Col Malwinder Singh Guron
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Col Malwinder Singh Guron, Political organisation, Kohara Chowk, Ludhiana Industrial Area B.
This page is opened to extend support and promote Our Candidate Col Malwinder Singh Guron from Sahnewal Constituency supported by SSM with aim to get maximum Votes to Win.
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12/10/2025
To
S. Bhagwant Singh Mann Ji,
Hon’ble Chief Minister, Punjab, Chandigarh.
Shri Gulab Chand Kataria Ji,
Hon’ble Governor, Punjab, Chandigarh
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*Subject: Humble Request for Establishing a University of Environmental Sciences, Biotechnology and Laws in Ludhiana — A Dire Need for Punjab’s Ecological Revival*
Respected Sir,
With utmost humility and deep concern for Punjab’s environmental future, it is earnestly requested that a University of Environmental Sciences, Biotechnology, and Environmental Laws be established in Ludhiana, ideally near the Integrated Industrial Park, Dhanansu.
This initiative is not merely an academic proposal—it is a strategic necessity for the ecological and industrial balance of Punjab, especially when the entire Ludhiana district faces grave challenges from polluted water bodies, air pollution, subsoil water depletion, and ecosystem degradation.
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1. Why Ludhiana is the Ideal Location
Ludhiana is Punjab’s industrial heart, but it also bears the heaviest ecological burden. Establishing this University here would ensure that research, innovation, and application directly address on-ground challenges in:
Water Pollution: Buddha Darya, Satluj, and subsoil contamination.
Air Pollution: Industrial, Stubble Burning and Vehicular emissions.
Jungle Degradation: Loss of Mattewara forests and green cover.
Waste Management: Solid, domestic, industrial sludge and agricultural waste.
Additionally, Ludhiana offers natural laboratories for field-based research:
River Satluj, Lakes, Ponds and its floodplains
Mattewara Jungles
Buddha Darya and its tributaries
Botanical Gardens and Biodiversity Parks
Integrated Industrial Clusters
Developing Eco-tourism and Agroforestry Zones
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2. Academic and Research Focus Areas
The proposed University may encompass multidisciplinary schools combining science, law, and technology, covering areas such as:
(a) Environmental Sciences and Biotechnology
Advanced research on water, air, garbage and soil pollution.
Development of refined STP, ETP, CETP, and RO technologies.
Desilting and hydrological innovations for rivers, wetlands, lakes, ponds and drains.
Techniques for separating heavy metals and toxic chemicals from effluents.
Rainwater harvesting, floodwater storage, and recharge methodologies.
Promotion of agroforestry, native tree plantations, and biodiversity restoration.
Biogas and biomass conversion technologies for sustainable energy.
Effective Strom Water System
Effective Sewage Treatment and Disposal System (s)
Effective Waste Management Techniques, Reutilization and Neutralization
Plastic Waste Management Practices and Techniques for curtailing use
Electronic Waste Management
(b) Environmental Laws and Governance
Research on implementation and enforcement of environmental laws.
Development of legal and administrative frameworks for eco-restoration.
Studies on policy intervention, compliance auditing, community participation and public accountability.
(c) Digital and Technological Applications
Application of IT, AI, and remote sensing in environmental monitoring.
Development of real-time pollution tracking and data analytics systems.
Integration of GIS-based ecological mapping for planning and protection.
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3. Direct Socio-Economic and Environmental Benefits
Creation of a centre of excellence that nurtures scientists, legal experts, and innovators for sustainable governance.
Employment generation in green technologies, research, and eco-industries.
Strengthening of industrial compliance and cleaner production systems.
Revival of Punjab’s rivers, forests, and groundwater through applied research.
Integration of surface water supply schemes with sustainable usage models.
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4. The Urgency
Punjab’s 13 Blocks in Ludhiana District are already declared “Dark Zones” due to subsoil water depletion. Industrial effluents continue to contaminate rivers and agricultural lands. The establishment of this University would thus serve as a scientific lighthouse guiding Punjab’s environmental restoration and sustainable industrial growth.
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5. Humble Appeal
In view of the above, it is humbly submitted that the Government of Punjab, under your visionary leadership, may kindly consider establishing this University in Ludhiana with the financial grant and assistance from Central Government. The city’s unique combination of industrial, agricultural, and ecological zones provides an unparalleled ecosystem for education, research, and practical application.
