गुरुवार, 13 सितंबर 2012

सुन्दरता हमेसा वरदान नही होती

दोस्तों ईस्वर से हमें बहुत सी चीजें उपहार स्वरूप मिली इनमें से हैं सुन्दरता। सुन्दरता प्रकर्ति का एक ऐसा गुण हैं, जिसके बिना हम दुनिया की कल्पना भी नहीं कर सकते। हमारे वेदों शास्त्रों में ऋषि महिरीषियों ने  प्रकृतिक सुन्दरता का जो वर्णन किया हैं उससे पता चलता हैं की मानव हमेसा से सुन्दरता का प्रशंसक रहा हैं। किसी का सुन्दर होना उसके लिए वरदान माना जाता हैं। पर क्या सुन्दरता सच में हमेशा ही वरदान होती हैं।

राष्ट्रीय राजधानी दिल्ली के दक्षिण सीमा पर फरीदाबाद व गुडगाँव के की सीमा पर पड़ता हैं मांगर गाँव। 5 हजार एकड़ में फैला हुआ इसके क्षेत्र में 4500 एकड़ से ज्यादा भाग पहाडी मीलों तक फैला अरावली का विस्तार चारों तरफ से पहाडी के बीचों बींच घाटी में बसा हुआ छोटा सा गाँव इसकी सुन्दरता को जो देख ले ठगा सा खड़ा रह जाए। मांगर बनी का 500-700 एकड़ का संरक्षित (स्थानीय लोगों द्वारा) वन क्षेत्र व सैकड़ो तरह के पशु पक्षी इस गाँव की सुन्दरता में चार चाँद लगा देते हैं।

मांगर बनी 



मागर बनी में सैकड़ो जंगली पेड़ों की परजतियाँ जो दुर्लभ मानी जाती हैं, सुरक्षित बची हुई हैं। कुछ पर्यावरण विदों के अनुसार यह क्षेत्र न सिर्फ देखने में सुन्दर हैं बल्कि यह एन सी आर की 3 बड़े शहरों (राष्ट्रिय राजधानी दिल्ली फरीदाबाद व् गुडगाँव) के लिए फेफड़ों का काम करता हैं। वहीँ भू-जल विभाग भारत सरकार का मानना यह हैं की इस क्षेत्र में पहाडी में दरार होने से यहाँ पानी का रिसाव बहुत ज्यादा हैं इसलिए यह फरीदाबाद गुडगाँव व राजधानी के  भू-जल की पूर्ति करने में इस क्षेत्र का बहुत बड़ा योगदान रहता हैं।

किन्तु इसकी सुन्दरता इसके बाकी सभी गुणों पर भारी पड़ रहीं हैं अपनी भोगोलिक सिथति व अपनी सुन्दरता की वजह से यह भी उन लोगों की नजरों में चढ़ गया जिनके अनुसार हर सुन्दर चीज पर उनका अधिकार हैं क्योंकि उनके पास पैसा हैं। सरकार उनके पैसे से बनती हैं कानुन उनकी मर्जी से बनते हैं उनके पास किसी भी चीज को खरीदने की ताकत हैं। फिर इतनी सुन्दर जगह पर उनका 5-10 एकड़ का फार्म हाउस क्यों न हों। चाहे उसके लिए 2-4 हजार पेड़ नस्ट क्यों न हो जाए। चाहे उसके लिए कितने ही पशु पक्षीयों को बेघर क्यों न होना पड़े। सर्वोच्च न्यायालय भले ही मना करे पर सरकार तो उनके पैसे से ही बनती हैं। वो लोग कानून को बदलवाने की ताकत रखते हैं।

मैं कई बार यह सोचता हूँ की काश यह गाँव इतना सुन्दर ना होता काश यह राजधानी के इतने समीप ना होता तो शायद कोई यहाँ इतने फार्म हाउस न होते हरेक आदमी यहाँ 100 गज खरीदने की कोशिश नहीं करता। तब शायद जंगल में प्लास्टिक व शराब की बोतले न मिलती। जंगली जानवर यहाँ चैन से रह सकते। गाँव के लोग अपने पूर्वजों की तरह इसके संरक्षण की तरफ ध्यान देते। पैसे वाले लोग यहाँ अपनी अय्याशी का अड्डा  (फार्म हाउस) नहीं बना पाते। इसिलए सुन्दरता हमेशा वरदान नहीं होती। 

बुधवार, 20 जून 2012

A sacred forest struggles for survival in Delhi’s backyard


  
           
Just off the bustling Faridabad-Gurgaon highway, lies a quaint little village yet untouched by the blighting arms of development. This village, Manger, is nestled in a vast expanse of uninterrupted green that has for generations been venerated and conserved by its village folk as a sacred grove blessed by the local deity. The villagers themselves don't allow logging in the forest, making it one of the last surviving woods in the Aravalli foothill.

