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Now River Ganga Has The Same Rights As A Human Being

This means polluting the Ganga may be seen as human rights violation.
Alex Dissanayake

DEHRADUN -- The Uttarakhand High Court on Monday recognised river Ganga as the first living entity of India.

One of the largest rivers in India, Ganga is considered to be the holiest river and holds a high place in the mythology of India.

Recognising a river as a living entity means granting it the same legal rights as a human being.

The new status means if someone pollutes river Ganga, the law will see it equal to harming a human being.

The court also ruled the government to form a Ganga Administration Board for cleaning and better maintenance of the river.

Earlier in the month, the court came heavily down upon the Union and Uttarakhand state government for doing "nothing concrete" to clean the river.

The court slammed them for wasting efforts on reviving a lost river Saraswati but not taking efforts on maintaining Ganga which if given proper attention will once again flow in its full glory.

"The Ganga should be saved for the generations to come," the court added.

A similar ruling was passed out in New Zealand when their parliament passed a bill declaring 145km long Whanganui River as a living entity.

The river became the first in the world to be legally recognised as a living entity and was granted the same rights as a human being.

The Executive Committee of the National Mission for Clean Ganga had recently approved 20 projects - 13 of which are in Uttarakhand - worth Rs 1,900 crore to be swiftly implemented in Uttarakhand, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.