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THE HIMALAYAN DISASTER: TRANSNATIONAL DISASTER MANAGEMENT MECHANISM A MUST

We talked with Palash Biswas, an editor for Indian Express in Kolkata today also. He urged that there must a transnational disaster management mechanism to avert such scale disaster in the Himalayas. http://youtu.be/7IzWUpRECJM

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS TALKS AGAINST CASTEIST HEGEMONY IN SOUTH ASIA

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS TALKS AGAINST CASTEIST HEGEMONY IN SOUTH ASIA

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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

POLITICS: MAHARASHTRA Jaitapur, Level 7 A protest turns radioactive with the entry of the Shiv Sena SMRUTI KOPPIKAR

Wrong target After the death in police firing of a protester against the Jaitapur plant, villagers take it out on hospital staff
POLITICS: MAHARASHTRA
Jaitapur, Level 7
A protest turns radioactive with the entry of the Shiv Sena

Jaitapur N-Power Plant: Land For Power

  • 968 hectares The nuclear plant site covers five villages: Madban, Niveli, Karel, Mithgavane, Varliwada, all in Ratnagiri district, Maharashtra
  • Land acquisition ordered in 2007. Land cleared for acquisition: 968 hectares.
  • 14.85 Rs-cr Compensation earmarked by the state government
  • 1.38 Rs-cr Amount paid out so far
  • 1.2-1.5 Rs-lakh/acre Price initially offered to villagers
  • 4 Rs-lakh Later upped to Rs 4 lakh
  • 10 Rs-lakh This year, the state government has offered Rs 10 lakh per acre plus one job to every family displaced by the project
  • 2,400 Families affected by land acquisition
  • 40 Only 40 have accepted compensation so far, but some of them are rethinking their stand
  • 40,000 The plant affects the livelihood of 40,000 locals, including about 16,000 directly dependent on fishing
  • 2,200 Rs-cr Land was shown as "barren" in the initial environment impact assessment reports. But the district is famous for mangoes, chiefly the alphonso variety. Annual turnover: Rs 2,200 crore. In 2003, Ratnagiri was even declared a "horticulture zone".

***

For two days last week, large swathes of Ratnagiri district—home to the world-famous alphonso mango—shut down after unprecedented violence. April is when fishermen remain busy and orchard owners pack the best pick of the mango for Mumbai and beyond. This year, however, April brought death. Tabrez Sayekar, a 30-year-old fisherman from Sakhri Nate village, took three bullets and died on April 18 when police fired to quell a huge mob protesting against the proposed 9,900 mw nuclear power plant in Jaitapur.

The death marked a watershed in the sustained five-year history of local agitation against the plant; the area had not witnessed vandalism and violence on such a large scale all these years. Incidentally, for the first time since Ratnagiri villagers began agitating against the project, the Shiv Sena claimed ownership and leadership of the agitation.

On April 18 morning, about 400 protesters from villages that will be affected by the project, led by Shiv Sena MLA Rajan Salvi, marched to the site of the plant, hurled stones at the policemen on guard, ransacked office sheds and set fire to some machinery. The police resorted to a lathicharge, injuring many. Policemen also fired in the air and arrested about 30 of the protesters. About the same time, another mob of about 350 people converged on Nate police station, demanding the release of those held. After a war of words between police officers and agitation leaders, the mob ransacked the police station and prepared to torch it. A lathicharge and firing followed. Sayekar lost his life, and some 80 people were injured, including 30 policemen. The following day, Ratnagiri district shut down in protest.

As vandalism and violence took over this green coastal belt, Salvi's leader watched from a safe distance. Uddhav Thackeray, executive president of the Shiv Sena, had toured the area in early April, canvassing for a complete halt to the project and addressed a large public rally on April 9. In the intervening days, the state home department received intelligence that the area might witness violent protests, a fact home minister R.R. Patil admitted in the assembly. But as Salvi led Sena activists and locals on Monday, Thackeray, who still finds time for his hobby of wildlife photography, was taking in the sights of the Kanha National Park in Madhya Pradesh with his political aspirant son Aditya.

Thackeray is treading on precarious ground. It's difficult, as some analysts point out, not to see motives in the Shiv Sena parachuting into the five-year-old local agitation. It needs to recover lost ground in the Konkan belt and could do with the political mileage accruing from a popular agitation. The party lost some of its hold over the region after Narayan Rane switched loyalty to the Congress six years ago. This was Uddhav's best moment to put Rane in place and reclaim leadership in the Konkan. Also, with local body elections ten months away in prestigious Mumbai and Thane—which have large numbers of migrants from the Konkan—the Sena needs to demonstrate its concern for the area.

Contrast the April 18 protest with the one in December 2010. Then, nearly 6,000 protesters had marched across the villages calling for a total halt to the Jaitapur project. There was sloganeering and singing. There were sit-ins at police stations and no less than 1,500 of the protesters were arrested. But the anti-government sentiment had not resulted in vandalism.

In his cynical attempt to score points, Uddhav has caused damage to the agitation itself: one, he stymied a Hazare-type agitation in New Delhi planned by local organisations and may have fractured the anti-Jaitapur agitation into Sena and non-Sena-led ones; two, he introduced a needlessly violent strain into a legitimate protest that had been relatively calm even in the face of severe repression through all these years.

