what about the deliberate, continual damage sustained to the biodiversity in the country by our ‘rulers for the past 65 years of our “self rule”?

I sincerely wish, somebody at the conference will bring out, just to mention a few, vis-à-vis (at least) Indian biodiversity:

— the literal rape of the Western Ghats;

ADVERTISEMENT

— the devastation of the Himalayas from Haridwar to Badrinath, caused by our uneducated pilgrims, year after year;

— the unredeemable pollution of our rivers, including (or especially) the great Maa Ganga, which have been reduced to sewers;

— and nearer home, in Hyderabad, the ruining of the Hussainsagar lake, by the annual immersion of Ganesh idols;

— and the indiscriminate felling of hundreds of substantial trees (some of them more them 100 years old) for road widening or that stupid Outer Ring Road etc.

I also recall the suggestion some time ago of ‘developing’ the great Sundarbans as a tourist attraction by some selfish, money-hungry Indian multi-billionaire. Well, if that materialises, it will be some more nails in the coffin of Indian biodiversity.

(The writer’s email is: bhargavasc_yapral@ rediffmail.com)

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT