Clean Goa is the call after clean GangaTNN | Jul 4, 2011, 12.09am IST

 












 
 
AHMEDABAD: A place is judged by its hygiene level for its cool quotient. Nature 
has given Goa scenic spots in abundance, the waters, a lush green land, serene 
views, et al. The Portuguese left behind some very cute buildings. But we have 
not been able to handle it over a period of time. We have wasted an 
opportunity. Blame it on ourselves, or blame it on tourists, the state's ugly 
patches come up now and then as you drive through some of the most picturesque 
spots. 

There is garbage strewn all over the roadside. Suddenly, the ugly patches hit 
you in the eye. As you drive through, you wonder who is responsible for this 
mess. What will move our society and our panchayats to get their act together 
and rid the stretches of garbage? Who is dumping there? Why no action? Who is 
to bell the cat? A thought comes, why not we dump the garbage in the chief 
minister's house and see if the authorities will take some action? Probably 
then the municipalities and panchayats will go and collect it from there. 

The state urgently requires garbage dump yards and garbage treatment plants 
covering all locations. Garbage collection and segregation is an important task 
of the civic agencies. There are several officials who are drawing huge 
salaries from the public fund to ensure that this work is done properly. Goa is 
a small state and should serve as a model state for the country to follow. If 
we cannot, who else can? Why has it taken such a long time to identify 
permanent garbage dumps in the state? Why is there no will among our 
bureaucrats and babus down the line to set this problem right? The common 
answer one finds from people in high society is that politicians do not have 
the will. Is it only a politicians' responsibility? Is it not the right of the 
citizens to fight for this issue? Politicians will act if they know that their 
citizenry is having an issue with the garbage piling up. So, it's up to us 
citizens to take on the government on the issue. 

We do not have appropriate garbage dumps in the state. Look at what we have and 
the problems associated with it. The Sonsoddo garbage dump in Margao has been 
there for more than a decade. The Mapusa municipal council has been dumping 
garbage at Assagao Plateau for more than a decade for want of an appropriate 
place. It has turned into an eyesore on the picturesque Assagao Plateau. Panaji 
has no dumping ground, so CCP has usurped the now non-functional quarry at 
Taleigao plateau and made it its dump yard recently and is seeking to make it a 
regular dump yard much to the consternation of the residents around. 

In Vasco, Mormugao municipal council has a landfill and garbage treatment plant 
at Bogda. But MPT complained last year that it causes a nuisance. They went to 
court. The high court of Bombay at Goa has ruled that the garbage treatment 
plant is fine, but has asked Mormugao municipal council to shift the landfill 
to another location. So effectively, most areas of the state do not have 
appropriate dump yards. 

Many apartments have started coming up in Goa. But infrastructure to cater to 
the increasing number of residential properties and flats is not in place. Even 
the sewage pipelines and storm water drains are not going to be adequate to 
cater to the future requirements of the state. It's time that the government 
come up with a comprehensive plan to deal with these issues and implement them 
quickly without waiting for too long. Already, National Institute of 
Oceanography (NIO) has a report which has found that sewage being let out into 
the river Zuari and river Mandovi has contaminated the waters and during 
monsoons, many spots in the beaches are contaminated with E.coli, making it 
unsafe. 

It's time to clean up Goa, and so citizen forums too have an onus to fight. 





                                          

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