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A waterfront apartment is something most people dream of, and if it is in Kochi (Ernakulam), what more can one ask for? It is this obsession that real estate developers are cashing in on, with hundreds of housing projects in various stages of construction coming up on the shores of lakes in and around the city.
While much of this land was originally owned by local fishing communities, it has gradually passed into the hands of business groups, as indicated by the presence of numerous large buildings mushrooming up along the shorelines over time. Many of these developmental projects were launched breaching coastal regulation laws, causing alarming damage to the surrounding environment.
One such lake in Kochi now under threat is the Chilavannor Lake located on the outskirts of the city. The water body, which is a part of the Vembanad backwaters, is a critically vulnerable coastal area according to a 2011 Coastal Regulatory Zone (CRZ) notification.
The lake, which was earlier rich in multiple species of fishes, has been affected by large-scale reclamation of filtration ponds and tidal marshes on its banks, which has affected the flow and circulation of water in the lake. The situation is also being acerbated by alleged dumping of waste in the lake.
In December 2014, the Kochi Corporation issued notices to 19 builders for violating CRZ norms on the banks of the Chilavannor Lake. In the same month, the Kerala High Court ordered the state government to demolish a DLF apartment complex that had come up on the banks of the lake. It also came down heavily on the Corporation for allowing violations of rules in CRZ areas in the first place.
The DLF complex was the most controversial case among the buildings along the banks of the lake.
As per rules, buildings near water-bodies must be located at a specific minimum distance from the waterline, and should also be separated from the water body by a road.
While the DLF case is still pending in the Supreme Court, all of these buildings continue to exist in areas which have allegedly been encroached upon.
(This article has been published in collaboration with The News Minute.)
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