English, asked by tokazhimo1999, 1 month ago

write a letter to the editor of a newspaper on whether schools should be opened or not...( 6 mrks ) ... it's urgent...​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

A.

33, Jal Vihar

Wazirabad, New Delhi - 33

Dated: 17 July 2017

The Editor

Hindustan Times

New Delhi.

Subject: Need for people’s movement for a clean Yamuna

Dear Editor

I am Radha G, member of NGO AWAAZ. I am writing to you in order to highlight the deteriorating condition of river Yamuna.

The city of Delhi is getting contaminated water from river Yamuna. The residents are to be blamed for this. They pollute the river with garbage, sewage and filth. The river water is full of bacteria, plastic, chemicals and other waste materials. It is unfit for consumption.

The people have been demanding a Water Treatment plant. The authorities have not yet responded to the repeated requests.

I request you to highlight the problem in your newspaper and arouse public interest. We all need to get together in order to get the plant set up in the area.

Thank You

Yours sincerely

Radha G

Member AWAAZ.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

15A Model Town

Delhi

April 5, 20XX

The Editor

Expressions

Kasturba Gandhi Marg

New Delhi-110001

Sir

Sub: Deteriorating standard of living in the capital city.

Through the columns of your reputed magazine, I wish to express my views on the deteriorating standard of living in the capital city of Delhi.

What does the standard of living actually mean? Does it mean possessing expensive goods of comfort and beauty, living in posh bungalows or, the overall decent and

peaceful living conditions including health and hygiene, pollution-free environment, and above all, a value-based society.

Considering all these, the living conditions in Delhi are really appalling. Dumps of garbage, heavy traffic congestion on the roads, growing atmospheric pollution, high levels of noise pollution, overcrowding at public places, etc., throw ample light on the deterioration in the people’s standard of living. Our lungs are hungry for fresh air and green belts.

The large number of immigrants, from other states to Delhi, put tremendous pressure on the resources of the city. The housing problem is growing rapidly with lack of civic amenities. The life is so busy that there is little interaction among neighbours. Hurry and worry is what best describes the life in the capital city. With growing consumerism and rising prices, the disparity between rich and poor is increasing day by day. Something judicious needs to be done to remedy this situation. More green belts and ‘silence zones’ should be created. The unrestricted inflow of people to Delhi should also be checked. Only then the standard of living can be improved.

Yours truly

PMR

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