For the last two decades, however, this forest has been in danger of becoming the proverbial beehive of real estate activity, which is threatening its very existence. A new documentary titled The Lost Forest critically examines the recent man-nature conflict in Mangerbani (the forest of Manger) and the possible repercussion of the onslaught of development on this grove. The film, which was screened at the India Habitat Centre on World Environment Day (5 June), attempts to initiate a dialogue on the issue and to contemplate further action to save this ancient reservoir of natural history.

Director Ishani Dutta, who has worked extensively on the natural resources of Haryana, explains how till the 1970s, the forest was under community ownership of the Panchayat. "But for some mysterious reasons, the entire forest got privatised between 1970 and 1985. The villagers were persuaded to sell off their shares and as of today, the forest land is available for re-sale to the highest bidder," she says.

The filmmaker feels the grove is too close for comfort to the fast growing neighborhood of Delhi, Gurgaon and Faridabad. "Hard-pressed for space, these neighbourhoods are devouring the remaining green zones to fulfill their urban ambitions. For these real estate developers and corporates, there is big money to be made here," she adds.

The film explains how the land's commercial value was too much to ignore even for the state government. "Haryana government went against the Union government directives, which clarified that non-agricultural land cannot be transformed into agricultural land without clearance. Things were done arbitrarily, which is why there are many grey areas in the matter," says environmental activist Chetan Agarwal.

            If Mangerbani dies, the entire ecosystem of the area will die, and with it a tradition of conservation that has been kept alive for centuries   — Ishani Dutta, Director
Author Pradip Krishen concurs and adds that it's important to protect this bio-reserve because Mangerbani's ecosystem is fragile, yet unique. "Here, one can find vegetation that is capable of surviving the harsh and dry climate conditions of the region," he says. "The forest is home to dhau, a habitat specialist tree that grows on steep rocks. No tree species can grow in such an inhospitable environment and if dhau is destroyed, these hills will become barren."

Not only this, Mangerbani is also regarded as the last unfragmented habitat for wild-life in this area. Sightings of leopards, striped hyenas, wild hare, porcupines, partridges, nilgai, jackal, mongooses and rare birds like the large-billed leaf warbler, have been reported in the region.

"If the Bani dies, the entire ecosystem will die, and with it a tradition of conservation that has been kept alive for thousands of years," says Dutta. "Not only will these unique trees and rare animals lose their last shelter, neighbouring habitats will lose their source of fresh air and clean water. It already seems like a lost forest; a forest that isn't there."

Sunil, a resident of the village, puts quiet succinctly when he says, "Construction can happen anywhere, but where will we find another sacred grove conserved by tradition and faith for centuries. Where will they find another Mangarbani?"

PAWANPREET KAUR

मंगलवार, 10 जनवरी 2012

Haryana govt asked to increase Mangar forest cover

Dipak Kumar Dash TNN

Faridabad/Gurgaon: After concerns were raised about the Haryana government’s plan to put a huge patch of forest area in Mangar and its adjoining villages in Faridabad under residential, agricultural andindustrialuse,thelocal town andcountry planning department has proposed that the state government double theforestcover.

Against the department’s earlier plan to put only 1,822 hectares under the forest category in the Draft Mangar Development Plan 2031, the new proposal seeks to increase it to approximately 3,800 hectares. This may upset the plans of real estate developers and those eyeing to own a farmhousein theAravalis.
The state-level committee is scheduled to hold a review meeting on Thursdayin Chandigarh to finalize the plan, which will cover 10,426 hectares across23 villages,including Mangar, Alampur, Gothra Mohabatabad, Sirohi, Pali, Dhauj andKabulpur Bangar.

Sources in the state forest department said that about nine villages have substantial forest cover. “It could be to the tune of 4,000 hectares. If we manage to protect 3,800 hectares, it would be a great achievement.The realtors and private entities have been pushing to minimize the forest cover,”said an official posted at thestateheadquarters.

