Sunday, September 5, 2010

Godavari: The New Narmada?Will Polavaram be another ecocide zone? Not if we apply the Vedanta logic to it.

Adivasi Aikya Vedika
Boiling Over The dam could displace Konda Reddies like this mother and child
andhra pradeshL polavaram dam
Godavari: The New Narmada?
Will Polavaram be another ecocide zone? Not if we apply the Vedanta logic to it.
Madhavi Tata
http://outlookindia.com/article.aspx?266976

Adivasi Aikya Vedika
Boiling Over The dam could displace Konda Reddies like this mother and child
andhra pradeshL polavaram dam
Godavari: The New Narmada?
Will Polavaram be another ecocide zone? Not if we apply the Vedanta logic to it.


Godavari Flow Chart

  • 80 TMC of water diverted to river Krishna. Water supply to Visakhapatnam. Drinking water to 540 villages.
  • Will  irrigate 2.91 lakh hectares. Power generation: 960 MW
  • Full reservoir Level: 151 feet,  total cost: about Rs 17,800 crore
  • Clearance from MoEF in July 2010
  • Environmentalists and rights activists say the dam could inundate parts of AP, Orissa and Chhattisgarh, swamp 280 villages. It will displace two lakh people, mostly tribals.

***

The Polavaram dam across the river Godavari has been a dream project for several governments in Andhra Pradesh. Most of them had to let it stay at that—a dream. An ambitious project which envisages harnessing the river's surplus water that otherwise flows into the sea (80 thousand million cubic feet is also diverted annually to the Krishna river), the Polavaram dam has been in the conceptual stage since 1943. It was only when Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy took charge and accorded irrigation topmost priority that the dam's construction was taken up as part of the Jalayagnam programme.

Christened the Indira Sagar Polavaram project, the 151-ft-high dam will have a gross storage capacity of 194.6 TMC and a power generation capacity of 960 MW. However, the dam has remained controversial from the word go. One of the major issues is the massive submergence of forest and cultivated land it will entail in Khammam, the west and east Godavari districts, Chhattisgarh and Orissa. Up to 40,138 hectares will be affected, uprooting a population of two lakh, many of them primitive tribal groups and adivasis. In all, 280 villages would be hit. Besides, reserve forests and a part of the Papikonda wildlife sanctuary would cease to exist. However, regardless of all this, the Union ministry of environment and forests (MOEF) cleared the proposal for diversion of 3,731.07 hectares of forest land for the Indira Sagar project in July 2010. While the AP government celebrates it as an achievement, tribal activists and environmentalists see red.

Madhusudhan N., who runs ngo Yakshi and works for tribal rights, says the logic which the Saxena committee report used to nullify Vedanta's project in Orissa should apply here as well. "The MOEF's clearance is based on the assurance by the AP government that there are no forest rights to be settled under the Scheduled Tribes and Other Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Right) Act, 2006, in the project area. The fact is that several tribals like Koyas and Konda Reddies have been living here for long. Their cultural ecosystems, their territorial rights to forest resources need to be recognised. In other words, they cannot be evicted. The AP government has obviously misled the Centre on these facts."

S. Jeevan Kumar, president, Human Rights Forum, calls the dam a hugely destructive project. "Tribals and Dalits," he says, "will account for 65 per cent of the displaced. The natural resources, cultural systems, traditional knowledge of these people are closely tied to the land they inhabit. With no forest, the existence of these communities will become untenable. Another condition for the MOEF's clearance is that the consent of gram sabhas (village councils) has to be obtained. Not a single gram sabha has given its consent so far. The Centre cannot apply the Forest Rights Act, 2006, selectively only in Orissa and ignore it in AP." Both the Orissa and Chhattisgarh governments have gone to the Supreme Court seeking a stay on the dam.


Hind Site Work on the main canal

Irrigation and environment expert Prof T. Shivaji Rao says the dam is being built by blindly ignoring aspects like climate change and global warming. "Over the years, the intensity and duration of storms in the Godavari are going to increase by 20-30 per cent. The AP government cannot alter nature." He points out that the National Institute of Hydrology, Roorkee, had in 1999 said the maximum flood inflow in the Godavari could be 60 lakh cusecs. The Central Water Commission (CWC) was only slightly more conservative: it put the figure at 50 lakh cusecs in September 2006. "Even if one were to take CWC's figure, the Polavaram dam would be a ticking time-bomb during floods," says Shivaji Rao.

