adani group | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Thu, 21 Nov 2024 10:00:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png adani group | SabrangIndia 32 32 Adani controversy: Experts and retired bank officials demand accountability for corporate and policy corruption in India’s power sector https://sabrangindia.in/adani-controversy-experts-and-retired-bank-officials-demand-accountability-for-corporate-and-policy-corruption-in-indias-power-sector/ Thu, 21 Nov 2024 10:00:31 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=38898 A group of experts from the power sector, retired bureaucrats and bank officials called the People's Commission on Public Sector and Public Services has “demanded an independent judicial investigation into these allegations to uncover the role of implicated entities and public officials, assess the financial loss to consumers, and ensure accountability. Those found guilty must face prosecution, blacklisting and financial penalties, including compensation to affected consumers.

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The recent indictment by the US District Court (Eastern District of New York) of Indian entities, including Adani Green and the Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI), exposes serious corruption involving large-scale corporate collusion and anti-consumer policies. Investigations by the US SEC and FBI reveal how private companies, with support from SECI and the Ministry of Power, pushed one-sided Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs), enriching themselves at the cost of electricity consumers and State Power utilities says a statement issued by experts and concerned citizens.

This judgement and arrest warrant by a US District Court follows years of questionable directives from the Ministry of Power, including mandatory procurement of expensive solar power and forced coal imports, benefitting a few business conglomerates while burdening consumers. These actions have strained DISCOM’s finances and defrauded the public.

A group of experts from the power sector, retired bureaucrats and bank officials called the People’s Commission on Public Sector and Public Services has “demanded an independent judicial investigation into these allegations to uncover the role of implicated entities and public officials, assess the financial loss to consumers, and ensure accountability. Those found guilty must face prosecution, blacklisting and financial penalties, including compensation to affected consumers. Besides, the government must present a full report to Parliament within six months to restore public trust and uphold consumer rights.”

The US  District Court (Eastern District Court of New York)’s recent indictment of several Indian companies, including Adani Green, part of the the Adani conglomerate and the Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI), a CPSE, says the PCPSPS statement raises disturbing concerns not only about large-scale corporate corruption that evidently prevails in India and the USA but also about how fraudulent policies adopted by the Union Ministry of Power at the instance of favoured business conglomerates have defrauded electricity consumers across the country.

In this connection, he PCPSPS has also referred to their statements issued on  June 2, 2022, June 30, 2022 and  August 16, 2024 in which the group of experts had repeatedly pointed out how the Ministry of Power irregularly invoked its authority under Section 11 of the Electricity Act of 2003 to impose an obligation on State power utilities to buy electricity from solar power plants to meet at least 10% of their total electricity requirement, irrespective of its unit cost and affordability. Similarly, the Centre created a man-made coal shortage situation across the country and the Ministry of Power equally irregularly ordered the State power utilities to buy coal from overseas sources to cover the shortage. Both those measures indirectly benefitted a few domestic private business groups known to be close to the ruling political executive at the cost of electricity consumers across the country. Such consumer-unfriendly measures so blatantly adopted by the Ministry led one to the inevitable inference that the policies adopted by the Ministry of Power during the last several years were at the instance of a few business conglomerates close to the executive, certainly not for safeguarding the interests of millions of electricity consumers, many below the poverty line.

The PCPSPS has also expressed the hope that institutions like SEBI function independently so as to reinforce the integrity of the stockmarkets and elicit public trust.

The US court’s judgement, based on detailed investigations by US Security Exchange Commission and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, clearly points to how the Adani Group officials acting in tandem with a US company persuaded SECI and the State-owned power utilities in several States including Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Chhattisgarh, Odisha and J&K to sign one-sided Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) that would enable those private companies to earn billions of dollars of profits over the next several decades, entirely at the cost of the electricity consumers in India. In the process, ably supported by the Ministry of Power’s anti-consumer policies and diktats, the private companies not only defrauded unwary consumers, crippled DISCOMs’ finances but also committed fraud on the public at large.

The PCPSPS has also demanded that,  under independent judicial oversight, a comprehensive investigation of this be taken up by CBI/ ED/ CBDT and other investigating agencies to gather further evidence from the US SEC/ FBI, factual evidence on the circumstances that led to the Union Ministry of Power adopting such misguided policies and issuing such illegal directives to States, the role of the concerned Indian business conglomerates including the extent to which they unduly benefitted, the one-sided nature of the PPAs, the role of public funcionaries at the Centre and in the States and the extent of loss suffered by electricity consumers in the country.

If the allegations emerging out of the indictment are found to be true, the Commission states that, not only the concerned business conglomerates and their promoters be blacklisted and prohibited from underataking activities in the electricity sector in the future but they should be forced to pay a deterrent penalty in addition to compansating electricity consumers for the additional costs borne by them on account of these acts of malfeasance. The culprits should be prosecuted for their criminal liability under the relevant laws.

Most of all a comprehensive report should be placed before Parliament within six months.


Related:

Modi govt distancing from Adanis? MoEFCC ‘defers’ 1500 MW project in Western Ghats

Supreme Court gives two journalists interim protection from Gujarat police arrest over article against Adani Group (Hindenburg issue)

UP cancels Adani’s tenders even as RSS’ Organiser inspires a social media onslaught alleging a conspiracy against ‘Adani brand of nationalism’

 

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Modi govt distancing from Adanis? MoEFCC ‘defers’ 1500 MW project in Western Ghats https://sabrangindia.in/modi-govt-distancing-from-adanis-moefcc-defers-1500-mw-project-in-western-ghats/ Sat, 05 Oct 2024 06:46:12 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=38102 Is the Narendra Modi government, in its third but  what would appear to be a weaker avatar, seeking to show that it would keep a distance, albeit temporarily, from its most favorite business house, the Adanis? It would seem so if the latest move of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) latest […]

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Is the Narendra Modi government, in its third but  what would appear to be a weaker avatar, seeking to show that it would keep a distance, albeit temporarily, from its most favorite business house, the Adanis? It would seem so if the latest move of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) latest to “defer” the Adani Energy’s application for 1500 MW Warasgaon-Warangi Pump Storage Project is any indication.

Quoting the September 27 MoEFCC’s Expert Appraisal Committee (EAC) meeting,  released on October 2, a senior scholar-activist of the top environmental advocacy group South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People (SANDRP) has reported that in a “respite” to forest dwelling communities, fragile biodiversity and community conservation areas, the EAC has “rejected” the Adani application for project.

However, the window for continuing with the controversial project hasn’t been entirely closed. To quote Parineeta Dandekar, the proponents have been asked “to apply afresh” for Stage I Clearance, adding several conditions to assessment. To quote her, “The EAC did not approve the Adani application for amendments in the Terms of Reference (TORs) earlier granted for 1200 MW Warasgaon-Warangi Pumped Storage Project (PSP) by Adani Green Energy.”

Appreciating the move, Dandekar said, the EAC not just “rejected” the application but “decided to visit sites all the PSPs that have applied for environment clearance before giving any further clearances”, hoping, “The site visits will expose the perilous siting of over 15 pumped storage projects in the Western Ghats.”

In a detailed analysis on September 24 on the advocacy group’s website, Dandekar had pointed  to how the upper dam of 1500 MW Warasgaon Warangi Project “was set to destroy a sacred fish pool and sacred grove of Goddess Varadayini in the village Tekpowale.” This followed an SANDRP submission to the EAC outlining the impacts of this project on the “ecologically sensitive area” and the “wider cumulative impact” of the multiple PSP schemes in the Western Ghats.

The submission was signed by more than 200 individuals and organizations, including Parineeta Dandekar and Himanshu Thakkar of SANDRP; Suniti SR and colleagues of the National Alliance for People’s Movements; Shailaja Deshpande and colleagues of the Jeevit Nadi; Priyadarshini Karve of the Indian Network on Ethics and Climate Change; Jaideep Baphana of Pune River Revival (a group with over 1000 members in Pune); and Shripad Dharmadhikary of the Manthan Adhyayan Kendra, Pune.

Quoting the minutes of the  EAC meeting, Dandekar said, it asked the project proponents to prepare “a new project layout which will not obstruct rivulets in Western Ghats” and “change the project layout to reduce impact on forest land”. Refusing to grant TORs (Stage I Clearance) to the project and deciding on a site visit to all the proposed  PSP sites in the Western Ghats for which TORs have been issued prior to granting Environmental Clearance, EAC said, “These projects are located in the ecologically fragile Western Ghats and huge forest area is also involved”.

She quoted EAC as rejecting the Adanis’ TOR given on February 13, 2023 which had specifically said the project proposes to use water of the catchment of the lower reservoir for initial filling and annual recuperation of losses, pointing out, this will “impact several small rivulets draining into these reservoirs as the water will not be released downstream.”

Said Dandekar, the EAC was of the view that project proponents had “changed configuration of the project drastically which could attract more impact on the environment”,  raising concerns about “change in the total forest land required for the project with an increase of more than three times, i.e. from 24.50 ha to 88.98 ha.”

Hence, the EAC suggested submission of a fresh proposal for grant of TOR with modified pre-feasibility report (PFR) with “fresh alternative site analysis modifying the project layout with no obstruction of small rivulets in the area as the small rivulets are the key source of water for the perennial rivers in the western ghats”, and “change in project profile i.e. change in project layout, change in forest land and private land requirement.”

At the same time, the EAC  noted that  the MoEFCC had granted TOR to approximately 15 projects in the Western Ghats, but “given the region’s high environmental sensitivity”, there should be site visits by sub-committee members to several PSPs as these  are located in “the ecologically fragile Western Ghats and huge forest area is involved”. Hence, the need for a site visit “in toto wherever possible.”

In her September 25 analysis  of the project prior to the EAC move, Dandekar (photo), who had visited the project site earlier, had said, Adani Energy’s had planned the project “in a remote, densely forested area of the Western Ghats and enveloped by dam backwaters” around Tekpowale village, which “feels like a place lost in time”.

“This village”, she said, “narrowly escaped submersion from the Panshet Dam and now precariously perches on its encroaching backwaters. The Warasgaon Dam backwaters lie about seven kilometers away, with Mulshi and Temghar Dams approximately 19 kilometers distant and Pawana Dam around 48 kilometers”, adding, “The region is densely packed with dams; a mere straight-line distance of 66 kilometers from the northern-most Thokarwadi Dam to Panshet encompasses ten large dams in the Mula-Mutha Basin.”

According to Dandekar, “Unsurprisingly, Maharashtra holds the distinction of being the most dammed state in India, and this area might be the most heavily dammed within the state. Despite the proliferation of dams, upscale resorts, and urban developments like Lonavala and Lavasa encroaching upon the Western Ghats’ forests.” Yet, the region “still boasts vital community conservation areas, including sacred groves, temple forests, and remarkable community fish sanctuaries.”