After TOI had first reported aboutthedraft plan that poses threat to the ग्रीन cover,environment activists took up theissuewith governmentofficials। “There is a contiguous patch of forest from Asola in Delhi up to Khot in Faridabad. If we allow farmhouse or any non-forest activity in this corridor, it will have huge adverse impact on wildlife in the region,” said a Haryana wildlife departmentofficial.

Mangar on edge: Authorities want the realtors out

Dipak Kumar Dash TNN

Faridabad/ New Delhi: After a series of reports by TOI on the need to protect the ecofragile Mangar area and adjoining forests in the Aravalis in Faridabad, the district administration has sent a detailed report to the state headquarters seeking the conservation of these areas.

Deputy commissioner Rakesh Gupta told TOI that the report highlights the need to conserve areas in Manger and 7-8 other villages. “We have found that these areas are major water recharge zones and have ample green cover. We hope these issues
will be considered by the apex committee constituted by the government,” Gupta added.

The committee, headed by the deputy commissioner, suggested that this area, being an important forest for Faridabad, should be excluded from real estate zoning. It is also part of a wildlife corridor between Delhi and Rajasthan. Gupta said that non-forestry activities would cause major depletion of groundwater and could pose a threat to the water availability in Gurgaon and Faridabad. The two districts are largely dependent on groundwater.

Since the government came out with a Draft Development Plan (DDP) 2031 for Mangar and adjoining villages, the number of requests for boring tubewells in the region has increased manifold. Land prices have also shot up. The plan proposes to allow 22 kinds of real estate activities in the Aravalis hills — from farmhouses to airports.

The committee found that allowing non-forestry activities in the green belt would fragment the hills and affect the catchment area of Dhauj Lake. The lake has been drying up because of vegetational degradation of the forest in the catchment area.

Last winter, a leopard had got trapped in a farmhouse in the forest area and was killed
by locals. Further fragmentation will compound the mananimal conflict here, committee members say.
Gupta has reportedly directed the forest department that the case for notifying all remaining gairmumkin pahar/ Aravalli Hills/ forest areas in all villages that are covered in the DDP under section 4 and 5 of Punjab Land Preservation Act (PLPA) starting with Mangar and Kot village be prepared and sent to the competent authority for immediate notification.

ECOLOGICALLY SENSITIVE: The committee has suggested that Mangar and other areas should be excluded from real estate zoning

'Ecologically sensitive regions should be protected'

Dipak Kumar Dash, TNN | Dec 8, 2011, 12.51AM IST

NEW DELHI: After TOI highlighted the danger to Mangar village's sacred forest that encompasses rare Ridge vegetation, the Faridabad district administration has decided to identify the forest cover that needs to be protected in the area.

Faridabad deputy commissioner Rakesh Gupta told TOI, "There is a dire need to protect this region, which is ecologically sensitive. First, we will prepare a plan by superimposing satellite imagery to identify densely covered areas in Mangar. We will request the government to bring this zone under sections 4 and 6 of Punjab Land Preservation Act (PLPA)".

Areas notified under these two sections cannot be used for non-forestry activities without prior clearance of the Centre. Gupta said more such areas will be identified in the second phase of the survey. "We will send a strong case to Chandigarh to protect these green covers," the DC said.

At present, only 1,132 acres are covered under the PLPA sections in entire Mangar. A large portion of the sacred forest - Mangarbani - is still outside the PLPA.

Meanwhile, activists from around the world have floated an online petition for protecting forests in the Aravallis. Mission Gurgaon Development (MGD), a citizens' group that launched the movement, said the petition will be submitted to Union environment minister Jayanthi Natarajan. They are aiming to get at least 5,000 signatories to the campaign. Till Tuesday evening, 500 people had signed up.
The petitioners want the Haryana chief minister to cancel all construction plans in the Aravalli forests and have urged Natarajan to ask the Haryana government to "observe the law laid down by the Supreme Court on preservation of Aravallis' eco-structure and not sanction development in hilly forests, including Gualpahari in Gurgaon district and Mangarbani in Faridabad District."

