Sunday, August 16, 2009

Massive destruction of Forest cover in Colamb, Rivona



Here are pictures of massive destruction of Forest cover at Colamb, Rivona in Sanguem Taluka. Click here
for details of the matter. Colamb villagers approached South Goa Conservator of Forest in Margao Mr.Bidi on August 13, 2009 to bring this to his notice. He behaved very rudely with the villagers and asked the villagers to get out of his office. Villagers staged 'Gandigiri' and refused to get out of the office. Mr. Bidi then cooled down and agreed to send the department team for on the spot inspection of A.X.P Palondicar as well as of Hiralal Khodidas mining lease operated by Fomentos was inspected. Here are some pictures straight from the Forest.

What will remain if all the Goa's Forest is finished at the alter of mining industry? What will happen to Western Ghats Forests? What will happen to every living organism in and around forest for which all the Indian Citizens are duty bound to be compassionate towards via Fundamental duties in Indian Constitution? How do we collectively put an end to the dictate of mining industry that has held all of us ransom? What will happen all all the springs of the mountains dries up forever and Goa turns into a dessert? Should we let all this to happen? Please raise your voice for the sake of planet earth. Our planet is wounded and it needs time for rest. Please stop mining. Please bury your bulldozers into the soil and get out of Goa now. It is too beautiful and too precious to be offered as sacrificial goat to the mining industry. Please stop your nasty power play. We can take it no more. half a century of pain needs many years to heal. Please do not add more to our worries. We want to survive and live to experience life's mystery. Please do not bury Goa into the dustbin of history.

Please learn to respect life above your fattened briefcases bloated power hunger. It is enough! We can take this no more!

Forest department, please pack up your bags and go home. You cannot protect forest anymore. And Forest Minister and Chief Minister please pull up your socks and do something drastic to stop mining forever in Goa now.

Sebastian Rodrigues





Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Govt warns Vedanta against illegal mining in Orissa

http://www.zeenews.com/news552881.html

Tuesday, August 04, 2009, 22:03 IST

New Delhi: Centre on Tuesday warned the Vedanta group that it can be prosecuted if it resorts to "illegal mining" of bauxite at Nyomgiri in Orissa since the Anil Agarwal-controlled firm has been given only in-principle approval.

"They have got environmental approval in-principle. They have not got full forest clearance. If mining is taking place in Nyomgiri, then it is illegal," Environment and Forests Minister Jairam Ramesh said in the Rajya Sabha.

Replying to a debate on the working of his ministry, he said the 'in principle' nod given to the group would not mean sanction for the mining operations. "They can be prosecuted," he said.

Ramesh said his ministry has now made it mandatory that all applications for mining in forest areas would require not only the forestry clearances but also an evidence that provisions of the Tribals Rights Act have been complied with.

Since the ministry was not insisting on implementation of the Tribal Act earlier, Vedanta received in principle nod.

Ramesh said he was not happy about giving 'in principle' approvals, "give me a little more time and I will get rid of this animal called in principle forest approval. It is not a good animal to have... had the Tribal Acts been in place, the chances are that this project (Vedanta) would not have been cleared in the first place".

The Vedanta group of UK-based Agarwal had announced Rs.70,000 crore India investment plans for its aluminium projects which would significantly hinge upon the Bauxite to be mined at Nyomgiri.

Bureau Report

Requiem for the Western Ghats

5 Aug, 2009, Herald, Panjim

HARTMAN DE SOUZA documents how mining – ‘legal’ as well is ‘illegal’ – is decimating the Western Ghats in Goa

One feels sad for the kingfishers that choose to follow the Kushawati as she comes down from Sulcorna. These birds, intent on finding an eddy or pool where a fish may seek respite from turbulent monsoon currents, thoughtlessly go with the river as she bends north towards Colomb and Rivona.

Barely a kilometre ahead where the first open-cast iron ore mine starts, the Kushawati, thanks to the waste churned up, has turned sluggish, changing in colour from the tea-brown water associated with the monsoon flow to the dirty, muddied, disembowelled red associated with mining. If there were fish there, they have long since disappeared.

Even worse is the devastation on either side of the Kushawati and the road to Colomb and Rivona that runs parallel: hundreds of acres laid bare as far as the eyes can see, one huge dune of fist-sized stones leading to another, roads created in between by bulldozers, and huge chasms of muddy stagnant water that, come September, will be pumped out into the Kushawati so that the company can dig even deeper. The destruction will be absolute and the mining will systematically destroy a majestic river that brings water from the Western Ghats.

