Saturday, January 08, 2011

Waters from hell

Prof Rajita Chaudhuri follow some off-beat trends like organizing make up sessions

Rivers and coasts in India's most developed and most polluted state of Gujarat are fast turning into dumps of toxic industrial effluents. As both the Administration and the industry shy away from their responsibilities, its impact will be catastrophic on marine, human and other lifeforms, writes Arnold Christie

A recent police complaint against the Gujarat Industrial Development Corporation (GIDC) and the Gujarat Pollution Control Board (GPCB) has alleged that leakages in the effluent pipeline from Jhagadia industrial units have contaminated water bodies - fresh water ponds and the Amravati Creek - in Ankleshwar taluka. An edgy GPCB has rushed its officials to collect samples of the polluted water following the complaint from villagers of Dadhal, a tiny village in Bharuch district.

On December 11, 2009, the Ahmedabad Police raided a textile factory in the Narol area and seized a tanker which was dumping concentrated acid in sewage. After analysis, the chemical was found to be hazardous for any lifeform. On July 3, 2010, police filed a chargesheet against four arrested during the seizure. Last week, GPCB has issued closure order against Electrotherm's iron pipe manufacturing plant situated at Shamkhiyali in Kutch. The firm had allegedly started operations without environmental clearance from the Centre and NOC from GPCB.

Millions of litres of untreated effluents were being pumped into the Arabian Sea in Valsad district of south Gujarat. At the vanguard of the legal battle in the Gujarat High Court is the Parsi community that made Sanjan its home after fleeing Iran 1,300 years ago. The crisis has already taken a huge toll on the marine eco system of the region. Ten million litres of toxic chemical effluents have been dumped into the Arabian sea from the Sarigam Industrial Estate off the coast of Sanjan. In April, 2010, Gujarat High Court ordered that 22 units be shut down for lacking requisite facilities to treat effluents. This is the grim reality hidden behind the facade of impressive industrial growth in Gujarat's Golden Corridor - spread from south Gujarat to north Gujarat.

Union minister for environment and forests Jairam Ramesh announced after his visit to Ankleshwar in September, 2009, that no new industry would be given permission till they spruced up their facility to meet the laid-down standards. The ministry will not give environmental clearance for new industries in the major industrial areas of Gujarat, at least till August this year. This ban order was issued in January 2010.

These are not isolated incidents. The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) in March, 2010, declared Gujarat as the 'most polluted state' in the country. About 80 per cent of total hazardous wastes in the country is generated by seven states; Gujarat tops the list. Gujarat accounts for 29 per cent of the 6.2 million tonnes of hazardous waste. Accusing the state government of not taking any remedial action, director of Paryavaran Mitra (Friends of Environment) Mahesh Pandya says, 'Authority and industrialists are responsible for such a polluted environment. If we pursue the state government, they ask the association of industries to clean it up. These associations say it's not their responsibility. Now the toxins are affecting the masses.' Gujarat takes pride as the flag bearer of India's industrial might but it has come at a huge cost. A 400-km stretch between Vapi in south Gujarat and Mehsana in the north is dotted densely by waste dump hotspots. Rivers have become industrial gutters, hand pumps spew coloured water and open land, both government and private, is used to dump wastes. The major polluting units along the rivers include sugar, textile, electroplating, pesticides, pharmaceuticals, pulp and paper, tanneries, dyes and dye intermediates, petrochemicals and steel plants among others. According to CPCB, the major reason for polluted river stretches in Gujarat is that effluents are directly discharged by the factories into these water bodies. Millions of litres of untreated effluents are dumped in major rivers like Narmada, Sabarmati, Mahi, Khari, Damanganga, Amalkhadi and in the Gulf of Khambhat. Convener of Gujarat Paryavaran Surakha Samiti Rohit Prajapati says, 'All the shocking figures had been obtained from GPCB and CPCB through RTI. In most cases, the presence of toxins are 300 per cent to over 1,000 per cent more than the levels set by the GPCB. Even the effluent treatment plants set up by the state and the Central governments are not functioning properly, adding to the problem.'

In a shocking revelation, GPCB sources admitted that the wastes discharged in the Damanganga from the Common Effluent Treatment Plant (CETP) of the industrial houses in Vapi contained 347 per cent more Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD), 432 per cent more Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) and 196 per cent more Ammoniacal Nitrogen (AN), a serious health hazard, compared to the GPCB-prescribed norms. The conditions are worse in Ankleshwar where 248 per cent more COD and 1,328 per cent more AN is dumped into the Gulf of Cambay. The effluent channel project of Vadodara dumping waste water into the estuary of the Mahisagar was found to be carrying 300 to 700 per cent more than the prescribed norms of COD, Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD), AN, TDS, Cyanide, phenols and other hazardous pollutants.

Effluents dumped in the Sabarmati from the industrial estates in Vatva, Odhav, Narol and Naroda around Ahmedabad were found to be alarmingly toxic, 2,926 per cent more of COD, 2,520 per cent more of AN and 780 per cent more of TDS. Industries in and around Vadodara are dumping huge quantities of hazardous chemicals into river Mahisagar and the Gulf of Khambhat. A latest CPCB report finds the effluents 15 times more toxic than the accepted limits.

