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In GK-I, trees just got back their right to breathe

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Neha Sinha

Posted: May 18, 2009 at 2344 hrs IST

New Delhi A couple of years after a High Court order said trees along roads should be provided with 6-feet-by-6-feet patches of earth around their trunk to grow, residents of N-Block in Greater Kailasa have finally succeeded in getting the authorities to ‘free’ around a hundred trees from the grip of concrete.

For the last three years, Padmavati Dwivedi watched GK residents put tiles or concretised circles right around the trees in her block, right up to their trunks. Concerned that the trees would not be able to absorb water or breathe, she spoke to the civic authorities, but to no avail.

Three months ago, she decided to take up the issue with a vengeance. “My son had started going to school. I had time for the long fight,” she says.

Padmavati then started what she calls a ‘fax campaign’. “I sent a fax to the chief minister every week, starting February 28,” she says. She sent letters to the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) too. Exactly two months and many correspondences later, on April 28, she got a letter from the CM’s office, saying action would be taken.

Since then, MCD workers have been working to break the concrete and tiling around a hundred trees in the locality.

But it is a battle that has just begun.

“In this area, it’s not MCD contractors who concretise the space around trees. Private builders who raise residential buildings are to blame,” says Padmavati.

“Residents ask for it because they want optimum parking space for their vehicles. Further, many feel the area is ‘cleaner’ after concretisation because refuse is dumped around the trees,” says N Block resident Naina Abrol.

“I have been getting hostile calls from residents, asking me why I am doing this, where do I live, where am I from,” says Padmavati. “People just don’t realism that when the area around a tree is concretised, the tree stops growing. It just looks green. But I’m not giving up,” she adds.

Environmentalists see this as a welcome start for a city where trees have been proven to be under stress. A study by the Forest Research Institute, commissioned by the New Delhi Municipal Council in 2007, found that due to loud noise and air pollution in the city, trees in the NDMC area, which also happen to be some of the oldest in the Capital, were under high levels of “stress”. Consequently, the NDMC announced a first-of-its-kind tree ambulance earlier this year.

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Tiling work around trees continues by sujata chatterji on 28 Apr 2010

Hi again, Further to my previous post, it is now 6 whole days since we brought the above matter to the notice of the builder but now he has started even filling in the gaps between the interlocking tiles with "mud and sand". Many people have called him to protest but it doesn't seem to concern him. I guess its a case of green paper being more powerful than greenery. This concerns a space outside one of the parks in J block of Chittaranjan Park. More later.

Detiling trees in front of park by sujata chatterji on 27 Apr 2010

Hi, I need help from you. I live in Chittaranjan Park in front of a beautiful park. There is tiling work going on in front a newly built house here for parking cars. I pointed it out to our RWA, the Federation of RWAs and other "influential persons" in the colony who have spoken to the builder about it who assured them that the trees would come to no harm and they would not use cement or concrete. Someone even reported this to the MCD who apparently sent people to inspect the site. The MCD sent its team to see what was going on and reported that they had stopped the work but it goes on unabated and in full swing. Please advise me on what I can do now. An environmentalist friend of mine had told me about you and that is how I am here after googling you. Feeling very helpless and angry at the might of "private builder" which seems to carry much more weight than all these colony-based organisations/persons. Thank you.

rees just got back their right to breathe by Dr. Paras Deo on 18 May 2009

This is great piece of by a "green" citizin. My congrats. Keep it up and Please keep bringing such news. It takes years to grow tress but just hours to destroy them. The trees regulate the temperatures and the ground water. All very important for life. All Govt workers must be made to attend enviromental course during their training.

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