The destruction of forests, using highly sophisticated machinery, is nothing short of ‘scientific’ – barring fifty metres either side of the road that show evidence of the trees that originally made up these Quepem forests, and which, ironically, hide the mining on both sides of the river and road, from public view. This is part of an elaborate farce enacted by mining companies making new forays in Quepem, rubber-stamped by the ever compliant pro-mining panel embedded in the MoEF, New Delhi.

The mining companies maintain a pitiful green cover in front of their mines, as they say in their applications for ‘environment clearance’, to reduce the ‘visual impact’ of their mining operations! The euphemisms are on a template: the dirty, muddied, dead bodies of water, steep sides well below the water table, are referred to as ‘reservoirs’; companies promise to cut only those trees necessary to begin mining, with no mention of how many hectares of government-demarcated forest will disappear. Reforestation amounts to planting a row of acacia, hybrid bohenia, Singapore cherry, and shrubs of milky-green durantha at the entrance to the mine, perhaps even some bright-coloured hibiscus around the security cabin, to reduce ‘visual impact’.

Mining is a bonanza for a privileged few, from the large mining companies to the politician or politician’s kin turned ‘super contractors’ doing their bidding, to the affluent in Goa with investments in mining shares, or trucking operations, or barges.

In a mining operation that will net a few thousand crore rupees at least, Rs40-50 lakh is set aside for reforestation projects; Rs10 lakh reluctantly spent to hire water tankers to spray the roads to keep dust levels down, or provide drinking water to villages that once had water in abundance! It is this easy to get official ‘environmental clearances’.

It is difficult to explain this to birds looking for fish or worms, or to wildlife losing their natural abode and coping with the plight and indeed, fright, of fleeing; or to villagers in Colomb who point out the cracks in their mud and mortar homes brought on by the mining company blasting explosives; or old men wondering why centuries-old forests need to uprooted, or why the mud in their fields is stained with the blood of mining; or women and children who watch, baffled, as the water sources slowly and surely dry up and choking red dust settles on and around their dwellings.

Or, for that matter, to villagers in Maina, Pirla, Colomb and Rivona who wonder what system of governance prevails in this country, when, in spite of violent opposition to new mining operations in Quepem, the permissions to mine are still be given, old leases being renewed well after they have lapsed.

Or to explain to farmers in Quepem that when one of these old colonially legislated leases is sold for a few crore to a mining company or ‘super contractor’, they are left with ‘superficial rights’ under the law, and the mining concession, in spite of being drafted at a time when Quepem did not have such human settlement, given precedence.

Given the scale of mining in Quepem thus far, when it is obvious that only a massive deforestation beckons, one begins to wonder what exactly is ‘legal’ in mining iron ore in our Western Ghats? Villagers there are not to know that in Goa, democracy is defined as a government ‘off’ the people, ‘buy’ the people and very ‘far’ from the people indeed! The tragedy surrounding the rape of Goa’s forests begins with laws that give the mining industry precedence over agriculture and kept this way by successive pro-mining governments in Panjim. Add to this an archaic principle that accepts that those who pollute will pay for their sins.

This is how the mining companies got away with murder in the early 70s when they made their first forays in North Goa, with officialdom advising farmers they were not strong enough to take on the mining behemoths and should therefore sell and move out. This was their strategy in Sanguem, where they have already been successful in taking away an entire generation of young able-bodied men from earning a successful living off the land. They turned them into truck drivers to haul the ore. This is their strategy in Rivona and Colomb, as also in the recent leases renewed in the villages of Pirla, Maina and Kawrem, all surrounded by forest lands the government has been steadfastly refusing to notify. Why should they, when ministers own mining companies, or barges, or businesses in earth-moving machinery…

In the Regional Plan, Quepem has been demarcated as a place in need of quality educational institutions. But even as this is being written, two meetings have been held at a government school in Maina, chaired by truck drivers and mining managers, the deal being that mining will now come even closer to the school and cross over to the other side of the road, destroying large sugarcane fields and going all the way towards the Paikdev Temple and the Curca river.

The school has already been given a bus by the mining company, the children have got exercise books and pencils, umbrellas for the rains, and now promises have been made that the students will shift into a new school building built by the miners. Does anyone in government even know about this, or is this proof of complicity afoot? How can we have ‘laws’ that allow unscrupulous politicians and industrialists to destroy what remains of the Western Ghats?

In Ambaulim, where villagers have been protesting about the quantum of mining trucks passing through, more able-bodied men have been lured into owning trucks and making the money the company offers them, and now the mining company wants to build a community hall for the local church!

