advertisement
On 16 June 2016, the streets of Vinayaknagar, Bengaluru, were stained blue by chemical effluents that had been released into the tap water by three illegal dyeing companies.
The issue was brought to the notice of the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) by the president of a local NGO – named the Future India Organisation. An official complaint was lodged the next day.
Fast forward 311 days, and the taps in the area are still spouting coloured water, reportedly polluted by the same companies. And the authorities who are supposed to be putting an end to the pollution are allegedly dragging their feet on the matter.
“Later, we found that around three illegal silk yarn dyeing units were operating in the area. So immediately we lodged a complaint with the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board,” he added.
Almost a year on, Rowland and his NGO wanted to speak to the KSPCB about the progress in the case. However, despite their efforts, they were not allowed to talk to the chairman of the pollution control board. It was only after they protested for five days last week that Rowland and other members of the NGO were allowed to meet the Member Secretary of the board.
But despite the letter – and the complaint from last year – little has been done in the case.
On 4 July, the Senior Environmental Officer of the KSPCB sent showcause notices to three people – the proprietor of a dyeing unit in Sri Lakshmi Nilaya in Vinayaka Nagar, Ramakrishna from Jalakanteshwarapura Main Road, and Mallairaj from Jalakanteshwarapura Cross Road in Vinayaka Nagar.
The notices were sent after representatives of the Senior Environmental Officer of the KSPCB inspected the units on 23 June 2016.
According to the report sent by the Senior Environmental Officer of Bengaluru to the Member Secretary of the KSPCB, the following observations were made in the last inspection:
While one of the units was locked from outside, there were people inside the building, who were working, but claimed that the unit was not operational. The inspectors noted that this claim couldn’t be accepted.
According to the proprietor whom the inspectors spoke to, the second unit – which did not have a board – was working ‘intermittently’. The inspectors noted that the effluents from the dyeing unit were sent into the underground drainage system without treatment, and that the unit was using firewood for its operations, which could cause air pollution.
The third unit, too, was found to be discharging effluents into the underground drainage system without treatment. And both the second and the third unit, according to the inspection report, did not have the consent of the board for the operations.
The Senior Environmental Officer sent these inspection reports to the member secretary of the KSPCB on 17 April. However, when contacted, the Board member secretary S Shanthappa refused to reveal too many details. He told TNM that the KSPCB had “issued the closure order” to the three illegal units and claimed that the NGO did not mention water pollution.
Rowland says that while the KSPCB has been in denial, 14 other dyeing units have cropped up in the area.
According to him, once the PCB takes up a complaint, a committee in the board is supposed to examine the veracity of the issue. But, Rowland alleges that this committee is made up of politicians. As long as any industrial unit has political backing, there is little chance of justice, says Rowland, while clarifying that the officials have not given any false reports.
The residents of the area fall sick regularly – some even had to get surgeries done reportedly because of the contaminated water. And until that is cleaned up – until action is taken to ensure that the pollution in their drinking water source is controlled, no number of inspections or reports are going to be of any use to them.
(This story was originally published on The News Minute)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)