Mohit Ray

Mohit Ray

Dr. Mohit Ray
Born 1954
Kolkata, West Bengal, India
Nationality Indian
Alma mater Jadavpur University
Occupation Environmental activist
Human rights activist

Mohit Ray (Bengali: মোহিত রায়) (born 1954) is an environmental[1] and human rights activist based in Kolkata. He has campaigned for saving the Adi Ganga, Bikramgarh Jheel and other water bodies of Kolkata. His seminal work in this field is the extensive research on the water bodies and heritage ponds of Kolkata.[2] His work has been published by the Kolkata Municipal Corporation[3] and Ananda Publishers. He has also published a number of papers in technical journals. He writes regularly on environmental issues in different journals including The Statesman, a national daily, in Anandabazar Patrika, Ei Samay and Bartaman, the Bengali dailies. He has also campaigned for a long time against the persecution of minorities in Bangladesh and the citizenship rights of the Bengali Hindu refugees.

Early life and career

Mohit was born in Kolkata into a Bengali Hindu migrant family from East Bengal in 1954. He graduated in Chemical engineering from Jadavpur University in 1976. In 1979 he completed his post graduation from University of Manchester. A year later he joined Engineers India Limited and relocated to New Delhi. In 1988, he joined Development Consultants Limited and shifted to Kolkata. In 1995, Mohit quit Development Consultants and began independent consultancy. He has worked as a consultant for a number of World Bank and Asian Development Bank projects. He has been a visiting faculty in the Environment Programme for M.Phil. at the School of Environmental Studies of Jadavpur University, in Academic Staff College of Jadavpur University and in the Environmental Management Department of Indian Institute of Social Welfare and Business Management. He completed his Ph.D. in engineering from Jadavpur University in 2005.

Environmental activism

Dr. Mohit Ray speaking on World Human Rights Day, 2011

Mohit has remained in the forefront of environmental activism in Kolkata for last two and half decades. He been associated with a number of NGOs involved in environmental activities and he leads a small non-funded group named Vasundhara.[2] He has been an active participant or adviser to efforts like restoring water bodies, saving Adi Ganga, questioning concreting the water bodies to rights of bicycle riders as a non-polluting vehicle. The discovery, identification and documentation of 48 heritage water bodies of Kolkata and environmental and social details of several thousand water bodies of Kolkata constitutes his seminal work in this field.[2] Mohit believes that the possibility of serious water and environmental crisis due to diminishing numbers of water bodies in the city can only be addressed by better management of the existing water bodies through technological innovations.[4] For Mohit, environment cannot be delinked from peoples’ livelihood concerns. So he emphasizes environmental improvement, along with development.

Human rights activism

Mohit has been active in social issues from his student days. He was the founder convener of Democratic Students Front at Jadavpur University, the students organization that was formed after the Emergency was lifted. His concern for human rights led him to become an executive member of People's Union for Democratic Rights and the joint secretary of Association for Protection of Democratic Rights. For last one decade he has organized a campaign for the human rights of the Hindu-Buddhist-Christian minorities in Bangladesh through the auspices of CAAMB. In May 2014, Mohit along with other delegates from several human rights bodies from various countries met the Indian president Pranab Mukherjee to convey him of the human rights issues plaguing the minorities of Bangladesh.[5]

Publications

Mohit has written a number of books in Bengali and English published by reputed publishers. He has also written fiction based on the theme of environment.

Non-fiction

Fiction

Articles

References

  1. Ganguly, Deepankar (25 June 2009). "Heritage tag on water bodies - Civic body plans to renovate centuries-old ponds". The Telegraph (Kolkata). Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 "Old Mirrors Traditional Ponds of Kolkata". Centre for Science and Environment. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  3. Bhattacharjee, Dr. Ratan (25 May 2012). "Mohit Roy's book Old Mirrors - Traditional Ponds of Kolkata". merinews.com. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  4. "Kolkata needs technological innovation to save waterbodies: Scientists". Times of India (Kolkata). 16 May 2013. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  5. "Save Bangladesh Minorities: Human Rights Groups appealed Indian President". News Bharati. 29 April 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, July 11, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.