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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, January 07, 2001 |
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Opinion
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Undermining welfare
In Kashipur today, a no-holds-barred contest is on between old
adversaries: tribals and `industrial development'. PRAFULLA DAS
reports.
TO THE casual visitor, scenic Kashipur block in Orissa's remote
Rayagada district could seem like a paradise. But reality is far
different. A no-holds-barred contest is on between old
adversaries: tribals and `industrial development'. The cause: the
region's rich bauxite reserves.
Matters came to a head on December 16 when three tribals were
killed in police firing at Maikanch village. A deep divide runs
through the local community. The tribals are opposed to bauxite
mining and the proposed alumina plant while the non-tribals
support ``development''.
At Kucheipadar village, where resistance to the alumina project
first began since land acquisition started in 1995, the people's
opposition has only gained strength over the years and the gap
between those against giving up their land and homes for the
plant and the authorities have grown wider. The opposition has
even spread to villages which are not directly affected.
That resistance to the project has gained support among the
tribals was evident when the Prakrutika Sampada Suraksha Parishad
(PSSP), which is spearheading the anti-alumina agitation,
organised a road block in the area on December 20. The programme
drew a sizeable tribal population.
``Why should the tribals always pay for development? We will not
allow the alumina plant to come up in our area. If the project
comes up, first we will lose our land and homes and in the long
run it will destroy the area's ecology,'' said Mr. Bangaru Majhi,
president of the PSSP and a resident of Kucheipadar.
``We will not allow anyone to snatch away our right to the water,
land and forests around us. If the Government is keen on our
development, they should provide us with better irrigation
facility, schools and healthcare,'' said Mr. Shyamaghan Majhi.
Contrary to the administration's claim that those opposed to the
project had never come forward for a dialogue, the PSSP members
charge that the authorities had not given them the right
information on the project. ``When survey work is going on in the
entire area, how can we be sure that only a few villages will be
affected,'' asks Bhagaban Majhi, another PSSP supporter.
The alumina plant in question is to be set up by Utkal Aluminium
International Limited (UAIL). The company's 20 per cent share is
owned by Indian Aluminium Company which has since been taken over
by the Birlas, and of the remaining share, 45 per cent is owned
by Hydro Aluminium of Norway and 35 per cent by Aluminium Company
of Canada.
Construction of the Rs. 4,500-crore export-oriented unit was to
begin by 2001-end and it was to be commissioned by 2005,
according to Mr. B.K. Otta, general manager of UAIL. But as the
resistance is growing after the Maikanch firing incident, the
project is running way behind schedule. The UAIL, which has
already invested a huge sum on construction of an airstrip and
other infrastructure, had obtained environmental clearance for
the project from the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests in
1995 and the bauxite mining lease was handed over to it by the
Orissa Mining Corporation in November, 2000.
The company, through the State Government, has already acquired
2,115 acres of private land to meet its requirement and is
getting another 712 acres of Government land. The acquisition of
private land, spread over 24 villages of Kashipur block, was
completed in April, 2000, and compensation money was paid to the
people after the UAIL deposited it with the Government.
According to Mr. Otta, all the 147 families of Ranibeda village
and the hamlets of D. Korol and Kendukhuti, who would be
displaced for the construction of the plant, have taken payments
for both their agricultural land as well as houses. Though they
have not been shifted, sites have already been identified in the
nearby area for their rehabilitation.
Of the 157 families of Kucheipadar who would be losing a total of
124 acres of agricultural land, 84 have taken compensation from
the Government. But the remaining families have not responded to
the Government notices for collecting payment for their land.
They are opposed to the project and are not collecting the money,
says Mr. Otta, while claiming that over 90 per cent of the people
in the area are in support of the project. The people of Maikanch
are not going to be affected by the project at all, he adds.
The UAIL's claim that the project had support from the majority
is also supported by the Rayagada District Collector, Mr. D.P.
Das, and the all-party committee formed by the district units of
the BJD, the BJP and the Congress. The politicians allege that
Agragamee - a non-government organisation working in Kashipur for
the past 20 years - was instigating the tribals to oppose bauxite
mining.
On its part, Agragamee has clarified its stand saying that it had
nothing to do directly with the tribal opposition to the project.
However, it supports the demand of the tribal people in Kashipur.
``The stand of the tribal communities in the region against
giving up their land and homes for mining is within the
constitutional rights guaranteed to them under the Vth Schedule
of the Constitution,'' Mr. Achyut Das, Director of Agragamee, has
clarified in a recent letter to the Chief Minister, Mr. Naveen
Patnaik.
Mr. Das has urged the Government to invite the leaders of the
movement to a round table meet to understand and address the
problem and to suspend all mining and industrial activities
pending an agreement with the people on the further development
measures for the region.
On the other hand, the all-party committee says work on the UAIL
project should not be stopped. ``If the UAIL project is shelved,
other companies which have already evinced interest to set up
similar plants in Rayagada and adjoining Koraput district may
drop their plans,'' says Mr. N. Bhaskar Rao, president of the
BJD's Rayagada district unit. The Government should taken
immediate steps to resolve the issue, he says.
The State Government has ordered an administrative inquiry into
the police firing. The people of Maikanch say the action was
planned, while the police say they opened fire when they were
attacked by the tribals from all sides. The police claim they had
gone to Maikanch to investigate an incident of December 15 in
which Mr. Bhaskar Rao and his supporters were assaulted by the
villagers when they went to hold a public meeting. But the
tribals say the police had come to the village to suppress their
resentment against the politicians who were favouring the alumina
project.
Even in the past, the tribals' voice of dissent has largely gone
unheard. But tribals in Kashipur are proving to be tougher
customers. The deadlock, therefore, continues.
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