By Vijay Phanshikar :
THE ruling of the National Green
Tribunal (NGT) that the water in
Nagpur’s Futala Lake is not good
enough even for human bathing,
should make every Nagpurian not just
very upset but also very, very angry.
That is also the mood at ‘The
Hitavada’. For, for years on end, ‘The
Hitavada’ has been most consistently
campaigning for conservation of the
Futala Lake. It has insisted -- on the
strength of proof -- that toying with the
Futala Lake is dangerous (therefore not
permissible) for the lake’s overall health.
Yet, unmindful of all those words of
caution and angst, some elements went
ahead with locating a fountain in the
middle of the lake waters and also
constructed viewers’ gallery on its
eastern embankment. That fountain
went futt in just a few months and the
lake got blighted.
To make matters worse -- as if with
design -- some elements abused the
lake bed and catchment areas of the
Futala to construct roads and walls and
agro-forestry nursery etc. All that
human interference blocked the
sources and channels of fresh water
supply to the lake. The lake’s spread
towards the west also shrank, which has
happened on the southern and
northern sides as well.
Relentlessly, ‘The Hitavada’ has been
pursuing the cause of the Futala Lake --
as well as that of other lakes and water
bodies in the city -- for years, issuing
warnings to the larger society that we
were imperilling our own ecology.
In its recent campaign, ‘The Hitavada’
published pictures of how the Futala’s
spread had been reduced by
construction of walls near its edge.
Satellite pictures (through Google
Maps) also confirmed the details
‘The Hitavada’ placed for people’s
consideration.
The people -- the esteemed readers --
did respond strongly, but not the
authorities. Corridors of power kept a
stoic silence -- as if to communicate to
the larger society that no one cared for
the expose` and that those who matter
would go on with their ugly indulgences
to destroy the Futala Lake.
And now has come the ruling of the
National Green Tribunal (whose report
‘The Hitavada’ is carrying as first lead
on the front page of this very issue of
CityLine of August 14, 2025). The report
lays bare all the ills that have come to
strike the Futala Lake. The report also
provides enough reasons to suspect
that the historic lake is on the verge of
death in some more time.
T
HE biggest problem in Nagpur is
that the authorities in corridors of
power are just smug about such
issues. They don’t care a damn even if a
lake is on the way to become a
moribund entity.
That is what is threatening to happen
with the Futala Lake. The larger society,
therefore, needs to wake up and start
accosting those in power -- either in
politics or in the bureaucracy -- to ask
angry and uncomfortable questions. If
the larger society fails in doing this,
Nagpur will have to face the misfortune
of losing not just Futala Lake but also
many other water bodies and green
patches.
‘The Hitavada’ has raised the issue of
Naik Talao and Lendi Talao on countless
occasions in the past many years. It
will keep up that task in larger public
interest regardless.
But the actual need is of an open
public intervention in this regard.