These are sops, because if the mining companies have their way they will wreck hundreds, if not thousands, of hectares of forest land in the cusp between Rivona, Collomb, Kawrem, Maina and the outskirts of Ambaulim. The farce is incomplete without mention of the fact that ‘environment clearances’ have been procured in Maina for land that is not even owned by the politician in question! A local sugarcane farmer, brokering nefarious deals, is wealthy beyond his wildest imagination, cheating his own sister-in-law of her late husband’s land. He owns a Sumo, has a tipper truck parked in his compound, and has built a two-storeyed mansion without any official permissions.

The polluter cannot be allowed to pollute. But for that to be realised, our priorities need to be re-aligned and the foundation of ‘industrial development’ shaken at its core, made subservient to the Western Ghats. If that were done, the ongoing destruction of Quepem’s forests would cease.

As it is, though, the procedures to enact this wanton rape are ridiculously simple.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Tribal land at treat from mine

Interesting article here from Guardian Weekly. It is based on struggle of Niyamgiri hill People - known as Khonds - against Vedanta in Orissa.

Church under pressure over revelations that Vedanta supplies nuclear programme

• Sacred mountain bauxite will be used for missiles
• Campaigners press for ethical rethink on share stake

Gethin Chamberlain in Delhi

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/aug/02/vedanta-mining-environment-development

The Church of England will come under more pressure to give up its stake in a controversial mining group after it emerged that the firm supplies materials to India's nuclear missile programme.

Bauxite mined by Vedanta Resources from a sacred Indian mountain will be used to produce components for the country's military, the Guardian has learned, bringing a potential conflict between the church's ethical investment policy and £2.5m stake in the company. Several local councils also have stakes in the firm.

A spokesman for Vedanta confirmed that bauxite from the mine would be supplied to its Balco subsidiary but insisted that the company was only involved in the production of metals for the weapons, rather than the weapons themselves.

"What these guys sell is the refined aluminium which can then be used for all sorts of things, they are not actually involved in manufacturing weapons," he said. Balco supplies 90% of the aluminium used in India's nuclear-capable Agni, Prithvi and Akaash missiles.

Vedanta's plan to mine at Niyamgiri in the eastern state of Orissa has prompted a barrage of criticism from environmental activists, who claim it will displace the 8,000 strong Dongria Kondh tribe and wreck the delicate ecosystem of the area. The hill is regarded as sacred by the tribe.

Last week activists including Bianca Jagger targeted the British company's annual meeting, hoping to persuade shareholders to force the company to abandon plans for the mine.

Those shareholders include the Church of England, which has a £2.5m holding in Vedanta. It has already promised that its Ethical Investment Advisory Group [EIAG] will hold talks with the company's management over the mining plans.
But today's revelation will heap further pressure on the church, which has a policy of not investing in companies that supply or manufacture armaments.
In a policy document entitled Church Investments and Armaments, the EIAG states that "the church has historically avoided armaments where these constituted the main business or focus of any company. However a policy review resulted in new criteria being adopted that provides for the complete exclusion of armaments."

A spokesman for the EIAG said: "We are taking the allegations about Vedanta's Niyamgiri operations and plans very seriously and we will make our assessment as quickly as possible."

He said the company had responded promptly to a request for a meeting but because of the holiday season a video conference was not likely to take place before September. The EIAG is also planning to take up an offer from Vedanta to visit Lanjigarh in Orissa, where the firm has a bauxite refinery, to look at its operations.

Campaigners opposed to the mine said the company's involvement in the production of nuclear missiles was further reason to oppose the project.
Meredith Alexander, head of trade and corporates at ActionAid said: "Vedanta's commitment to sustainable development becomes ever more laughable. The news that Vedanta provides raw materials for weapons systems is outrageous.
"This is just another reason why investors should take a hard look at their holdings in Vedanta. The Church of England, for example, state that they will not invest in defence companies. Vedanta's involvement in missile production surely makes their investment even more controversial."
Campaigners also want other high profile investors to rethink their involvement. These include the pension funds of three councils – Hertfordshire and Suffolk county councils and Havering district council. The list also includes leading fund managers such as Norwich Union Life and Pensions Ltd, Halifax pension fund and Axa Sun Life Assurance Society.

The aluminium alloys needed for India's Agni, Prithvi and Akaash missiles were developed by Balco, purchased from the Indian government in 2001 by Sterlite Industries – which is owned by Vedanta Resources. Vedanta has an alumina refinery at Lanjigarh, where from next year bauxite mined at Niyamgiri will be processed, according to its most recent company report.

Once that happens, the company plans to continue to supply part of Lanjigarh's output to Balco, which states on its website that one of the key clients is the Indian missile programme.

