Environmentalists challenge government
over uncontrolled practice of body disposal by Hindus, who consider the river
sacred
Reuters in New Delhi
Hindu pilgrims in
Photograph: Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP
|
Last week more than 80 bodies – mostly
decomposed skeletons and half-burned corpses – surfaced in the river in the
northern state of Uttar Pradesh after a drop in water levels.
Their emergence has reignited concerns
among environmentalists over the uncontrolled practice of body disposal in the Ganges by Hindus, who consider the river to be
sacred.
On Monday the National Green Tribunal (NGT ), a court set up to look at
environmental grievances, ordered both the water resources and environment
ministries to explain who should be held responsible for the pollution in the Ganges .
“The court said that it was really very
unfortunate that the pollution levels are increasing and told the central
government to do something about it,” said Gaurav Bansal, a lawyer representing
a group of environmentalists petitioning the NGT . “The government has to reply by 27
January.”
The 1,600 mile (2,500km) Ganges river, which originates in the Himalayas and spills out into the Bay of Bengal , is a means of livelihood for more than 400
million people, as well as being Hinduism’s holiest river.
Millions visit places along its banks, such
as the sacred city of Varanasi , to cremate their dead and scatter their ashes in the
river.
Others bathe in the Ganges in an act of ritual purification, believing
the river cleanses them of sin and frees them from the cycle of rebirth.
Authorities say the corpses in the Ganges are the deceased from poor families who
cannot afford to buy enough firewood for cremation and are forced to immerse
the half-burned bodies of their loved ones in the river.
Unmarried women and children are often buried
in shallow graves along the riverbank, and their remains can be washed into the
river when water levels rise.
Bansal said at least 3,000 bodies were
recovered from the Ganges annually, yet the government had
remained a “mute spectator” to the health risks of cremations and burials along
its banks.
The Ganges is considered to be the
country’s most polluted river, tainted by industrial effluents, sewage and
waste from human settlements built on its shores.
*
AFGHAN MAN SLICES OFF WIFE'S NOSE
Photograph of disfigured 20-year-old
provokes revulsion in country where violence against women is widespread
Associated Press in Kabul
Reza Gul lies on a bed with her baby in
hospital after her nose was cut off.
Photograph: Hasan Sirdash/ |
A photograph of an Afghan woman whose
nose was sliced off by her husband has sparked widespread revulsion across the
country, with activists demanding strict punishment.
Reza Gul, 20, was taken to hospital after
the attack, which took place in the Ghormach district of the north-western province of Faryab on Sunday. Her husband is said to have
fled to a Taliban-controlled area.
The man, identified as Mohammad Khan, is
said to have cut off Gul’s nose with a pocket knife, according to a spokesman
for the governor of Faryab.
The incident highlights the endemic
violence against women in Afghan society, despite reforms brought in since the
Taliban’s Islamist regime was ousted in a 2001 US-led invasion.
“Such a brutal and barbaric act should be
strongly condemned,” said Alema, a Kabul-based women’s rights activist, who
goes by one name. “Such incidents would not happen if the judicial system
severely punished attacks on women,” she told AFP .
A photograph of the disfigured woman was
widely shared on social media, prompting calls for tough action against the
husband. The governor’s spokesman said Gul would need reconstructive surgery, which
was not possible at the local government-run hospital.
It was not immediately clear what
prompted Khan to attack Gul, whom he married five years ago as a teenager, and
who is the mother of a one-year-old child. Khan, who is unemployed, is believed
to have recently returned from neighbouring Iran and may have joined the Taliban after
fleeing in the wake of the attack.
The government has vowed to protect
women’s rights but this has not prevented violent attacks.
“Horrifying cases like this one happen all too
often in Afghanistan ,” Heather Barr, a researcher with Human
Rights Watch, told AFP . “The level of impunity for violence against women encourages
some men to continue to feel that women are their property and violence is
their right.”
In November a young woman was stoned to
death after being accused of adultery in the central province of Ghor . And last March a woman named Farkhunda
was savagely beaten and set ablaze in central Kabul after being falsely accused of burning a
copy of the Qur’an.
The mob killing triggered angry
nationwide protests and drew global attention to the treatment of Afghan women.
In 2010, Time magazine put on its cover a photograph of 18-year-old Aisha
Mohammadzai, whose nose was cut off by an abusive husband. The cover provoked a
worldwide outpouring of sympathy for Aisha, who was taken to the US where she was given a prosthetic nose.