Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
India

Centre Working More On Paper, Less On Ground, Says 11-Year-Old Activist Ridhima Pandey

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Sep, 2019 09:05 PM

    While the world is going gaga over teenage environment activist Greta Thunberg's thought-provoking speech on rising emissions, few are aware that an 11-year-old Indian girl was among 16 child petitioners who filed a complaint to protest lack of government action on the climate crisis.


    Haridwar native Ridhima Pandey minces no words when she talks about environment and blames the government for the current scenario.


    "Our government is working on paper, less on the ground," Ms Pandey told.


    She was among 16 children, including Ms Thunberg, who filed a complaint to protest the lack of government action on the climate crisis at the United Nations Climate Action Summit on Monday.


    Ms Pandey, studying in Class 8, hit the headlines in 2017 when she filed a petition in the National Green Tribunal against the government for failing to take action on climate change, highlighting the growing concern over pollution and environmental degradation in the country.


    She contended that India is one of the most vulnerable countries and was already experiencing adverse impacts of climate change.


    To her dismay, the NGT said climate change was already covered under the environment impact assessment and disposed of her plea.


    The tribunal had said the authorities acting under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 have to perform their obligation of impact assessment as per statutory scheme which has not been challenged in her plea. The matter is now before the Supreme Court.


    Ridhima Pandey spoke at length with news agency PTI about her recent journey to New York, where she attended the United Nations Climate Action Summit. She said what she witnessed there was an unforgettable experience.


    "I had a visa appointment in Noida for going to Oslo few months ago. I got to know from somebody that there is an organisation which is looking for young people with regard to climate change. I contacted them and I was interviewed by them in the last week of August. I told them about my petition and other works regarding the environment. Once I cleared the interview, they said that I will have to travel to New York for the summit," Ms Pandey said.


    In New York, she campaigned against climate change along with Ms Thunberg, Alexandria Villasenor, Chiara Sacchi, Catarina Lorenzo, Iris Duquesne, Raina Ivanova, David Ackley III, Ranton Anjain, Litokne Kabua, Deborah Adegbile, Carlos Manuel, Ayakha Melithafa, Ellen-Anne, Raslen Jbeili and Carl Smith.


    Her father Dinesh Pandey accompanied her to New York. He is all praise for her daughter, who he says is a superstar.


    "To see children from all over the world coming together for such an important issue is really heartening. They are aware about the environment and worried about the future. The governments and politicians have no concern for the ecology at all. They are fooling and cheating us. They are hungry for power and nobody is bothered about the future generations," Dinesh said.


    On the issue of Ganga cleaning, Ridhima claimed that not much progress is visible on the ground. Vast amount of waste, including polythene bags, garbage and industrial effluent, goes into the river untreated and there is total apathy on the part of the authorities, she added.


    "We consider Ganga as our ''Maa'' (mother). Yet we wash our clothes and throw waste in it. The government claims its cleaning but there is hardly any change in the condition of the river. It is still polluted. The government must take proactive measures," Ridhima said.


    Talking about Haridwar, a city of religious importance for Hindus, she said there is a lot of air pollution in the city.


    Ganga, after flowing 253 kilometres from its source at Gomukh, enters the Gangetic plain for the first time in Haridwar.


    Calling for a total ban on plastic, the 11-year-old, who is a class topper, said the prohibition should be strictly implemented. "If we as consumers stop using plastic, companies will stop manufacturing it," she said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Baldev Kumar, Pakistan Ex-Lawmaker From PM Imran Khan’s PTI Reaches India; Seeks Asylum

    “You are watching the situation (in Pakistan) and I am also watching the same. That day our Sikh girl was kidnapped. Such things should not take place,” said Kumar.

    Baldev Kumar, Pakistan Ex-Lawmaker From PM Imran Khan’s PTI Reaches India; Seeks Asylum

    Chandrayaan-2: India on edge As ISRO Loses Communication With Moon Lander

    Announcing the snapping of communication link, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Chairman K. Sivan said, the performance of the lander was as per the plan till it was 2.1 km from the moon surface.

    Chandrayaan-2: India on edge As ISRO Loses Communication With Moon Lander

    Canadian Detained In Cuba Following Boating Death Allowed To Return Home

    A Quebecer who spent more than two years in legal limbo in Cuba following the death of a fellow Canadian tourist has returned home.

    Canadian Detained In Cuba Following Boating Death Allowed To Return Home

    Rs 39 Lakh For Indian Man In UAE After Medical Negligence Kills Wife

    An Indian expat in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has been compensated over his wife's death due to medical negligence, a media report said.

    Rs 39 Lakh For Indian Man In UAE After Medical Negligence Kills Wife

    Mumbai Student Climbs 6,262-Metre Peak In Ladakh

    Kaamya Karthikeyan had climbed another ''above 6,000 m'' peak, Mt Stok Kangri, in August 2017, becoming the youngest in the world to do so, a defence spokesperson said on Thursday.

    Mumbai Student Climbs 6,262-Metre Peak In Ladakh

    Sunny Deol Skips Son's Debut Film Launch Over Gurdaspur Tragedy

    At least 23 were killed and 27 were injured in a blast at a firecracker factory in Batala of Gurdaspur district on Wednesday.

    Sunny Deol Skips Son's Debut Film Launch Over Gurdaspur Tragedy