The Gujarat Government's dream river front project is coming up on the banks of third most polluted river in the country. And it is not surprising that the state is also home to the first two most polluted rivers of the country. They are the Amalkhadi river at Ankleshwar and Khari river near Ahmedabad. The Amlakhadi, which meets Narmada in Bharuch district, has been reduced to an effluent channel by over 1,500 chemical units in Ankleshwar, Panoli, Vilayat, Dahej and Jhagadia. Recently, Jairam Ramesh called Vapi the most polluted town in the country. Forbes and Time have listed it among the 10 most polluted towns in the world. Its three streams ' Damanganga, Kolak and Balitha ' no longer bear a resemblance to flowing water bodies. CPCB has, in fact, categorised both the Damanganga and Kolak rivers as unfit to support life.

The river Han in Seoul, South Korea, was the most polluted river in the world a decade back. Today, it receives no more effluents. We can also follow the Seoul Model and save our rivers. Today, Gujarat's rivers hope that good sense will finally prevail over short-term considerations. Development is necessity but without an environment to sustain life, it will be meaningless.

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board
IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of IndiaIIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri's Snaps

Friday, January 07, 2011

Munna Shukla

IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board

Munna Shukla's palatial home looks forlorn these days. The palace of this MLA from Lalganj has not seen any coMunna Shuklaurt or courtier for months now. It lacks the pomp and show that it was known for in the past. Now since the king himself is in jail, couriers have found better things to do. Implicated in the murder case of ex-minister Brij Bihari Prasad, Shukla is serving life sentence in Muzaffarpur jail. His kin too give his palace a miss these days. They prefer to stay elsewhere. His wife Anu Shukla keeps visiting once in a while, but mostly, she divides her time between courts in Patna and Delhi. A few caretakers and close aides stay in the house and entertain people who lose their way to the palace. His wife takes care of the complaints of the people from his constituency. His personal assistant Sanjeev Kumar maintains that his MLA does not let the people of the constituency feel that their MLA is out of touch. He is omnipresent. Political dynasties are a common fare but Munna's was a politico-criminal dynasty. One of his brothers, Chotan Shukla, an aide of dreaded muscleman Devendra Nath Dubey, was gunned down in 1994 when he was returning from an election meeting. It was during his funeral procession that DM Krishnaiyah was lynched by the mob led by Anand Mohan and his wife Lovely Anand. While the young DM pleaded for his life, Munna's youngest brother Bhutkan Shukla shot him in the head from close. Bhutkan met the same fate a few years later. The battle between minister Brij Bihari Prasad and the Shukla family was the battle to control the turf of Muzaffarpur. Prasad allegedly drew the first blood when his gunmen killed Chotan. Munna later joined with other upper caste ganglords to kill Prasad. But that was a long time ago.

A few profiteers and aides keep the chairs at his house warm. His wife is doing whatever she can to soothe the people of constituency but patience is running out. His aides maintain that the CM has betrayed his promise to bail him out. Nitish visited his village for a public meeting but gave his house a miss. Only his release, his aides believe, can restore the charisma and fear his name once evoked.

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM BBA MBA B-School: Rabindranath Tagore Peace Prize To Irom Chanu Sharmila
IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of India
Rajita Chaudhuri follow some off-beat trends like organizing make up sessions
IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri: The New Age Woman

Monday, January 03, 2011

Rajesh Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav

IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri's Snaps

It was not that criminalisation of politics was the gift of the Lalu-Rabri regimeRajesh Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav. It was always there in one form or the other. It was just that with the advent of Lalu, the monopoly of upper caste ganglords was broken for the first time. The confidence among the backward castes manifested itself in several ways, including criminalisation. Rajesh Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav was one such manifestation. And unlike several other musclemen who opted for established political parties, Pappu Yadav entered the political arena as an independent.

When Pappu started his career as an MLA from Singheshwar Assembly constituency in Madhepura, he already had a dozen-odd cases against him. But soon he shifted his base to neighbouring Purnea where Ajit Sarkar of the CPI(M) ruled the roost. Sarkar epitomised everything that Pappu was not and thus was an ideological and political threat to Pappu. Pappu took this animosity to his heart. On June 14, 1998, Sarkar was gunned down along with a few of his cadres. Pappu got implicated and the routine rounds to courts started. People lost count of the number of times he went to the jail and was released. However, unwary of all these, Pappu continued to operate freely from the jail itself. Later he was shifted to Tihar in Delhi. He has such a long list of cases that people say that everyday in this country a court hears a case against him. Pappu's political graph, however, never dipped in between. He became an MP and continued to win. Pappu rules the roost in eastern and north-eastern Bihar. He has caught the imagination of the youth from a particular community. When he saw that his political career was threatened because of the number of cases aginst him, he brought his glamorous wife Ranjita Ranjan to the fray in 2004. However, she lost the 2009 election on a Congress ticket. So, for all practical purposes, Ranjita is politically unemployed these days. However, she is active in her own right. She keeps the Congress rank and file on their toes with her aggressive demeanor. She couldn't see eye to eye with state Congress president Anil Sharma and hence kept pestering him whenever an opportunity arose. Anil, in a singing remark that was obviously directed against her and her husband, said that there was no place for criminals in politics. Her supporters retaliated by disrupting public meetings in several places.

Pappu Yadav's supporters have constituted an apolitical group called 'Yuva Shakti Sangathan' that works for their cause. In fact, the organisation acts as a bulwark to the duo. Ranjita is active and keeps travelling a lot to several cities where Pappu's cases are pending. Their kids study in a prestigious public school in Delhi. They don't come to Bihar very often. Their supporters, as expected, swear that their netaji is an epitome of innocence.

An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).