Recalling her visits to Tekpowale, she said, they have “often revolved around its cherished fish sanctuary, which preserves a sacred pool devoted to Vardayini, a fierce forest goddess known as the Bestower of Boons. Surrounded by an ancient dark grove, the pool is home to sacred Mahseer fish, which villagers protect with utmost reverence. The grove, adorned with traditional garments and offerings, forms an eerie yet majestic setting.”

Pointing out that the community in the village “strictly forbids fishing in this sanctuary, believing the Mahseer bears a distinctive mark given by their goddess—similar to tales from other regions in India about fish marked by divine figures”, Dandekar noted, “Even in times of drought, the villagers refrain from drawing water from the pool, opting instead to carry it by hand as a show of respect.”

Praising this as a “community-driven conservation model”,  signaling “a successful commitment to safeguarding their sacred spaces and the biodiversity they support”, she warned, “This tranquil setting faces a dire threat. Adani Energy plans to create a 56-meter-high dam just upstream of Vardayini’s pool, resulting in the flooding of 49 hectares of dense forest within the proposed Velhe-Mulshi Conservation Reserve. This not only jeopardizes a culturally revered site but also threatens the diverse freshwater ecosystem.”

She underlined, “The 1500 MW Warasgaon-Warangi Pumped Storage Project will involve the construction of two massive dams—one in Tekpowale and another in Warangi—connected by a two-kilometer underground tunnel… Despite its proclaimed benefits, the environmental implications of such a project in a biodiversity-rich and sacred region are concerning.”

Calling the project’s pre-feasibility study “superficial” focusing “solely on economic factors while neglecting ecological realities, such as the presence of the Varadayini Fish Sanctuary”, Dandekar said, “The project would disturb not only the sacred pool in Tekpowale but also the nearby Walen Kondh Fish Sanctuary, without acknowledging its significance in project considerations.”

Asserting that the “communities like those in Tekpowale, deeply connected to their land and water, oppose any developments that threaten their heritage”, she said, “The claim that the Warasgaon-Warangi Project supports green energy initiatives is misleading”. She added, “The destruction of these sacred places is anything but eco-friendly and sustainable. As the guardians of Vardayini and her sanctuary, the villagers of Tekpowale stand resolutely against the encroachment of industry into their revered spaces.”

Courtesy: CounterView

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Bengal: SKM condemns police aggression on Murshidabad farmers. https://sabrangindia.in/bengal-skm-condemns-police-aggression-murshidabad-farmers/ Sat, 09 Jul 2022 08:00:25 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2022/07/09/bengal-skm-condemns-police-aggression-murshidabad-farmers/ SKM condemns lathi-charge on Murshidabad farmers in order to forcefully erect Adani Group's high voltage electricity power-line

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Adani GroupImage Courtesy: telegraphindia.com

On July 6, 2022 farmers body Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM) appealed to West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to stop Adani Group’s grid power-lines project in the Farakka area following alleged police brutality. 

On July 2nd, local police and residents of Dadantola village in Murshidabad district clashed over the installation of high-tension electricity lines. These lines are required to supply power from Godda, Jharkhand’s Adani Group-owned power plant, to Bangladesh as part of a bilateral trade agreement, said The Telegraph. 

However, the farmers claim that they had expressed unwillingness to allow their fruiting trees to be cut. This resulted in clashes wherein seven villagers (mostly farmers) and seven police personnel were injured, said The Telegraph. Further, the villagers also accused the police of lathi-charging. While the SKM claimed that this was as based on orders from ‘higher authorities’. In a press release the SKM said, “The state administration, police force and local political functionaries unleashed a reign of terror in the locality, forcing the menfolk to escape”. 

It further condemned the West Bengal government for “forcefully taking land and right-of-way from farmers, including horticulture farmers” after openly voicing support for the farmers’ struggle. In Murshidabad the corporation is currently trying to chop down mango and litchi trees. Highlighting the corporate-political nexus, which was condemned during the yearlong farmers’ struggle. 

 To look into this, SKM sent its fact-finding team to visit the area and speak to protesting farmers. However, the police prevented them from doing so. “They were virtually under detention and were not permitted to leave their hotel,” said SKM leader Darshan Pal. 

Eventually a police-escorted visit was organised but the team was not allowed to visit the affected villages or meet protesting farmers. The SKM said it has the constitutional and legal right to meet farmers and stand with them. 

“Any government trying to stop SKM from being with farmers is anti-farmer,” said the SKM.  

Accordingly, it demanded that the government cooperate with the national level fact-finding team that the union will send to the affected area. Regarding FIRs against farmers, the SKM demanded that the police withdraw the allegedly false cases and release them from Police or Judicial custody. 

Similarly, Adivasi farmers in the Dhinkia village of Jagatsinghpur, Odisha have also been opposing the developmental project in their area for several years. The farmers in Jagatsinghpur have talked about how their Betel vineyards have been destroyed by their authorities. SKM also voiced its solidarity with the struggle of the Adivasi farmers earlier.    

Related:

Farmers demand answers: What happened to written promises?
After activists, is GoI now targeting farmers?
Lakhimpur Kheri case: Third witness attacked, survives firing by goons
Pan-India farmers protest over attack on Rakesh Tikait!
UP elections: ECI data indicates enthusiastic voter turnout in the farming community
Birbhum: Adivasis opposing coal mining project get support from SKM
Punjab: Farmers begin Lok Kalyan rally

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‘No Means No’: Adani’s Land Woes in Australia https://sabrangindia.in/no-means-no-adanis-land-woes-australia/ Mon, 11 Feb 2019 05:20:40 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/02/11/no-means-no-adanis-land-woes-australia/ The UN intervention marks yet another milestone in the legal and public fight of the Wangan and Jagalingou traditional owners to secure their ancestral lands.   The UN intervention marks yet another milestone in the legal and public fight of the Wangan and Jagalingou traditional owners to secure their ancestral lands.   In 2004, a […]

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The UN intervention marks yet another milestone in the legal and public fight of the Wangan and Jagalingou traditional owners to secure their ancestral lands.

 
The UN intervention marks yet another milestone in the legal and public fight of the Wangan and Jagalingou traditional owners to secure their ancestral lands.
 
In 2004, a group of W&J [Wangan & Jagalingou] family members registered their ancestral claim to a large area of land in the Galilee Basin in central Queensland under Australia’s Native Title Act (1993). The Act gives traditional owners legal claim over their native lands, enabling them to negotiate on matters of mining and development in the native country. The registered W&J land holds the sacred Doongmabulla springs, a place of dreaming, described as an ‘oasis in a dry land fed by abundant freshwater emerging from deep within the earth’. According to W&J folklore, their dreaming totem, the Mundunjudra or Rainbow Serpent, emerged from these springs to travel and give shape to the land, rivers and waterholes of the dry Australian continent.

Australia’s biggest coal ambition
The W&J registered their land claim half a decade before the Australian government got serious about its ambition to open up the Galilee Basin, the continent’s largest reservoir of coal. Roughly 400 kilometres inland from the Great Barrier Reef, the region covers an area as large as the United Kingdom, and holds thrice as much coal as has ever been mined in Australia. The International Energy Agency offers some perspective on the scale of the Galilee’s coal deposit: if all of the Basin’s coal were to be loaded onto a single train, it would stretch to a length of 2.5 million kilometres, or six and a half times the distance to the moon.

Although the first exploration licence to mine the Galilee was taken out in 1970s by Australian mining magnate Lang Hancock, plans to ‘develop’ the Galilee Basin did not eventuate before the 21st century,  owing to both to the region’s remoteness and the need for higher prices and demand for thermal coal. Australia’s recent resource boom, the biggest since the gold rush of the mid-1800s, began around 2003 when prices for coal and iron ore, Australia’s two biggest mining exports, started to rise.

Adani embarked on its ambitious Australian mission when the resource boom was at its peak in 2010. Initially estimated to start operations in 2014 and reach full capacity by 2022 to export 60 million tonnes of coal, the Adani mine would be the largest of six megamines, and a total of nine proposed coalmines in the Galilee. The original list of proponents also included the Indian mining company GVK in a joint partnership with an Australian resource giant, Hancock Prospecting. 

The scale of Adani’s Carmichael proposal promised to put Australia in the same league as the Powder River Basin coalmines in the United States that have an export capacity of up to 100 million tonnes of coal a year. The Basin constituted one of the four “pillars” for Queensland’s growth as envisioned by the state Liberal National Government under Campbell Newman, with an estimated A$60 billion in revenue generation and the creation of 15,000 jobs. Being ‘in the business of coal’, the Newman government subsidised the Galilee megamines through the Galilee Basin Development Strategy.

Subsequent Queensland governments also meted out special treatment to the Galilee Basin, and particularly to the Carmichael project, the biggest and the first scheduled to begin. The Labor government that followed Premiere Newman’s Liberal government declared the Adani Carmichael project ‘critical infrastructure’, a status that had never before been granted to a private commercial development, on grounds of its perceived economic benefits, allowing the Coordinator General to reduce red tape and sign off on the various ‘conditional approvals’ for the Carmichael project quickly.

Adani and Queensland vs the W&J
The W&J first appealed to the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples in October 2015, submitting about Australia’s failure to protect their rights:
“Our ancestral homelands in central‐western Queensland, Australia, are threatened with devastation by the proposed development by a private company, Adani Mining, of the massive Carmichael Coal Mine. … We exist as people of our land and waters, and all things on and in them – plants and animals – have special meaning to us and tell us who we are. Our land and waters are our culture and our identity. If they are destroyed, we will become nothing…We have not consented to the development of the Carmichael mine or any other proposed mine on our traditional lands.”

Australian media has reported a rift within the core council of W&J family representatives who claimed native title over the lands designated for Adani’s mine, with one part of the family council dead set against the mine, and the other side wishing for a better outcome than had been offered from the ILUA [Indigenous Land Use Agreements] negotiations with Adani. However, a key bone of contention for the Wangan and Jagalingou claim group, one shared by all core members, relates to the Carmichael project’s perceived benefits.
Adrian Burragubba, the head of the W&J family council that has sustained a long legal fight against Adani is reported to have first heard of Adani’s exaggerated jobs claims from a high-level company official during a meeting with traditional owners in August 2014. This information came just months before an important meeting between the family members and the company to authorise a land use agreement.  

