By : ANUMEHA YADAV
More than 50 Adivasi farmers, including women, were detained
for over six hours on 30th April, 2013 (Tuesday) at the Sundarpahari
police station in Godda, a kilometre from the venue where President Pranab Mukherjee
laid the foundation for a thermal power plant to be set up by Jindal Steel and
Power Limited (JSPL).
Farmers from 11 villages in the Nimpaniya and Goiarijor
blocks said they had gathered at Sundarpahari to oppose land acquisition by
JSPL. At 10 a.m. they were detained by the police and kept on the station
premises till evening.
“My family lives at Seemaldhap village in Chota Amarpur.
More than 200 of us had gathered at Tiril Tola over the last two days because
we planned to march to the venue but the police arrested us. I had rice with me
for my little daughter but the police kept that away too,” Hopanmai Marandi
told this reporter.
“We were already displaced when the Sunder Dam was built. We
will not allow ourselves to be moved from our land again,” said another
villager Mary Nisha Hasda.
As part of JSPL’s expansion plans in Jharkhand, it had
announced the setting up of the 1,320-MW captive power plant in Godda at a cost
of Rs. 8,500 crore. The plant will use coal from the Jitpur coal block and water
from the Sunder Dam and the Gumani and Jalhara rivers.
JSPL, in a statement, said all land for its projects had
been obtained “through the government acquisition route, with consent of the
people,” a point the company director and MP Naveen Jindal reiterated at the
inauguration ceremony attended by Governor Syed Ahmed, Nishikant Dubey, MP
(Godda), and political leaders, including Subodh Kant Sahai, Hemlal Murmu,
Devidhan Besra, MP (Rajmahal), senior State officials and pradhans and mukhiyas
from seven villages.
Superintendent of Police Ajay Linda, however, denied anyone
had been detained. “There was overcrowding at the venue because so many
villagers wanted to attend the inauguration function. Then some of them stayed
back at the police station which is only a km away,” he said on the phone.
Away from the police station, hundreds of policemen and home
guards carrying sticks walked around villages. “Only the families in Bangali
Tola agreed to sell land to the company, the rest of us have refused. The police
have been coming to the village regularly now. All land around this village is
my land. Its yield lasts us the whole year; we will not give up this land,”
said a woman in Kalhajhar’s Charai Tola.
“My father is in the Nimpaniya panchayat samiti. My family
and other 30-35 families from my village are ready to sell our land. How else
will we move to cities?” said Sujit Kumar, who is home during a break from his
training at an industrial training institute.
Godda lies in the Santhal Pargana region of Jharkhand. All
land transactions are governed by the Santhal Pargana Tenancy Act (SPTA) and
most of the land is non-transferable and non-saleable, whether owned by tribals
or non-tribals. “Because of the Santhal rebellion against the British in 1855
in which 30,000 Santhals died fighting to protect their land, only land
classified as Gair Majurwa Khaas (GMK) or land listed as non-agricultural land
owned by the government can be transferred. The rest of the transfers — except
those made as gifts to relatives etc. — are illegal. It is not possible that a
power plant will be built only on GMK land. Despite these norms, officials
continue to alienate tribals from land,” said Ramesh Sharan, economist at
Ranchi University.
FOUNDATION LAID
President Pranab Mukherjee, on Tuesday, laid the foundation
for Jindal Steel and Power’s (JSPL) 1,320 -MW thermal power plant at Godda
district. The captive power plant, with an estimated cost of Rs.8,500 crore,
will use coal from the Jitpur coal block and water from the Sunder Dam, Gumani
and Jalhara river. It will be the first mega power project in Santhal Pargana
region in the state’s eastern region, and is expected to provide direct and
indirect employment to 20,000 people.
“I expect this power plant will meet the electricity needs
of rural areas that face a shortage of 33 per cent. This is a coal-producing
region and the needs of the villagers from around here must be met on
priority,” said Mr. Mukherjee addressing the public after laying the foundation.
By Courtesy : The Hindu (30th April, 2013)
Villagers Hopanmai
Marandi (left) and Mary Hasda are among those detained at the Sundarpahari
police station in Godda, Jharkhand, on Tuesday. Photo: Manob Chowdhury
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