After Durga Puja immersion in Delhi, this is what Yamuna looks like

With nearly 200 Durga Puja pandals immersing idols in the river in Delhi-NCR, Yamuna was choked with debris. The river water was clogged with plastic bags, flower petals and pooja material, besides metal structures

delhi Updated: Oct 02, 2017 13:41 IST
A Mariyam Alavi
Debris along the Yamuna ghat after immersion of Durga Puja idols near ISBT Kashmere Gate in north Delhi.
Debris along the Yamuna ghat after immersion of Durga Puja idols near ISBT Kashmere Gate in north Delhi.(Arvind Yadav/HT PHOTO)
The Yamuna choked on debris and waste materials on Sunday, a day after idols from nearly 200 Durga Pujas pandals in Delhi, Gurgaon, Noida, Ghaziabad, Faridabad and surrounding areas made way to the designated ghats for immersions.
According to a revenue department official, though the government had helped identify seven designated ghats for immersions, it was the duty of the flood and irrigation department and the municipal corporations to help clean the river.
A child sits on a heap of debris on Yamuna bank after Durga Puja celebrations. (Arvind Yadav/HT PHOTO)
Raveendra Kumar, executive engineer at the department of irrigation and flood control, said that they had built enclosures on the banks of the river for the devotees to drop their insoluble wastes, and the waters had enclosures too, to avoid the flow of debris into the river. He added that during the immersions, they had JCBs on standby to help pull out the idols as when they were immersed.
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A child plays in the debris left in Yamuna after Durga Puja came to an end on Saturday with the immersion of idols. (Arvind Yadav/HT PHOTO)
The National Green Tribunal in 2015 had banned immersion of idols made from non-biodegradable material, such as quick-setting gypsum plaster, also known as Plaster of Paris, or plastic in the Yamuna. It had said that idol immersion should be done from a designated place so that the river doesn’t get polluted. The bench, in an earlier order, prohibited throwing of puja material from anywhere but the designated ghats.
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Two days after Durga Puja came to an end with much fanfare, piles of debris have left the Yamuna choked. (Arvind Yadav/HT PHOTO)
However, many people do not dispose of insoluble materials before the immersion, and there is no real testing of the materials used to build the idols. “Compliance is very poor. I don’t think anybody has been fined for not using biodegradable materials since the order,” said CR Babu, an ecologist who is part of the seven member committee appointed by the NGT.
Locals sift through the Durga Puja debris in Yamuna to salvage waste for reuse. (Arvind Yadav/HT PHOTO)
“We don’t really know what materials have been used to build the idols, and we can’t really stop people from immersing any idol (as it would hurt sentiments),” added Kumar, which was echoed by a DDA official.
A man hunts for coins thrown in the river during the idol immersion. (Arvind Yadav/HT PHOTO)
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
Like each year, this time too, the river was seen to be choking with flowers, debris and plastic containers — floating within the designated areas. (Arvind Yadav/HT PHOTO)
“Many people do not throw these [non-biodegradable] things away before immersing the idol,” said Anand Mathur, one of the many who go to the banks after the puja to scavenge for wood and other scrap that they can either sell or use to build makeshift household items like rooftops and furniture.

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