Bellandur lake needs your help! Will you heed its call?

It is only a matter of time before Bellandur lake becomes 'the lake that was'. Restoring Bengaluru's largest water body is one way to ensure better times for the city in the coming days.

My Dear Friends and Fellow Bengalureans,

Warm (or perhaps ‘fiery’) greetings from me.

Possibly, I do not need an introduction. Nevertheless, for those who still don’t know me: I’m the disrepute of Bengaluru – the frothy, foamy, toxic-filled, foul-smelling Bellandur Lake, which many claim has put Namma Bengaluru to shame on international landscapes.

This would make for a pretty picture if we didn’t know the reality. Pic: Sanchayan Nath

Let me say, I owe this claim-to-fame to:

  1. The city’s mindless administrative machinery

  2. Unlawful encroachers

  3. All those who consider dumping waste (solid, liquid or industrial) in my waters their birth right!

For over 20 years now, while you have seen rapid development all around, I lay unattended, silently paying the price for this unprecedented urbanisation. My dear friends, do you know – Article 21 of our Constitution states clean air, water and environment to be the fundamental right of citizens of India? I wonder why these fundamental rights aren’t applied to the country’s natural resources like me! Have none of your grandparents told you they drank water from me and played by my side in their childhood, decades ago? I wonder, how am I less important in your life today, after having been a part of Bengaluru for so long?

Bengaluru has grown beyond reasonable predictions, but there’s been a sharp decline of 79% in its waterbodies between 1973 and 2013, affecting the physical, chemical and biological integrity of our city. But that’s not what you should be shocked about. I have something more dreadful to share.

I Am Exceedingly Poisonous Now.

My waters are so harmful and contaminated that coming in close contact with me will prove damaging to you. The concentration of acids, bases and salts in my waters is 1592.0 μs/cm, which is three times over the desirable limit. And with the alkalinity ranging between 500 to 600 mg/l, you cannot dare imagine to drink of me anymore! Hang on, the horror doesn’t end here. My activist friends have informed me that my coliform count at present is greater than 1600 MPN/100 ml, which means I am choking on a bacteria that is typically found in our environment – including faeces of human beings and other warm-blooded animals. Further, my E.coli levels that should normally bear no trace stand at 110 MPN/100 ml, which shows I am carrying disease-causing micro-organisms putting all of you at great risk.

Friends, these figures are no joke. If you reside near me or if you’ve been in contact with me in recent times, then chances are you have fallen victim to waterborne infections causing nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. You would have or will also suffer other severe effects and in extreme cases, my pollutants could damage your lungs, skin, eyes, kidneys, nervous system and prove to harm you in more ways than one!

To be honest, I’m weary and as frustrated as you are with the way government agencies like Bangalore Development Authority (BDA), Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB), Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB), Karnataka Industrial Area Developmental Board (KIADB) etc. have responded to my deteriorating health. Perfect in the act of passing the buck, they have quietly and criminally signed my death warrant. I’m suffocated by the indiscriminate disposal of industry effluents and sewage wastes, building debris and all the poison that’s being dumped into me without any treatment.

Graphic representation of four main inlets from where sewage enters Bellandur lake. Pic Source: BWSSB

I am dying gradually and extremely painfully, but the authorities clearly are least concerned! I too wanted development, but illegal and reckless encroachment on my lake bed has caused me unmeasurable harm. Does anyone care that I’ve been ripped down from 892 acres to 700 acres in quick time? Also, no one is bothered about maintaining the 30 metre ‘No-development Buffer Zone’ around me, which would have at least served as protection.

I find activists and friends who come to me shouting slogans, giving me a ray of hope. I’ve also felt the concerned touch of a handful of scientists, engineers and ecologists. But I fear that all this may be too little, too late!

I heard a little bird once say, “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” I beg to differ and want to scream out saying: I’M NO LONGER CAPABLE OF ACCEPTING THINGS I CANNOT CHANGE. IT’S NOW TIME TO CHANGE THE THINGS I CANNOT ACCEPT. But I can fight only if YOU help me right now, my friends.

Death is not too far away from me. It is a matter of time before I become a thing of the past and the world will then know me as ‘Bellandur – the lake that was’. With the Cauvery unable to cater to all your water needs and with groundwater levels falling at an alarming rate, I am perhaps your only hope. I’m Bengaluru’s largest waterbody and restoring me is one real way you and I can ensure better times for our city.

As citizens of Bengaluru, it is your responsibility to stall the irrational encroachment of land in the name of development; it is also your duty to restrict decision makers from misusing their discretion and allowing unchecked pollution and land grabbing; it is for you to safeguard the natural resources of our city; and above all, it is your actions in time that can change the course of our future.

Pic: Namma Bengaluru Foundation

I will be happy to hear from you, for your support matters. Do write to me on how you think I can fight this battle for survival. Science, engineering, legal means or through policy – do share your opinions in the comments box below. I will ask a few expert friends of mine to take a look at these, while I remain eternally thankful to you.

Let me conclude by saying, we don’t remember days of our lives, we remember moments. And I’d like to forget and erase these terrible years of poisonous life that I have been living. This would be possible only if you help me get a fresh lease of life.

Yours forever and foamingly,
Bellandur Lake

References
*Image courtesy: Debasish Ghosh/BBC

Related Articles

All you need to know about Bellandur Lake and its problems
In pictures: Bellandur lake’s fire and snow

Comments:

  1. Nainika Joseph says:

    Wow! It was the best article , actually you have posted something new compared to others, because I read many articles related to this topic but I only get impressed with your post only, keep posting.

    SAP FICO training in Chennai

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Buckingham Canal restoration: Stuck between ambitious proposals and financial constraints

Buckingham Canal in Chennai, vital for flood control and ecology, faces neglect, pollution and halted restoration due to funding challenges

It has been over two centuries since the construction of the Buckingham Canal, a once vital navigational route stretching from Pedda Ganjam in Andhra Pradesh to Marakkanam in Tamil Nadu. At its peak, the canal could carry 5,600 cubic feet per second (cusecs) of water. However, decades of unplanned urbanisation have drastically reduced its capacity to just 2,850 cusecs with the Mass Rapid Transit System (MRTS) being the major encroacher. Map: Shanthala Ramesh Regular desilting is crucial for maintaining the Buckingham Canal, yet its upkeep has been a significant challenge since the early 20th century. Over the years, numerous proposals…

Similar Story

Panje wetlands: Greens continue their fight against all odds

Despite a long struggle by environmentalists, the Panje wetlands in Uran are drying up. A look at the reasons for this and what activists face.

“Panchhi nadiya pawan ke jhonke, koi sarhad na inhe roke…”  (Birds can fly where they want/ water can take its course/ the wind blows in every direction/ no barrier can stop them) — thus go the Javed Akhtar penned lyrics of the song from the movie Refugee (2000, J. P Dutta). As I read about the Panje wetlands in Uran, I wondered if these lyrics hold true today, when human interference is wreaking such havoc on natural environments, and keeping these very elements out. But then, I also wondered if I should refer to Panje, a 289-hectare inter-tidal zone, as…