[All preparations had to be complete prior to the function in which Prime
Minister Narendra Modi ‘gifted a dam’ to the nation on his birthday on
Sunday (September 17). The Sardar Sarovar dam was lit up and 2,00,000
people (comprising farmers, fishers, potters, pastoralists, Dalits and
small enterprise holders) had to be submerged for the Narmada Mahotsav (and
Modi’s birthday) to be a success. For this, water was diverted into the
Sardar Sarovar reservoir from unfilled dams, raising water levels to 129.64
metres and beginning the inundation of 191 villages and one township in
Madhya Pradesh. The 30 sluice gates at the dam site have also been closed
since June 17 this year, allowing water to fill the reservoir.
False claims have been made in the Indore high court about the provision of
all basic amenities in 88 rehabilitation sites. It has been announced that
the disbursal of compensation amounts of Rs 60 lakh and Rs 15 lakh to 681
families in Madhya Pradesh is complete, when fewer than half of the
beneficiaries, the oustees of the dam, have received it. Economists like
Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar took care of the rest of the preparations
by telling a nation of a billion people that tribal people ousted by dams
will flourish and adapt in no time and with limited trauma even, as if the
Narmada Bachao Andolan kept the struggle alive for 32 years when there was
no injustice being perpetrated.
...
The main objective of the dam, which was to provide people with water for
drinking and irrigation, has been entirely recast. In Gujarat, water is
being made available to the factories of Coca Cola and Tata Nano car, to
corporates like the Adani and Ambani groups, to six industrial centres, and
to fill a stretch of the Sabarmati river in Ahmedabad – while throats and
fields of farmers in Saurashtra and elsewhere remain parched. Out of the
17.92 lakh hectares of land to have been irrigated, only two lakh hectares
have actually benefitted. The project was accorded sanction for a canal
network of 90,389 km; however, the government of Gujarat talks only of a
71,748-km canal network, a decrease by 18,641 km. Madhya Pradesh and
Maharashtra, having received no benefits of water, are getting only 56% and
27% share in electricity respectively – which is ridiculous as in the state
of Madhya Pradesh alone, it has been predicted that the production of
electricity will be in excess of the demand for the next 15 years.]

https://thewire.in/178562/narendra-modi-narmada-sardar-sarovar-dam/

Narendra Modi’s ‘Gift’ to the Nation Is Set to Submerge Lakhs of People

BY SNEHA GUTGUTIA ON 18/09/2017

Water is still not reaching those who need it, while people are being
forced to give up their homes and livelihoods linked to the Narmada.

Protestors at the jalsatyagraha in Chhota Barda village. Courtesy: Narmada
Bachao Andolan

All preparations had to be complete prior to the function in which Prime
Minister Narendra Modi ‘gifted a dam’ to the nation on his birthday on
Sunday (September 17). The Sardar Sarovar dam was lit up and 2,00,000
people (comprising farmers, fishers, potters, pastoralists, Dalits and
small enterprise holders) had to be submerged for the Narmada Mahotsav (and
Modi’s birthday) to be a success. For this, water was diverted into the
Sardar Sarovar reservoir from unfilled dams, raising water levels to 129.64
metres and beginning the inundation of 191 villages and one township in
Madhya Pradesh. The 30 sluice gates at the dam site have also been closed
since June 17 this year, allowing water to fill the reservoir.

False claims have been made in the Indore high court about the provision of
all basic amenities in 88 rehabilitation sites. It has been announced that
the disbursal of compensation amounts of Rs 60 lakh and Rs 15 lakh to 681
families in Madhya Pradesh is complete, when fewer than half of the
beneficiaries, the oustees of the dam, have received it. Economists like
Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar took care of the rest of the preparations
by telling a nation of a billion people that tribal people ousted by dams
will flourish and adapt in no time and with limited trauma even, as if the
Narmada Bachao Andolan kept the struggle alive for 32 years when there was
no injustice being perpetrated.

Also read: On Narendra Modi’s Birthday, Will He Remember Those Fighting for
the Narmada?

Distortion of the benefits of the dam

The main objective of the dam, which was to provide people with water for
drinking and irrigation, has been entirely recast. In Gujarat, water is
being made available to the factories of Coca Cola and Tata Nano car, to
corporates like the Adani and Ambani groups, to six industrial centres, and
to fill a stretch of the Sabarmati river in Ahmedabad – while throats and
fields of farmers in Saurashtra and elsewhere remain parched. Out of the
17.92 lakh hectares of land to have been irrigated, only two lakh hectares
have actually benefitted. The project was accorded sanction for a canal
network of 90,389 km; however, the government of Gujarat talks only of a
71,748-km canal network, a decrease by 18,641 km. Madhya Pradesh and
Maharashtra, having received no benefits of water, are getting only 56% and
27% share in electricity respectively – which is ridiculous as in the state
of Madhya Pradesh alone, it has been predicted that the production of
electricity will be in excess of the demand for the next 15 years.