Adani needed an ILUA to undertake all works associated with the project, and secure a 2,750-hectare area for critical infrastructure related to various mining operations including an airstrip, workers’ village, and a washing plant. The Native Title Act, 1993 allows for an agreement between indigenous groups and a mining corporation to be drawn up in six months, failing which the company can approach the Native Title Tribunal to facilitate an ILUA and override objections from traditional owners. The law also allows the state to extinguish Native Title and compulsorily acquire mining land; however, Australian governments have so far avoided such a clear disregard for the wishes of the traditional owners.

The W&J family council refused to grant Adani an ILUA, and the company approached the Native Title Tribunal in April 2015. The company’s 10,000 jobs promise had attracted controversy by this time following the testimony of its own expert in the Queensland Land Court that the forecast was closer to 1464 jobs.

The Tribunal, however, ruled in favour of Adani, finding the project in the public interest on account of Adani Australia’s advertised 10,000 jobs figure that both state and federal governments had accepted. The W&J maintained that Adani had misled the Tribunal with false economic benefit claims from Carmichael. The Tribunal authorised Queensland to issue mining licences and the W&J moved to the federal court for a judicial review of the case of mining licences without an ILUA. The Federal Court also dismissed the W&J case. At the third stage of legal appeal from the W&J, the state’s Supreme Court of Queensland also struck down the case.  

Outside the courtroom, the W&J emphasised that they had struck down Adani’s proposed ILUA on three separate occasions during bona fide meetings of the claim group. After the W&J family council first formally rejected Adani’s ILUA in March 2015, they took a Defence of Country Declaration which stated their rights as indigenous people under the UNDRIP [United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples] to the Queensland Parliament.

Adrian Burragubba’s ‘Adani, No means No’ slogan grew to become the headline for a sustained indigenous land rights movement to stop Australia’s largest coalmine. Not only were the W&J opponents opposed to coalmining on their ancestral lands, they were concerned about the nature and the adequacy of the benefits, particularly jobs that the company had proposed. A W&J commissioned economic assessment of the ILUA found the proposed compensations to be less than half the industry average. The land use agreement had pegged three quarters of the economic benefits on jobs, raising concerns about its viability in the future given the negative outlook for coal.

At the heart of their ‘No’ lies an understanding of their fundamental right to reject developments that would devastate their legacy, and endanger the future, essentially of free and prior informed consent as they choose to exercise it. Burragubba’s assertion exposes the limitation of Australia’s Native Title Act that does not give indigenous groups the provision to altogether veto mining. 

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Australia’s Indigenous Youth Climate Network sends a message to federal parliament in May 2017. Image courtesy: Seed Indigenous Youth Climate Network

The W&J pulled out all stops to prevent coalmining on their ancestral lands. The two faces of the campaign, Burragubba and his niece Murrawah Johnson went on a world tour with environmental activists in 2015 to appeal to global investors against the Carmichael project. Eleven international banks including HSBC and Barclays committed to not fund Australia’s largest proposed mine on grounds of standing up for indigenous rights, repeated delays in starting the project, and the effects on the Great Barrier Reef.

Most large banks are signatories to a set of standards commonly known as the Equator Principles that rule out the financing of projects that can harm world heritage sites. The London-based Standard Chartered ended its association with Carmichael, reportedly to avoid reputational damage that the distancing of other global banks from the project had exposed it to.

In a video on the campaign website adaninomeansno.com, Murrawah Johnson talks about the “tremendous task that it is in Australia and Queensland to take on a mining corporation when the laws are stacked against us”. Juggling college assignments and an international advocacy tour in 2015, she had a firsthand chance to experience the scale of devastation of ancestral lands by large fossil-fuel projects when she visited First Nations people in Canada fighting the Keystone Pipeline.

The W&J resistance to the Adani coalmine established itself as part of a global indigenous solidarity against fossil-fuel mining on First Nations people’s land, linking with major indigenous protests in Canada to the Keystone Pipeline and in the United States to the Dakota Access Pipeline. At a Brisbane symposium in July 2018, the global alliance called for rethinking development so that ‘indigenous people’s rights and the realities of a climate constrained world’ are both kept at the centre.

In the meantime, a significant opportunity to reject Adani’s ILUA arose for the W&J after a High Court ruling in February 2017 from Western Australia interpreted the Native Title Act to mean that any ILUA drawn up without the consent of all registered native title claimants from an indigenous community is invalid. The Australian prime minister is reported to have delivered assurances of ‘fixing native title uncertainty’ to the Adani Group in person during a state visit to New Delhi in April.

Less than two weeks after the McGlade decision, the federal government introduced legislation to annul the effects of the High Court ruling, and it finally passed through both houses with the support from the Labor opposition in August. It was widely held that the government’s move on Native Title was to help clear the way for the Carmichael project.

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Murrawah Johnson presents a Declaration of Defence of Country to Queensland’ speaker of the house in 2015. Photo courtesy: Dan Peled/AAPImage

‘Disproportionate’ cost of resistance
The W&J’s legal track of work against the Carmichael mine continued side by side with its international public campaign. After three unfavourable decisions from various courts, the W&J lodged a case in the Federal Court in December 2016 around how Adani ‘conducted’ a crucial meeting in April where traditional owners voted for an ILUA for Adani. The W&J native title claim group is made up of 12 W&J families. Seven of these families are reported to have voted for an Adani ILUA. 

The W&J federal case alleged that Adani provided generous travel and accommodation for attendees who voted favourably, that the company ‘stacked’ the meetings with non W&J native title claimants who had never attended a single meeting before. Various allegations of bribery included claims that the company collectively paid more than A$10,000 to the seven pro-Adani family members.

Adani spokespersons refuted these allegations, and maintained that due process had been followed in the meeting where traditional owners had “overwhelmingly” voted for the Carmichael mine. Adani’s ILUA success was however short-lived since by June one of the seven pro-W&J family representatives withdrew his support.

The allegedly ‘sham’ ILUA case continued till mid-2018, and the final decision yet again ruled against the W&J. It raised the prospect of the state stepping in to wipe out the W&J’s native title over and hand over property rights to Adani. The W&J wrote to the state government asking not to risk extinguishing their rights over ancestral lands for a project whose prospects of going ahead were weak.

It has been reported that following internal pressure from within the Labor party that is currently in power in Queensland, the state government decided to hold off on extinguishing the W&J’s native title rights at the mine site till the company could prove its finances were in place. The Queensland government acknowledged that the ILUA was “contested amongst traditional owners”.

Next, the W&J moved for a Federal Court full bench appeal of the decision. By this time, Adani Australia’s lawyers had tallied up cost orders against the W&J from previous Supreme and Federal Court proceedings at A$870,000. The company asked the court to direct W&J to pay A$160,000 in security money within a fortnight, failing which the “appeal be dismissed with costs”.  In a hearing last December, the court found Adani’s estimate “disproportionate”, and revised the W&J’s security money to A$50,000.

The W&J’s legal and public campaigns have mostly been crowd-funded and assisted by lawyers on a pro-bono basis. Many of the 100,000 supporters on their campaign list, and the 12,000 followers on Facebook have personally donated to the fight. The ‘Adani no means no’ campaign was able to salvage its legal fight within the stipulated 14 days through a public interest litigation group Grata Fund’s donations. This appeal is now due for hearing in May.

For the W&J, a hectic pace in and out of the courts has become the new normal. As Adani announced in late November that it will finally begin operations, a small group of traditional owners travelled to Korea to dissuade major financial institutions not to lend to the controversial project. Adani had reportedly been in talks with establishments in Seoul. The W&J received written commitments from Korean banks to not fund the Carmichael project.  And then in the new year, the United Nations wrote to the Australian government expressing its concerns about the rights of the W&J.

Unprecedented resistance
The W&J’s resistance to surrendering their lands evokes other such historic indigenous environmental struggles in Australia, most prominently, the resistance to the Jabiluka uranium mine on the land of the Mirrar people in the Northern Territory in the nineties and the resistance to a coastal gas hub on the Kimberley coast in Australia’s northwest, the traditional lands of the Goolarabaloo people six years ago.

But their global reach, set against the broader context of Australia’s economic dependency on coal and international movements on climate change, make the relevance of their struggle more complex, and its stake perhaps more widely shared.

Even though the Carmichael project has now significantly reduced in scale from its original proposed capacity, it still holds the key to the rest of the Galilee Basin’s projects. On several occasions during the last five years, the repeated W&J legal challenges stood as the only legal hurdles in the path of the mine commencing operations, with most other environmental challenges having been ruled unfavourably by courts.

Their long legal battle severely exposed the limitations of Australia’s Native Title Act to protect the historic and cultural interests of indigenous communities. The rushed amendments to the Act in response to the McGlade decision, passed through Parliament amidst criticism from indigenous communities betrayed a certain desperation of the part of the Australian government to open up its last coal frontier.

The W&J’s international campaign coincided with critical and significant movements in North America against fossil fuel mining on indigenous lands at a time when the world was moving towards a global climate consensus in Paris. The concurrence of these struggles against massive coal, oil and gas projects made the human rights aspect of climate resistances starkly obvious. The fight against the Carmichael mine has been the largest Australia has seen in recent times. And the indigenous land struggle against Adani, fought by a small group of traditional owners entirely with public donations, has been one of its most tenacious arms.

Ruchira Talukdar is a PhD scholar at the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Technology Sydney. Her research compares energy politics and environmental mass movements in India and Australia. The material for this article was collected through interviews during research field trips as well as through a variety of news media. 

Courtesy: Newsclick.in
 

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Adani Is Byword for Government’s Climate Inaction as Australia Gears for Elections https://sabrangindia.in/adani-byword-governments-climate-inaction-australia-gears-elections/ Thu, 20 Dec 2018 05:30:43 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/12/20/adani-byword-governments-climate-inaction-australia-gears-elections/ Australia is witnessing a tsunami of climate protests, and a single name, Adani, has emerged as the byword for the government’s inaction on climate change.   Representational Image. | Image Courtesy: Tracey Nearmy/AAP   Last week, protesters rallied in the major cities across Australia, opposing Adani’s announcement for self-financing the controversial Carmichael mine. Adani’s Australian […]

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Australia is witnessing a tsunami of climate protests, and a single name, Adani, has emerged as the byword for the government’s inaction on climate change.
 
Representational Image. | Image Courtesy: Tracey Nearmy/AAP
 
Last week, protesters rallied in the major cities across Australia, opposing Adani’s announcement for self-financing the controversial Carmichael mine. Adani’s Australian venture, the Carmichael mine-and-rail project, was initially proposed as an A$16.5 billion mega-mine with 60 million tonnes a year capacity. The latest announcement is the second time the project has been scaled down, and it now stands as a 10-15 million tonnes a year self-financed project at A$2 billion.

