PWD Minister Parvesh Verma inspects water management, infrastructure in East Delhi

ANI April 4, 2025 140 views

Delhi's PWD Minister Parvesh Verma has launched a comprehensive initiative to improve infrastructure and protect the Yamuna River. By requesting the Territorial Army's assistance, the government aims to prevent pollution, encroachment, and environmental degradation. The strategy focuses on education and awareness rather than punitive measures. This multi-pronged approach demonstrates the government's commitment to environmental restoration and urban development.

"We don't want to put fines but want to educate people on why they should not throw garbage in Yamuna" - Parvesh Verma, Water Minister
New Delhi, April 4: Public Works Department (PWD) Minister Parvesh Verma on Friday inspected water management and infrastructure in East Delhi.

Key Points

1

PWD Minister conducts comprehensive infrastructure review in East Delhi

2

Delhi seeks Territorial Army's help to protect Yamuna

3

Government launches river preservation campaign

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Ecological Task Force to safeguard river stretches

Speaking to ANI, Verma said, "Today, I toured Vishwas Nagar assembly constituency with MLA OP Sharma. We witnessed many shortcomings here. The officials have been informed. All the work left here will be completed soon."

Earlier today, the Minister emphasised that the focus was on educating people rather than imposing fines.

In a significant move to protect the Yamuna River, the Delhi Government has 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.

"Delhi government has requested the Territorial Army to protect Yamuna," Water Minister Parvesh Verma said on Thursday. "We don't want to put fines but want to educate people on why they should not throw garbage in Yamuna or why they should save water," he added.

The Yamuna has been a key focus of the newly formed Delhi Government. The proposal has been extensively discussed, and a formal request to the Territorial Army is expected soon. Alongside this, a citywide campaign will be launched to educate people on the importance of protecting the river.

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

While speaking on the issue, a senior official from the Ministry of Defence also said, "An official communication regarding such is not known to us yet, but yes, if asked, Territorial Army's arm, Ecological Task Force, is dedicated to such tasks and is capable of protecting the River Yamuna.

"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 V K 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 recent election in Delhi spotlighted the deteriorating state of the Yamuna River. Despite multiple initiatives and substantial financial investments, the 22-km stretch of the river passing through Delhi continues to resemble a sewage canal. The failure to achieve tangible improvements underscores the urgent need for a structured, accountable, and result-oriented action plan to restore the Yamuna to its natural state.

In a decisive move to tackle worsening pollution in the Yamuna River, the Jal Shakti Ministry has formulated a 'Yamuna Master Plan', which will soon be submitted to Prime Minister Narendra Modi for approval. This initiative aims to restore the severely polluted stretches of the river in mission mode, drawing insights from the successful Sabarmati Riverfront Project.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Finally some action on Yamuna cleanup! The Territorial Army involvement sounds promising. Hope they can actually enforce protection against illegal dumping and mining. 🤞
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Priya M.
Education over fines is the right approach! People need to understand why protecting Yamuna matters. Maybe they should start with school programs too.
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Amit S.
I live near Vishwas Nagar and the water situation is terrible. Glad the minister visited, but we've heard "work will be completed soon" before. Show us actual results!
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Sunita R.
The Yamuna Master Plan sounds ambitious. Hope they learn from Sabarmati's success but also address Delhi's unique challenges. Fingers crossed!
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Vikram J.
While the intentions are good, I'm skeptical. Previous cleanup efforts failed despite huge budgets. What's different this time? Need more transparency in the process.
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Neha T.
The Ecological Task Force is a great idea! Military discipline might be what's needed to stop the constant violations. Hope they get proper authority to act.

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

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