The Gomti, Gumti or Gomati River is a river flowing entirely within the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. It is a tributary of the Ganges.
Hindu belief
According to Hindu belief, the Gomti is the daughter of RishiVashishtha. Bathing in the river on Ekadashi (the 11th day of the two lunar phases of the Hindu calendar month) is thought to wash away sins. According to the Bhagavata Purana, one of Hinduism's major religious works, Gomti is one of the five transcendental rivers of India. The rare Gomti Chakra is found there. ==Pollution==
Pollution
The Gomti River is polluted at several points of its course through the stretch of alluvial plains in Uttar Pradesh. The major sources of pollution are industrial waste and effluent from sugar factories and distilleries and residential wastewater and sewage. The river and its tributaries, particularly the Kukrail Drainage, collect large amounts of human and industrial pollutants as they flow through an area comprising about 18 million people. High pollution levels threaten the Gomti's aquatic life. On 25 July 2008, the foundation stone of a -capacity sewage treatment plant was laid. The plant, promoted as Asia's largest, failed; in 2014 it was reportedly running at 10 percent of capacity, and beyond the plant (near Bharwara) untreated sewage and solid waste entered the river. The plant was intended to intercept the 23 major natural drains entering the Gomti. ==Riverfront development controversy==
{{anchor|Gomti riverfront development and related controversy|Controversy with current riverfront development.|The importance of this project|Current status of the controversy and the project.}}Riverfront development controversy
The Gomti has been stressed, particularly in and around Lucknow, for decades. There are three major reasons for this: • Embankments - High embankments were built around the river to protect the population of Lucknow after a major flood during 1970s, altering the Gomti's natural floodplain. • Pollution - The Gomti has 40 natural drains, of which 23 are major. The drains, which carried surplus water into the river during the monsoon and recharged the underground water table, were reduced to carry residential and industrial sewage into the river. • Development - The river's floodplains and fertile land were covered with residential areas, such as Gomti Nagar and Triveni Nagar. The Gomti began receding during the late 1970s, and was under major stress in 2016. The Gomti rises by 10–12 meters during the monsoon, and in 2008 a major flood was reported. Around 2012, the newly-elected government and the Lucknow Development Authority began a feasibility study with the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee to build a river-front similar to Sabarmati Riverfront in Ahmedabad. The LDA submitted the report, warning about the negative consequences of reducing the Gomti to less than 250 meters wide. At 250 meters wide (with walls on both sides), the river's velocity would increase by 20 percent and its bed-shear stress by 30 percent. Current embankments would have to be raised by 1.5 meters, and the high flood level (HFL) would increase by 1.25 meters. Two bridges would be threatened with collapse under flood conditions. The riverfront-development project is seen as a political showdown that project as well. Both projects are seen as a template for similar interference with river systems across India, including the Yamuna, the Hindon and the Varuna. ==Flooding==
Flooding
Monsoon flooding leads to several problems when the water recedes, including the danger posed by drying potholes and pits (which host disease causing mosquitoes such as malaria and dengue). ==See also==
{{anchor|Notes}}External links
• Sacred Rivers • "Sewage kills thousands of fish in north Indian river". Babu Lal Sharma, Associated Press, 22 August 2003 • Markandey Mahadeo on Wikimapia • Reference to Gomti River System