500 walk to save Vibhutipura lake

Vibhutipura lake is another of the city's diminishing water bodies. Area residents recently launched a campaign to restore it.

The Vibhutipura lake near HAL airport which spans across 14 acres is slowly diminishing due to increasing encroachment over the last 5 years. This sort of encroachment seems to be systematic and starts with building debris dumped in the lake bed. Later, it is flattened and slums rise over it following which, building construction begins. People living nearby dump garbage while raw sewage flows into the lake from apartment complexes and individual houses.

Jobees Krishnan, a decade old resident observes, "The lake was full, with clean water 10 years ago; so clean that there were fish in the lake and fishermen in small boats used to fish in the lake".

$(document).ready(function(){ $(‘.carousel .carousel-inner .item’).first().attr(‘class’, ‘active item’);});

On 3rd November, a Saturday morning, we residents of various localities on the periphery of the Vibhutipura lake near HAL airport, assembled for a walkathon as part of the ‘Save the Vibhutipura Lake’ campaign. We aimed to increase awareness among the residents about the lake and its present condition, to show the government authorities that we all cared about the lake and to pressurize them to expedite the restoration work. The other objective was to announce the formation of a lake improvement trust comprising of citizens from all the surrounding areas. The trust plans to get actively involved in the restoration and future maintenance of the lake. "It is only in the last 5 years after many apartments have sprung up that lake is more polluted", said Dr. Hanifa, another resident of ten years.

More than 500 people living in L B Shastri Nagar, Vignana Nagar, Vibhutipura, Annasandra Palya, Veerabhadra Nagar, Basava Nagar and surrounding areas participated in the march. They included over 150 children aged between 10 and 16 years from 3 schools namely APSA Dream School in LBS Nagar, Indian Public School in Vignana Nagar and Vibhutipura Mutta School in Annasandra Palya. Rakesh, a student of the APSA school remarked, "The lake is a home for many many migratory birds. We should conserve the lake".

There were two groups of marchers (one starting from Uthkarsh Park in LBS Nagar and another starting from Vignana Nagar) who converged at the Vibhutipura Mutta school where a public meeting was held.

The MLA of KR Puram assembly constituency, N Nandiesha Reddy and the BBMP corporator Geeta Vivekananda were also present along with officials and engineers from BDA and other agencies. Here the citizens presented a petition with their demands regarding restoration of the lake along with more than 500 signatures to the authorities.

Reddy stated that the contract for the restoration work had already been awarded last month and promised that the work on restoration would be inaugurated by the Chief Minister of Karnataka before the end of November 2012. He instructed the BDA officials to involve the proposed citizens’ trust – Vibhutipura Kere Abhivruddhi Mattu Samrakshana Samiti (ViKAS) in all the work.

The MLA also spoke about the problem of encroachments on the lake of nearly 3 ½ acres and asked for people’s support in removing them. "It is high time that this Vibhutipura lake gets the attention of people, residents, officials and the MLA. Let us do something before the lake is eaten up by land sharks", added Ambareen, a member of VIKAS.

Arbind Gupta, a member of OneBengaluru – a platform for solving public problems in the city also addressed the gathering. He spoke about his experience in working for restoration of Arakere lake and his current work on bringing different citizen groups together on a common platform to focus and work unitedly on some of the key issues facing lakes in Bangalore.

Leave a Reply

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

Similar Story

Give us good roads, protect public spaces: Chandivali residents’ manifesto for BMC polls

Chandivali Citizens Welfare Association in Mumbai urges civic accountability, pothole-free roads and pollution control in its 24-point manifesto.

Chandivali is a rapidly developing, upscale residential and commercial suburb in Andheri East, with both business hubs and green spaces such as the Powai Lake. It is close to the neighbourhoods of Powai, Saki Naka and Vikhroli. Many long-pending civic issues in the locality need the attention of the municipal authorities, and the residents of Chandivali have been demanding infrastructure development in the area. As the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) election approaches, we reiterate our demand for better roads and improved civic facilities. Since founding the Chandivali Citizens Welfare Association (CCWA) in 2017, we have consistently raised and reported numerous…

Similar Story

How a Bengaluru initiative is involving the community to revamp public spaces

GBA’s Revitalising Public Spaces initiative engages citizens to transform 194 sites with safer, greener, community-friendly infrastructure.

The KEB Junction on 27th Main Road in HSR Layout highlights a typical urban planning failure. The junction prioritises vehicle movement over pedestrians. Resident Sachin Pandith, along with the HSR Community Task Force, has been working to address these issues and make the area safer. According to Sachin, residents have been engaging with officials and filing complaints for more than five years, yet nothing has changed. Encroached footpaths, unclear signage, and unsafe pedestrian crossings have created a hostile environment for walkers. In addition, the poorly located bus stop leaves little space for buses to halt, often turning the stretch into…