Famous environmentalist and author of Trees of Delhi, Pradip Krishen, says, "Mangarbani is not just a tiny jewel on the edge of the NCR, it is a symbol of our will to protect important natural areas."
"India needs to retain all the green spaces; it can learn population control", and "India is going to need all the clean water it can get. Can't drink urban development," are some of the other comments online.
A Native American petitioner quoting Chief Seattle writes, "This we know: the earth does not belong to man, man belongs to the earth. All things are connected like blood that unites us all. Man did not weave the web of life; he is merely a strand in it. Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself."

Col (retd) Sarvadaman Oberoi says that the petition is only one of the ways in which they are seeking support from citizens. "We are also prepared to knock the doors of the court if necessary".

Development sword over ‘sacred’ forest

Mangarbani Still Has Original Ridge Vegetation; Gujjars Revere It As Abode Of Their Saint

Dipak Kumar Dash TNN

Mangar (Faridabad): Residents of this village are up in arms against the Haryana government’s plans to allow development in their neck of the Aravallis, as it could wipe out a 500-hectare forest revered by them for generations. Not only is the forest sacred, botanists and historians consider it one of the last surviving specimens of the ‘original’ Ridge vegetation. Even forest department officials admit that it is a virgin forest where not a single sapling has ever been planted.

Once the state government’s draft development plan for 23 villages, including Mangar, is finalized, more than 8,000 hectares will become available for non-forestry activities such as construction of farmhouses and non-polluting industries, hotels, motels and educational institutions. Worried about this, the villagers’ umbrella organization, Gram Vikas Samiti, has drafted a petition asking the state government to acquire the Mangar forest and declare it a “conserved area” under Wildlife Protection Act.

The plan has also kicked up a storm in official circles with the forest department reportedly complaining to the town and country planning department (DTCP) and the local deputy commissioner about not being consulted at the drafting stage. The forest department has also pointed out that the proposed development plan does not conform to Supreme Court decisions on protecting the Aravallis.

In the recent past, residents have reported tree felling in the forest and also complained about land buyers moving in to take possession of their plots. While many villagers themselves have gained from the unexpected rise in property prices as a result of the plan, they too are opposed to any development in the sacred part of the forest. Like the Bishnois of Rajasthan, who are known to protect trees and animals, the Gujjars of Mangar have taken upon themselves the protection of this forest, which they consider the abode of a saint,
Gudariya Das Baba.

The forest houses a large temple to Gudariya Baba and the locals claim they don’t cut even a twig inside it. “Whoever took away wood for cooking from here saw his kitchen burn down,” says the petition signed by the villagers.

This is not the first time that Mangarbani has been threatened by development. In 1998, the Haryana government had given in-principle approval for setting up of the 500-acre European Technology Park. However, when this issue was taken up with the Supreme Court-appointed Central Empowered Committee (CEC) in late 2008, it held that the Union ministry of environment and forests could clear the project proposed by the state government only after excluding the “deemed forest” area of Mangarbani.
Former conservator of forests, RP Balwan, who had taken up this issue with the CEC, said, “I have fears that Mangar will be destroyed sooner or later because of the greed of real estate developers and government officials. We are also concerned whether locals will stick to their present stand or succumb to monetary allurements.” Some of the environmentalists who met deputy commissioner Rakesh Gupta recently opposed the development plan. They pointed out that the SC order of 2002 had stopped mining and pumping of groundwater on land falling in the Aravalli hills in Faridabad, within 5 km of Delhi. Another concern for the environmentalists is that the development plan will fragment the hills into thousands of properties with boundary walls. This will stop the movement of wildlife and destroy the rare flora besides depleting the groundwater.

“I have been apprised of these important concerns, including how this area functions as a natural water recharge zone for the region. I will take a round of the locality soon,” Gupta told TOI.

DEFENDING A SACRED FOREST

Mangar located a few km off Faridabad-Gurgaon Road
In May 2008, villagers submitted a petition to Haryana forest department to save Mangarbani sacred grove
Town and country planning dept is finalizing Mangar Development Plan covering 10,426 hectare spread across 23 villages

AWAITING LEGAL STATUS
Mining and extraction operations, including lime and brick kilns; quarries and crushing; non-polluting industries; dhabas; banquet halls; motels; hotels; restaurants; resorts and amusement parks; farmhouses; godowns; universities

RARE SPECIES |
Dhau, kala siris , salai or frankincense tree , hingot, khair, kumtta, Dhak, phulai, kareel, kulu tree (Sterculia urens) and pisangan (Grewia flavscens). Frankincense trees grow only near the top of steep valleys
HALLOWED GROUND: Villagers say they do not use timber from the 500-hectare forest surrounding their saint’s temple

Unhappy Bani

Issue: Nov 30, 2011

March of real estate threatens one of the last patches of native Aravalli forest near Delhi
Gudariya Baba’s shrine inside the Bani reminds Mangar residents of his wrath if they harmed the grove
Sitting in a chaupal, Fateh Singh Harsana of Mangar village in Haryana’s Faridabad district looks intently at a piece of paper. It is a petition to the forest department from people of his village. Singh, popularly known as Fatra, hopes to undo a 30-year-old mistake by signing the petition.

