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Facelift
for Nagin is all they fight for
The
Nagin lake of Srinagar has long suffered the neglect and apathy
of local people and the authorities. But now it is getting
a new lease of life as the Valley people vow to restore it
to its lost pristine beauty. Mufti Islah narrates the
struggle of the harbingers of beauty.
Srinagar, June 14: The Nagin lake has always existed in
the shadows of its illustrious sister Dal. It never got the
kind of attention that Dal, which has been in the limelight
even for being polluted, enjoyed.
Today
its different. Nagin, which was at one time even more polluted
than the Dal lake, has become the cynosure of the Valley people.
Efforts by locals, spearheaded by Khursheed Naqib, chairman,
Lakes and Waterways Development, has dramatically improved
the seven-km lake in just three weeks.
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Weeds
and lily pads, floating on the the surface of the Nagin
lake
(Photos by Javeed Shah)
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Infested
all over with weeds and lily pads, the Nagin was likely to
turn into a cesspool in three years but for the agile residents,
who accepted the task of ``returning the lake to its pristine''.
Together
with their chief motivator, Manzoor Ahmad Wangnoo, the residents
and people from its catchment areas started to de-weed the
lake. Help came soon when Naqib made available the money for
the work.
``Our
delegation met Naqib at the lakeside and convinced him that
they will clear the Nagin within months if his department
lines up some finances for us. On May 21, he agreed. Work
started the next day,'' recalls Wangnoo, who supervises the
project.
Naqib
too said, he had to give in to the novel idea of the residents.
"They took responsibility for cleaning the lake and we
also went ahead. It proved a success,'' he said, adding that
``this can set a trend for similar projects.'' People's participation
can work miracles if motivation is there, he said.
``For
last three weeks, we have cleansed two-thirds of the lake
and the amount of money we have exhausted so far is less than
Rs four lakh,'' says Wangnoo.
Wangnoo
says he has employed 90-95 boats to clear the lake of the
weeds and lilypads, which had grown luxuriantly in last seven
years. ``Each boat is hired for five hours in the morning
and paid Rs 255,'' he informs, adding we disfavoured mechanical
dredging as it has proven ineffective elsewhere.
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A
shikara cruising through the cleansed water of the Nagin
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"We
have engaged people from the neighbouring areas and they know
how to de-weed the lake.
Despite
it's relative obscurity the emerald Nagin lake has always
found place in the itinerary of the tourists because of its
serene location. More than 100 houseboats, including the one
made on the pattern of a butterfly, floats on its placid waters.
``Foreign
tourists preferred Nagin to Dal because of its green waters
and swimming and sporting facilities it offered,'' says Mohammad
Ashraf of Baghwanpora.
``The
lake was going to collapse had the locals not acted this time,''
says Mohammad Akbar, a shikarawalla. ``It used to take me
two hours from Hazratbal to Nagin earlier, but now I cruise
easily,'' he says.
"We
will get rid of the weeds at the other side also so that we
can then save it for our posterity,'' he says.
Despite
all the goodwork, Wangnoo, however, is not that optimistic.
``Silt deposits primarily from Umar Colony, Saderbal and Lal
Bazar enter the lake continuously. If that is not stopped,
the health of the lake is bound to suffer,'' he regrets.
``Another
factor that can spell doom for the lake is the purchasing
of 1400-kanal land by Kashmir University adjoining the lake.
The university is planning constructions on the land. If such
a thing happens, consider the lake dead,'' he said.
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