Sunday, November 17, 2019

Poison in the air

Poisonous smog has been polluting the environment of major cities like Lahore for many years. Instead of any improvement pollution is more acute, threatening the lives and health of citizens especially our children. Other than statements from the executive, civil administration and heads of various housing societies, no concrete steps have been taken except issuing warning to citizens when the hazardous level crosses critical level. Green agriculture belts around the periphery of every city have been converted to concrete jungles of welfare housing societies. Thousands of trees have been cut by the powerful land mafia and this criminal activity continues even today. Pakistan continues to import substandard petroleum which meets Euro 2 specifications while world has adopted Euro-5 and Euro-6 standards. Corrupt motor vehicle Inspectors are another problem. Amenity plots continue to be illegally converted for commercial purposes, not just in Karachi, but also in Islamabad, Lahore, Hyderabad etc.Trees continue to be cut on some pretext or another. Brick kilns located near all cities continue to emit poison and other than rhetoric by city and provincial administrations for the past few years, no concrete steps have been taken to enforce the adoption of technology to reduce hazardous poisonous emissions. Farmers continue to burn crops, a practice that has been in vogue in both India and Pakistan, which only adds to pollution. The state cannot – and should not – allow the greed of the corrupt to prevail while hundreds of thousands of citizens fall prey to air pollution for which we cannot blame India alone.Malik Tariq AliLahore

from The News International - Newspost https://ift.tt/2CQSwcH

Related Posts:

  • Not that simpleCorruption is a hot topic of discussion these days. Examples of honesty in developed countries are frequently cited in comparison with Pakistan. What we need to understand is that in developed countries a poor person is not e… Read More
  • The auto slumpThis refers to the news item ‘Car sales plunge 44 percent in November’ (Dec 11). Apart from the increase in prices post devaluation and higher cost of financing following raise in interest rates by the SBP, another factor con… Read More
  • Train for KarachiThis refers to the news report ‘Orange Train rolls out for test run (December 11). With the test run made successfully, I am sure other procedures would be completed without unnecessary delay and the train service opened for … Read More
  • What’s for the people?Under the austerity drive of the government, all of the provincial governments providing a cash surplus of Rs202bn to the centre in the first quarter of the ongoing fiscal year mean that the provinces have hardly spent a subs… Read More
  • Rules of failureThis refers to the article, ‘Broken promises’ (December 11) by Mohammad Zubair. The writer has rightly criticized government for not meeting a single promise but failed to mention the mess left behind by the previous two gove… Read More

0 comments:

Post a Comment