Yahoo – AFP,
April 1, 2017
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The status of "living entity" was given to two glaciers as well as swathes of the Himalayan environment, including waterfalls, meadows, lakes and forests |
An Indian
court has recognised Himalayan glaciers, lakes and forests as "legal
persons" in an effort to curb environmental destruction, weeks after it
granted similar status to the country's two most sacred rivers.
In a
decision that aims to widen environmental protections in the mountainous
region, the court granted the legal standing to glaciers Gangotri and Yamunotri
that feed India's venerated Ganga and Yamuna rivers, which won the status in a
landmark judgement in March.
"The
rights of these entities shall be equivalent to the rights of human beings and
any injury or harm caused to these bodies shall be treated as injury or harm
caused to human beings," the highest court in Himalayan state of
Uttarakhand said in its ruling on Friday.
It said
Yamunotri glacier, which is the source for Yamuna river was shrinking at an
alarming rate.
Gangotri,
which feeds the river Ganga and is one of the largest glaciers in the
Himalayas, is also "receding fast", the court said.
"In
over 25 years, it has retreated more than 850 meters (2,800 feet)," a
two-judge bench of justices Rajeev Sharma and Alok Singh said.
The court
also extended the status of "living entity" to swathes of the
Himalayan environment, including waterfalls, meadows, lakes and forests.
On March 20,
the same court ordered that both Ganges and Yamuna rivers should be given
"living entity" status to conserve them, in a decision cautiously
welcomed by activists who expressed hope that it would signify more than just a
symbolic gesture.
Both rivers
are considered holy by millions of Hindus, who ritualistically bathe, drink and
scatter the ashes of their dead in the water.
The rivers
which criss-cross most of the country before flowing into the sea have
witnessed massive pollution near human habitations mainly due to dumping of
untreated sewage and industrial waste.
The court
argued the unusual step was necessary because the hallowed rivers upon which
Hindu rites are conducted were "losing their very existence".
New Zealand
earlier last month recognised its third-largest river, ancestral and spiritual
waters for its Maori people, as a living entity.
Successive
governments in India have attempted with limited success to clean up the
Ganges, which snakes 2,500 kilometres (1,553-mile) across northern India from
the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal.
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