Metro vs citizens

People protest against BMRCL’s recent move to cut down trees at Lalbagh for its Metro project. Read all about the saga, proposed alternatives and the legal angle.

Over the last week, hundreds of people have been vociferously protesting against the plans of the Bangalore Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL) to build a Metro station in Lalbagh and to cut trees along the verdant Lakshman Rao Boulevard, popularly known as Nanda Road.

On Sunday evening, 19th April, 250 people gathered along the tree lined road. They sang songs, shouted slogans (“Ulisi ulisi, Nanda Road ulisi”) and held a candle light vigil to protest against the proposed cutting of trees in Lakshman Rao Park. Earlier, on Friday, 17th April, about 220 people formed a human chain along RV Road near Lalbagh West Gate. Behind the long line the protesters formed was what had brought them together – an ugly gash of upturned footpath, broken stones and traces of stumps was all that remained of the Lalbagh boundary wall that had once stood there.

Trees cut and walls demolished near Lalbagh west gate

Trees cut and walls demolished near Lalbagh west gate (Pic: Kiran Jonnalagada)

It was on the night of 13th April that demolition of the boundary wall near Lalbagh West Gate began. Volunteers of Hasiru Usiru (HU), a network of citizens and groups concerned about Bangalore’s green cover, chanced upon the demolition. The next evening, activists at a hurriedly convened meeting at the site, decided to hold a protest. By that time, about 150 metres of the boundary wall had been demolished. Early next morning, HU volunteers distributed flyers at West Gate and spoke to morning walkers at Lalbagh, urging them to participate in that evening’s protest to save Bengaluru’s natural heritage. They also spoke to independent candidate for the Bengaluru South constituency, Capt Gopinath, who immediately cancelled all other appointments and decided to join the protest. “I am not against the Metro,” he averred, “but it must be an intelligent Metro.”

The first protests organised that Wednesday evening, 22nd April, brought together about 250 people. HU volunteers, volunteers from the NGO, Maraa (meaning tree), ordinary citizens who enjoy the open spaces Lalbagh provides, Capt Gopinath and his band of campaign volunteers and a large posse of media people – all congregated at the site of the demolition.

Capt Gopinath’s supporters held aloft a huge banner proclaiming ‘Smartplan Metro – Preserve Lalbagh’. Addressing the crowd, he pointed out how other cities had not had their parks destroyed by Metros, whether in Delhi or London. “The London Metro has a Hyde Park Station, but the station is not inside the park, it is opposite the park,” he said. An oft-repeated refrain of the protesters was “Metro: underground”.

Alternatives

At least some of those gathered at Lalbagh seemed to feel that the simplest thing to do in order to save Lalbagh and Nanda Road from the axe was to do away with the Metro altogether. Several voices periodically cried slogans against the Metro: “Metro beda” (we don’t want the Metro).

Most, however, said they would prefer to see the Metro go underground. As for the higher costs of an underground Metro,  Leo Saldanha of Environment Support Group (ESG) and HU says other “fanciful political imaginations” like the Rs. 3,000 crore high speed rail link from MG Road to the airport could be shelved and the money put instead into the Metro going underground.

There are also alternatives to the present Metro alignment which would leave the last few bastions of nature in Bengaluru untouched. One such, proposed by HU and ESG, has the Metro running underground along RV Road, all the way to South End Circle, from where it could proceed to Jayanagar shopping complex.

From here, HU proposes that the Metro turn towards BTM Layout and further. As Saldanha emphasises, instead of heading towards Jarganahalli on Kanakapura Road, where a large number of lower income families live and who are unlikely to use the Metro; to be of maximum benefit, the Metro should touch the Bannerghatta Road – Electronic City area. “Otherwise, as a public transport idea, the Metro will fail,” predicts Saldanha.

The idea that the Metro will alleviate the city’s traffic congestion has also been challenged. According to Metro’s own figures, it will carry 10.2 lakh people a day in 2011, and 16.1 lakh in 2021, which works out to about 10 per cent of the population. But according to BMTC’s website, public buses in Bangalore already carry 38 lakh people a day. With a little more expenditure, an improved bus service could easily carry the 10 lakh passengers that BMRCL says its Metro will carry. Spending Rs. 9000 crore for a Metro project then seems ill thought out.

Some of these reservations, but not the alternative alignments, were discussed during an open house discussion on ‘Bangalore Metro – its socio-economic and environmental impact’ organised by CIVIC in June 2007, in which the then Managing Director of BMRCL, V Madhu, had participated, with members from CIVIC and Hasiru Usiru as respondents. However, architect and HU member Vijay Narnapatti, says they have not met and presented Metro officials with suggestions for alternative routes. HU members are currently working on elaborating their suggestions for alternative alignments.

Thin end of the wedge?

