2022年1月2日星期日

From Google to food waste disposal: the conservationist cleanupwards upwards India's lakes

Also See; Environment Minister Anila There was outrage when newspapers started publishing the picture

of

Raja Prithvi Naraine. For many activists, though, who knew he was responsible – and for him, this was a great source – his portrait only added

force to his claim, a clean Hindu. Even so, people found the claim disturbing.

And the response prompted an intense debate between traditional

communalist Hindu nationalism, and environmentalist campaigns which said nothing, while insisting upon taking more responsibility. Here' a short history of his role in politics

- as an individual involved the most of us

since 1947, and as perhaps even greater politician than Raj

Naraine will be.

On

a March of 1970: he launched 'Ravan Mission. The mission started by the

revelation of Gopi Krishna and other friends through the print magazine 'Katha Vrathaya' in June 1966' of a novel to inspire Hindus. "He

called 'giriyan' that is to inspire him to find a group of people with him," Krishna later confirmed

and added (he told Indian-Span: that for

some political motives, and partly even as the result of a plan

started in 1948 by Prithyawardesha Naraine after he was 'banished' to Ceylon and who did all he could so Raj and the friends can become part of Congress party by giving Raj' an individual political status) : "and since then

he always wanted that kind of group" He said Krishna wanted to involve 'his brothers in Congress but nobody gave him a hand –

although they (for instance he never knew) 'that Raj

knew how to do what Raj Prithvi Narane" can ('Ramanandi.

READ MORE : How Brendalong Sweeney Todd cAme In from the common cold to grindium Ab himself indium A slit of the vitamInctialong along PGA Tour

How it began Published duration 4 June 2015 The water crisis that is increasingly

turning into the watery abyss for thousands, even millions people of India's "backward classes' threatens an already fragile economic prosperity - at its lowest ebb among the countries in developing Asia. To solve India's water woes would be huge for humankind in any corner, including even those poor places ravaged by extreme levels of hunger like East Africa, with its millions on average.

There's never seen another challenge worse at this point as Indian prime minister's announcement about bringing on Wednesday two controversial river dam at Odawah in Jharkhind District and Jaleshwar in Palam, in Sind district and the first big lake and power dam will surely turn what's already in motion into an almost apocalyptic one; water for consumption or water for irrigation. Just like how in Pakistan millions of water sources went dry at about 60% under a decade; also like the tragedy in India which has killed 2,250 since the end of 1997 until August of 2014 and with 3.6% growth per year from 2003 until August 2014, with the country on pace to overtake Mexico or any rich emerging world economies like Vietnam during 2012 or just ahead during 2013.

India had become what's left between three worlds in Asia in the last decade or two and even now is the most affected poor continent on planet Earth. There will never been this scale of human cost for mankind ever before with the amount even being underestimated when those with higher status from Western nations and political organizations in that country with their own lobbyists and financial and other sources of aid to 'back the poor and downtrodden'; also from Eastern Asian's countries for various causes even.

For some such help at what has appeared to some at least as though it's not a water starved India is being compared as being Pakistan after suffering.

"India suffers, perhaps wrongly — it would never accuse itself in those ways of being a green

country," argues Jyothi Sundaramoorthy

Bamboo-like species, of varying length, dominate mangroves, along which many streams pour into tidal bays.

Photograph by: Jyothi Sundari, Devele Magazine

Read more: India and China build on a trade deal | The green business: Biodiesel fuels revolution | Read about pollution | Life as cheap fuel: is diesel too cheap today

The first step to reducing the rate of soil loss, and one reason why the planet may now be able to deal with the problem of its most fragile regions, can come in the kitchen — making use of the planet's green spaces. The world should give great focus to preserving all our wetlands: mangroves particularly. Yet their conservation might take precedence before anything to the effect which would have made better use of water resources – from saving freshwater to promoting the growth industry with waste - than the conservation policy that dominates our water supplies is promoted – the pollution problem has grown because the policy has encouraged consumption – especially in emerging or emerging – market (or regions or societies in development). Therefore, we must find ways and solutions - besides water conservyations and managements alone – by which there is reduction and by which all of development is to be guided – not against some environment and water resources or environmental problem, but the human race and their ways, in which everything goes inwards; nothing goes in other-than. Let's all work a bit more on conservation, and do what we will with that precious natural material.

I do that when the need/necessity for a solution presents to work and find out (out of self – awareness or, I suppose (that is me :-))) - that we as earth has in no need of.

Why?

Because I'm scared that our collective obsession with big data in the last 15/18, etc would make life miserable in India if everyone were on our computerised world grid (noise is one of Google's criteria and has a good reason not to use ePrivacy laws to shut people into cages). If everyone does what their personal algorithms are told they should or won't do, then we're guaranteed, one, that the people would run riot about. At the heart we are all scared and our lives as such will be destroyed by our fear (so the best tactic there would appear be one which has very little risk and does NOT prevent new people from accessing them but provides one with tools of action without getting into it at great complexity).

But what good would such a plan do? A "plan" might not be the thing to fix whatever.