Union Nations consultant for Asian irrigation projects, T. Hanumantha Rao, while factoring in these climate change facts, had suggested an alternative to the Polavaram dam in the form of three barrages at Polavaram, between Bhadrachalam and Konavaram and across the Sabari river close to the Orissa border. The AP government ruled out his proposals. "They were technically unviable," says irrigation minister Ponnala Laxmaiah. Hanumantha Rao says that he has never been against the Polavaram project but these barrages might just present a solution and work out cheaper than the current cost of Rs 17,728.20 crore and will generate more power (1,038 MW).

Both Shivaji Rao and Hanumantha Rao point out that earthen dams are prone to breaches. Since the soil foundation at Polavaram is of clay and sand, a concrete dam is unviable. Other major rivers in the world which have lesser peak flood discharges than Godavari, such as the Yangtze in China, the Mississippi in the US or the Volga in Russia, do not have earthen dams at locations where such high flood flow conditions occur. The Indira Sagar project is located almost at the end of the river where the peak discharge occurs.

Shivaji Rao points out: "In October 2009, the Krishna river saw unprecedented floods, more than 2.7 times the normal flow, and Kurnool was submerged for days together. And there is no dam out there. If such a situation occurs in the Godavari and the Polavaram dam is built, then a breach is almost certain. The maximum flood inflow would be 90 lakh cusecs. Imagine a tsunami of 200 TMC of dam water breaking across the Godavari delta. Overnight, 45 lakh people would have a watery grave."

Irrigation officials in the government dismiss these theories as alarmist and say that the benefits of the Polavaram dam are too many to be ignored. Irrigation minister Laxmaiah says that the objections by Orissa and Chhattisgarh have no relevance since they are signatories to the 1976 Bachawat Award on the Krishna waters. "We have obtained all the clearances and are offering a compensation package of more than Rs 600 crore for the two states. We are offering the best rehabilitation and relief packages in the country," says Laxmaiah. "In fact, we invited Medha Patkar about four years back to assess the R&R package and she found it to be good. The government has also taken the suggestions of the World Water Forum." Do the people have a say, that is the moot question.


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--


PTI
No closure yet At Azad's funeral
encounter deaths: Chemkuri azad
Shoot And Shut Up
Despite the reports that Azad was killed in cold blood, the State feigns innocence
Anuradha Raman, Saikat Datta

PTI
No closure yet At Azad's funeral
encounter deaths: Chemkuri azad
Shoot And Shut Up
Despite the reports that Azad was killed in cold blood, the State feigns innocence


Slash And Burn Approach

The State is bearing down on dissent by killing even those who want to talk peace

"In the Azad case an FIR has been made out against a man who has been killed by the cops. It's as if they are judge and jury." Colin Gonsalves, Advocate, rights activist   "Azad was deputed for the peace talks by the Maoists. The home minister's refusal to recognise his killing shows the State's intent." Arundhati Roy, Writer, activist

"We are moving from constitutional democracy to one that is populist. It won't be surprising if we soon move towards mob rule." Justice M.N. Venkatachaliah, Former chief justice of India   "With Azad's killing, it seems the State wants Operation Greenhunt to go on, keep blaming the Maoists and snuff out peace talks." Kavita Srivastav, PUCL activist

A deafening silence from the government has greeted demands for an independent probe into the death of Chemkuri Azad Rajkumar after reports in Outlook and other media raised serious questions about the police encounter. The post-mortem indicated death by a shot fired at point-blank range. When Outlook took the post-mortem report to independent experts, not saying it was of Azad, they concurred with the earlier finding that the wounds and other signs indicated death from a shot fired from "less than 7.5 cm" away.

Azad's death is not the death of just any Maoist leader. Some may say the state is well within its rights to kill the leader of an armed rebellion, but his death could well perpetuate a conflict without end.

