Hyderabad:If you have not visited the pristine stretch of India’s most protected archipelago – Lakshadweep – it is probably because it is best left undiscovered by populous tourism. Yes, it is a bewitching jewel in the Arabian Sea and it has been a body of restrictions, some by even the Supreme Court, that has kept it away from degradation, depletion, and blemished development.
But now that the Prime Minister has visited this haven and, more importantly, a Maldives-incited furor has put it into the limelight, no amount of screen will help. It has been spotted and, sadly, has to fight the war of upmanship with a nation like Maldives which, with all its azure beaches and eye-stirring beauty is still an over-developed tourism hub fighting a losing battle of existence and has appealed to the world to save it from sinking into the sea and vanishing forever.
Indeed, balancing tourism development with environmental protection is a twin-edged sword mostly propelling development over environmental protection, the latter being mostly a misnomer in the corridors of modern progress norms.
While islands like Bangaram offer stunning beaches, coral reefs, and unique marine life, their extremely fragile ecosystem is vulnerable to environmental hazards that will be exacerbated by unchecked tourism.
First and foremost in this category lies the cornerstone of Lakshadweep’s beauty, its stunning but vulnerable coral reefs.
Till now, and much after the court shut down the one and only resort of Lakshadweep – the Bangaram Island Resort which was run by the CGE Group – these coral reefs would get minimal visitors which included the cautious and informed marine researchers and a few honeymooners, both of which these reefs could withstand.
Coral reefs as we all know are crucial for marine biodiversity, protecting coastlines from erosion, and providing livelihood for local communities. However, rising sea temperatures due to climate change and unsustainable tourism practices like coral bleaching from boat anchors and pollution will definitely damage these fragile ecosystems.
Any kind of tourism bluster in areas like the delicate Lakshadweep islands comes fraught with dangers that we do not require to test. As we are aware, this archipelago is low-lying (like The Maldives) and highly susceptible to erosion. Increased tourist footfall, construction activities to house those tourists, an airport to land them – all this sounds so happening.
The reality though is, that the resultant removal of sand and vegetation will accelerate erosion, trigger beach loss, invite saltwater intrusion into freshwater sources, and embolden habitat destruction.
Put into simple words, it means mining a gem at the cost of survival, like killing the golden goose. At best, and if at all Lakshadweep needs visitors, it should be developed as a niche spot with a maximum limit of tourists that can land there for an indulgence called a holiday. The Andaman and Nicobar Islands, ever since they emerged from being the British Kalapani islands to becoming the blue beauty of India, have suffered depletion, degradation, loss of habitat, and alarming urbanisation of its local communities and tribes.
These communities, totally secluded till the 90s have now become the jobless, angsting population of tourism-urbanised Andamans. You thank your lucky stars though that the Government has shown some prudence in making at least some stretches of the Nicobar Islands protected, unbreachable property.
Lakshadweep has several such communities that have till now not faced the dangers of being pushed into the alien environs of being mainstreamed. It will be great if they continue to lead that simple, set life with no intrusions of the like that will come in for tourism not for them.
Returning to the cost that generations, alas planet Earth will pay for the definite coastal erosion that will hit Lakshadweep with all the land sharks landing there and tourism-supportive infrastructure activities begin there in earnest, and that includes the airport. Till now a helipad has worked pretty well in securing the area from insufferable traffic.