But as the various messages on display on the streets last Saturday demonstrated, public concern around Adani’s coalmine has snowballed into something much bigger. Apart from the red and white on black STOP ADANI posters that have by now become ubiquitous across protests and marches around the country, people also carried placards demanding “a renewable future” for Australia asking, “The climate is changing, why aren’t we?”

This is not a one-off event. The scale of the protests that were organised in a flash to respond to Adani’s announcement demonstrate the breath of the venture’s unpopularity, as well as the network of resistance that has built up over the years. Australia is witnessing a tsunami of climate protests, and a single name, Adani, has emerged as the byword for the government’s inaction on climate change.

Consider these two events from last month:
A week before these protests, students marched on the streets demanding that the government bring in a plan to tackle climate change. Inspired by the 15-year-old Swedish student Greta Thunberg, thousands of Australian school children called a national school strike to march on the streets, and fill city squares to demand a safe future. Delegations of students met members of the state and federal parliament, asking what their plan was to stop climate change. Some of the most visible signs at the rallies included ‘Don’t be a Fossil Fool’, and “It’s getting hot in here, so get out all your coals”. Students also drummed up a chorus of “Stop Adani” chants during the demonstrations.

Two weeks before the national school strikes, bushfires swept through the drought-stricken state of Queensland. One of the many images that surfaced in its aftermath was of a scorched STOP sign on a dirty-track in a country town, against a flat, blackened landscape. Someone had scrawled ADANI under it. Queensland’s farmers, reeling under the impacts of drought have been demanding decisive climate action from a climate denialist Liberal Federal government. Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s “let us pray for rain” response to this extreme event became a national joke.

                                                                            ***********

For the ten years that I have worked along with environmental groups in Australia, I have seen the Adani group’s Carmichael mine emerge as the most popular and high-profile environmental issue. Ten years ago, Queensland was in the middle of a prosperous albeit highly environmentally destructive resource boom. At that time, the focal point for civil society’s opposition to rampant mining was the Great Barrier Reef. The Reef, the largest living organism on earth, is under severe risk of bleaching and dying from climate change. Activist groups, scientists and even the United Nations warned against the state government’s plans to expand ports and gas processing plants along the coast of Queensland abutting the Reef. 

And then came the proposals for mining coal in the Galilee Basin, Australia’s largest coal reserve, a semi-arid region in Central Queensland as large as the United Kingdom. Adani’s Carmichael mine, at its initial proposed capacity of 60 million tonnes of coal per annum production capacity, was going to be its biggest mega-mine, and also its first. It was going to be the key to a total of nine projects. Five of these mines in the Galilee, including Carmichael, were going to be larger than any existing coalmine in the country.

Approvals for Carmichael and other mines in the region progressed through various stages, both state and federal, around the same time that the world was moving towards a Paris Agreement. Carmichael received federal approval with the single largest number of environmental conditions ever received – a total of 36 – in September 2014 under the Liberal Prime Minister Tony Abbott.

Prime Minister Abbott’s tenure was known for an ideological championing of coal, opposition to renewables and a denial of climate change. Under Abbott, who dismantled the previous Labor government’s carbon tax, the Carmichael mine was deemed not only in Australia’s national interest, but also in India’s as an alleviator of poverty through the provisioning of electricity.   

In stark opposition to the government’s mindset, Australian civil society considered the Paris Agreement a definite signal for moving away from coal. It has been estimated that to keep the world below the 1.5 degrees of warming agreed in Paris, the world’s existing coal reserves need to be phased out, and new coalmines must not be built. A scientific report “Unburnable Coal” by eminent climate scientist Will Steffen estimates that “90 per cent of known, extractable coal in Australia’s existing coal reserves must stay in the ground”. The report conclusively states, “…There is no justification for opening new coal mines”.

Australia’s coal exports have also declined on account of China’s reduced demand and Australia’s oldest coal port at Newcastle is now preparing for a future without coal. It is feared that opening up the Galilee Basin during such times would risk existing jobs in established coal regions. Even though both the Queensland and the federal government strongly support prising open Australia’s largest coal reservoir through the Adani mine under these economically and climactically contradictory circumstances, civil society groups joined hands against the Galilee venture for myriad reasons.

Its most notable face is the Stop Adani movement consisting of a network of 40 national, state and regional-level environmental organisations united under the common purpose of stopping the Adani mine as a first step towards making Australia move away from exporting coal. The network registered 100 new local groups from all around the country on their website within the first three months. At a Stop Adani town hall event in Sydney in September 2017 that I attended, the legendary environmentalist Bob Brown promised to make the movement the “biggest Australia has ever seen”. Such meetings occurred across cities, and towns not just as a show of opposition, but also to develop strategies for local actions in order to pressure elected members against the Adani mine. 

Over the last two years, a pair of paper mache heads belonging to former Prime Minister Turnbull and Adani became as prominent as the Stop Adani signage at protests across Australian cities. At a Stop Adani protest in Sydney last October, I spotted the Indian businessman and Australian Prime Minister walking hand in hand with a stuffed bag with ‘Your Taxes $1 billion’ written on it. The Sydney protest drew of crowd of a couple thousands, and was part of Stop Adani’s ‘Big Day of Action’, a coordinated national day of 60 anti-Adani demonstrations around Australia.

The highly visible movement even sports its own catchy merchandise. Volunteers at protest rallies make brisk business from selling three or four different kinds of Stop Adani T-shirts, can coolers, key chains and coffee mugs, apart from variously sized placards and posters and tool-kits for local groups to start saying “no” to Adani “Street by Street”. Even Stop Adani dangler earrings, worn by both men and women youth activists, can be spotted at such events. 

                                                                               **********

The year I landed in Australia, Australian Labor dealt a severe defeat to the incumbent Liberal Government of John Howard and Kevin Rudd formed government with a people’s mandate for climate action. Australia’s mandate for 2007 was climate change action. From 2008 till 2018, Australia witnessed an unusual decade of leadership spills across both parties and drastic backflips on climate policy. Rudd’s Carbon Reduction Pollution Scheme (CPRS) was struck down twice in Parliament, and his successor Julia Gillard’s Carbon Tax was scrapped by the Liberal Government of Tony Abbott, the prime minister for coal.

There are two key differences to the focus of civil society groups between 2007 and 2019. The first is that emissions are now strongly linked in the popular imagination to “fossil fuels”, and in Australia’s case, particularly to coal. The second is that the ambition of both Queensland and federal governments to open up the Galilee Basin for coalmining has backfired not just on climate and environmental, but also on economic grounds.

Adani’s mine itself, labelled a “climate bomb” with emissions potentials as massive as the Keystone Pipeline in North America, along with concern over the company’s environmental track record and opaque corporate structure has lent itself to the Australian imagination as a focal target for a unified civil society resistance. The various arms of the Stop Adani resistance have captured people’s frustration over the Liberal government’s denial of climate change as well as the Labor Opposition’s non-commitment to the demand of ‘no new coal mines’ to exert pressure in electorates and influence voting patterns.

The debate over the Carmichael mine and the Galilee Basin continues to rage as it has done in the last eight years, with Resource Minister Matt Canavan’s vociferous championing of Carmichael and the Galilee venture being consistently countered by a variety of public concern representatives and groups. A poll of 1,400 people conducted by the progressive think tank Australia Institute found that 64 per cent opposed a $1 billion public loan to build the Carmichael rail network. Coal consistently came last on respondents’ lists of where they would like to see their taxpayer funds spent during the poll.

Recent political changes hint at a climate change election again in May 2019, 11 years after Kevin Rudd attempted to make Australia take a responsible step to resolve the “biggest moral challenge of all times”. The Liberals lost their longest held seat of Wentworth that boasts Australia’s iconic surfing beach Bondi to an independent, this October. This ‘Blue Ribbon seat’ was held by Malcolm Turnbull, the last prime minister and the only Liberal party leader who supported action on climate change. When Australia’s political rigmarole replaced Turnbull with Scott Morrison, a climate denialist, notorious for his coal stunt in Parliament, voters paid back in the Wentworth byelection.

At a pre-election candidates forum organised by Stop Adani coordinators at the pavilion by the beach in Bondi, the public sentiment reflected a zero tolerance towards the Liberal government’s lack of accountability on climate and the support for Carmichael. Volunteers also recruited people for a door knocking activity to speak to ‘as many people as possible’ before the elections to vote ‘for climate’ and against ‘Carmichael’. 

Australian activists and farmers have been known not to see eye to eye on politics and environmental issues. Farmers have also been known to vote conservatively and either deny or remain silent on the matter of climate change. But the rampant scale of changes in the last 10 years, both climactic and government proclivity towards coalmining at the cost of other industries has united them. And their common focus, their first measure of accountability from governments, is stopping Adani. As the country heads towards a 2019 federal election, Adani will be the shorthand for failing Australia’s climate.

(Ruchira Talukdar is currently pursuing a PhD from the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Technology Sydney. Her research compares energy politics and environmental mass movements in India and Australia. Before the PhD Ruchira worked with national and international environmental NGOs based in India and Australia. Views expressed are personal.)

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

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Taking Over Fertile Land For Adani Group From Protesting Farmers, Jharkhand Government Manipulates New Law Meant To Protect Them https://sabrangindia.in/taking-over-fertile-land-adani-group-protesting-farmers-jharkhand-government-manipulates/ Sat, 01 Dec 2018 06:34:05 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/12/01/taking-over-fertile-land-adani-group-protesting-farmers-jharkhand-government-manipulates/ Godda, Jharkhand: Soon after police personnel drove up in a convoy of vehicles that Friday, August 31, 2018, “Adani ke log (Adani’s people)” arrived with earthmoving equipment, recounted Adivasi (tribal) and Dalit villagers in Mali, in this lush eastern corner of Jharkhand. On August 31, 2018, Adani Group officials, backed by the Jharkhand police, destroyed […]

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Godda, Jharkhand: Soon after police personnel drove up in a convoy of vehicles that Friday, August 31, 2018, “Adani ke log (Adani’s people)” arrived with earthmoving equipment, recounted Adivasi (tribal) and Dalit villagers in Mali, in this lush eastern corner of Jharkhand.


On August 31, 2018, Adani Group officials, backed by the Jharkhand police, destroyed the standing paddy crop and uprooted the trees of these Santal Adivasi farmers, in a bid to take their lands for a power plant that will supply electricity to Bangladesh.

“There were eight to 10 police for each of us villagers,” said Sita Murmu, a wiry farmer in her 40s from the Santal community, one of India’s largest indigenous tribes, describing the attempt that followed to take over the villagers’ farmlands, abutting a clutch of mud and brick homes.
 

