Sivaganga tank stinks due to apathy by authorities
The Hindu
Sivaganga's polluted teppakulam due to garbage dumping and sewage release, prompting calls for regular cleaning and monitoring.
A waterbody sprawling on an area of more than five acres in the centre of Sivaganga town due to continuous garbage dumping and release of sewage into it, has become highly polluted.
A resident of Sivaganga who used the teppakulam since his childhood days, said the water body was used by the residents for taking bath and to fetch drinking water. Though it was not associated with any religion, people as a ritual used to take bath early in the mornings, he added.
The ‘padithurais’ which were built along the water body displayed the importance given to the teppakulam by the early rulers and the administrations that followed, he said.
P. Maruthu, deputy district secretary, Communist Party of India, said the water body which was at least in a usable condition in the last four to five years, due to the release of household drainage into the channels carrying water to the teppakulam, has become highly polluted and has been rendered unfit to use.
He was worried that the continuous negligence by both the district administration and municipality would lead to irrevocable damage to the century-old-water body.
“Not just that, people also treat it as a garbage dump, casually throwing household wastes and food leftovers and waste packed in polythene bag into the water,” Mr. Maruthu said.
He suggested that even if the municipality could monitor or manage it on a regular basis, actions should at least be taken to deploy non-governmental organisations or students through a drive to clean the water body periodically.

When reporters brought to her notice the claim by villagers that the late maharaja of Mysore Sri Jayachamaraja Wadiyar had gifted the land to them, Pramoda Devi Wadiyar said she is not aware of the matter, but sought to assure people that no effort will be made to take back the land that had been gifted by the late maharaja.