Justice B.G. Kolse Patil (retd), former judge of the Bombay High Court, who led the December march and was held for five days, says: "We completely disagree with the kind of agitation the Sena is spearheading. No one can take the law into their hands." Vaishali Patil, convenor of the Konkan Vinashkari Prakalp Virodhi Samiti, one of the four organisations agitating, says the people's struggle could turn "violent and communal if political parties began to cash in".

However, post-agitation too, the Sena suffers from a confidence deficit in the region, for hardly anyone here has forgotten its flip-flop on another mega power project of the 1990s. "After vowing to throw the Enron project into the Arabian Sea, it renegotiated and augmented the project when it came to power in 1995. How do we know Uddhav won't do the same with Jaitapur?" asked Patil.

Besides, its agitation record is flawed. The Sena has led violent agitations against a power company for "inflated consumer bills", toll road operators for high rates and private hospitals for not admitting poor patients, but always withdrawn before resolving the issue.

The violent turn the Sena has imparted to the Jaitapur agitation has put its ally, the BJP, in a quandary. Eknath Khadse, BJP leader and leader of the opposition, raised the issue of police violence in the legislature this week but even he knows he cannot go far. For, after an internal study in late January, the BJP decided it would support the nuclear plant. At the centre too, the BJP has supported nuclear energy initiatives and its government in Gujarat has planned two such plants.

Union environment minister Jairam Ramesh and Maharashtra chief minister Prithiviraj Chavan have since said "there will be no rethink" on the project itself but compensation could be reconsidered. Chavan's repeated attempts to win over villagers have been rebuffed. He is conscious that several Congressmen in the state have privately questioned the project, especially after the Fukushima disaster. Protesting villagers, who heard Congress spokesperson Abhishek Manu Singhvi ask on television if the government should stop the project only because local villagers don't want it, say the project is "a test for a government that claims to be for the aam aadmi". Jaitapur is on the boil, and nuclear energy has everything to do with it.

PRINT COMMENTS
APR 27, 2011 11:35 AM
16

BJP should be complimented for not exploiting this issue. Our energy needs are very real for our sustained economic growth. A bilateral approach on issues of vital national interest is good.

ANWAAR
DALLAS, UNITED STATES
APR 27, 2011 10:47 AM
15

 /// For god sake this party has to be banned for using God's name (Shiv) in a political party.'/// 
Here are some some parties having a name on religion or community (List is very long)

State political parties (State wise list)
Muslim League Kerala State Committee

Registered unrecognized parties
All India Majlis-e-Ahrar-e-Islam
All India Majlis-E-Ittehadul Muslimeen
Muslim Majlis Uttar Pradesh
Hindu Mahasabha
These parties be banned and not a party having the name of 'SHIVAJI' the warrior (not God).

DINESH CHAUKSEY
BHOPAL, INDIA
APR 27, 2011 09:59 AM
14

I would like to give Manmohan Singh his due in these adverse conditions. His focus on energy security is commendable.
In my understanding the whole nuclear deal with US was in fact his quest in this same line.
I understand the concern of local population regarding this Jaitapur power-plant. But if you remember few years back in Maharashtra itself, there were massive rally against wind farm in Konkan coast. Someone said it will change the flow of wind and nothing will grow there.
Not every protest is justified.
Not sure how many people know that there is plan to build massive solar farm in Rajasthan desert. Which is good thing also. I am sure in near future we will see some locals from that area protesting for one reason or other.

No I am not being hypocrite. My own village is going under water in a hyro power station in Uttarakhand.
I grew-up there and know how bad is this feeling of loss. But it serves the larger purpose, and I am ready to sacrifies my bit.

SANTOSH GAIROLA
HSINCHU, TAIWAN
APR 27, 2011 04:54 AM
13

Right now, solar energy is cheaper than nuclear energy, much safer and quite suitable for a tropical country like India. Why then Indian Govt. is foolishly pursuing nuclear energy? Germany, Israel and China have announced plans to scrap new nuclear power plants or even shut down existing power plants. 

While China, Germany, Spain and many other countries are massively investing in solar energy which grew worldwide by 59% in 2010, India shamefully does not even figure in top ten countries with solar energy installations, research and development. 

It is time for the Indian media, opposition and public to demand and force Indian Govt. to scrap plans for all new nuclear power plants and instead invest in solar, wind and biomass energy development which are rapidly growing all aorund the world.

Read: http://www.consumerenergyreport.com/2010/08/01/solar-energy-cheaper-than-nuclear-energy/

VASUKI
LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES
APR 26, 2011 10:45 PM
12

It is extremely interesting to note how the UPA Government is handling Jaitapur Power Plant project and compare with the way they are handling the POSCO Steel Plant project.

Both are big FDI projects that would mean a lot to Indian Industry. But in case of POSCO, the ruling UPA government has done everything to derail the POSCO project, even though quite a significant (but not all) percent of local population wants POSCO.

And here in the case of Jaitapur Nuke power plant, UPA government is pushing for it with all its might even though almost all locals are against it.

It is quite evident that the ruling UPA -2 coalition is driven not by principles but purely by partisan interests. Shameful !

PS - It is even curiouser to see Outlook's resident writer on Maharahstra affairs cover the whole agitation in such a way that very little is spoken about the pros/cons of nuclear power - rather the article more dwells on Shiv Sena . Hmm...

All this

RAMKI
DELHI, INDIA
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