Delhi LG Sandhu Unveils 5-Pillar Vision for Yamuna Cleanup and Growth

Delhi Lieutenant Governor T.S. Sandhu has pledged to clean and restore the Yamuna River as a vibrant ecological and cultural lifeline. He identified six central issues including air pollution, water body rejuvenation, and sustainable mobility for Delhi’s urban vision. Sandhu emphasized inclusive growth that benefits all communities, from women and youth to migrant workers and artists. He also called for strengthening Delhi’s position as a global cultural capital through investment in museums, public art, and heritage restoration.

Key Points: Delhi LG Sandhu’s Vision: Clean Yamuna, Inclusive Growth

  • LG Sandhu pledges Yamuna restoration as ecological lifeline
  • Identifies six urban issues: air, waste, water, mobility, green cover
  • Stresses inclusive growth for women, youth, migrants, artists
  • Calls for tech-driven, transparent governance and cultural capital status
3 min read

Delhi L-G TS Sandhu vows to clean Yamuna; promote culture, growth

LG T.S. Sandhu vows to clean Yamuna, boost culture, and ensure inclusive growth, highlighting six key issues for Delhi’s urban transformation.

"The Yamuna must not only be cleaned; it must be restored, as a vibrant ecological and cultural lifeline of this city. - T.S. Sandhu"

New Delhi, May 8

Vowing to clean the Yamuna River, Lieutenant Governor T.S. Sandhu on Friday identified sustainability, inclusion, culture, innovation, economic growth and compassion as the five essential pillars of Delhi's future development.

Speaking at a felicitation programme organised at JNU's School of International Studies (SIS), of which he is an alumnus, the Lieutenant Governor underlined that governance should be responsive, accessible and humane.

Sandhu identified air pollution, cleaning of the Yamuna River, rejuvenation of water bodies, effective waste management, sustainable mobility and enhanced green cover as issues central to Delhi's urban vision.

"The Yamuna must not only be cleaned; it must be restored, as a vibrant ecological and cultural lifeline of this city," he said.

At the same time, stronger public transport systems, electric mobility, pedestrian-friendly streets, cycling infrastructure, and integrated urban planning will define the next phase of Delhi's transformation, he said.

He stressed that the government and people will have to move beyond reactive measures and commit to long-term ecological planning.

Stressing that growth and development will have to be inclusive, the L-G said the benefits of growth should be shared, and opportunities should be accessible to all.

"Delhi's future must belong equally to women, senior citizens, youth, differently-abled, migrant workers, entrepreneurs, artists, students, and vulnerable communities," he said.

Urban development cannot be limited to physical infrastructure alone, as it must also strengthen social infrastructure -- healthcare, education, safety, accessibility, and dignity, said Sandhu.

The Lieutenant Governor called for technology and governance to work together so that transparent, efficient and citizen-friendly systems are created.

"The objective should be simple: governance that is responsive, accessible, and humane," he said.

Highlighting the city's rich culture, he said that Delhi possesses one of the richest cultural identities anywhere in the world.

Its monuments, literature, food traditions, music, crafts, languages, museums, festivals, and artistic communities together form the soul of this city, he said.

As we modernise Delhi, we must ensure that we do not lose its cultural memory. Instead, we must strengthen Delhi's position as a global cultural capital, he said.

"Investment in museums, public art, creative industries, cultural tourism, heritage restoration, and community spaces can help create a city where culture is not preserved passively, but lived actively," said Sandhu.

Stressing innovation and economic growth, he said that Delhi has the potential to emerge, not only as an administrative capital, but also as a leading centre for knowledge, startups, tourism, hospitality, the creative economy, and the wider service sector.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Sounds wonderful on paper, but I'll believe it when I see action. Every L-G and CM has promised to clean Yamuna, but the river remains a toxic drain. The focus on inclusive growth and culture is appreciated, but please start with basics like waste management and sewage treatment first. We need implementation, not just speeches.
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James A
As someone who lived in Delhi for work, I can say this vision is ambitious but needed. The pollution there is heartbreaking, and Yamuna's condition is a national shame. The emphasis on sustainable mobility and green cover gives me hope. Hope the government and citizens cooperate to make this dream a reality. #DelhiRising
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Kavya N
L-G sahab's emphasis on including women, senior citizens, and especially migrant workers is very thoughtful. Delhi's soul is indeed its diversity. But cleaning Yamuna isn't just about government — it's about changing public mindset too. We must stop treating rivers as gutters. Start with stopping industrial waste and temple offerings that pollute. A clean Yamuna would transform Delhi's beauty! 🌿✨
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Vikram M
Fine words, but where is the budget allocated? Delhi already has a dispute with the Centre over cleanliness projects. If L-G really wants to clean Yamuna, he needs to work with the Kejriwal government, not against it. Every year we hear these promises — let's see concrete timelines and funds. Otherwise it's just another photo-op speech at JNU.
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