Public Screening at IIC: The Land of Vanishing Lakes

Toxics Link’s Environment & Health Public Lecture Series

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The most popular lakes of NCR have disappeared. The 2 billion year old water bodies of the Aravallis – Surajkund, Badkhal and Damdama, have all dried up.

This film looks at the nexus between the corrupt bureaucracy with the construction and the mining mafia. With exclusive bytes from Retired Forest officers, Environmentalists and Scientists, we piece together the whole story behind the current mess. This film opens with a few short interviews, which talk about what led to the disappearance of the lakes due to illegal & irresponsible mining and construction of farm houses in the notified forest area of the Aravallis. We talk to experts on the principle of sustainable mining and through their comments, the land-mafia-admin-police-miner nexus comes out, and the utter helplessness of the situation gets revealed.

The latter part of the film explores the realm of PILs filed by Magsaysay award winner Advocate M. C. Mehta that led to the court banning all mining operations in the area. The Haryana government, apparently oblivious, to the ruling went ahead with inviting bids for mining leases for Sirohi and Khori Jamalpur mines.

The climax questions the Haryana Government’s claim of bringing back water to its lakes before the Commonwealth Games without any concrete plans for the same. The residents of the area — who have seen the tourist flow getting reduced to a trickle over the years — complain that no effort was ever made to maintain the water flow to the historical Surajkund which is now a fleeting shadow of its past.

An alarm had been sounded in the hydrological report submitted by the Ministry of Environment in its affidavit before the forest bench of Supreme Court in August last year. It had mentioned that these used mining pits were found ‘‘filled with water’’ leading to ‘‘massive evaporation of groundwater’’ — about 8.86 lakh ccm of fresh water.

The film ends with a ray of hope in spite of apparent ecological disaster and offers a way-ahead in devastated areas.

Speakers:

  • Ms. Ishani K Dutta – Director, The Land Of Vanishing Lakes
  • Mr. R. K. Srinivasan – Senior Research Officer, Centre for Science and Environment
  • Mr. R. P. Balwan – Retd. Forest Officer, Haryana Govt.

Date: 23rd October 2009, Friday
Time: 6:30 p.m.
Venue: Conference Room I, India International Centre, Lodhi Road, New Delhi

(In collaboration with India International Centre)

For further information and RSVP, please contact:
Pragya Majumder – pragya@toxicslink.org
Tel: 24320711, 24328006
Email: info@toxicslink.org

Aastha Kukreti

Aastha Kukreti holds a Master’s degree in Environment Management and her areas of expertise range from waste management, pollution ecology, green audits, ecofeminism, environmental equity and social justice.

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