 

Santal Adivasi farmers fall at the feet on Adani personnel on August 31, 2018, begging the company to not take their land. Credit: Abhijeet Tanmay/Kashish News

These fertile, multi-crop lands are their only source of livelihood, and the villagers were shocked when the earthmovers began uprooting valuable palm trees and bulldozing the young paddy stalks, laboriously sown weeks ago.

“We begged Adani’s people to stop,” said Santali farmer Anil Hembrom. “But they said our land was theirs now, that the government had given it to them.”

Villagers said they made urgent phone calls for help to Godda’s deputy commissioner (DC) and the superintendent of police (SP). “The SP told us, ‘Go to the local thaana (police station) and lodge a complaint,’” they recalled. “We told him, ‘how can we lodge a complaint at the thaana, when the police from there are here with Adani.’” The DC too ignored their pleas, villagers said, recalling, “She said, ‘Your money (compensation for the land) is lying in the government office. Go, take it.’”

Meanwhile, Adani personnel were casting concertina wire to fence off the land, and a farm pond. Santalis bury their dead on their land, and the earthmovers dug up this clan’s burial site too, the farmers recalled.

Witnessing the destruction, women farmers fell at the feet of Adani’s personnel, pleading with them to spare their land. They wept as they said they could not survive without it.

Onlookers filmed these scenes on their cellphones, and the story was picked up by a Godda-based Hindi news outlet but found no mention in India’s legacy media.  Alarmed by the women’s protests, the Adani team and the police eventually aborted the land acquisition attempt that day.

IndiaSpend sent questionnaires to the Adani Group and Godda DC Kiran Pasi on the morning of November 20, 2018, about the incident in Mali and the broader land- acquisition project. Neither replied. If they do, we will update this story with their responses.

The villagers’ battle against the Adani Group began in 2016, when Mali, 380 km east of state capital Ranchi, and nine other villages around it became contested territory. That was when Adani Power (Jharkhand) Limited, a subsidiary of the Adani Group, told Jharkhand’s BJP-ruled government that it wanted to build a coal-fired plant on over 2,000 acres of land—private farms and commons—in these villages, according to official documents reviewed by IndiaSpend.

The Adani Group is led by Gautam Adani, one of India’s richest and most powerful tycoons. Its proposed 1,600 megawatt (MW) plant in Godda is to be fuelled with Australian and Indonesian coal imports. When complete—the commissioning year is 2022—it will sell all the electricity via high-tension lines to Bangladesh. The proposal for the plant came in August 2015, following a visit by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Bangladesh. Adani was among the industrialists accompanying Modi, and the agenda featured power transmission.

But forcible takeover of land for the plant—as several farmers in Mali, and surrounding villages like Motia, Nayabad and Gangta are experiencing—was meant to be relegated to the past with the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act (the LARR Act). Parliament passed the LARR Act in September 2013 unanimously, an acknowledgement that the 1894 Land Acquisition Act , in force for 123 years, needed to be scrapped.

Forcible state takeover of land and private property for infrastructure and development is a legacy of British India, legitimised by the 1894 law. In post-independent India, this colonial-era law was particularly criticised for being abused by governments to take over private rural land for industry, sparking numerous bloody battles over land, from Kalinganagar to Nandigram. The brunt of this eminent domain—the power of the state to take over private property, citing public purpose—was disproportionately borne by Adivasis. Among India’s most disadvantaged communities, they make up 8% of India’s population, but an estimated 40% of those dispossessed for dams, mines and industrial projects.

The LARR Act provides “additional safeguards for them, such as informed consent to acquisition of their land,” said Muhammad Khan, a lawyer, and Congress party spokesperson who had helped draft the act, and also co-authored ‘Legislating for Justice’, a book on the issue. “The Act also provides for additional compensatory measures of land-for-land for Scheduled Castes (Dalits) and Scheduled Tribes (Adivasis),” he said. “This was an important safeguard, a recognition that the identities and livelihoods of such communities are strongly grounded in land.”

But the Jharkhand government’s use of the LARR Act, we found, demonstrates how a relatively progressive law can end up replicating the colonial predecessor it was meant to negate. This case holds important lessons for Jharkhand, and the rest of India, because it marks the first time the state government has evoked the LARR law for private industry.

In Mali and surrounding villages, IndiaSpend found that the LARR Act’s aim of making land acquisition a “humane, transparent, participative and informed” process  has been compromised.
For government institutions, long accustomed to deploying eminent domain powers with little public accountability, key safeguards introduced by the LARR Act—related to social impact assessment, “public purpose” justification, free prior, informed consent of affected families, land-for-land compensation for Adivasis and Dalits, and transparency and participation in decision-making, have been either undermined, or bypassed.

In a brief conversation with us on 19 November, 2018, Godda DC Pasi defended the acquisition.

“Farmers want the plant on their land,” she said, referring to the government’s acquisition of nearly 500 acres of land in four villages over this year. Asked about protests, in particular by Adivasi and Dalit farmers, she asked us to send her a questionnaire. IndiaSpend did so on 20 November, 2018, but Pasi did not respond, despite two reminders over two days.   

How a ‘humane, transparent, participative’ law is flouted  

Backed by the government, Adani personnel are taking over and fencing off private land and village commons. They are destroying multi-crop farm land, which provides year-round work and livelihood to its owners, sharecroppers and farm labour (right).


On August 31, 2018, Mali’s Santali farmers, such as Talamai Murmu, fell at the feet of Adani personnel, begging them to not acquire their land. “They just took it over like dacoits,” said Gangta villager Ramesh Besra (right), whose land is now in the company’s possession.

When IndiaSpend first visited Mali’s farmers weeks after the violent acquisition attempt of August 31, 2018, their lands had still not been taken over. But villagers were tense about the possible return of Adani personnel and police. Manager Hembrom, one of the landowners, said if that happened, they would “vehemently protest.”

“Land is everything for us,” Hembrom said of the fertile farms, where villagers grow rice, wheat, maize, pulses and vegetables around the year. “Our livelihood, our life, the basis of our identification for every benefit from the state.” Sita Murmu and other women farmers agreed: “We labour on our own land, and sustain ourselves. There is no way we will give it up.”

The villagers were looking at serious economic losses and food insecurity, given Adani personnel had destroyed their standing rice crop, and there would be no paddy to harvest in coming weeks.
 

“With our crop destroyed, we will also struggle through this coming year to get enough (fodder) to feed our livestock,” said Hembrom. Murmu has filed a case in the district court under the Prevention of Atrocities Act against the Adani personnel who destroyed her crop on August 31, 2018. They would have to wait until November to sow the next crop of wheat, said the villagers. On 23 November 2018, farmers told us this crop too was in question: eight days earlier, Adani personnel sent a complaint to the Godda police asking them to stop Hembrom and others from growing a new crop on their land. The company said the government had acquired this land for them.

As the villagers were speaking to IndiaSpend, Bimal Yadav, an aged sharecropper among them, started to weep. “Adani babu, please leave our land,” he pleaded. “We might get by on the money you are giving us for it, but what will our future generations live on? We beg you, please do not take our land.”

The following day, walking through the uprooted trees and damaged crop on her land, Lakhimai Murmu, one of the villagers also broke down. “When we have not agreed to give our land, how can they forcibly take it?” she said. “Why don’t they just kill us first?” She surveyed the field, pointing to small surviving paddy patches here and there, and told her family, “Maybe we can retrieve a little bit of dhaan (rice).”

Villagers in this section of Mali still hold out hope that the government might heed their protests. But Adivasi farmers in the neighbouring villages of Gangta and Nayabad like Suryanarayan Hembrom and Ramesh Besra, have seen their ancestral lands seized in recent months for the plant. “They just took it over like dacoits,” said Ramesh Besra of his farmland in Nayabad. “We could not do anything.”

Hembrom said that in the second week of July, 2018, a day after he had sown his fields, Adani personnel arrived in Gangta with police and began cordoning off land and moving in earthmovers. Hembrom’s farm was among those destroyed. When he tried to protest on his land the following day, joined by other villagers, Adani personnel and officials arrived and tried to evict them, he said.

“‘On which authority’s orders have you come here,’ they asked me,” Hembrom recalled. “We told them, ‘This is our ancestral land. We survive on farming. Should we ask the government for permission to come on our own land?’”

Marynisha Hansdak, a Godda-based Santali reporter, who was with the farmers that day, had been reporting Hembrom’s story. Adani officials who arrived on the scene threatened her to delete her footage, including visuals of them on the contested land, she said.

“I told them I was doing my job of reporting the story and would not delete my footage,” Hansdak said. Adani personnel, she said, responded by summoning the police. Hansdak left with the villagers from the area and took refuge in one of the villages for the night.

Within days, a court notice landed at Hembrom’s house, informing him that the police had admitted an FIR by Adani staff, who charged five Adivasi villagers including him with rioting, criminal trespassing, and breaking public peace. Hembrom is currently out on bail. An Adani spokesperson did not respond to questions by IndiaSpend on the cases filed by the company against the farmers.  

Godda MLA Pradeep Yadav, who has raised questions since 2016 about the project, spent five months over 2017 in prison on similar charges and is currently on bail. “I was questioning the government’s and Adani’s outrageous mili-bhagat (connivance) to profit the company,” Yadav alleged. “So, the police slapped numerous cases on me. Sending their elected representative to prison was a clear message to the villagers to live in fear.”

Suryanarayan Hembrom and other farmers are facing criminal cases for resisting the acquisition of their land.

On a recent morning, a large group of villagers gathered in Mali-Gangta, to speak about the terror they felt. “We have no peace since the company has come,” said a Santali farmer Mohan Murmu. “They have taken away the grazing lands of our livestock too.”  Those who spoke up in solidarity were not spared either, others in the group said. Adani group personnel threatened them, they said, telling them to not join protests, else their land would be taken too.

Both Besra and Hembrom have refused to accept monetary compensation, on the ground that they never agreed to give their land to the Adani Group. The same is true for farmers Balesh Kumar Pandit, Chintamani Shah, Ramjeevan Paswan, and Jayanarayan Shah from nearby villages. A retired schoolteacher, Chintamani Shah has filed numerous complaints since December 2016, listing violations in the land acquisition process.

“When I have been opposing losing my land to Adani since Day 1, and I continue to do so, on what moral grounds can I take that money?” Chintamani Shah asked, referring to the 42 lakh rupees compensation, which he has refused to take, after the government acquired his land in May.

Several villagers brought out  letters, appeals and gram sabha (village assembly) resolutions made between 2016 and 2018 stating their opposition to the land acquisition. These were addressed to a number of authorities—from officials in the district to those in the state capital of Ranchi, to the Jharkhand governor Draupadi Murmu.

