Democratise the development process in Odisha


By Pravin Patel



Odhisha State is bestowed with huge natural wealth and possesses rich culture 
with glorious past. It has a beautiful coast line that not only attracts 
tourists from all over the world but also provides livelihood to many. Rich 
forests with flora and fauna on the surface and huge mineral wealth below the 
surface are all more than enough for its four and half crore population to make 
them happy and become the leading state of India.



However, in contrast to the glorious past, the present is shocking with 
uncertain future.  The rich land is witnessing more than half of its population 
below the poverty line who struggle to survive; high rate of illiteracy; lack 
of quality education and non existence of minimum required health care in rural 
tribal areas; ruined rural economy; demographic attack on tribal areas 
disturbing their culture and destroying sources of livelihood and exploitation 
of the rural poor are some of the hard realties, that has resulted in ultras 
gaining more and more strength every day.



Is this the development that the people of the state looked at from successive 
governments during last sixty years of Independence?  Retrospective of the 
facts reveals that the definition of development has been redefined at Odisha 
not once but several times. Blindly pursuing the policy of rapid 
industrialization; mortgaging the long-term strategic interests of the state by 
bowing down to the powerful corporate houses is the latest definition of 
development. At Odisha, the definition of development is defined again and 
again. Let us have a look.



Rural economy depends on agriculture and related activities. What a farmer 
needs is quality seeds, fertilizers and water to irrigate the field well in 
time with proper marketing support. Helpless farmers are left on their own to 
look at sky for rains, while the mining and industrial corporations manage to 
divert the water to their plants.



Poor farmer with no money has to depend on middlemen who supply those poor 
inputs, charging exorbitant rate of interest and lifts the harvest from the 
farms to recover money. Such shylocks cause humiliation, stress and economic 
ruins for the helpless poor tribals bringing tears in their eyes. This is the 
story with most of the marginal farmers in the tribal areas. Umarkote area in 
Nabrangpur district will expose that a number of mafia styled Shylocks operate 
illegally defying Odisha  money lending act with many poor persons in their 
clutches. Who can expect those poor farmer to gather enough courage to lodge a 
complain? Neglect the farm sector and ruin rural economy to make farmers 
vulnerable is the first definition of development.



National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) provides the right to get 
minimum 100 days of employment to rural poor. Villagers through the Gram Sabha 
are to decide the work which is needed but in nexus with contractors, BDO 
decides the work that has been done using earth moving machineries but by 
preparing false muster rolls, Crores of rupees have been eaten away. Any one 
complaining is taught lessons by the musclemen of the contractors. A report of 
Parsuram has exposed scam of Rs 500 crore at KBK. Playing mischief in an 
important program to eat away money meant for creating for employment for the 
poor and needy and forcing those rural poor to migrate to the urban areas in 
search of livelihood is second definition of development.

Tribal habitats are bestowed with huge natural wealth in shape of forests and 
minerals. But by pursuing faulty mining policies that is tilted heavily takes 
the care of mining and industrial corporations. Iron ore (International market 
price is Rs. 10,000/tonne) is allowed to be virtually looted at laughingly low 
rate of royalty of average Rs 17/tonne, speaks of how big games are played to 
play mischief with the mineral wealth of the state.



Similar is the situation in Bauxite and other costly minerals. While private 
corporations earn hundreds of crores of rupees, poor tribals are forcibly 
displaced and huge environmental losses are in bonus for the state. Corporate 
social responsibility remains on paper as a visit to the mining area villages 
is more than enough to understand the big games played in the name of 
development. Pursuing faulty mining policies that makes the state poorer and 
make tribals vulnerable is the third definition of development.



Forests and Tribals are made for each other. Without forests tribals can not 
live and without tribals forest can not be safe. Faulty anti-people policies 
have resulted in the exploitation of tribals to fill the coffers of the private 
parties and state exchequer. While bamboo is supplied to paper mills at 49 
paisa a piece, tribals are harassed and denied their rights to use bamboo for 
their livelihood.  Even at the rate of Rs. 7/- fixed by the forest department, 
he finds great difficulty to procure it to weave basket and other products.



Similarly Kendu Leaves that generates about Rs. 500 crore per year on average, 
state collects more than 40% as Royalty and taxes. As per KLCC committee 
meeting held on March 11, 2008, chaired by Chief Secretary of Odisha, the 
target for 2008 crop year was fixed at 4.46 lakh quintal. Purchase price of KL 
has been fixed at Rs. 1420.20 per quintal that means a payment of Rs. 63.34 
crore to 10 lakh pluckers, which is a meager amount of only Rs. 639.34 paisa 
per person. Where as the budget for about 12,000 strong forest staff was fixed 
at Rs. 20.09 crore as establishment cost.



Forest Rights Act empowers tribals with right to collect, process and sale 
Kendu Leaves, Bamboos and other non timber products but in absence of any clear 
rules, there are confusions how to transport the material to the customer's 
destination. Playing gimmicks to give shoes for free to Kendu leaves pluckers 
and exploitation of tribals to fill the coffers of the state and private 
corporations is the fourth definition of development.