The immediate concern of the protesters in Lalbagh and Nanda Road was the loss of Bengaluru’s irreplaceable natural heritage. Magalam Suresh, a young software professional who took part on Wednesday’s protests at Lalbagh, explained how, as a Bangalorean who had grown up with greenery, he could not sit back and watch as the city lost its trees. “When I heard about the trees being cut, I just had to come,” is how he put it.

Protesters at Lalbagh

Protesters at Lalbagh (Pic: Kiran Jonnalagada)

There was also the fear that Metro’s planned station in Lalbagh might be the thin end of the wedge. As one young protester, computer professional Pavan Hegde, says, “First, they will want a station. Then they will want a parking lot for the station. Soon, construction would have come up to Lalbagh Lake.”

The experience with the Metro thus far shows that Hegde may have a point. The Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) of the Metro project claims only 412 trees (of which it says almost 35 per cent are “aged” or “mutilated” and will anyway need replacement in the near future) will be sacrificed for the Metro. But as Vinay Sreenivasa of HU says, “About 250 have already been cut. And now, in response to an RTI, we know that 323 trees are going to be cut for the Metro along Nanda Road.”

The legal angles

During Wednesday’s protest at Lalbagh, Saldanha said Metro’s action of tree felling was in violation of the Karnataka Town and Country Planning Act and the Tree Preservation Act. He also mentioned that the felling had been done without permission from the Tree Officer.

According to the Tree Preservation Act (1976), permission needs to be taken from the Tree Officer, a forest official assigned to the BBMP, before cutting any tree in the city. This Act does not apply to lands under the Horticulture Department; both Lalbagh and Cubbon Park fall under the Horticulture Department. However, the land where the boundary wall has been demolished is no longer a part of Lalbagh.

In November 2008, when both Houses of the Karnataka State Legislature were not in session, stating that there were circumstances that necessitated immediate action, the Governor promulgated an ordinance amending the Karnataka Government Parks (Preservation) Act of 1975. Called The Karnataka Government Parks (Preservation) (Amendment) Ordinance, 2008, it allowed the State government to ‘alienate’ – legalese for transfer ownership – 1135.18 m2 of land near the compound wall along RV Road to the BMRCL for constructing the Lalbagh West Gate elevated Metro station. (Incidentally, this same ordinance also transferred 1223 m2 at the Indira Gandhi Musical Fountain Park in Cubbon Park to the BBMP to allow it to widen roads there).

The BMRCL Public Relations Officer BLY Chavan and Lalitha, Assistant Director at the Horticulture Department, confirmed that the land had been transferred to BMRCL. So does this mean that the Tree Officer’s permission is required?

Venkateshappa, Tree Officer for Bengaluru (South) said that BMRCL had indeed applied for permission to cut some trees along RV Road, but that “pending some inspection”, he had not yet granted that permission. He added that it would take him eight to 10 days to complete that procedure.

Venkateshappa says three Ficus trees have already been cut, before the permissions have been granted. He has since filed a complaint against the contractor in charge.

Chavan of BMRCL, however, refused to talk to Citizen Matters about why they had asked, but had not waited for, permission to cut trees. “I do not want to comment on this until after the elections because it has become a political issue,” is all that he is willing to say.

RK Misra, member, ABIDe, the task force chaired by the chief minister, refused to comment at this point, “ABIDe having been constituted by the govt, we cannot make any pronouncements on the issue when the code of conduct is in force.” He pointed out that the transport minister, R Ashoka has already said that they are going to relook at the alignment, to see that Lalbagh and Nanda Road are not affected. As a consulting body, if the government requests them (after the elections), “ABIDe will provide advice on a relook at Metro alignment.”

Of Town and Country

Legally speaking, there is another Act which may make Metro’s act of demolition illegal. CIVIC Bangalore and ESG have been legally challenging the issue of tree felling for road widening for several months now. They had filed a writ petition in May last year challenging the BBMP’s road widening schemes, stating, among other things, that they did not conform to the Karnataka Town and Country Planning Act, 1963. As a consequence, an empowered committee was set up in June 2008 to look into cases of tree felling and into related matters such as public and private transport – both directives that directly impact the BMRCL, which was also a respondent (meaning defendant) in the case.

As part of the same case, on 16th March this year, the High Court ruled that while the BBMP was free to proceed with road widening, it should “strictly follow the provisions of the Karnataka Town and Country Planning Act”. As a respondent and as an entity involved in tree felling and providing public transport, this directive is also legally binding on BMRCL.

This is why protestors have decried Metro’s moves as illegal. The Karnataka Town and Country Planning Act (1963) provides for public input into the planning process. This has not been done for the Metro construction in Lalbagh, nor at Nanda Road.

