Governance

Abandoned dams; abandoned people

Amita Bhaduri, Chicu Lokgariwar

Kanhar, 1976; Polavaram 1941. These are just two of the several dam projects that were proposed decades ago but are yet to see the light of day. Capitalist media is quick to denounce 'anti-development' activists as being the roadblocks on the glorious path of progress but there is more to it. Unlike what we are all led to believe, halting a state-sponsored project without strong legal backing isn't easy. The Supreme Court of India remains one of the country's institutions that retains respect and a reputation for being just. If some dams have been issued a stay order by the National Green Tribunal, it is not because of agitations but because the dams were environmentally and legally unsound in the first place.

There are at least three valid legal reasons why the National Green Tribunal should have halted the ongoing construction activity at the dam.

  • Kanhar dam was first proposed in 1976, and land for it partially acquired from 1978-82. Environmental clearance was given in 1980 -- 35 years ago. However, since it predates the Right to Information Act, the document can no longer be produced before the affected people. Implementing a project on the basis of a document none of the affected are allowed to see, is contrary to the provisions of the 

    Environmental Impact Assessment Notification, 2006 specified under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 as well as the Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980.

  • As per the

    73rd amendment to Constitution

    , Gram Sabhas are empowered to take decisions on whether projects should be executed or not. All the Gram Sabhas in the project-affected area have unanimously rejected the project. They have approached the Allahabad High Court regarding this (Case no. 67043/2011). The case is still pending, so the Government should not go ahead with construction till this is decided.
  • According to the

    Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land acquisition, Resettlement and Rehabilitation Act, 2013

    , if the acquired land has not been used, the process of acquisition would have to start afresh.

A case was filed in the National Green Tribunal based on an application filed on December 22, 2014 by O.D. Singh (UP People’s Union for Civil Liberties) and Debadityo Sinha (Vindhya Bachao Abhiyan) against the UP Government and Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) for carrying out construction activity of the project without statutory clearances under EIA Notification, 2006 and Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980. The judgement was given on May 7, 2015.

Reactions on the Kanhar judgment

the environmental clearance needs to be reviewed and reconsidered for such projects every few years, say every five years

According to Roma Malik of the All India Union of Forest Working People(AIUFWP), the deliberations of the National Green Tribunal are inconsistent with it's judgement. She says, "The people opposing the Kanhar Dam have always stated that the dam was built in an illegal manner; this has been validated by the National Green Tribunal in its judgement of May 7, 2015. The court has decided that the demands of the Dalits and Adivasis of the dam-affected villages are correct. Despite this, in just one sentence at the end, the Court issued directions to complete the existing work just to make the State happy. There is a complete stop on new construction. The reality is that all the work that is going on is new construction. Thus

there is a discrepancy between the Green Tribunal’s 50-page deliberation and the direction given at the end"

"

The observations of the National Green Tribunal and its directions are not consistent

Debadityo Sinha, Vindhya Bachao Abhiyan, an applicant in the case said, "the judgment is a mixed one. While

it provides partial relief

Several projects in India carry in their trail the same sorry tale. While the judgment says that the "project is intended to provide and inject better facilities of living", it is the project affected people who will be left to negotiate their new lives over the ruins of their ravaged existence.

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