"I don't think people have fully grasped the true significance of the killing of Azad. There have been killings like this before in Andhra Pradesh. Fake encounter killings have a fixed format. They just change the name of the person killed. So why should it be any more or less significant in Azad's case?" asks Arundhati Roy. The writer-activist, who has  spent considerable time with the Maoists, reporting on them, says Azad's death indicates "the government desperately needs this war to clear the land and push ahead with what it wants to".

"Azad," says Arundhati, "was the man deputed by the Maoist party to represent them in the proposed peace talks. For the police to kill him in this way, and for the Union home minister to refuse to take cognisance of this extra-judicial killing, tells a great deal about the government's real attitude towards the peace talks." The hundreds of MoUs signed by the government with corporates "are waiting to be actualised. The government wants to escalate this war to sort out what it views as a problem. Peace talks would interfere with the momentum and be an unnecessary impediment".

"We are moving away from a constitutional democracy to a populist democracy, and mob rule is just a step away," says M.N. Venkatachaliah, former chief justice of India. A constitutional democracy, he says, works under institutional safeguards. It was under Venkatachaliah's tenure as chairman of the National Human Rights Commission (nhrc) that guidelines on encounter deaths were spelt out and states were expected to follow them. As encounter deaths—more recently that of Azad—continue unabated at the hands of the State, Venkatachaliah is perturbed that the guidelines are not being followed at all. In fact, he says the attitude of the State can be summed up as follows: "Show me the man, and I will show you the law."

But Union home secretary G.K. Pillai rejects any calls for an independent inquiry into Azad's death (see following interview). While Pillai supports the state government's version of the encounter, the state's dgp, R.R. Girish Kumar, reiterates "whatever allegations made by Maoists or their frontal organisations are baseless". The Maoists, he says, are taking some point in the post-mortem report and trying to blow it up in a disproportionate manner. "The allegations on the post-mortem report contents are not true," he says.

But Kavita Srivastav, of the People's Union of Civil Liberties (PUCL), feels otherwise. "This is called faking the encounter. And there has been no magisterial inquiry till date. With Azad's killing it appears that the government wants to continue Operation Greenhunt, continue denouncing the Maoists and snuff out any chance of a peace process. The implications of his killing are sinister and dangerous."

Kavita is clear that as a first step, "the Supreme Court should uphold the Andhra Pradesh High Court order of 2009, which states that every encounter killing must be investigated. That will have far-reaching implications on such killings. Having done that, the apex court should suo motu take note of such killings and order a judicial inquiry. Parliament must also legislate to check such killings by the state." That may not happen in a hurry.

Arundhati feels that Azad's killing, along with the others who have been killed so far, is a cause for concern and needs to be challenged. "The way the peace talks are being approached by both sides is amateurish. It's true that the talks held in Andhra were a debacle. But still, there were important lessons for both sides to be learnt from the debacle. It took more than a year just to finalise a committee of concerned citizens to initiate the talks. Each person on that committee had impeccable credentials and public standing. It wasn't a question of arbitrarily suggesting names to the media (like the Maoists are doing), nor of arbitrarily selecting a person like Swami Agnivesh (like home minister P. Chidambaram did)."

She also says, "Finally, there are many other groups who have been raising the same issues as the Maoists are—but peacefully and within the ambit of the law. However, the government doesn't seem to be even pretending to be interested in peace talks with them. That says something about the waging of an armed struggle."

In Azad's case, "two FIRs should have been registered by the police. In this case an FIR has been registered against the man who was killed by the police. It's like the police are the judge and the jury and Azad is the accused person. It's a travesty of law," says Supreme Court lawyer and human rights activist Colin Gonsalves. He, too, draws attention to the Andhra Pradesh High Court order of 2009, which clearly stated that an FIR has to be registered in case of an encounter killing and this is the law of the country. But with the Supreme Court granting a stay on that judgement following an appeal by the Andhra Pradesh government and its police, encounter deaths continue to remain outside the pale of an independent inquiry. So, ironically, while it seems to be good in law to gun down a man in cold blood, it conveys the impression that it is  bad in law to order an independent inquiry into such executions.

interview
Union home secretary on the killing of Maoist ideologue Azad.
Chandrani Banerjee



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