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Taj city hit by 'green thieves' (Letter from Agra)

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IANS Agra

A whole tribe of petty thieves with a peculiar fancy for flower pots and saplings seems to have hit the Taj city, targeting salons, mobile phone shops, dentists' clinics and even scrap dealers. The "green thieves" are not even sparing government saplings planted across the city for beautification.

When residents of some upscale colonies complained to authorities a few days ago that new saplings were disappearing, nobody took them seriously.

But now activists and environmentalists have demanded action against the unidentified "green thieves" who reportedly came in a truck and whisked away two huge flower pots kept at the entrance of the newly-developed Etmauddaula view-point on the Yamuna bank, right in front of a police kiosk.

 

"This is amazing. When I got up around 4 a.m. and looked from the temple balcony towards the newly-developed site across the Ambedkar Setu, I found the picture incomplete. Something looked amiss. I came down to have a closer view and, to my horror, I realised the huge flower pots were missing," Nandan Shrotriya, priest of the Mathuradheesh temple, told IANS.

"On inquiry, I learnt a truck with some people had come to take the flower pots away. Only three days ago, Agra District Magistrate Zuhair Bin Saghir inaugurated the site, which provides such a magnificent view of the Etmauddaula tomb across the river," he said.

Citizens of Agra voluntary group convener Harvijay Bahia, who worked hard to beautify the area, and Ashok Jain, who installed two solar panels, expressed shock.

"How could somebody do this," said Bahia.

"Obviously, the huge flower pots must be somewhere in the city. We have to look for them and we need police protection. At this rate, voluntary agencies would be discouraged from taking up greening efforts," he said.

Dinesh Pandey, an official of the state forest department, has complained to police, and a search has been launched.

Theft of saplings has been reported from many areas.

"It's easy to plant saplings, but you need committed volunteers to look after them and tend them like kids. The NGOs generally fail in this task," said green activist Shishir Bhagat.

The problem is that a whole tribe of petty thieves has raided the city, residents said.

"On Saturday night, a barber's salon, a mobile phone shop, a dentist's clinic and a scrap dealer's shop were burgled for whatever the culprits could lay their hands on, including flower pots," said social activist Sudheir Gupta.

(Brij Khandelwal can be contacted at brij.k@ians.in)

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First Published: Aug 19 2013 | 11:02 AM IST

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