This would mark a historic step toward achieving Punjab’s vision of a Smart, Sustainable, and Green Future, while setting a national precedent for environmental governance and scientific integration.
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With deepest respect and humble submission,
Col CM Lakhanpal
Member, Public Action Committee (PAC)
Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj, and Buddha Darya, Ludhiana.
94171 38044.
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Ashok Prashar Pappi Gurpreet Bassi Gogi Kulwant Singh Sidhu Harjot Singh Bains Kultar Singh Sandhwan Bhagwant Mann Sarvjit Kaur Manuke Col Malwinder Singh Guron Ch Madan Lal Bagga Gill Ranjodh
11/10/2025
*Justice Deferred: The Unending Wait for Relief in the Buddha Darya Pollution Case*
1. The Crisis Behind the Case
The pollution of Buddha Darya, once a sacred water channel of Ludhiana and a vital tributary of the Satluj, remains one of Punjab’s most painful ecological tragedies. Despite years of investigation, committee findings, and public outcry, toxic industrial, Dairies Waste, and municipal discharges continue to flow unabated into this lifeline of Malwa.
For the people of Ludhiana and downstream districts, the issue is not only environmental—it is existential. Contaminated water seeps into the subsoil, poisons crops, and contributes to the rising prevalence of cancer and other chronic ailments. The Public Action Committee (PAC) has been consistently drawing attention to these realities before the authorities and the Hon’ble National Green Tribunal (NGT). Yet, the wait for justice grows longer.
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2. Findings Long Established, Actions Still Elusive
In its hearing of 22 July 2025, the NGT recorded the affidavit of the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), which categorically admitted that all three Common Effluent Treatment Plants (CETPs) operating in Ludhiana were non-compliant and violating Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD) norms.
These CETPs—at Focal Point (40 MLD), Tajpur Road (50 MLD), and Bahadurke (20 MLD)—were found to be grossly underperforming, releasing inadequately treated effluents into the drain system that connects directly to the Buddha Darya. The Tribunal directed that a joint meeting of all stakeholders be held to prepare a remediation plan. Both the Union and State Governments were given two months to file their roadmap.
However, when the matter came up again on 7 October 2025, instead of moving forward with compliance reports, the case was once more adjourned—this time until 13 January 2026—as the MoEFCC sought additional time to hold yet another meeting of stakeholders.
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3. A Pattern of Delay and Disillusionment
This adjournment is not an isolated instance; it represents a recurring pattern in a case that has already lingered for over four years.
Repeated postponements—often on procedural pretexts—have paralyzed enforcement and emboldened violators.
Each delay translates into continued pollution:
Untreated industrial effluents continue to be discharged daily into the Buddha Darya.
Groundwater contamination deepens, spreading carcinogenic residues across agricultural fields.
Citizens’ faith in environmental justice erodes with every passing hearing.
The affected communities and civil representatives, have appeared in every proceeding, provided data and on-ground evidence, and cooperated with every official inquiry. Yet, the systemic inertia of Central and State agencies has turned the judicial process into an endurance test for citizens seeking justice.
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4. The Cost of Delay: Environment and Accountability at Stake
The consequences of these deferments go far beyond courtrooms:
1. Environmental Irreversibility: Continued dumping of toxic effluents has already damaged soil fertility and aquatic ecosystems, threatening the Satluj river basin.
2. Public Health Emergency: The affected regions report high incidence of waterborne and cancer-linked diseases, particularly in Malwa.
3. Loss of Governance Credibility: When acknowledged violations remain unpunished, both CPCB and PPCB lose moral and operational credibility as regulatory institutions.
4. Denial of Justice: For those who have suffered for decades, justice delayed is truly justice denied.
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5. The Way Forward: Restoring Faith through Action
The PAC, along with numerous citizen groups, calls for immediate and accountable measures to end this prolonged stalemate. The following actions are imperative:
Proactive Representation: The State Government must ensure its departments appear before the NGT with full preparation and a commitment to enforcement.
Status Accountability: Both the State Environment Department and the MoEFCC must file clear, time-bound compliance reports on CETP operations and corrective measures.
Independent Oversight: A joint review by constitutional or gubernatorial authority can bring moral weight and transparency to the process.
Time-Bound Remediation: The pollution control boards must fix verifiable deadlines for upgrading CETPs, monitoring discharges, and restoring the river system till that time the Polluting Units must be kept shut.
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6. Conclusion: A Call for Environmental Justice
The tragedy of Buddha Darya is no longer a technical or legal matter—it is a test of governance, integrity, and compassion.
