This Article is From Jun 01, 2016

You Will Pay, Says Court To Sri Sri's Art of Living In Strong Order

Move this image around for a 360-degree view of the Sri Sri Ravi Shankar festival venue where workers, volunteers and musicians gathered during the three-day event in March 2016Click to Play
Move this image around for a 360-degree view of the Sri Sri Ravi Shankar festival venue where workers, volunteers and musicians gathered during the three-day event in March 2016

Highlights

  • Fine of Rs. 4.75 crore must be paid, says top green court
  • Festival on Yamuna banks in March was allowed with fine
  • Art of Living says it left site 'in better condition than we found it'
New Delhi: For its massive festival held on the banks of the River Yamuna in Delhi, the Art of Living, led by spiritual guru Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, must pay nearly five crores, the country's top environment court said today, offering strong criticism of the organisation.

The Art of Living had been allowed to go ahead with the three-day "World Culture Festival" on the banks of the River Yamuna on the condition that it would furnish five crores against potential damage to the area's delicate ecosystem. 

Hundreds of thousands of devotees attended the event which included what was billed as the world's largest stage, spreading over seven acres.

The organisers paid Rs 25 lakhs at the time, and said the rest would be given later. They then asked that the 4.75 crores that they owed be treated as a bank guarantee and that it should apply towards creating a biodiversity park in the area. 

The Art of Living "used the order of the court to hold the event and then went back on its commitment," the National Green Tribunal said today, adding that the organisers have tried multiple legal cases "in order not to pay the fine" as a result of which the "conduct of the foundation has been called into question."
 

Over 10,000 dancers enthralled the audience at the World Culture Festival organised by Art of Living foundation on the banks of the Yamuna. (Reuters photo)

Environmentalists had accused organisers of ripping up vegetation and ruining the river's fragile ecosystem by damaging its bed and disrupting water flows. 

Sri Sri, 60, had said he should be given an award for organising the event. His organization said today that "we left the site in better condition than we found it" and that it is will take its case to the Supreme Court.

The opening of the event was attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, though President Pranab Mukherjee dropped out after the controversy over environmental clearances erupted.



(Interview aired March 10, 2016)
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