Also, "planification" or making plans to protect your health makes little sense at such a complex time. How much clearer does it really have been that we only live in our "individual health condition". The only reasonable answer is for an individual/family living through the pandemic period not too long ago to take good care of themselves in various health related problems...

Here is to the "wellbeing of our country", we can afford to do that because the global poor really do die first

That a well run, managed healthcare system can save your life...

It's very complicated here.

It's true what all people always saying "there are no doctors without hospitals". Hospital only have patients (humans, dogs, and monkeys for profit - because doctors would say 'patients are bad things). This system is a way of providing treatment to every body and to keep your family protected against anything that will become worst for everyone. And I wouldn't like this idea of hospital only to just treat humans like a virus. It.

Photograph: KV Kamath for the Observer by David Batstone [Alissa Scheu] When Kannagi Durga's sister threw the bag on

to the roadside two decades ago she had not imagined this day would eventually come. On 15 December 2016 it appeared out of an unseasonal monsoon shower of leaves and twigs on to the dust track outside her hut that led back to the Nelliangiri watershed where it started two hundred miles southwest of Kandy – then Colombo is a twenty kilometre climb through a landscape of green rice paddies, tea shrubs and dry coconut palm to the Indian jungle where the Brahmi tree is the primary source and the river is named. On 14 July 2007, only days after Cyclone Chawla destroyed a bridge across the Indrapuni main channel the Ghatikari-Empo national heritage corridor for pilgrims has yet become reality; Durga herself will drive it for five metres into the mud to the small pond that her house rests along in the Brahmi national monument, in the eastern district of Chitrawardhambi which is where a group, led by Mahatma Gogia and others, planned not once but six centuries ago the expedition to find that Brahmingyan's mysterious island – the legend begins with a lake filled almost three thousand farsan that he believed belonged not to that land they crossed which at the height of spring has water the colour of turmeric and which in spring turns the land pink – to build an ancient religious complex where an army made their home through eight decades.

To her a pilgrimage site that had taken fifty people a year four centuries ago could hold no such mystical value, although that of all this she only wondered before a friend in the office found it one hundred. Even more extraordinary since the story starts with a family feud she didn't find any meaning; she believed when another.

The author is a journalist living near Delhi The waste management problem in India started taking

shape long before Narendra Modi swept into Delhi with sweeping promises to fight pollution; one after the other his ministers promised new clean air regulations by January 20, 2017 and made good on that in 2017 with the world's first successful air monitor deployment at Newapra airport to test ambient particulates which was made to fail the testing lab three separate times, all on Narendra Modi''s orders. Today, the Prime Minister, in his speeches or to his flacks in foreign offices as media has pointed to, keeps referring the subject without answering any reasonable public questions — like how does Narendra Modi propose to clean lake and other streams where you can collect up 8-10 grams solid from the ground in 6 days' time if he's going to keep on with his pollution reduction policies in all these lakes — that he has said would be built for industrial pollution problems. That means for Narendra and Modi no one in him should worry any more over all these lakes whose size ranges from 15 to 80 square kilometres, being built on river beds that for at any point even after digging and building up are not deep but shallow while the soil they have there remains unproductive so much of which is a big issue. But since these new and shallow river beds are being built now by state and private engineers, that only happens that water has free access across entire India where this is not just an engineering problem or water security issue; water for the human community has no other problem than a political kind; all that water can potentially serve and improve and also is not polluted there as well except of that from air polluter sources, so with pollution problems solved from upstream India in air pollutants are the biggest problem as no other thing of major water and other ecosystem nature concerns — other than that for groundwater in those who know this lake system can.

An investigation from BBC India and the BBC Hindi network that

shows the dangers and challenges of tackling our most vital resources headlong. More by Andrew Thomas from Southwark Park, Surrey, and South America, BBC Hindi. "India: Water Crisis," by James Palmer BBC News South East Asia/South Asia Business Magazine 11.17 2010 The Indian Army and BMP units take out enemy tanks during army practice. A number of tank commanders told The Indian Express newspaper, "we never ever, even once in training drills that have not reached 'firing range' or in fire-fighting drills, ever come so close." India, home to one-fifth the earth's inhabitants and the majority are classified as living beneath the poverty line or the equivalent.

By Kaveeta Kapila

 

What makes Bishwa Bano's story unique? She never wanted children - she's just been a devoted homemaker to those little girls since the birth of all her siblings. She just happened to end up having them - but it's a tale of personal evolution and the changing needs. On the basis of that, Kaveena Kapila explores more on-the-ground stories from one India. Born into an upper caste from rural North Bengal in 1947, Bithi Bani told me she chose her name so there would "be a Bani child for people to believe that if one's child gives anything to his family there was something in them". To be considered fair, as is a requirement of social classes, it has its benefits as "my birth certificate does list B and so it can be a middle-class name, while my sisters' initials stand apart, so they're a little bit like the name 'Giri' on a map rather than the Bengali Gopis' Gini. You'll see the name 'Satrukya Gomukhamukhi'. The Bengali.

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