The governor has a special role under the Constitution, with regard to scheduled tribes, in particular, in preventing the alienation of land. Governor Murmu’s office did not respond to an IndiaSpend questionnaire about action taken by her office on these complaints.

Kisise koi sunwaai nahi hai (there is no hearing for us from any quarter),” was a refrain we heard over and over again in the 4 villages witnessing acquisition.

Public Purpose: Farmland for Adani, electricity for Bangladesh
When the LARR Act came to be, India’s minister for rural development, Jairam Ramesh, had argued that the state should rarely invoke the power of eminent domain granted by the law, and instead, opt for the market mechanism. This principle especially applied to land acquisition for private corporations, he argued.

“You want land? Go buy the land,” Ramesh had said, addressing industry at that time.

For its proposed power plant in Godda, however, as per documents reviewed by IndiaSpend, the Adani Group wrote to the Jharkhand state government on May 6, 2016 and August 2, 2016, asking it to acquire over 2,000 acres of land in ten villages of the district. In March 2017, the government said it would acquire 917 acres in six villages: Motia, Gangta, Patwa, Mali, Sondiha and Gaighat. The administration has so far acquired 519 acres of private land in the first four villages. Acquisition notices in the remaining two villages lapsed in August 2018, with the plant’s land requirements changing.

The company secured environmental clearance for the plant in August 2017, citing Godda’s Chir river as the water source. It now says it intends to draw water from the Ganga in adjoining Sahibganj district, and wants sub-surface rights over 460 acres for a 92-km pipeline to transport water. It also wants 75 acres for a railway line to transport coal.

Had the government turned down the Adani Group’s request, the company would have had to approach farmers to purchase their land, and villagers like Murmu, Hembrom and others would have had a say. On March 24 2017, in a 11-page note, which the Jharkhand government has not made public, the Godda DC declared the proposed power plant to be “for public purpose”, which meant it would acquire from farmers the land the Adani Group sought.

The LARR Act defines “public purpose” as covering several infrastructure activities, including power generation and transmission. But villagers point out that the Adani Group will sell all the power generated at the plant to Bangladesh.

“Adani benefits. Bangladesh benefits. How do we benefit?” asked an agitated Chintamani Shah, echoing the views of several farmers IndiaSpend spoke to.

The state has the first right of refusal for 25% of the power generated by thermal power plants built in the state, which means plants are legally obligated to sell 25% of the power to the state, at rates determined by government policy, according to the Jharkhand government’s 2012 Energy Policy. However, since the Adani Group wants to sell all the power generated at the Godda plant to Bangladesh, a February 2016 MoU between the state government and the Adani Group states that the government has agreed to the company’s request to sell power equivalent to 25% “from alternative sources”.

The government has not made its MoUs with the Adani Group public; the February 2016 document accessed by IndiaSpend is silent on the details of this “alternatively sourced” power. “The MoU is between the company and the state government, I cannot comment on that,” said Pasi when asked for specifics.  Officials speaking to IndiaSpend, requesting anonymity, said the company has not provided “clear answers” about where this power will be sourced from and when will it be sold to the state. An Adani spokesperson did not respond to IndiaSpend’s questions on this issue.

The “alternative source” reasoning riles Babulal Marandi, an Adivasi leader and former chief minister of Jharkhand. “How can the state government justify grabbing land from farmers, and giving it to Adani on the grounds that Adani will sell us 25% power from other sources?” asked Marandi. “We can buy power ourselves. The state is already doing it. Why do we need Adani for it?”

An investigation by Aruna Chandrasekhar for Scroll.in in June 2018 revealed how the state government tweaked its energy policy in October 2016, months after signing the MoU, to buy costlier power from Adani. This “preferential treatment”, words used by the government’s own auditors, will result in a Rs 7,410-crore ($1.05 billion) benefit to the Adani Group, Scroll.in reported.

While acquisition of fertile agricultural land to generate electricity for Bangladesh is being called “public purpose”, villagers losing their land for the plant have little or no power. After sundown, electricity lights up Adani’s plant construction site, while the villages around it are swathed in darkness. In Mali and Gangta, on a recent night, people got by with the light of little lamps burning on kerosene, “bought at Rs 50 per litre”, as one villager said.


The 1600 megawatts of electricity generated from the Adani power plant will be sold to Bangladesh. Villages losing their farms and commons to the plant get by on kerosene lamps. The only electricity in the area was at the plant site (right).

“Earlier we used to get power for one or two hours. But since four months, after this company began building its plant here, we have not been getting any electricity,” said a schoolteacher in one of the villages, fanning himself with a textbook as he watched over his wards. “The government is issuing circulars for smart classrooms, and asking us to teach using projectors. And here, children haven’t seen electricity since four months,” said the teacher, requesting anonymity.

A 2016 government report lists even Godda’s district headquarter town as undergoing 18-20 hour daily power cuts.

Social impact assessment silent on impacts
The LARR Act requires the government to conduct a social impact assessment (SIA) to weigh an acquisition’s socio-economic costs and impacts against potential benefits.  

Under the law, the SIA study is required to be a publicly available document, circulated and disclosed widely, from gram sabhas in the relevant villages, to government offices and relevant websites. It must detail the extent of private, common and government land to be affected by the proposed acquisition as well as the number of affected families, including the number of displaced. It must assess whether land acquisition at an alternate place was considered and found unfeasible. The assessment also requires that the government hold public hearings to incorporate views of the impacted families.

The SIA report in this case contravened several requirements, we found. It is not publicly available, nor is it placed on any relevant government websites, such as the Godda district website, or the Jharkhand Land Department website. Few villagers like Shah have a copy obtained  from “sources”.

Although the SIA states that 5,339 villagers were “project-affected”, it documents the views of only three villagers in the Motia hearing and 13 in Baxara. All the views favour the project and mirror each other. The SIA’s account of the hearings do not record the views of any Adivasi or Dalit residents.

Several locals in the four villages where the government was acquiring land for the Adani Group said that on December 6, 2016, the day of the SIA public hearings, they were barred from attending the proceedings. “There was large police deployment around the hearing site,” said Devendra Paswan, a Dalit farmer .

Only those who had a yellow card or a green card issued by company agents–dalaals as the villagers called them–were allowed in by the police, numerous villagers in Mali, Motia, Patwa and Gangta said. Villagers alleged that the police prevented them from entering even though they were carrying voter IDs and Aadhar cards.  

When villagers protested, the police baton-charged and teargassed them, they alleged. Mali resident Rakesh Hembrom said they had no option but to gather outside and protest. “The next day the local paper carried a photo of us with our hands raised in protest, but saying the villagers are in support of the project,” recalled Hembrom.

Residents say they were kept out of the SIA public hearings
In December 2016, several villagers, including women, told a Newslaundry reporter, Amit Bhardwaj, how they were beaten and barred from the SIA hearing site. A local journalist who captured footage of the police violence against villagers in Motia told Bhardwaj the police forced him to delete it.

While the Jharkhand government has empanelled several Jharkhand-based institutions, and public universities, including the area’s Sido Kanhu Murmu University, to conduct SIAs, the SIA for the Adani plant was awarded to a Mumbai-based consultancy firm called AFC India Limited. In the SIA, neither does AFC list the socio-economic costs of the project nor its impact on locals, as it is supposed to.

For example, the SIA omits rudimentary information, such as farming incomes in the area, landholding patterns, the extent of irrigated and multi-crop land, the economic losses for land losers, the impact on women and children, sharecroppers and farm labourers, the extent of common property resources such as grazing grounds and water bodies and the impacts of their loss. The SIA mentions that 97% of the residents are dependent on agriculture, but it does not say how they will get by after losing their land to the plant.

The SIA lists the number of “affected families” in nine villages at 841. But that only includes landholders. Moreover, in the four villages witnessing land acquisition so far, government data has listed 1,328 landholders.

The SIA also claims that the power plant will cause “zero displacement” and that habitations are “very far” from the site of land acquisition. It provides no evidence to support this statement, repeating claims made by the Adani Group in filings to the government, as well as claims by district officials that land acquisition for the project will not displace anyone. The Godda DC’s March 2017 note lists “zero displacement” as one of the grounds for Adani’s plant being a “public purpose” project.

The realities contradict this assertion. For example, the Santali families of Mali, who protested the acquisition bid of August 31, 2018, stand to lose their entire farmland. Their homes abut these farms.

“They may not touch our homes today,” pointed out Sita Murmu, “But without any land, what will we do here and how long can we survive here? We will eventually be forced out.”

In the adjoining village of Motia, at the site of the power plant, the land was being levelled and construction had begun. Construction workers were marking boundary pillars just shy of the walls of the homes of Dalit and Adivasi villagers, such Punam Sugo Devi and Karu Laiyya.

“The company has hemmed us in on all sides,” said Devi. “Where are the poor supposed to go?”


Officials and Adani personnel claim land acquired for a power plant will not displace anyone. But the plant site is enveloping homes of Dalit and Adivasi villagers, such as Punam Sugo Devi and Karu Laiyya (right). “Where are the poor supposed to go?” Devi asks.

“Adani’s people keep telling us every day that we will be evicted from here, this is now sarkar ka zameen (the government’s land),” said Devi’s neighbour Deepak Kumar Yadav. “There is no knowing where they will throw us.” Construction personnel at the site confirmed that they were not taking this area “now”, but, as one said, “it will happen soon.”

Yadav, a landless sharecropper said they were financially hit by the land acquisition, which had subsumed the farms they used to work on – impacts the SIA report was meant to document, but ignored.

“Usually at this time, we would be busy in the fields. But we are without work since the past three months,” said Yadav, adding that they could not even get loans. “Earlier, the moneylender would lend to us against the crop that we would harvest as a sharecropper. Now nobody does so, since they know the land we worked on is gone.”

Sharecroppers and landless labourers say they have lost work and incomes, post-land acquisition

Asked for details of the social impact management and rehabilitation plans—the LARR Act requires these to be in the public domain—Godda’s DC Pasi refused. “That is confidential,” she said. “It contains third party information.”

Land rights expert Usha Ramanathan was a member of the High-Level Committee (2013-14), set up by then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to report on the socio-economic, health and educational status of India’s Scheduled Tribes. The manner in which the Jharkhand government was taking land and livelihood from farmers demonstrated how “the idea of who, or what, is the public in ‘public purpose’ has got distorted beyond recognition,” she said.        

Questions of consent
Under the LARR Act, even if the government declares a private project as “public purpose”, it has to secure the “informed consent” of at least 80% of the landholders.