In the 1970s when the government allowed privatisation of the village commons, Fatra, like most people in his village, got a share. In the 1980s, he was among the many Mangar residents who sold their share without knowing the actual location of their holding. They now regret the transactions, which allowed private investors a toehold in an about 200-hectare (ha) patch of revered forest in the Aravallis, one of the oldest mountain ranges. They are now petitioning for government protection for their sacred grove, one of the last patches of native Aravalli vegetation near Delhi. They and people from neighbouring Bandhwari and Baliawas villages have protected the patch for centuries in memory of Gudariya Baba, a saint who, they believe, attained moksha (salvation) in the Bani. Harming the forest, which they call Bani, would incur the Baba’s wrath, they believe.

After the sale the grove remained untouched because most buyers were speculative investors and the plots were not demarcated on ground. The people did not allow anyone with the intention to acquire land to enter the Bani, so land prices remained low. But things have changed now. In July this year, the Haryana government drafted a master plan to develop 10,484 ha around 23 villages in the Aravallis in Faridabad, including Mangar. The Mangar Draft Development Plan (DDP), 2031, proposes developmental activities, including construction of residential or industrial colonies, farmhouses, communication towers, hotels, railway stations and airports. Even lime and brick kilns, and stone quarrying and crushing are sought to be allowed.
Environmentalists fear the plan, if approved, will open floodgates for real estate and harm the ecologically sensitive zones in the Aravallis. “If real estate development happens in the region the land prices will increase and market forces could threaten the sacred forest,” says Chetan Agarwal, who has studied the ecological benefits of Mangar Bani and the surrounding Aravalli hills.

Well preserved for centuries

Ninety-five per cent of the Bani comprises a slow growing tree, dhau (Anogeissus pendula). The surrounding area is dominated by vilayti keekar (Prosopis juliflora). “Dhau has a unique feature. If it is nibbled by cattle, it spreads out on ground or over rocks like thick, prostrate undergrowth. If left undisturbed, it grows into a middle-sized tree,” says Pradip Krishen, the author of Trees of Delhi. The 13-metre-tall dhaus in Mangar Bani testify to the forest’s antiquity, he adds. Agrees elderly Fatra: “Nobody knows when our ancestors began protecting the Bani. My grandfather told me all his life he had seen the dhau trees as tall as they are today,” he says.

Fatra (left), Harsana and other residents want legal protection for sacred grove (Photos: Vaibhav Raghunandan)The village abounds with stories suggesting Gudariya Baba’s protection of the Bani. Bharatraj Harsana, a resident, recounts, “Once a few Rabaris from Rajasthan took their camels inside the Bani to graze. The animals started lopping dhau branches. Baba’s spirit told the Rabaris their camels were eating his hair and asked them to go away. The herdsmen ignored the warning. Soon their camels started dying. Since then no Rabari has taken his animals into the Bani for grazing.”

“Whenever someone took wood from the Bani for building a house, or for fuel, his house got burnt,” adds Balwant Ram, another resident. People in Mangar believe the Baba’s spirit would help them tide over the current predicament. “A real estate company that owns land in the Bani tried to acquire it a few years ago. It failed,” says Chandraraj Harsana of Mangar. “If anybody comes to acquire the land, he will have to overpower the residents of three villages.”