Every adjournment allows more toxins to enter our rivers, our soil, and ultimately, our bodies.
Punjab’s rivers, once sacred and life-giving, now cry for justice. The citizens’ demand is simple:
Act now—before the damage becomes irreversible.
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Col CM Lakhanpal
Member, Public Action Committee (PAC)
Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj & Buddha Darya
Ludhiana | 94171 38044
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Ashok Prashar Pappi Gurpreet Bassi Gogi Kulwant Singh Sidhu Harjot Singh Bains Kultar Singh Sandhwan Bhagwant Mann Sarvjit Kaur Manuke Gill Ranjodh Col Malwinder Singh Guron Ch Madan Lal Bagga
07/10/2025
*“One for All – All for One: Plea for Justice to NGT”*
Buddha Darya, once a living stream of Ludhiana’s heritage and faith, has today become the most polluted drain in Punjab. It carries the collective pain of the people — polluted water, poisoned soil, and shattered dreams. For years, citizens have cried for justice; investigations and reports have confirmed the truth, yet justice remains pending. The Hon’ble National Green Tribunal (NGT) holds in its hands the power to restore faith, law, and life itself.
The Awareness and Appeal Drive on 07 October 2025 at Maj Bhupinder Singh MVC Chowk (Bharat Nagar Chowk) is not merely a gathering. It is a collective prayer for life. It is the united voice of farmers, students, women, industrial workers, and environmental defenders of Punjab — a cry that says:
> “Stop Pollution – Save Life.
Justice for Buddha Darya is Justice for Punjab.”
The ongoing discharges of toxic effluents from CETPs, STPs, and industrial drains have turned Buddha Darya into a carrier of disease and despair. The drain flows into the holy River Satluj, spreading pollution downstream across districts and states. This is no longer a local issue; it is a national concern for environmental justice and human survival.
We therefore appeal, with folded hands, to the Hon’ble NGT to hear the voice of the suffering people. Justice delayed is justice denied. Let there be accountability, enforcement of Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD), restoration of the sacred river, and punishment of those who defile our environment and the law.
A Call to Every Citizen
Join this movement not as an observer but as a guardian of life.
Stand shoulder to shoulder under the call:
“One for All – All for One.”
Together, let us become the conscience of the nation and compel action for a clean, green, and just future.
Col CM Lakhanpal
Member PAC Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj, and Buddha Darya, Ludhiana.
94171 38044.
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Ashok Prashar Pappi Gurpreet Bassi Gogi Kulwant Singh Sidhu Harjot Singh Bains Kultar Singh Sandhwan Bhagwant Mann Sarvjit Kaur Manuke Gill Ranjodh Ch Madan Lal Bagga Col Malwinder Singh Guron
04/10/2025
*Struggling for Justice: Buddha Darya Pollution Awaiting Decision in NGT*
*A Humble Appeal to Conscience, Justice, and Collective Responsibility*
For years, the people of Ludhiana and Punjab have been struggling for justice on the issue of Buddha Darya Pollution — a tragedy that has poisoned our rivers, degraded our soil, and endangered countless lives.
The facts are known. The violations are documented. Yet, justice continues to elude the suffering citizens.
Undeniable Facts
Industrial discharges from CETPs — illegal.
Dairy waste through ETPs or direct discharge — illegal.
Mixed industrial and domestic sewage entering STPs — illegal.
Use of stormwater pipelines for waste disposal — illegal.
All direct discharge points into Buddha Darya and Satluj — illegal.
These are not allegations — these are established facts, already accepted and recorded by NGT, CPCB, PPCB, and other statutory bodies.
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The Core Question: Where Is the Delay?
If everything is already known and declared unlawful,
then why does the suffering continue?
Who benefits from this delay — the polluters or the people?
It is evident that polluters, in connivance with facilitators, are dragging their feet, buying time, and weakening public faith in justice.
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A Humble Appeal to the Hon’ble NGT
The Hon’ble National Green Tribunal now holds the moral and legal key to restore public faith.
Lakhs of innocent citizens — farmers, children, and families — are waiting for relief and justice.
They trust the Tribunal to uphold the principles of justice, environment, and humanity.
Let not Justice Delayed become Justice Denied.
The Hon’ble NGT has the sacred opportunity once again to protect not just a river — but the right to life and health guaranteed under the Constitution of India.
