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Video Editor: Mohd Irshad Alam
A thick blanket of smoke is suffocating the forests of Uttarakhand. Large tracts in Kumaon and Garhwal have intermittently been on fire for about a month and are showing little sign of dying down.
This is an annual affair which wreaks havoc on the wildlife in the state, destroys the forest cover with brutal efficiency and releases massive amounts of pollutants into the air. Strong summer winds help spread the devastation faster and farther.
This year alone 1,400 separate cases of fires have been responsible for the destruction of over 2,000 hectares of forest land in Uttarakhand. The lack of government planning and mechanisms for dealing with this annual disaster is painfully evident.
The forests of Uttarakhand are densely populated with pine trees, the dead leaves of which catch fire easily and help spread it across the forest floor.
Another reason is that the local villagers often light leaves on fire and throw away burning cigarettes or bidis into the forest, which later birth massive fires.
Forests in the East and West Himalayan regions of Uttarakhand have also been receiving irregular and scant rainfall. Natural water sources in the area have been drying up and temperatures are soaring.
For the past few years the fires have been progressively worsening.
Discussions in the Lok Sabha indicate that apart from Uttarakhand, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh and Odisha are the states worst affected by forest fires.
The loss of property in Uttarakhand alone amounts to Rs 35 lakh this year, indicate government figures. The loss of valuable forest cover with trees like Deodar and Oak may run into crores of rupees.
Despite the huge annual losses the Uttarakhand government seems to be oblivious to the issue and hasn’t put in place any effective measures to deal with the forest fires.
(Translated by Viraj Gaur. Click here to read the original article in Hindi.)
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