Makrand Gadgil in Mumbai

Three months have passed, but the Maharashtra government has not been able to 
finalise its report on the results of the September 22 referendum it had 
organised in 22 villages of Raigad district that form part of the 
10,000-hectare Mumbai Special Economic Zone developed by Jai Corp [Get Quote], 
a company promoted by Reliance Industries [Get Quote] chairman Mukesh Ambani's 
close associate Anand Jain.

The state revenue department is pointing fingers at the irrigation department 
for the delay. The irrigation department claims it has submitted the inputs 
required to finalise the report.

Meanwhile, the future of thousands of farmers and Jai Corp, which has invested 
around Rs 600 crore (Rs 6 billion) mostly to acquire land, hangs in the 
balance. Jai Corp has acquired around 1,500 hectares.

The notice period given to farmers under Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act 
lapses on August 6 and the 'in-principle' approval from the central 
government's SEZ approval boards lapses in June. Around 3,000 hectares of land 
from these 22 villages has been notified for land acquisition.

A senior state government official said the decision is being delayed because 
the state government is in a bind. Any decision will adversely impact either 
the farmers - which is considered politically risky in an election year - or 
the interests of a powerful industrial house like Reliance.

The crux of the problem is that the central government's SEZ policy of 2007 
bars irrigated land from being acquired for SEZs after which activists pressed 
for 22 villages, which fall under the command area of the Hetavane dam in the 
Raigad district, to be deleted from the purview of the SEZ. The state 
government decided to hold a referendum as a result of this protest.

J P Dange, secretary of the state's revenue and forest department, explained: 
"Before we finalise our report, we would like to know how many farmers are 
actually going to get the benefit of irrigation. And the irrigation department 
has told us it will take time if they have to give a report on every farmer."

A senior officer from the irrigation department said out of 145 thousand 
million cubic meters of water available in the dam, only 30 TMC is reserved for 
irrigation; the rest is for drinking water and industrial purposes. This 30 
TMC, he added, is available for 52 villages and not just the 22 villages in the 
SEZ. "Our report highlighting all these facts was submitted to the state 
government long ago," he said.

The real issue, he added, is deciding, how priority of the water in the dam 
should be fixed. The issue is whether the state government is ready to give 
priority to irrigation over industry.

Maharashtra's water resources policy clearly gives priority to industrial 
purposes over irrigation, the official said.

Meanwhile, Ulka Mahajan, convener of the anti-globalisation forum that was at 
the forefront of the anti-SEZ agitation, insists that the referendum is 
"overwhelmingly against the SEZ".

http://www.rediff.com/money/2009/jan/03maharashtra-dithers-over-sez-referendum-results.htm




--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Kences1" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/kences1?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to