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Appeal to Government and Industry
Governments — both State and Centre — must rise above political lines and work sincerely for Clean Water and Sustainable Goals.
Industries must redefine Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) — not as a publicity act, but as a moral duty towards the rivers and people they depend upon.
Let the truth prevail. Let conscience guide action. Let humanity triumph over greed.
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A Call to Every Citizen
Each one of us — officials, industrialists, activists, citizens — is a stakeholder in this shared future.
We must unite in our commitment:
“Clean Water – Green Earth – Healthy Lives.”
The fate of lakhs of people, of our sacred Buddha Darya and River Satluj, now lies before the conscience of justice.
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Col CM Lakhanpal
Member, PAC Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj & Buddha Darya, Ludhiana.
94171 38044.
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Ashok Prashar Pappi Ch Madan Lal Bagga Gurpreet Bassi Gogi Kulwant Singh Sidhu Harjot Singh Bains Kultar Singh Sandhwan Bhagwant Mann Sarvjit Kaur Manuke Gill Ranjodh
28/09/2025
Save Sasrali !
09/09/2025
*Restoration and Rehabilitation Process in Punjab After Severe Floods*
The recent floods have left behind a trail of devastation across Punjab. Beyond the visible destruction, communities are grappling with deep-rooted challenges that need immediate and sustained attention.
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Present Condition After Floods
Massive Displacement of families and communities from homes and farmlands.
Degradation of basic infrastructure such as roads, bundhs, electricity and water supply systems.
Widespread Destruction of crops, livestock, houses, and livelihoods.
Psychological Trauma among children, women, elderly, and flood-affected families.
Severe Financial Losses leading to long-term uncertainty.
Public Health Concerns due to stagnant contaminated water, vector-borne diseases, and lack of clean drinking water.
Ecological Devastation — uprooted trees, eroded bundhs, sand mining damage, polluted rivers and disturbed natural balance.
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Path to Restoration
1. Rebuilding Critical Infrastructure
Repair and reinforcement of breached bundhs and approach roads.
Restoration of irrigation systems, village connectivity, and flood-control structures.
2. Health & Sanitation Measures
Mobile health camps in every affected cluster.
Immediate provision of clean drinking water, medicines, and vaccination drives.
Large-scale sanitation campaigns to prevent epidemics.
3. Ecological Restoration
Plantation drives along riverbanks and bundhs.
Stopping illegal mining and rejuvenating degraded forest belts.
Scientific floodplain management and wetland restoration to act as natural buffers.
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Path to Rehabilitation
1. Human Settlements & Relief Centres
Safe and well-equipped rehabilitation centres for displaced families.
Separate care centres for vulnerable groups — children, elderly, women, and the differently abled.
2. Animal Welfare
Establishing rehabilitation shelters for livestock.
Veterinary support to restore animal health and prevent epidemic outbreaks.
3. Livelihood & Employment Generation
Launch of employment-generation schemes in affected areas.
Skill-building programs and financial support to small traders, farmers, and artisans.
Cooperative-based models for long-term sustainability.
4. Financial Rehabilitation
Transparent compensation for losses through state and central schemes.
Interest-free microfinance and cooperative credit societies in each district.
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Role of Community & Government
Community Participation & Volunteerism
Every citizen has a role—through volunteering, resource-sharing, and disciplined coordination with administration.
Government Support – Centre & State
Aid must flow without bias, political interests, or discrimination. Timely release of funds and proactive rehabilitation measures are crucial.
Coordination Cells in Each District
Local-level command and control structures to ensure need-based assistance and effective delivery.
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Joint Responsibility – A Call to Action
The path ahead is not just a government’s responsibility—it is a collective mission of all segments of society. NGOs, religious institutions, educational bodies, industries, and individuals must unite with one spirit:
One for All – All for One.
When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Get Going.
The Public Action Committee (PAC) humbly appeals for wholehearted community participation to:
Support every affected family,
Rebuild livelihoods,
Restore lost ecology,
And ensure a greener, healthier, stronger Punjab for tomorrow.
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Col CM Lakhanpal
Member PAC Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj, and Buddha Darya, Ludhiana.
94171 38044.
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01/09/2025
‘Saza-e-kaala paani’: Heavily polluted water from overflowing Buddha Nullah enters Ludhiana homes after downpour
‘Saza-e-kaala paani’: Heavily polluted water from overflowing Buddha Nullah enters Ludhiana homes after downpour The 14-km-long Buddha Nullah crosses the heart of Ludhiana city, carrying untreated effluents from dyeing and other industries, domestic sewage, and solid waste, before flowing into the Sutlej River.