Public opinion

With each protest, the ranks of Hasiru Usiru have been swelling as citizens, horrified at the thought of losing trees in Lalbagh and Nanda Road, join the green movement. On Sunday’s protests along Nanda Road, several residents of the neighbourhood joined in. Volunteers and protesters distributed flyers to passengers in passing cars, buses and autos, several of whom promptly joined the Hasiru Usiru coalition the very next day.

In the meanwhile, Sunday night’s assertion by Transport Minister R Ashoka that he had instructed BMRCL to stop work until the polls has energised the green activists. But they plan to press on with the struggle to save Bengaluru’s green heritage. 

Update

On 21st April, one day before Earth Day, the fourth protest in a week was organised by Hasiru Usiru to protest Metro’s plans of felling trees in Lalbagh and along Nanda Road. About 150 people walked along RV Road from South End Circle to Lalbagh West Gate, passionately shouting slogans all the way (“Vote for Lalbagh! Vote for Nanda Road!”). At West Gate, they listened to short speeches by HU members Sreenivasa and Narnapatti.

Addressing the wildly cheering crowd, Narnapatti spoke about how, in contravention of the Karnataka Town and Country Planning Act, no public consultations had been held by the BMRCL. “If they have a consultation, we can give them alternatives,” he said, outlining two possibilities: The Metro can go via KR Road and thence to 4th Block, or “it can go underground in which case it can go anywhere”, he said. The meeting concluded with the announcement of a public meeting to be organised by Hasiru Usiru on 1st May in an as yet undecided venue.

Later, reacting to statements made by BMRCL officials that public consultations had been held in 2004, Saldanha said any meetings that might have been held so far did not constitute statutory public meetings as required by the law.

Comments:

  1. Rajiv Hanumanthiah says:

    HI All,

    I have been following the developments of the proposed metro line along south Bangalore, especially Lalbagh. As a first reaction it is natural that every one wants to protect the green cover which is the pride of our city. Bangalore is beautiful due to its environment, climate and most importantly the people.The city has grown leaps and bounds from its past of a laid back city. Keeping this in mind the metro and MRT is a need for the day.
    The compromise under discussion is a few hundred trees v/s the pollution which is generated without the metro. The financial implications to take the metro underground are too large for us to currently absorb. A statistics says if a metro line on grade is X, then elevating it costs 3x and underground 11X.It makes more sense to have a wider network of metro line than to spend it to take it underground.
    Let’s see how to replant or transplant these trees than stalling the project.
    On the brighter side; very few cities can boast of giving a beautiful green view (like Lalbagh) to the people who commute by the metro.
    I have been a Bangalorean for 37 years and I love the city. Let’s strive to make this a lovable, livable and practical city.
    Rajiv H

  2. Meera Iyer says:

    Mr Hanumanthaiah, thanks for your responses. It is not very clear whether the Metro is really is going to reduce traffic congestion. As per BMRCL’s figures, it will carry about 10% of the population – not enough to reduce traffic congestion. Ridership in other Indian Metros is actually about half what was projected, so Namma Metro might actually end up carrying less than 10%. Regarding the cost: there are ways to finance an underground, in addition to those the article mentions. Advertising in the tunnels is one option. With an underground Metro, you could also have larger stations with more shops and so more revenue. As for the view: if the trees are cut (as at Nanda Road), there will not be much of a view, will there? And I agree, we should make this a lovable, livable and practical city.

    Thanks,
    Meera

  3. Debamitro Chakraborti says:

    Mr Rajiv H, constructing a metro in any case is a very costly and time-consuming affair. My impression of BMRCL is that they want to replicate the Delhi Metro’s model in Bangalore. I have lived for the last 3 years in Delhi/NCR (in Bangalore only since 6 months). Let us, say, not consider the basic fact that Bangalore and Delhi are very very different places with different type of people as well. Even then, the Metro in Delhi has been something that did help a little, but it was a “too little, too late” solution. Spending a small fraction of the money and time needed for a Metro in improving the bus and auto systems seems a better solution to me. We should learn from, rather than follow Delhi’s mistakes.

  4. Debamitro Chakraborti says:

    This thread on praja has some discussions on why Metro is not THE solution, and what are the better alternatives –> http://praja.in/blog/cvikash/2007/09/05/metro-rail-too-much-handle-can-we-leapfrog

  5. Srikar says:

    First of all, is this Metro project capable of handling the transportation problem of Bangalore’s growing population efficiently? Is it is worthy enough to be given higher importance over the vital green cover that Bangalore boasts of?
    Well, as I understand, it doesn’t. Instead of spending humongous amounts of tax payer’s money on a system like metro, I believe it would be well spent in implementing a series of alternative transportation systems like MetroLITE (described in the above link) and in improving the already present transportation system. The variety offered by MetroLITE in conjunction with the current transportation system will surely do good to serve the local populace. I firmly believe that authorities must look at alternatives before doing a copy-cat act of other cities without considering the ground realities.

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