There are enough legal provisions available to tribals to protect their 
property rights. Panchayat Extension of Schedule Areas Act (PESA) is of much 
importance. Under PESA, it is mandatory to obtain positive consent of the 
villagers through a properly convened and conducted Gram Sabha. But by imposing 
section 144, preventing the tribals to attend the meeting, crushing their 
democratic right of protest, forwarding those who take leadership initiatives 
under false criminal cases to remove them from the scene and as if this is not 
enough terrorize them by beating with lathis, firing tear gas shells and even 
live bullets, all to forcibly acquire the land of the poor using century old 
colonial land acquisition act for the "Private Purpose" of corporate houses in 
the name of "Public Purpose". Making mockery of the laws of the land to make 
`Private Purpose' to 'Public Purpose' by bulldozing the rights of the poor 
people of the state is the fifth definition of development.

R & R Policy of the state is decided in consultation with the project proponent 
which is to be well explained to the people who are to be displaced. Two major 
components of the R & R Policy is to make a one time payment in lieu of the 
land lost, to be determined by the state in consultation with the project 
proponent and the other is to provide one person from each family a permanent 
employment in the project that is to be created by displacing them.

Poor tribals, most of whom are illiterates and do not know how to use those 
money fall in the hands of touts who lure them to cheat them of their money. 
The result is land is also lost and money is also gone. The proud land owner 
within no time becomes a pauper and has no option left except to become a 
poorly paid daily wage earner. Secondly, the permanent jobs never reach to 
them. Take the list of the displaced person from any project and compare with 
the list of permanent employment provided them. The result will be shocking.

Locals are pushed to corners and many new faces close to the project proponent 
and people in power takes benefit with both hands while locals are pushed to 
corners, barring few lucky ones who are used as show case, who are also shown 
the door once the purpose is served. Farmers of 3,400 acres of land lost at 
Behrampur to Tatas, nor the plant has come even after twenty years nor any 
employment is provided. Making mockery of the R & R policy and not to take 
penal action against the defaulting private corporations is sixth definition of 
development.

Promising huge sops to the private industrial and mining corporations including 
assess to water from natural water bodies, minerals, granting monetary 
concessions and other assurances as conditions to give permanent employment etc 
are all the components in the MoUs but are kept a secret document for example 
MoU inked with Tata Steel at Kalinganagar which is in the news due to bloody 
killings. In the largest democracy of the world, there should be a policy of 
democratic industrialization in which complete transparency is assured. Hiding 
facts from the very people who have voted the government to power as if they 
are agents of the private industrial corporations is seventh definition of 
development.

Orissa State pollution control Board is a statutory body duly empowered to 
ensure that Air and Water pollution norms are strictly complied as per law. 
Board issues   mandatory clearances i.e. "Consent to establish"; "Consent to 
Operate", only after fulfilling the required criteria and set norms and 
guidelines.



It is also a vital clause that on submissions of wrong information or 
violations of the conditions of the clearances issued, Board is empowered to 
withdrawal the consents and even seal the unit. But despite serious violations 
and false submissions the Board has failed to discharge their official duties. 
Mandatory clearances have been given to one metallic company at Khairban 
(Latikata Block) on land not owned by them. Village school which is located 
within 500 meters is shown beyond 1.5 KM, Kalushira village (Kuarmunda Block) 
is within one KM of Ganesham and two other sponge iron plants but it is shown 
at a distance of 25 KM, Population of the village is over 8,000 which is shown 
as only 50. A number of houses are located within 500 meters but it is shown 
that there are no houses within 2 Km distance.



A visit to any village in the vicinity of the coal based sponge iron plants is 
more than sufficient to see how the norms are openly flouted, causing 
irreparable losses to the health of the villagers and the sources of 
livelihood. How the mischief is played in conducting public hearing is also not 
a secret. Despite the facts are brought to the notice of the Board, no action 
taken is concrete proof of an unholy nexus existing between Board and those 
defaulter plants is the eighth definition of development.



The negative role of the administration that has expertise how to misuse the 
state police force to crack down on the democratic protests of the villagers, 
make mockery of the legal provisions of the country in broad day light, behave 
as a private army of the private corporations, not registering the complains of 
the poor and instead acting on false complains the victims are made culprits. 
From Khairban to Kalinganagar many incidents are in front of us where excesses 
committed by the misuse of state police force. Grossly misusing police force to 
intrude and bulldoze democratic rights of the people is the ninth definition of 
development.



Continuing the legacy of the previous governments, the present state government 
has also opened up all the tribals areas for the liquor vendors to brew and 
sale liquor, even when the tribals have rights to brew liquor for their own 
consumption. This has not only resulted in driving those poor tribals to 
economic ruins but those liquor vendors are busy in all sorts of illicit liquor 
activities. The result is repeated hooch tragedies in Odisha. Practising faulty 
excise policy to benefit of liquor mafias operating in nexus with corrupt 
excise and police officials even at the cost of huge losses of revenue and 
pushing tribals to economic ruins is the ninth definition of development.

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