The villagers, however, do not want to take a risk. They have formed a village development committee, which has prepared the petition asking the forest department to acquire the Bani land from its current owners. “With the government planning development activities around the Bani, the younger generations might not protect it,” says Sunil Kumar, the secretary of the Mangar Gram Vikas Samiti.
Kumar’s fear stems from the fact that the Bani has had no legal protection so far. The Mangar DDP says no construction will be permitted on the land falling under the Punjab Land Preservation Act (PLPA), 1900, and in the area under plantations in the Aravallis protected by the Supreme Court’s direction. The Bani and surrounding hills fall under neither. Sanjeev Mann, assistant director of Town and Country Planning in Faridabad, though, says any area that comes under the Supreme Court’s definition of forest, including the Bani, will be protected even if the draft DDP does not provide for it. But Krishen believes, “Even if they leave the Bani aside, it will not survive if development creeps up to the rim of the valley. There has to be a proper buffer zone. Its ecology is fragile and irreplaceable.”

Common land privatised

During Mughal rule, the land in the Aravalli villages was divided into two broad categories: privately owned agriculture land in the plains and the hills or “gair mumkin pahad”, which panchayats held as village commons. When the government allowed privatisation of the commons, each family was given a share in proportion to its agriculture holding in the plains. Mangar had more than 2,000 ha of common land and 160 ha of agriculture holdings, so each landowner got land in the hills roughly 13 times his land in the plains.
Initially, the newly privatised land was jointly held by the shareholders, with each family having a title showing the extent of land in its share, but not the location. “Outsiders allured us to sell the hill. Nobody knew where his land was. It was sold only on paper,” recollects Jairam Harsana of Mangar. In 1986 began chakbandi, the process of marking individual tracts on the village map. “It is then that we got to know that the whole hill, including the Bani, has been sold. Had we understood this, each one of us could have kept some land reserved on paper for the Bani”.

Realtors eye Mangar

The Aravalli hills in the region were the target of miners and real estate speculators till 1992, when an environment ministry notification banned construction activities without the ministry’s permission in the ranges in Gurgaon and Alwar district of Rajasthan. The hills in Faridabad got protection only in 2002, when the Supreme Court stopped mining and pumping of groundwater within 5 km of the Delhi-Haryana border.
Ban on construction in Gurgaon made Faridabad an interesting prospect for real estate. Mangar, at a stone’s throw from Gurgaon and Delhi, and with its huge chunks of common land, was a prize. “Under pressure from land owners and land sharks huge chunks of planted land are shown outside the protected plantations,” alleges R P Balwan, former conservator of forests in Gurgaon who raised his voice against the parcelling out of the Aravalli land. Between 1989 and 2010, the Haryana government declared 10,484 ha near the village as controlled area through notifications under the Punjab Scheduled Roads and Controlled Areas Restriction of Unregulated Development Act, 1963. The Act enables the government to reserve the land within 8 km on the outer boundaries of towns for planned urban development. Mangar DDP followed.

“Many influential people, including Central government ministers, cricketers, media barons and babas, own land in the region,” says a conservationist who does not want to be named. Land prices shot up once the news of the draft plan broke. “An acre (0.4 ha) in the hills sold for Rs 15-18 lakh a year ago. It has now doubled,” says a property dealer in the region. The conservationist, however, warns that land sales in the region can easily be challenged in the court.
Benefits of protection

The 2002 ban on mining and pumping of groundwater gave some respite to the ecology of the Aravallis. A 2008 report of the Central Ground Water Board mentions that between 2003 and 2008 groundwater levels around Mangar, Gothera Mohbatabad and Pali hills in Faridabad district rose by 1.19 m to 8.15 m. NCR Planning Board’s Regional Plan 2021 identifies parts of these hills as important recharge zones and states that the hilly, rocky region should be marked as a Natural Conservation Area. The Mangar DDP, in contrast, brackets the plains and the hills together and opens them for construction.

In 2009, a report of the Central Empowered Committee, which advises the apex court on forest-related matters, said Mangar Bani should be acquired by the government of Haryana, but nothing has happened on that front. The state government also did not form the committee for identifying the forest-like areas in Haryana and notify them as deemed forest as required by the 1996 Supreme Court order. The forest department alleges it was not consulted by the Town and Country Planning department when the master plan was drafted. “A continuous patch of forest starts from the Asola wildlife Sanctuary in Delhi, covers Ananthpur and Mangar and ends at Kot in Rajasthan. Animals from the Aravallis in Rajasthan stray here,” says a forest officer in Faridabad.

Agarwal says the Mangar DDP in its current form should be scrapped. “If its provisions are allowed, the Aravalli hills will be fragmented into thousands of properties. Developers will build boundary walls, stop movement of wildlife, destroy the rare flora and sink thousands of deep borewells,” he says