16/07/2025
*Buddha Darya Rejuvenation Project: A Campaign Caught in a Web of Delay and Diversion*
⚖️ *Date of Reckoning – 22 July 2025 (NGT Verdict on ZLD for Three Dyeing Clusters)*
The long-polluted Buddha Darya, once a life-giving stream, today stands as a symbol of institutional failure, environmental injustice, and political apathy. A major decision is scheduled on 22 July 2025 in the National Green Tribunal (NGT), where Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD) compliance is under judicial scrutiny for three major dyeing clusters — considered among the biggest polluters in Punjab.
Yet, in a move that has raised many eyebrows, the Punjab Government has just announced the formation of a 12-Member High Powered Committee, led by the Minister for Industries and Commerce without even a single Member from independent organizations or civic bodies, just days ahead of the NGT hearing. This has sparked concerns about the timing, intent, and implications of this sudden bureaucratic maneuver.
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❓ *Diversion or Determination*?
The formation of this Committee — rather than inspiring confidence — appears to many as a last-minute diversionary tactic, aimed at buying time and influencing judicial outcomes under the garb of administrative action.
This pattern of delayed tactics, repackaged action plans, and grand committees without on-ground results has been witnessed repeatedly — and the public is losing faith.
With the Punjab State Assembly Elections due in March 2027, there are rising fears that political posturing is being prioritized over genuine pollution control and justice for the victims.
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📍 *Malwa, Rajasthan & Haryana – The Epicenter of Suffering*
The Buddha Darya pollution is not a local crisis. Its contaminated waters seep into River Sutlej, travel across Malwa, and reach Rajasthan and Haryana, affecting lakhs of people, livestock, and fertile lands.
The groundwater has turned toxic, subsoil contamination is escalating, and cases of cancer, skin diseases, reproductive disorders, and crop failures have become alarmingly common.
The catastrophic environmental degradation over the past two decades is a man-made disaster—born out of unregulated industrialization, apathetic governance, and lack of accountability.
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🧾 *1000 Crores Down the Drain – A Fiasco of Failed Promises*
Despite the announcement of multiple rejuvenation projects over the years — with over ₹1000 Crores of public money reportedly spent — the results on the ground are negligible.
*The big question remains*:
*> Was the earlier Rejuvenation Plan a failure? Who is accountable for the misuse or non-utilization of these funds ineffectively ?*
If the previous project failed, what guarantees does the public have that the new Committee won’t follow the same route — another action plan, another budget, another delay and another failure ?
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🔴 *Red Category Industries – Profits Over People*?
The core issue continues to be the presence of Red Category industries that flout environmental norms with impunity. These polluting units — especially dyeing clusters and chemical-intensive industries — have consistently failed to comply with ZLD, effluent treatment, and waste disposal laws.
*Why should Punjab continue to host such units that profit at the cost of public health, money and environmental ruin* ?
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🤝 *Who Will Act ? Who Will Be Held Accountable*?
*Will the High Powered Committee succeed in influencing the NGT’s independent judgment*?
*Will the sufferers get justice on 22 July*?
*Will Central Government agencies step in to uphold environmental justice where the State has failed*?
*Or will the cycle of blame-shifting, delay, and neglect continue unabated — as it has for 20+ years*?
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🚨 *Public Awakening Needed – No More Silence, No More Delay*
This is not merely a legal or administrative issue — it is about the right to live, to drink clean water, to breathe clean air, and to farm on healthy soil.
The people of Punjab, Haryana, and Rajasthan must come together and raise a unified voice:
🛑 *Stop Industrial Pollution NOW*
⚖️ *Ensure Strict ZLD Compliance*
💰 *Audit and Publicly Disclose Expenditure on All Rejuvenation Projects*
👥 *Include Civil Society and Victims in All Future Committees*
🔍 *Independent Environmental Audits by Non-Governmental Experts*
🗳️ *Vote for Accountability, Not Apologies*
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🌊 *A Call to Action: Time to Save Buddha Darya & River Sutlej*
Let this not be just another missed opportunity. Let 22 July 2025 be the day where environmental justice prevails over political gamesmanship. The people have waited too long. The consequences of further delay will be irreversible.
📢 *Raise your voice. Demand accountability. The time for action is NOW*.
Col CM Lakhanpal
Member PAC Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj, and Buddha Darya, Ludhiana.
