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700 women join hands to save a river in Kerala-a story of kuttamperoor river in Aleppy│Reporter Live


700 women join hands to save a river in Kerala-a story of kuttamperoor river in Aleppy│Reporter Live


For watching this video please click the link : Reporter Live - Adayalam Program

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Some Newspaper cuttings regarding Kuttamperoor River

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A river reborn: How 700 workers cleaned a once-still river in Kerala’s Alappuzha - The News Minute

 700 people in 70 days gave life to the dead river. Kuttemperoor river in Kerala was dead for 10 long years. But not any more. A tributary of Pampa and Achankovil rivers, Kuttemperoor has now had a rebirth, thanks to the efforts of 700 workers for 70 days. Environmentalists have always said that any water body can be given a rebirth despite how severe its pollution problems are, or how near it is to death, and Kuttemperoor will go down in history as an example for this. Labourers cleaning the river Kuttemperoor before it died At one point, Kuttemperoor was Budhanoor’s lifeline. The residents of the village never experienced drinking water crisis, nor did they have a shortage of water for irrigation. In fact, the river was a source for irrigation for about 25,000 acres of paddy fields. Back then, the river was also used by local traders to transport their goods. It also helped control the flood in many places, because when Pamba and Achankovil overflowed...

In Kerala, 700 People Worked 70 Days to Revive a River Considered ‘Dead’ for over a Decade!

The Kuttamperoor stream connecting the Pampa and Achankovil rivers, had been a nearly stagnant, shrunken cesspool of dumped waste and weeds for more than a decade. Some weeks ago, it was resuscitated as a flowing river, thanks to the will of the Budhanur gram panchayat in Alappuzha district, and the commitment of 700 local men and women who worked to bring the river back to life under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA). The Kuttamperoor was once a full 12 kilometres long and, at places, over 100 feet wide. The river originates from Achankovil at Ulunthi, near Mavelikkara, and flows through Ennackad, Budhanur, Kuttamperoor, Mannar, and Pandanad before merging with the Pampa at Nakkida near Parumala in Pathanamthitta district. According to legend, it was originally a man-made canal on which wide-bodied vessels known as kettuvallams carried items of trade and daily requirement. The river irrigated 2,000 acres of paddy fields, and was t...