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The Accidental Activist - Water water everywhere!

By Venita Coelho


The Monsoon is finally over. It went out in spectacular style. I stood in the 
fields 
as thunder resounded and lightning fell with hair raising crackles. The rain 
was 
cold and wet, and I revelled in it, knowing that it was the last of our monsoon 
outbursts. Standing in that downpour, it was impossible to imagine that Goa 
could 
have a water problem. But indeed we do.

There are areas in Moira that get water for just one hour a day. The PWD supply 
has 
always been erratic. Everyone relies on their wells. But there's two kinds of 
bad 
news. First - the water table has been dropping steadily. As more and more 
constructions come up in the area, the builders pull up huge amounts through 
bore 
wells. The question is - who does the water belong to? Surely a community has 
first 
right over the water, and not commercial interests who don't care a damn if 
they 
cause long term damage as long as they make their buck. If a community has 
rights 
over its water, then it has the right to deny commercial usage of that water.

The Panchayat in Moira has wisely decided there will be no bore wells - but the 
water supply department hands out permissions for bore wells without bothering 
to 
check with the village. Builders and Panchayats find themselves in a stalemate. 
While builders assure the Panchayat that they will not touch the well, they 
secretly 
lower in pumps and help themselves to the water. And so a community resource 
dwindles until the community itself suffers.

The second really bad news - is that the wells in the ward of Povacao are 
polluted. 
In Goan villages we tend to have common ground water tables. That means all of 
our 
wells in Moira tap into the same water. If one well pollutes the water - not a 
single person can use that water any more. We've already seen that happen in 
Calangute and in Panjim and across Goa the same disaster is slowly unfolding. 
In 
this case this was a problem that had been forseen. Concerned citizens had 
repeatedly warned the Panchayat that the building project coming up in Povacao 
had 
sewage too close to the well. Neither did it have adequate sewage disposal for 
the 
number of people who would be residents. For the last three years, several 
residents 
have fought a frustrating battle trying to get officialdom to take them 
seriously. 
And now comes confirmation from well tests that the wells have indeed been 
polluted. 
The Health department has warned all those in the ward not to rely on the wells 
for 
drinking water.

Sadly, the culprits are not just builders putting together shoddy sewage 
infrastructure, it is the villagers as well. Sewage tanks are dug overnight, 
anywhere at all. A sewage chamber is built just mere feet from a public well. 
When 
neighbours protest, the culprits brother-in-law, who is a panch member, assures 
the 
Panchayat that the offending toilet will never be used. Of course it 
immediately is, 
with disastrous consequences. It is the petty cheating - the adding of a 
bathroom, 
the skimping on the size of a sewage chamber, that cost us so heavily in the 
long 
run. Yes, that new sewage chamber that you are having dug without bothering to 
check 
the distance from your well will one day lead to serious illness for your 
family. 
Worse still - you could actually be responsible for poisoning the water of your 
entire village.

The trouble with water is that they aren't making more if it. It is a finite 
resource. Moreover, we don't have access to all of it. 97.5% of it is 
saltwater. Of 
the fresh water resources, almost 70% are locked in glaciers. We have access 
mainly 
to the groundwater. And if that is polluted we are left with only the PWD 
water. And 
as Goa's water woes grow - that unreliable source is quite likely to dry up 
completely. No less than ten lakh children die a year because of bad quality 
and 
polluted water. 80% of all illnesses are due to bad water. That problem now 
sits on 
our doorstep in Moira. With one ward already polluted it will not be long 
before 
wells across Moira are unusable. As PWD water gets more unreliable, as water 
tables 
drop, as the only accessible water becomes polluted - we are heading for 
disaster.

It is the same old culprits every single time. Commercial interests that come 
into a 
village and proceed to build without any regard for village resources. 
Panchayats 
who don't take the problem seriously until it is too late, or, as in most 
cases, 
take their happy money to keep quiet. And villagers who don't think for the 
village 
but only for themselves.

The village community is an organic whole. We breathe the same air and we drink 
the 
same water. Clean air and water is our first right. No one person or commercial 
enterprise has the right to ruin our water and put all of us at risk. Unless 
individuals and Panchayats sit up to protect that right, we will be in bad 
shape in 
a few years, with water water everywhere - but not a drop to drink!     (ENDS)

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The above article appeared in the September 29, 2009 edition of the Herald, Goa


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