94171 38044.
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24/05/2025
*FORMAL INVITATION*
*Public Action Committee (PAC)Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj, and Buddha Darya, Ludhiana*
cordially invites you to join the celebrations of
*VAN MAHOTSAV 2025 & THIRD ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONS OF MATTEWARA JUNGLES*
*“One Earth, Many Lives — Protect Biodiversity, Preserve Our Future”*
*1st to 7th July 2025*
*Venue: Designated*
*Plantation Areas, Mattewara Jungles*
*In collaboration with: DFO Ludhiana & Range Forest Officer, Mattewara*
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*A CALL TO ACTION FOR A GREENER FUTURE*
*Van Mahotsav is not merely a tree-planting drive; it is a commitment to secure life, water, biodiversity, and ecological balance. This year, in the face of intensifying environmental degradation, we aim to revive, promote and Celebrate Third Anniversary of Mattewara Forest—a vital ecological treasure forming part of the floodplain of River Satluj.*
Join us in this Week of Green Action as we launch a community-driven plantation initiative, supported by the Forest Department and coordinated by PAC. This campaign will be conducted across officially identified zones within Mattewara.
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*WHY YOUR PARTICIPATION MATTERS*
Forests purify air, conserve water, support biodiversity, and shield us from climate disasters. The Mattewara belt—currently under ecological threat—is our collective responsibility.
*This invitation is extended to*:
Educational institutions
Media
Citizens and Residents Welfare Associations (RWAs)
Industry leaders and CSR wings
NGOs, Farmers’ Groups, Environmentalists
Youth Clubs and Community Leaders
Political Leaders
Administration
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*HOW YOU CAN CONTRIBUTE*
Join the plantation drives
Donate or sponsor native tree saplings
Adopt a green zone
Participate in awareness campaigns
Support eco-restoration projects
Spread the message through your networks
*PAC is also seeking support and guidance from RoundGlass Foundation to ensure plantation of region-appropriate native species.*
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*Let’s Unite to Rejuvenate Mattewara Jungle*
*Let’s make Ludhiana a Model Green Hub, and restore Mattewara as a living legacy of sustainability and peace. This is a historical opportunity to make a transformative impact through community spirit, environmental stewardship, and responsible action.*
*Join us in this celebration of nature, and let’s plant the seeds of a sustainable tomorrow - together*
*PAC Coordinator: S. Maninderjit Singh Benepal Ji, 94631 00077, 98141 17065*
Col CM Lakhanpal
Member, PAC – Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj, and Buddha Darya
Contact: 94171 38044
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23/05/2025
*INTERNATIONAL DAY FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY*
*“One Earth, Many Lives — Protect Biodiversity, Preserve Our Future.”*
Biodiversity is the heartbeat of our planet. It represents the intricate web of life that sustains ecosystems, supports food security, purifies our air and water, regulates climate, and enriches human culture and well-being. From the tiniest microorganism to the grandest tree, every species plays a vital role in maintaining the natural balance.
On this International Day for Biological Diversity, we are reminded that our survival is interwoven with the survival of all other life forms. The unity of all living beings on Earth underscores the importance of protecting and nurturing biodiversity—not just for today, but for generations to come.
However, biodiversity is under grave threat. Human activities—such as deforestation, pollution, unsustainable development, invasive species, and climate change—are rapidly degrading ecosystems and driving species to extinction at an alarming rate. The loss of even a single species can trigger a cascade of changes that weaken the entire natural system.
*But there is hope—and responsibility.*
Every action counts.
Each of us can make a difference by embracing eco-friendly habits:
Reduce, reuse, and recycle to cut waste.
Support local, sustainable agriculture and plant native species.
Avoid single-use plastics and limit chemical use.
Conserve water and energy.
Raise awareness in your community.
Stand with conservation efforts, both locally and globally.
By taking small yet significant steps, we become part of a powerful movement to heal our planet.
*Let us also honor the unique ecosystems around us—like the Mattewara Jungles, the River Satluj, and Buddha Darya—which are not just landscapes, but lifelines for countless species and future generations.*
*Let us unite as a community and pledge our commitment to protect nature, restore balance, and celebrate the richness of life. Because in protecting biodiversity, we are protecting ourselves.*
Col CM Lakhanpal
Member, Public Action Committee (PAC), Mattewara Jungles, River Satluj, and Buddha Darya, Ludhiana.
Contact: 94171 38044
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