English, asked by sahilsahil6, 1 month ago


before it is dumped into the river which supplies water not only to this city but to innumerable towns and villages downstream.the Ganga,the Yamuna,the Kaveri ,in fact all our important
rivers serving many urban conglomerations, are fast becoming a major source of diseases.
3. A comprehensive bill introduced in the Parliament recently, envisages the setting up of central
and state boards for the prevention and control of water pollution. But it will obviously take
some time before legislation is passed and effectively implemented. Meanwhile the problem
continues to swell. According to a survey of eight dwelling countries conducted a couple of
years ago, 90 per cent of all child deaths were due to water borne diseases. It is the same
unchanged story today.
4. In a country like India, a burgeoning population continuing to use the open countryside as a
lavatory means that with every dust storm and rain, human excreta laden with germs and
parasites find their way to ponds, shallow wells and even the streams and rivers. Only 18 per
cent of the rural folk have access to potable water.​

Answers

Answered by prudhvi699
2

Answer:

Bro once check it

it doesn't sense at all

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