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‘May nullify years of efforts’: Lake volunteers in Hyderabad as Ganesh idol immersion nears

Volunteers engaged in cleaning the Lake Kapra.

Volunteers engaged in cleaning the Lake Kapra.

As Ganesh idol immersion festivities draws near, anxiety grips the residents of Sainikpuri and nearby localities about the state of Lake Kapra post-immersion.

The residents, coming together as the voluntary organisation ‘Kapra Lake Revival Group’, had conducted several drives for garbage and weed removal from the water body.

“For a decade, we have been striving to keep the lake alive and litter free. In spite of rains, the lake has been reduced to a third in terms of water storage and allowing Ganesh immersion could worsen the situation,” says Manognya Reddy, a volunteer from the group.

Except during the pandemic years, monthly and, sometimes, weekly clean-up drives were being organised with support from GHMC, she said, adding that even wheelchair-bound senior citizens participated in the drive, which showed their commitment to the lake and environment protection.

Apart from plastic and other garbage, the volunteers also cleared the lake of water hyacinth, which was then composted. Over 500 residents also formed a human chain in August this year to attract the attention of the government to the issue.

Two cranes are now stationed in the vicinity of the lake, one near the pond constructed for the immersion and another closer to the lake. As per the Telangana High Court’s directions, idols made of plaster of Paris (PoP) should not be immersed in the lake whereas clay idols could be.

Accordingly, the government gave directives for the immersion of PoP idols only in the ponds constructed for the purpose. For the immersion of clay idols, cranes have been stationed near the lakes. The main immersion point at Hussain Sagar lake is no exception.

“As seen from previous immersions, the line between the lake and pond immersions blurs, and idols are immersed in both without any distinction. This nullifies our yearlong efforts and pollutes the lake all over again,” says Ms. Manognya Reddy.

Moreover, the volunteers have placed garbage bins near the lake so that the water remains litter-free. On the immersion day, the chance of flower waste being put in the bins is bleak, she fears.

Dhruvansh, an NGO taking care of Lake Neknampur, has made sure that nobody goes near the lake during the Ganesh Navratri festivities. “We have ensured that the immersion pond is located at the weir and that the polluted water does not return to the lake. That is not the case with other lakes, where the immersion pond is practically a part of the lake and the polluted water is drained back to it,” said Madhulika Choudhary, who heads the NGO.

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