The Sardar Sarovar Dam lit up ahead of the Narmada Mahotsav. Courtesy:
Narmada Bachao Andolan

Financial losses incurred by the Sardar Sarovar Project

In 1983, the cost of the project was estimated at Rs 4,200 crore. In 1988,
the Planning Commission approved the project at an estimated cost of Rs
6,400 crore. Today, the cost of the project has sky rocketed to Rs 99,000
crore. According to a letter from the citizens of Gujarat to the president,
an average amount of Rs 9,000 crore is annually provided for and spent, for
the construction of the remaining canal network. Even now, approximately
42,000 km of canal is yet to be constructed because of which only 20-30% of
the irrigation benefit has been achieved. Maharashtra has claimed coverage
for the loss of the amount Rs 1,800 crore. Crores of rupees have been spent
on building tin sheds, which are illegal as per the Narmada Water Disputes
Tribunal Award and three Supreme Court judgments. Again, crores of rupees
were spent on Narmada Mahotsav and the celebrations around it. No wonder,
then, that the total loss is being estimated to be thousands of crores of
rupees.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Sardar Sarovar dam on his birthday.
Credit: Twitter/PMOIndia

Environmental aspects still remain neglected

Environmental clearances for the project were granted in 1987 without
complete assessment of environmental impacts, on the condition that
environmental studies will be undertaken and mitigation of the impacts will
happen pari passu (side by side) with the construction of the dam. Till
date, this has not been followed. The issues – catchment area treatment,
command area development, compensatory afforestation, loss of flora and
fauna, protection of downstream environment, seismicity and rim stability,
health aspects, archaeological loss and anthropological setbacks – were
required to be considered by the environment sub group at each stage of
clearance given for increasing the dam height. Though work done on these
environmental aspects is far from complete, the government has obtained
permission to increase the height of the dam at every stage based on false
reports of environmental compliance.

Koteshwar ghat, an important religious site in Madhya Pradesh, is 80%
submerged. Courtesy: Narmada Bachao Andolan Mohan bhai, from the Imli
bazaar area in Nisarpur village. Courtesy: Narmada Bachao Andolan
State of affairs in villages to be submerged

The 214-km-long reservoir of the Sardar Sarovar dam is set to submerge
40,000 hectares in area (including 13,835 hectares of forests), which
includes 244 villages and one township in the three states of Madhya
Pradesh, Maharashtra and Gujarat. Out of these, 191 villages and the
township are located in the state of Madhya Pradesh and currently face
submergence. The resettlement and rehabilitation work done in all three
states is dissatisfactory.

Also read: Despite SC Intervention, Those Displaced By Sardar Sarovar Dam
Project Struggle With Uncertainty

In Gujarat and Maharashtra, around 15,000 families were resettled and
rehabilitated. But there are massive inconsistencies in the process and
thousands of families continue to struggle. In Kevadia colony in Gujarat,
about 200 representatives of project-affected people are protesting with
their long-pending rehabilitation demands; they were on a relay fast for a
year. Where the canals have been constructed in Gujarat, there are holes
and pits in their banks which damage the surrounding areas including crops
and villages. During the recent floods in Banaskantha district, the flood
situation was aggravated and worsened because of these breaches. In
Maharashtra, tribal populations of the submerged villages are pleading for
land.

Hands and feet of protesters sitting on a jalsatyagrah in Chhota Barda
village in Madhya Pradesh. Courtesy: Narmada Bachao Andolan

In Madhya Pradesh, the resettlement sites continue to lack basic amenities
like drinking water, sewerage, electricity, water and grazing land for
livestock, land for public building like schools and medical care
facilities. Most of the plots provided for housing are on black cotton
soil, where levelling and construction are difficult. The size of the house
plots is also a fraction (one-third) of what was promised. The list of 681
families eligible for the cash compensation of 60 lakh and 15 lakh, as
announced in the 2017 Supreme Court order, is also highly flawed. Between
2008 and 2010, 15,946 families were excluded from rehabilitation by the
Narmada Control Authority in the state as they were unscientifically
declared “unaffected by lowered back water level”. Many who consented to
rehabilitation in 2005 were either duped in fake registry scams as brought
forth by the Jha Commission report or received unfair, incomplete or no
compensation at all. A survey done by the NBA in 38 villages in Madhya
Pradesh shows that 308 religious sites, out of which 117 are very ancient,
will be submerged and lost. Today, as water enters villages in the state,
40,000 families in the submergence zone refuse to move as they have nowhere
to go.

“We will fight, we will win,” say the oustees facing submergence in Madhya
Pradesh

Rajendrabhai of Chikhalda village said with strong emotion, “Narmada is not
a water tank for us, she is our mother,” suggesting that their relationship
with the river goes beyond material fulfilment. Women in Kadmal village,
who were sitting on a relay fast in the month of July and protesting
vociferously for fair compensation, wondered if the loss of land and a way
of life inseparable from the river can ever be compensated. When facing
such loss, it is no wonder that the dismal situation has still not broken
the mettle of the andolankaris in the Narmada valley. On Sunday, as Modi
was ready for the jalhatya (drowning to death) of 40,000 families in Madhya
Pradesh and chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan had become a mute partner
in it, 36 agitating villagers stood as jalsatyagrahis (protestors standing
in the water) in Chhota Barda village to protest the celebrations and
agitate against the rising water levels of the Narmada. The satyagrahis
were badly affected – their skin came off and they shed blood due to long
exposure to water, but with an indomitable belief in non-violence and a
spirit that never gives up, they declared that the resistance to the
apathetic state will continue in the valley until families are
rehabilitated rightfully and justice is delivered.

Sneha Gutgutia is with Kalpavriksh, Pune.

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Peace Is Doable

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