Squalor to Splendour - A hope for Mumbai’s Mithi River
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 24 ก.ค. 2021
- This Documentary film titled “Squalor to Splendour - A hope for Mumbai’s Mithi River”, was conceptualised by Dr Rakesh Kumar, National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), Mumbai Zonal Centre, in 2014, for the purpose of creating awareness on the Mithi River.
It was not formally released into the public domain.
On this 16th anniversary of the devastating floods of 26th July 2005, and in memory of those who lost their lives on this fateful day, this film is being shared on TH-cam.
Conceptualised by Dr Rakesh Kumar, NEERI, Mumbai
Directed by:
Sohail J
nature.caravan@gmail.com
Cinematography:
Akshay Bapat akshay@bapat.net
Editing:
Pradip Patil & Akshay Bapat
Background Research, Storyboard, & Narration:
Gautam Kirtane
kirtaneg@gmail.com
People in Mumbai are so busy they go out for adventure to so many places, forgetting what they have in their back yard
Mithi river deserves to be developed as river front as done in Ahmedabad.
This is really sad and disturbing. Some of the brightest IIT engineers and they can't figure out a way to clean up the river. There is no political will and there is a lethargy on the part of the people. There are several videos explaining why the river is filthy and how to clean it up but 50 years later there are still the same videos explaining the same thing but nothing has been done!
People keep polluting their own living space. The brightest engineers will never solve the problem.
They will do ALL FOR MONEY 😃😃👍🙏🚩🚩🚩🙏
No garbage anywhere in Mumbai 🎉
Clean Mumbai, Green Mumbai 👌
All the industries must be compelled to maintain hygiene and maintenance services from their side.
It is a big challenge. Start out with incremental change. Get people at the top headwaters to put less in, and the people in the middle to take more out, and then work your way down building an ecosystem. 30 or 50 year horizon.
Well said. We need long-term planning for everything urban
Amazing 🔥
Glad you like it!
Amazing bro
Thank you so much 😀
First of all a slum is not a place where people should live. Second is a city needs a functional system to deal with garbage, waste water. Third is, dealing with part of the garbage and polute nature with the rest is not recycling! And it should not be allowed to anyone to destroy nature with its rivers, woods, mangroves, animals. All men have to learn to live with our planet, not against it. So a little bit of trash collecting is only the first step. We all have to stop that tsunami of garbage! And if our leaders don't work with us on this world problem we have to replace them with better ones. Or we will all die in garbage.
Sediment traps are the solution. Cover them with solar panels and an automated dredging mechanism. ZERO fuel cost. Sediment can be deposited on the quarried / mined borders of Sanjay Gandhi National Park.
Good documentary, keep it up brother
Thank you so much
@@kirtanegmithi river is still the same
Volunteers should clean up the garbage first then build sewer treatment plants. This type of project was done successfully in Bangalore.
Complete lack of political and administrative will
Bang on
I live near this river river but now it is a Nala very bad
Been around for millennia?...... You need to revisit this statement
Thank you for the feedback. happy to make changes. Can you please elaborate on why the river has not been around for Millennia?
Amuchi mithi maily,papiyonke pap dhote dhote.
Nid ma dredging...
Slums
people are selfish or there parents didn't teach them how to treat with nature or a special community is harming nature and bmc officers what they r doing
Your government in sleeping. More improvement should be done.
What’s the solution get out and pick the rubbish , just don’t show us the problem . Get a group together and start doing something positive
India 😂
मिठी dhang se bolo beta ...apan Hindi bolte hue hi bade hue hain 😊