New Delhi, Dec 19 (IANS) So what if India is surging at a high economic
growth rate? In some of the richest states in the country this very fact, in
terms of natural resources, has meant doom for millions who are displaced
from their homes, says a latest study.

Released Wednesday by international development agency ActionAid, India
Social Institute and LAYA, a voluntary organisation in Andhra Pradesh
working for tribal issues for the past 25 years, the report "Resource Rich
Tribal Poor" says that in the name of development a large number of
indigenous people are stripped of their basic identity and the right to live
a fulfilling life.

The study was conducted in five districts of four resource-rich states of
Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Orissa and Andhra Pradesh.

Joseph Marianus Kujur of the Indian Social Institute, who was the research
coordinator for the study, said acceleration of economic reforms has led to
exclusion of masses and has widened the gap between the rich and the poor.

"This study looks at the latest government data of the past 10 years in just
these four states which unveils the fact that the number of people who have
been displaced because of the various development projects is over 1.6million.

"In the process of conducting the study, 92 percent of the respondents said
that they have not received adequate compensation. All of this leads us to
ask the question: Is displacement necessary for development?" Kujur told
IANS.

According to the report, 749,555 people were displaced for various dam
projects, 304,698 for industry, 539,351 for mining, 926 people for
electricity generation plants and 22,050 for defence establishments.

Although land acquisition and displacement are two sides of the same coin,
the report says that there are no resettlement and rehabilitation policies
in place in Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand.

In Orissa and Andhra Pradesh, many of those displaced don't have record of
rights over the land that they have been using.

Most of the displaced people haven't been rehabilitated despite records
showing otherwise. However, those who have been, a majority being adivasis
(tribal), are finding it difficult to cope with the new environment and
usually tend to leave for forest cover.

"Pushed to live in the polluted slums, collective histories and indigenous
knowledge about plants, medicine and ecological symbiosis which the adivasis
have are thus rendered useless.

"Facing competition from the educated lot in the metropolitan cities and
towns, they fail to get any industrial job. All that they are left with is
menial and unreliable labour under contractors," Kujur said.

The report records the sentiments of a 40-year-old man from Bandhaguda,
Orissa, one on the villages under threat from bauxite mining plans of
Vedanta Plc., who said that he accepted cash compensation to leave his home
under the threat from company touts.

"We cannot eat money, and we know it won't last long. We have lost our land
and livelihood. While they make promises of better life for us, we are left
only with problems," the report quoted him as saying.

Some of those displaced were not even aware of the rehabilitation policies.

"What we found was that those who were rehabilitated couldn't have led a
worse life. Plucked out of their homes, they don't have a job, can't cope
with the sudden changes and to add to all of that, the resettlement sites
lack basic amenities," said Bratindi Jena of ActionAid said.

The report recommends that there should be strict adherence of the laws
existing at the Central and the state level, which prohibits the transfer of
tribal land to non-tribal under the cover of land acquisition for
development projects.

It also says that in order to protect the cultural identity of the
indigenous people, they should never be displaced from their homeland. Also,
representative of the local people should be included in the technical
committee formed by the government to assess the status of projects to be
undertaken.
khabrein.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1077&Itemid=88&limit=1&limitstart=1

-- 
Jharkhand News
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jharkhand Online Network
http://www.jharkhand.org.uk

Reply via email to