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India’s sacred River Ganga is a “living being” now; has parents too

Mar 21, 2017, 14:02 IST
India’s two holiest Rivers, Ganga and Yamuna, are dying a slow death and in a bid to save them, a high court pronounced them as “living beings”.
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Yes, this is true! Rivers Ganga and Yamuna have been declared as “living entities” by the Uttarakhand High Court.

A division bench of Justices Rajeev Sharma and Alok Singh of the High Court said, "Holy rivers Ganga and Yamuna have been declared to be treated as a living human entities."

Well, if you are wondering this is happening for the first time in the world, a look into the history will tell you River Whanganui in New Zealand has been given such status.

Giving the "legal status" of living humans to the holy rivers, the court ordered that the Director, Namami Gange project for cleaning and rejuvenating the river, the Chief Secretary and the Advocate General of Uttarakhand will act as the "legal parents" of the holy rivers and work as a the human face to protect, conserve and preserve them and their tributaries.

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These officers will be bound to "uphold the status" of the two rivers and also promote their "health and well being", the court said.

The matter related to mining and stone crushing along the banks of the Ganga.

On a PIL filed by Haridwar resident Mohammad Salim, the court ordered the Dehradun District Magistrate to remove encroachment from the Shakti canal of the Ganga at Dhakrani within the next 72 hours. It ordered that the DM be suspended if he failed to comply with the directive.

The petitioner contended that though the holy rivers connect the two states of Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh, there is "no effective distribution of properties attached to their tributaries between them".

The court also ordered the authorities to work out the division of various properties between the neighbouring states under Uttar Pradesh Re-Oganization Act, 2000, a matter pending since the inception of Uttarakhand in the year 2000.

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The court also directed the government to form a Ganga Management Board within the next eight weeks in accordance with an earlier order of the court in December 2016.
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