Delhi CM, along with LG Saxena, Minister Parvesh Verma inspects Barapullah, Wazirabad drain

ANI April 10, 2025 133 views

Delhi's top leadership is taking a proactive approach to addressing the long-standing ecological challenges of the Yamuna River. The inspection of Wazirabad and Barapullah drains signals a comprehensive strategy to clean and protect the river corridor. By deploying the Territorial Army and engaging multiple government departments, the administration aims to tackle pollution, encroachment, and environmental degradation. This mission represents a significant commitment to transforming the Yamuna's ecological landscape within the next three years.

"Our mission is to clean the Yamuna within three years" - Delhi Government Source
New Delhi, April 10: Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta inspected the supplementary drain at Wazirabad in the national capital on Thursday.

Key Points

1

Delhi launches comprehensive Yamuna River restoration strategy

2

Territorial Army deployed to protect river zones

3

Flood and Irrigation Department leads desilting efforts

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BJP targets ecological transformation of river corridor

The Delhi CM was accompanied by Delhi Lieutenant Governor Vinai Kumar Saxena and Minister Parvesh Verma.

Meanwhile, the Delhi CM, LG Saxena and Parvesh Verma also inspected the drainage of Barapullah Bridge near the Nizamuddin Bridge.

The Delhi government has assigned the Flood and Irrigation Department a special responsibility to ensure the timely desilting of drains.

The drain (Wazirabad) is one of the major ones flowing into the Yamuna and is, hence, crucial in cleaning the river.

Notably, after the BJP won with a historic mandate of 48 seats of 70 Delhi Assembly seats, the cleaning process for the Yamuna River was taken up, and trash skimmers, weed harvesters, and dredge utility vehicles were deployed to the river on February 16.

Pollution in the Yamuna was a key issue during the Delhi Assembly elections, with political parties targeting each other over pollution, encroachments, and flood management. BJP attacked AAP and accused it of failing to deliver on promises of cleaning the Yamuna.

Apart from this, the BJP has mentioned cleaning the Yamuna as one of the top priorities in its manifesto.

Since then, the Delhi Government had requested the Territorial Army to safeguard the river from dumping, mining, encroachment, and theft.

This decision aims to preserve the river in its natural form and achieve the government's target of cleaning the Yamuna within three years.

The Territorial Army's Ecological Task Force is capable of protecting the Yamuna River, and their deployment is anticipated in the coming months.

This move is crucial, given the severe pollution of the Yamuna River, which is attributed to untreated sewage discharge, industrial effluents, garbage dumping, illegal sand mining, water theft, and encroachment.

In a related development, Delhi Lieutenant Governor VK Saxena launched an intensive campaign to clean the Yamuna floodplains, which included inducting a 94-member company of the territorial army to ensure the cleaned stretches remain encroachment-free.

The Yamuna Master Plan is a comprehensive, sustainable, and scientific approach to river rejuvenation. It focuses on targeted interventions through a four-pronged strategy.

With a mission-driven approach, the plan seeks to transform the Yamuna into a clean and rejuvenated river, addressing long-standing environmental concerns in the 22 km stretch passing through Delhi.

Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
Finally some action on Yamuna cleaning! The photos of foam on the river were so embarrassing. Hope this isn't just another photo op and we see real results. 🤞
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Rahul S.
Good to see CM and LG working together on this. Cleaning Yamuna should be above politics - it's about our city's health and future.
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Anjali M.
While I appreciate the initiative, I'm skeptical about the 3-year target. Previous governments made similar promises. What's different this time? Would love to see quarterly progress reports.
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Sanjay P.
The Territorial Army involvement is a smart move! Maybe they can actually enforce the rules against illegal dumping and encroachment where local authorities have failed.
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Neha T.
As someone who lives near Wazirabad, I've seen firsthand how bad the pollution is. Hope this inspection leads to real change - we deserve clean water and air!
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Vikram J.
The master plan sounds comprehensive, but will it address the root causes? We need stricter enforcement against industries dumping waste and better sewage treatment plants.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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