| |
Save Delhi’s Trees, Do Not Sacrifice this heritage for transport
Petition by Trees for Delhi
Uploaded on 14/03/2007
Sign
by 14/03/2008
Open appeal to Chief Minister by citizens of Delhi to help save Delhi’s green heritage.
Open Appeal to the Hon'ble Chief Minister of Delhi
Delhi without Roadside and Colony Trees is Unacceptable
to its Citizens
Dear Hon'ble Chief Minister,
As citizens of Delhi who have a long-term stake in the future
of this city, we are writing to you to help save Delhi's green heritage - its
age-old trees that give the city its character and identity.
Delhi's famed green lungs, the hundreds of thousands of trees
that line the city's roads, are today under brutal assault. Old trees,
flowering trees, trees which provide shade to walkers and hawkers, children
and adults, which protect the residents of colonies from noisy roads and polluting
vehicles, trees which bloom in glorious colours in winter, summer, autumn and
spring, which bring birds and their nests to our neighbourhoods, are being cut
and hacked for transport corridors. People find that the trees they have grown
up with have suddenly vanished one fine morning. 'Someone' is making
decisions about our neighbourhoods, but those who live in those neighbourhoods
are neither consulted about those decisions, nor informed about them.
In recent months, thousands of healthy trees have been cut
or dug out in the name of traffic de-congestion and projects such as the Delhi
Metro and the High Bus Capacity Corridor. But this is not just another story
of urbanisation in conflict with the environment. It is also the story of the
loss of voice that people feel - people who have called this city their home
for generations. It is a brutal reminder of the disenfranchising and top-down
way that those at the helm are implementing policy.
More specifically:
- Delhi's entire landscape is changing at a mad pace and on an unprecedented
scale with multiple types of constructions About 30,000 trees have already
been cut for Metro Phase-I, National Highway Project, High Capacity Bus Service
(HCBS), flyovers, underpasses, subways, and general road widening.
- The Metro has three more phases and the HCBS five more routes planned. For
the HCBS, some 2500 trees will be removed in phase-1 alone, and many more
in the subsequent five phases.
- By the time the 2010 Commonwealth Games start, a significant part of Delhi's
green cover will disappear from its current locations, and many thousand trees
would have died.
- The city's parks are being converted into manicured spaces with no space
for birds and other life forms. Some parks have been converted into tree-less
parking lots.
- In Sunder Nursery alone the city will lose 1000 trees if the planned high-speed
tunnel is constructed. The nursery is home to 114 tree species; many found
nowhere else in Delhi.
Trees are not an 'add on' to the city's
design. They are intrinsic to Delhi's very identity and history. They
are our children's heritage. They provide nesting spaces for diverse bird
life including black kites which perform critical functions earlier performed
by vultures that have now disappeared. The house sparrow is also no longer to
be seen. What will Delhi be without birds and birdsongs? Indeed, trees should
be treated like the elderly in families - they need to be cherished and placed
at the centre of all designs for the city.
In fact, many old trees need to be given a heritage status
since they are irreplaceable, no matter how many new trees may be planted in
lieu. Yet in the blind march of so-called progress, trees are being uprooted,
shunted out, old species allowed to die, replaced at best by decorative fast
growing varieties or not at all.
Many areas where the trees are being cut resemble a war zone
with hundreds of trees on any stretch of road being tagged for death. The people
living in these areas have been caught unawares and are in a state of shock.
Suddenly, the trees that they and their children have lived with for decades
are disappearing. Shouldn't they be consulted before their green cover
is destroyed?
Procedurally, an infrastructure development project needs
an environment impact assessment. This should involve an assessment of all environmental
costs, including the number of trees to be cut for the project. Was this done
for the Metro, or the HCBS, or other ongoing and proposed transport corridors?
If so, these assessments need to be made public. As citizens we would also like
to ask: where trees were cut, was compensatory afforestation done? If so how
many trees were planted, of what species, at what locations? What was their
survival rate? We believe afforestation done in some remote corner of the city
cannot substitute for the loss of tree cover in the locations where people live.
Were the residents compensated when the trees were cut?
Undeniably, we need some solution for all those who commute
long distances, including many of us. But we believe this does not have to be
at the cost of these trees. We need more sane, less environmentally costly solutions.
We would welcome alternatives which could accommodate the other legitimate needs
of the city along with maintaining its tree lines.
We the citizens of Delhi, strongly object to the mindless
cutting of trees without due consultation or consideration. We object not only
on environmental grounds but also because trees define Delhi's heritage, its
historic identity, and our children's common future.
In a constructive spirit we would like to help find solutions.
But these solutions need to fit the context and location. They cannot be in
terms of one-solution-fits-all, decided unilaterally and imposed top-down.
We urge the government to:
- Bring to an immediate halt all tree felling in the name of progress and
development. Bring to an immediate halt all tree felling in the name of progress
and development. Stop all felling of trees for the first HCBS corridor, from
Ambedkar Stadium (Delhi Gate) to Ambedkar Nagar, till a transparent and participatory
review taking on board the concerns raised in this letter takes place.
- To propose alternatives which marry the legitimate needs of the city along
with the preservation of trees.
- Set in place consultation mechanisms, which involve local residents, planners,
and other concerned citizens, so that any tree cutting is subject to prior
review.
- Make a full disclosure of the trees, which have been cut over the past three
years, the locations of compensatory afforestation, their species, and their
year-wise survival rate.
- Make a full disclosure of the trees slated to be cut now, the location specific
justification for this for any transport corridor or road widening, and the
efforts
planned to avoid the cutting.
- Have clear guidelines for leaving adequate space around trees to allow them
to breathe and take in rain, where new roads are built.
- Avoid the cutting of roadside and colony trees for other utilities in the
city, and ensure that such plans accommodate and not destroy existing trees.
- Propose alternatives that marry the city's legitimate needs with the preservation
of trees.
- Ensure that all future infrastructure development integrates existing trees,
and more generally enhances Delhi's greenery and natural topography. Designs
must be also friendly for pedestrians, cyclists and children, the disabled
and the elderly.
- Ensure accountable and transparent processes in designing and executing
projects like the Metro, HCBS, flyovers, etc. Citizen participation must be
integrated into the decision-making process from the project's inception.
Signed by the Citizens of Delhi and by
'Trees for Delhi' (a network of 50 Delhi-based NGOs and citizens)
New Delhi
You can also the sign the petition at http://www.gopetition.com/online/11474.html
|
|