On March 7 and 8, 2017, district officials scheduled nine back-to-back ‘consent’ meetings in the nine villages where 1200 acres of land was to be acquired. The notification did not frame the meetings as a space for villagers to evaluate the acquisition proposal, and award or deny their consent. Instead, the government urged them to consent to the acquisition.  According to the administration, in these meetings, and during the 15-day “grace period” following it, 84% of landowners agreed to give their land to the government. The consent process was finished within a fortnight.

The next day, on 23 March, 2017, the Godda government pleader provided a legal opinion to the district administration: since over 80% of the landowners had given consent, the Santal Parganas Tenancy Act–a law that protects Adivasis–“has lost force”, and “land can be acquired even if the area is falling under the SPT Act”. On 24 March, 2017, the Godda administration issued the 11-page note recommending that the government acquire 917 acres of land for the Adani Group. On March 24 and 25, 2017, it issued LARR notifications for the acquisition.  

The 1949 Santal Parganas Tenancy (SPT) Act was intended to prevent Adivasi dispossession by placing several restrictions on the transfer of land from farmers in the erstwhile Santal Parganas district, now divided into six districts, including Godda. “There is no provision in the SPT Act for the government to transfer land to a company,” said Rashmi Katyayan, a Ranchi-based lawyer, specialising in land matters. To say that the Act had lost force, Katyayan argued, “was akin to legal fiction that benefits Adani.”

The SPT Act gives powers over the village’s common property (gair mazruwa) lands, such as grazing grounds to village heads, not the government, said Katyayan. But such common lands too have been acquired by the administration and are being given to the Adani group on 30-year leases, while titles of farmers’ land are being transferred to the company.

As with the MoU, the SIA report and the “public purpose” reasoning, the government has not made public the recordings and minutes of the consent meeting proceedings or official documents related to consent. It is hard to verify the government’s claim of consent from 84% of locals independently, since it has not implemented a key requirement of the consent process.

According to rules for the LARR Act, reiterated in the Jharkhand government’s own LARR rules issued in 2015, the landowner’s declaration giving or denying consent must be counter-signed by a district official. The rules state that a copy of this declaration, with the attached terms and conditions, must be handed to the affected landowner. None of the farmers IndiaSpend interviewed possessed these declarations.

Instead, several landholders, especially Adivasis and Dalits, said they had repeatedly refused consent for their land being taken. In Gangta, residents displayed copies of a gram sabha (village assembly) resolution sent to the district administration, the state’s energy department and the governor’s office.

“The gram sabha has collectively decided that it will not give any private or common property land of the village to Adani Power Plant…” said the resolution passed at the meeting held on August 31, 2016. “If we need to give up our lives in the process, we are ready for it.” The resolution is stamped as received by the district administration on September 2, 2016.


An August 2016 gram sabha resolution in Gangta opposed giving land to the Adani Group for the power plant. A September 2018 notice (right) by the Godda administration directed villagers to give consent for handing over gair mazruwa (common property) lands to the Adani Group.  

Several villagers alleged that the consent meetings called by the government were flawed and manipulated. “We boycotted them in protest, and have never given our consent,” said Chintamani Shah, adding that he filed right-to-information requests for the consent proceedings and was told that all records have been put on the website. “There was nothing there,” said Shah. IndiaSpend confirmed that was indeed the case.

The official opacity surrounding the project violates several LARR provisions, as well as Jharkhand’s 2015 LARR rules. These rules state: “As early as possible, the government will create a dedicated, user-friendly website that will be a public platform where the entire workflow of each acquisition case will be hosted, tracking each step of decision-making, implementation and audit.” This has not happened.

Officials said that most of the landowners have taken the compensation, which demonstrates consent. Several villagers offered a different perspective. A Dalit landholder in Motia, requesting anonymity for fear of retribution, said that all through, the government presented land acquisition for the Adani plant as a fait accompli, rather than a scenario of free and informed consent.

“My land is surrounded on four sides by that of upper castes,” he said. “Adani’s people told me that I should give the land, else I will be stranded and not get anything. I gave my land and took the compensation of 13 lakh rupees in a state of helplessness.”

Sikander Shah who lost his farm earlier this year, and has taken compensation of around 35 lakh rupees, had a similar account: “Adani’s people told me that if I don’t give consent, I will lose my land, and not get any money. I held out until the very end and finally had to relent.” Shah said that company personnel took him to their office, where he signed some documents. “Laachaar hokay karna pada (I had no choice but to do it),” he said.

Another Dalit famer in Motia, Ramjeevan Paswan, alleged that Adani personnel forcibly acquired his land in February, 2018. “Adani’s officials pushed me, uttering a casteist slur,” he said. “They said if you don’t give your land, we will bury you alive in it.” He filed a case under the The Scheduled Castes And The Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act against Adani personnel Dinesh Mishra, Abhimanyu Singh and Satyanarayan Routray. Nine months on, Paswan said, the police are still recording his statement.

Compensating land for land
Perhaps the most serious impact of the Jharkhand government’s use of the LARR Act to acquire land for the Adani Group, results from its interpretation of the land-for-land compensation principle, laid down in the act for Adivasi and Dalit landowners.

Clause Two in the Act’s Second Schedule states: “..in every project (emphasis added), those persons losing land and belonging to the Scheduled Castes or Scheduled Tribes will be provided land equivalent to land acquired, or 2.5 acres, whichever is lower.” This compensation, the schedule says, is in addition to money.

On June 14, 2017, the Godda district administration wrote to the state government for guidance on implementing multiple compensation and rehabilitation provisions of the act, specifically mentioning the Second Schedule, as well as the Act’s Section 41, which deals with safeguards for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.

Officials were thus deliberating important aspects of compensation three months after they had called meetings in the villages on March 7 and 8, 2017, and claimed to have secured “informed consent” from over 80% of the villagers.

On September 1, 2017, K Sriniwas, the state government’s director (land reforms), told Godda’s officials that the land-for-land compensation clause for Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Castes “only applied to irrigation projects.” For this, Sriniwas drew on the preceding part of the land-for-land section, which mentions that land-for-land compensation would be provided in all irrigation projects as far as possible.

Sriniwas is no longer the land reforms director. His successor, A Muthu Kumar told IndiaSpend: “I cannot comment on this. It is a policy decision of the government.”

The land-for-land compensation principle is a critical one, especially for Scheduled Tribes. “Adivasis are intertwined with land, forests and nature,” National Commission for Scheduled Tribes Chairperson Nandkumar Sai told IndiaSpend during a land rights seminar in September 2018. “Land is the very basis of their life, their culture and their identity,” Sai said, echoing the views of the Santalis in Godda’s villages.

In a 29 October 2018 note, following a meeting Sai held with officials of the central ministries of land resources, tribal affairs, and environment and forests, the NCST has drawn on the LARR Act’s land-for-land compensation principle to ask the government to award Adivasis, whom it relocates from tiger reserves, a minimum of 2.5 acres of land as compensation.  

The Jharkhand government’s decision to deny land-for-land compensation to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes “violates Article 14 of the Constitution, i.e. the principle of equality before law,” Ramanathan said. “Whether it is an irrigation project or a power plant, the fact of dispossession is the same across projects. Then how can you compensate with land in one case, but not in another?”

Jharkhand was formed as a separate state in 2000 due to decades of collective struggles for tribal self-determination, and that its government should dispossess tribal farmers thus is “particularly ironic,” Ramanathan said. IndiaSpend asked Kumar, the land reforms director, if it was the Jharkhand government’s stand to deny land-for-land compensation in all LARR projects, barring irrigation projects. “This is the government circular as of now,” said Kumar. “I cannot comment on any future circulars.”

Back in Godda, asked for information on how many Dalit and Adivasi families are losing their land to the Adani group, officials say they have not done “a caste-wise analysis” of those being dispossessed.

The land records in Jharkhand have not been updated since 1932. Documents around the project, including the SIA report, seem to be an unreliable guide. According to the SIA, of the acquisition’s “841 impacted families” (it is counting only land losers), Dalit and Adivasi families number 130, or around 15%. But a basic ground check raises questions about this data.  

For example, the SIA lists the number of impacted Adivasi families in Mali village as one. But just one patch of land, which was the target of the controversial acquisition of 31 August 2018, includes 6 families as landowners. Nearly 40 people, across three generations, are dependent on this land. But the SIA states that this land title is reported to be “issue-less”, which means it has no claimants.
Titleholders of this section of land include farmers like Anil Hembrom. Farmers said they would not be able to use the compensation money to buy alternative land, given the SPT Act, which places several restrictions on transfer of farmland in the region. “If the government takes our land from us, we, and our future generations will be condemned to landlessness forever,” said Hembrom. “Our Adivasi existence will be wiped out.”

Adivasi farmers explain why the acquisition will render them landless for good
“Numerous studies, including our report, have shown that communities whose lives are entwined with their habitat, especially Adivasis, have subsistence capability precisely because they have access to natural resources,” said Ramanathan. “If you fence these off from them, you render them immensely vulnerable.”

In Godda, this vulnerability has become a reality for many.

“We cannot even go into what was ours. The company has built a fence all around it,” said Sumitra Devi, a Dalit farmer in her 50s in Motia. Adani personnel threatened and intimidated her family into giving up their land, before eventually forcibly acquiring it this February, she alleged. Devi said her family has not taken the compensation on the grounds that they did not consent to giving their land.
Humein paise ka moh nahi hai, humein zameen ka moh hai (We have no attachment to money, we are attached to land),” Devi sobbed.“Please find a way for us to get our land back.”

With the land gone, she said, they were struggling to make ends meet, and take care of their 10 cows and calves. She suffered from gastric ailments and diabetes, and did not have enough money for her medical tests and medicines, she said.

On October 8, 2018, shortly after giving this interview, Devi died.

Days after being interviewed about how her land was forcibly acquired, Dalit farmer Sumitra Devi passed away.

(Chitrangada Choudhury is an independent journalist and researcher, working on issues of indigenous and rural communities, land and forest rights, and resource justice. Follow her on Twitter @ChitrangadaC)

Courtesy: India Spend

 

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How Adani Will Reap in Rs 33 crores unfair revenue in Kerala Port Deal: CAG https://sabrangindia.in/how-adani-will-reap-rs-33-crores-unfair-revenue-kerala-port-deal-cag/ Fri, 26 May 2017 05:27:27 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/05/26/how-adani-will-reap-rs-33-crores-unfair-revenue-kerala-port-deal-cag/ How will Gautam Adani’s flagship company Adani Ports and Private Limited get undue benefits from the Vizhinjam Internation Seaport Project in Kerala, though the Kerala government will bear 67% of the total investment required for the project? This is what is explained by the CAG report that has probed the deal and which was tabled […]

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How will Gautam Adani’s flagship company Adani Ports and Private Limited get undue benefits from the Vizhinjam Internation Seaport Project in Kerala, though the Kerala government will bear 67% of the total investment required for the project? This is what is explained by the CAG report that has probed the deal and which was tabled in the Kerala assembly on May 23. According to CAG, at the end of 40 years from the commencement of the project, Adani Group will walk away with a cool Rs 29,217 crore as additional revenue.

gautam Adani

And this is why the CAG concludes that the conditions in the agreement with the Adani Ports and Private Limited for implementing the Rs 7,525 crore Vizhinjam International Deep-water Multipurpose Seaport project were not favorable to the state.