Vedanta was allowed by the supreme court to go ahead with the mine at Niyamgiri despite advice from the court's central committee that the use of the forest land in an ecologically sensitive area should not be permitted. In its findings, the committee observed that "the casual approach, the lackadaisical manner and the haste with which the entire issue of forests and environmental clearance for the alumina refinery project has been dealt with smacks of undue favour/leniency".

Campaigners still believe that they have a chance of overturning the decision, with ActionAid citing a 1989 protest which stopped a Balco mine in the Gandhamardan hill in neighbouring Bargarh district. Last year the company made a renewed application to mine there too.

"Despite the supreme court ruling, the legal struggle against Vedanta's proposed mine in Niyamgiri continues," said Meredith Alexander. "The Kondh people have now launched a fresh challenge which highlights Vedanta's environmental record and its dogged refusal to listen to the local community.

Fomentos lime Solution!

At Colamb's Hiralal Khodidas mining lease T.C no 06/49 Gulkond Dongor, Fomento has found new solution to the problem of red mining water running off into the Green field of the Colamb villagers. The company now - as soon as it starts raining - releases large doze of lime into the running water so that red water running into the field does remain as photogenic as it was last season. This is indeed a novel solution! Fields and people continue to be at the receiving end the mining company. Irrespective of the colour of the silt, the silt continues to accumulate in the field and Fomentos continue to invade more Colamb land for mining activities. Why dint's it mine under the Cidade de Goa in Dona Paula or Timblo House and Fomento office near railway station in Margao? It would have fetch very good Ore and subsequent foreign exchange. Must consider this for very personal experience of being at receiving end of mining! Please, please consider it Fomento. You have troubled enough people of Goa and please stop your nonsense now. Enough is enough.

Rampant mining in Goa's Forest in Sanguem

A.X.P Palondicar mining lease 17/49 operated by Mr. Palondicar in collaboration with some unknown contractors from Andhra Pradesh is operating in Forest area in Survey number 72 of Colomba village in Sanguem Taluka. Its Public Hearing was conducted on 25th July 2009. Survey number 72 is declared Government Forest under Sawant and Karapurkar committee. It is declared as 'No Development Zone' in Goa Regional Plan 2021.

Presently massive cutting down of Forest is in Progress. One of the sources of Kushavati river known as "Unannatly Volli" originates here. This very source of water is being brutally destroyed. It is very pleasant and and cool place but now the work is in progress to destroy this forever. Our Goa Government is responsible for this ongoing genocide of Goa and it will have to be answerable now to people of Goa as well as to the Universe.

Mining dump collpases, runs into Selaulim Dam

M/s S. Kantilal mining lease bearing T.C No. 60/52 dump has collpased and silt has entered Selaulim water reservoir and Paddy fields in Curdi, Sanguem. Its contractor is Goa mining trader and Sanvordem MLA Mr. Anil Salgaonkar and subcontractor is Cuncolim MLA and Urban Development Minister in Goa cabinet Mr. Joaquim Alemao. Selaulim dam water is supplied to entire South Goa plus through Kallem river in Sanguem via pipeline it is released into Khandepar river in Ponda in Opa water works that supplies water to North Goa including to the Goa's Capital city.

Goa's lawmakers are law breakers of the first order and it is crystal clear here!

Monday, August 3, 2009

Farmers ‘crop’ govt on land acquisition

Vow to join hands and march the streets with spades and sickles

MARGAO, AUG 2
Agitated farmers from across the state under the banner of Goenchea Xetkarancho Ekvott on Sunday demanded that the government stop forthwith acquisition of agricultural land for any purpose and return the acquired land to the people.

At an impressive meeting held at the historic Lohia Maidan, various speakers lambasted the government in general and Chief Minister, Digambar Kamat in particular, holding him and other Ministers responsible for acquiring prime agricultural land under the guise of promoting development.

The farmers vowed to join hands to oppose government’s plan to acquire agricultural land in any part of Goa. Farmers warned that they would be forced to come on the streets with the spade and sickle if the government goes ahead with the Sports city in order to protect the land of their ancestors from being forcefully acquired by the government.

The impressive turn out of the people for the meeting supported by NGOs from across the state conveyed a message loud and clear to the government that they would no longer take things lying down. They resolved to fight tooth and nail thoughtless plans of the Goa government to acquire prime agricultural land for other purposes, primarily for constructions.

Speakers pointed out that it is ironical that the government makes budgetary provision for promotion of agriculture and in the same breath allows blatant conversion of agricultural land. They said that infrastructure like highways, roads should not be carried out by destroying fields. Instead, they called for exploring alternate measures and called for preserving and conserving tenanted land.