The concession agreement for the project with the Adani group was signed in August 2015 when the Congress led United Democratic Front government was in power. Oommen Chandy was the then Chief Minister. Adani Group was the lone bidder for the PPP model project, the cost of which was Rs 7,525 crore. CPI (M) veteran and former Chief Minister VS Achuthanandan on Monday had demanded the government to issue a White Paper on the port, alleging corruption in the deal.

Details
For PPP (public-private participation) projects, the standard concession period is 30 years.According to the government, the most common form of PPP (public-private participation) projects used is where the private sector operator designs, builds, finances, owns and constructs the facility and operates it commercially for the concession period. After the concession period, the facility is transferred to the authority or the public sector.

For PPP projects, the standard concession period is 30 years.

But in this case, it has been fixed as 40 years, going clearly against recommendation. This extra 10 years will allow the Adani group to get the additional revenues. “In the report on Vizhinjam project by the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the concession period was recommended as 30 years. The concession period was specified as 30 years in all the three tenders issued for Vizhinjam project prior to the 2013 tender. In the current agreement, however, the concession period was fixed as 40 years,” the CAG report said.

And this was done by the previous UDF government and is being carried forward by the LDF too. Obviously Adani enjoys favours across party lines!

The government had originally envisaged an extension period of ten years, and if it was retained, an additional revenue of Rs 61,095 crore (present value-Rs 353 crore) would have accrued to the state.

There’s more.

The CAG report says that in the Concession Agreement, the Concessionaire (Adani Group) was given right to mortgage all assets (except funded works) on the ground that “it would provide an additional layer of security to Lenders”.

Though the rules laid down by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs says that project assets were excluded from the assets and rights which could be mortgaged or pledged to lenders as security for debt incurred by the Concessionaire.

In spite of this a modification was made post award of concession and that too contrary to advice.

End result? The Concessionaire (Adani Group) has the right to mortgage assets which includes land taken over by the government at a total cost of Rs 548 crore.

The CAG report also says that a last-minute modification made in the contract on the equity support payable to Adani Group will make Government of Kerala pay excess equity support of Rs 283.08 crore in advance, resulting in interest loss of Rs 123.71 crore.
Also, as per the projected cash flow statements prepared by the consultants engaged by Vizhinjam International Seaport Limited, Adani group will recoup their investment of Rs 2,454 crore by the eleventh year from Commercial Operation Date, that is by 2030. Since the government bears 67% of the total investment required for the project, the revenue sharing with the Adani group should have commenced from the date on which the private partner recovers its investment i.e. from 2031. By postponing the commencement of revenue sharing, the government has forgone revenue of Rs 2,153 crore. This also allows undue benefit to the Adani Group.  

Reacting to the CAG report, Oommen Chandy said, “Allowing extra concession period was not a unilateral decision, but done as per the model concession agreement of the Planning Commission of India. No change was made after the final agreement of the port. Also, the finding that the cost of Colachel port is less than that of Vizhinjam Port is wrong,” Oommen Chandy said in a press conference in Thiruvananthapuram on Wednesday. “I owe full responsibility of the agreement of Vizhinjam port. No official will be made scapegoat in this,” he said.  

“Three groups bought the tender form for the port. But the government received the tender only from the Adani group. The tender works of the port were transparent” he said. Chandy also said that he is agreeing with the Chief Minister’s statement that the CAG’s criticism on the agreement should be examined. “The examination should be conducted soon,” the former Chief Minister said.
 

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Australian Govt Fails to Pass Native Title Changes: Setback to Adani https://sabrangindia.in/australian-govt-fails-pass-native-title-changes-setback-adani/ Sat, 01 Apr 2017 06:09:15 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/04/01/australian-govt-fails-pass-native-title-changes-setback-adani/ Native Rights Activists pushed back on Brandis’s ill-conceived ‘Adani amendments’, and encouraged the Labor Opposition to hold a line on decency, said Adrian Burraguba today. The $21bn Adani coal project has been the focus of strong opposition from environmental groups. Photograph: Paul Miller/AAP More than 6,000 supporters contacted Bill Shorten’s office over the last two […]

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Native Rights Activists pushed back on Brandis’s ill-conceived ‘Adani amendments’, and encouraged the Labor Opposition to hold a line on decency, said Adrian Burraguba today.

Adani
The $21bn Adani coal project has been the focus of strong opposition from environmental groups. Photograph: Paul Miller/AAP

More than 6,000 supporters contacted Bill Shorten’s office over the last two weeks in response to Labor’s apparent capitulation to pressure from the mining lobby and native title bureaucrats. It was an overwhelming and positive demonstration of concern and integrity by W&J supporters, and a demand to do what’s right, say the activists.

At the end of two weeks of sittings in which the Senate was expected to carry Brandis’ amendments, the Government failed to pass its Bill.
Local activists hav3 fought hard against this change to the native title law. They lobbied in Canberra, ran media, prepared legal analysis, made detailed submissions and appeared before the Senate Inquiry. They also met the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The success of the campaign demonstrates just how much people in Australia care about Aboriginal rights and the protection of our lands and waters. And how much they don’t want Adani’s  mine proposal. 

This is a major setback for Adani, the Qld Government, and their backers in the mining lobby, who thought the amendments would help them circumvent the legal challenge that has been mounted to their sham land use deal.
The Adani Board is apparently set to make a decision within the next two weeks on whether to push on with the mine project. But it still faces  court actions. 

Right now, their purported ‘Indigenous land use agreement’ is worthless. It is clear this controversial Bill does not sit well with many Labor and crossbench MPs – and the incompetent rush with which Attorney General Brandis went about it added insult to injury.
 Labor's resistance on some elements of the bill, has been welcomed which has prevented its passage through the Senate, though it doesn't diminish their unacceptable support for the key measures.

And Labor are still ready to back dangerous native title changes. If the changes they do support are passed in the next sitting of Parliament, it will strip away protections and hand mining companies like Adani the means to divide and conquer us and traditional owners around the country.

Hence, say activists, the need to continue to fight against the winding back and removal of our rights.
The Parliament must go back to the drawing board on Native Title reform and deliver a just outcome that protects the integrity of our decision-making and our right to self-determination.

Please follow up with Bill Shorten, Mark Dreyfus and Pat Dodson to encourage them to turn their resistance into a positive new move for native title reform and land justice. And Cc us of course, so we can share your concerns with the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Activists have appealed for the campaign to continue.

The Government, Adani and the mining lobby are overconfident in their power to subordinate the rights of Indigenous peoples. What they don’t understand is how resolved Native activists are, and how much support in the community they have, to defend their rights.
Now that the Turnbull Government’s divisive Native Title amendment bill is languishing in the Senate, activists have sworn  redouble efforts. They have vowed not to have tjeir rights violated by a land use deal that they do not agree to, which would open the way to the mass destruction of their country. 

(Adria Burragubba & Murrawah Johnson for the Wangan & Jagalingou Traditional Owners Council)
 

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Adani: Indian Fishermen warn Australia against Environmental Impact ahead of Coal Mine Talks – ABC News https://sabrangindia.in/adani-indian-fishermen-warn-australia-against-environmental-impact-ahead-coal-mine-talks/ Fri, 17 Mar 2017 12:29:34 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/03/17/adani-indian-fishermen-warn-australia-against-environmental-impact-ahead-coal-mine-talks/ Indian Fishermen have warned of the harmful effects of the Adani project even as Australia to be wary as Queensland's Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk prepares to decide whether to proceed with the Carmichael coal mine ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)News has reported. Several Indian fishermen have pointed out that a local Adani project has not just displaced […]

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Indian Fishermen have warned of the harmful effects of the Adani project even as Australia to be wary as Queensland's Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk prepares to decide whether to proceed with the Carmichael coal mine ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)News has reported.

Adani

Several Indian fishermen have pointed out that a local Adani project has not just displaced them but harmed the environment

Key points in the ABC Bulletin:

  • Noor Mohammad said the Adani project's coal dust, stream discharge harmed the community
  • Adani has been heavily criticised for a series of environmental breaches during construction of Gujarat project
  • Comment was sought from Adani on measures it had taken to address the ash problem, but the ABC received no response

Ms Palaszczuk and eight regional mayors are preparing to sit down with the chairman of Adani Enterprises, Gautam Adani, ahead of the company deciding whether to proceed with the proposed mine.

The Queenslanders will be shown the Adani's Gujarat port and power station, which itself has a chequered environmental record, of which the local fishermen said Australia should be wary. Noor Mohammad — a fisherman in coastal Gujarat —said his home used to be in Mundra, where Adani's port and power project now stands.

He was forced out when the Adani project started, and relocated with his wife, two sons and their families to a camp nearby. But he and other fishermen, like Buddha Ismail, said the destruction of tidal mangroves and ash from coal burnt at the power station had damaged the fishing.

"The Adani project is harming us. Their coal dust and stream discharge are harming us," Mr Mohammad said, adding he now caught a quarter of what he used to."There are no fish in the sea water near the coast. All living creatures are dead."

Adani was heavily criticised for a series of environmental breaches during construction that included destruction of mangroves, failure to regulate the ash generated by the power plant and altering the flow of waterways to the fishing's detriment.

At Hazira, another site on the Gujarat coast, early last year a court ordered the company to pay nearly $5 million in reparation for illegal construction work, which damaged the environment and deprived 80 fishing families of their access to the sea.

Mr Mohammad and Mr Ismail said based on their experiences Australia should be wary of Adani."From our side, we want to tell them that they should force [the] company to run away," Mr Mohammad said.

"I want to suggest them to not allow an [Adani] plant there," Mr Ismail said.

The ABC sought comment from Adani on measures it had taken to address the ash problem, identified in a key environmental report in 2013, but received no response before the deadline.

Mundra is slated to receive coal from the Queensland Carmichael mine if it goes ahead.

Adani said coal would help expand power generation, providing some jobs and critically, cheap electricity to 100 million Indians still without.

Despite their criticism, the fishermen both admitted they would see things differently if their sons worked with the company.
 

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