Attacking successive governments for making available limited agro land in Goa to a handful of capitalists, the farmers’ body charged the government for using different forms to promote devious and systematic designs to uproot people and render them aliens in their own land.
In a spirited address, President of Priol Shetkar Mandal, Sadanand B Gawde underlined the need for farmers to forge unity at the local level and foil attempts by the capitalists and the government to acquire their farming land. “It’s only when the farmers wake up from slumber, the government will come under pressure to leave the fields untouched”, he added.

Accusing the government of investing crores of rupees in unviable projects such as the Sky Bus metro, he said the same money could have been pumped into agriculture to help farmers continue the traditional occupation.

Richard Rebello came down heavily on the government for acquiring large tracts of prime agricultural land at Madel-Ambaji-Dovondem in recent times by displacing the farming community. He pointed out that the poor farmers have been paid a pittance by the government in lieu of the fields and demanded the return of the land to the owners.

He was highly critical of the Sports Minister, Babu Azgaonkar for pushing the sport city at the cost of the farmers.

Tarajan Desai said that prime agriculture land is being indiscriminately acquired in Cuncolim which has forced a farmer Vishnu Desai to knock the doors of the Supreme Court to seek return of the agriculture land.

The meeting was addressed amongst others by Ida Coutinho, Prakash, Sharad Gude, John D’Costa, Durgadas, Esteve Andrade, Xavier Fernandes, George Fernandes, Adv John Fernandes, Deugim Fernandes, Sheila Naik, Rama Velip, Seby Fernandes, Casiano Furtado and Rodney Almeida.

Representatives of various Non-governmental organizations, including Fr Maverick Fernandes, Soter D’Souza, Sabina Martins, Sidharth Karapurkar were seen seated amongst the audience.

Herald, August 03 2009, Panaji

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Call me, call my family: my home phone is tapped!

Today is August 02, 2009. More importantly it is Sunday. I got a call at around 10.00 am on my home BSNL landline 2272164 from someone did not identify with his name but only said that he is from Telephone department wanting to know if my phone was working properly. I said it is working but then asked as to whether anyone from my family had complained to department that it is not working. He replied that nobody complained but the department is checking if it is working on their own. Then I said there is no problem with my landline and then the caller hooked off the phone. Then within few seconds of me keeping the phone it began ringing again. I received the phone and then after about 5 seconds the line was cut without anyone uttering a word. My
hello' went in vain!

Then I pondered and discussed with my family members at home if anyone had lodged complaint at our Sioilm Telephone exchange? I got negative response at here. Then after few seconds I wondered that how come Siolim Telephone exchange is open on Sunday that is weekly holiday for the government staff? Our earlier experiences with Telephone repairing when it went dead have been very delayed response that would take always more then a week to attend to my landmine. At one incident one of my family members even had to get involved in heated discussion with the Telephone exchange officials in Siolim. Now what a turn around in the situation: feel like Goa's golden era has been ushered in Goa today morning in terms of giving quick services to the consumers all over Goa; when the department has began monitoring the phones round the clock; and its employees has no more weekly off on Sundays from today; let the labour laws fly to the winds! If this is not the case then this is a case of violation of my and my families right to privacy. Telephone department has to explain this situation or it is guilty of colluding with vested interests in tapping my private home landline and monitoring of information that is exchanged while in telephonic conversations which it has no right to do.

My mobile number 9923336347 too is tapped very often. One instance that was detected was in the evening of October 10, 2008 when I called up Rama Velip at his landlines in Colamb someone unknown Hindi speaking male voice received it. When I confronted him he hang up the line. Then, surprisingly on the same evening when Rama Velip called me up at my cell number also someone unknown Hindi speaking male voice received it!

Recently around two weeks ago my cell number and Rama Velip's cell number; whenever there is connection it is tapped. There is clear background voice to authenticate this. By now I know something about tapping of phones and in case any one want to meet me or meet my family or meet any person that I am in touch with there is no need at all to eve drop. I carry aversions towards none and me and my family based in Siolim will always welcome you as our most precious visitor, shower you with all the Love, Compassion, Goodwill, Peace and I will definitely share all my merits - that me and my family is abundantly blessed by universe - with you. I and my family is blessed abundantly and we are lavish when we share. So whoever you are, from whatever background please be fearless. I will never insult you and turn my head away from you but will receive you with my wide open arms. Also be sure that me and my family stands for truth and justice steadfastly, historically and that is one of our pristine family virtues.

Sebastian Rodrigues