Fomento and Corporate Social Responsibilty? No need for guessing the
gentleman behind this public relations exercise to show how concerned and
caring the Timblos are about Goa's garbage?

They'd be interested to know that the online petition currently doing the
rounds has well over a thousand signatures (and growing in number through
the days), and, more importantly, each affixed to comments that strongly
condemn Fomento and their other friends in the mining industry for being
anything but socially responsible.

They'd be surprised how many people know what they they have been doing to
destroy the Western Ghats for their own growth and prosperity. And lest it
be forgotten, then their other 'public relations exercise' - slapping a
defamation suit against Seby, for consistently exposing their machinations
in the Mandgoa blog.

One wonders why people who consider themselves 'industrialists' by sheer
virtue of their assets and holdings, are not able to see the writing on the
wall. The Essar Group, keen on putting up a steel mill in North Caxton Bay
in Trinidad, have been brought to their knees by Rhea Mungal, a Seby kind of
character, who, armed with a computer and befriended by a radical academic
in the University of the West Indies put out an online petition, and posted
material on several international sites . Their world wide campaign has
stirred environmentalists and the general public and brought pressure on
the Jindals to put their tails between their legs and run.  The Jindals are
also getting it in the neck in Bolivia and right here in our backyard, in
Tamil Nadu, where an activist in Salem, Piyush Manush, has mobilized entire
villages to chase them away.

The online petition against open cast mining in Goa, giving links to sites
showing the devastation caused by mining in Goa (Seby's blog for which he is
being sued, and Kurush Canteenwalla's documentary film) is now doing the
rounds in four continents. Even as this is being written, other moves are
already underway to get visitors from the West coming to Goa to boycott the
Marriot and Cidade de Goa because of their business ties to mining companies
destrying Goa's rich bio-diversity. Goan students studying in Mumbai and
college students in Kolakata have been contacted for their help in a la
Greepeace style to placard matches involving Dempo and Salgaoncar teams.

Dempos have already begun operation in Coastal Maharashtra in the ghats
between Sawantwadi and Ambolim, and Maharashtrians are not happy about it.
It is just a question of time before people come out on the roads as they
have done in Tamil Nadu to chase away the Jindals.

One still wonders, somewhat bemused, why these so-called Goan
'industrialists' never bothered to diversify. What stopped them getting into
the more environment-friendly software industry, and gradually letting go of
their mining interests?

Just plain greedy I guess...if it's there for the taking, why not just take
it?

Anju Timblo has been steering with distinction the Cidade de Goa hotel. She
comes from a distinguished family in Delhi, known for its adherence to the
law, and indeed, for practising it in court. Wouldn't 'corporate social
responsibility' for the Timblos begin with not encroaching on a public beach
and, insidiously, attempting to privatise it? Then, in true spirit of the
constitution admitting their fault as shown in the Supreme Court verdict
that went against them?

Wouldn't 'corporate social responsibity' entail seeing how the land can be
regenerated, even as one attempts to throughtlessly rape it for the ore
beneath? Wouldn't 'corporate social responsibility' mean that one attempts
to deal with Goa's garbage problem proactively, well before it became a
'public' issue to be mined for its 'Public Relations' potential?

Would the Timblos and Salgaoncars grant us full access to the hotel and to
their mines to film exactly where they have broken the law and where they
continue to break the law?

Are they willing to put up for public scrutiny the environment-assessment
reports on which basis they got their so-called 'environment clearances'
from the MOEF?  The mining companies should know that these reports prepared
on a template provided by a lab in Hyderabad were sent to the Centre for
Science and Environment in New Delhi, and lest the mining companies bump off
a few of us, they have all been photocopied and distributed world-wide. It
is an open secret that just last year a politician in Goa made several trips
to Delhi on behalf of the mining companies, ferrying money, if you please.
Thirty crore by one estimate. All this will surface at the opportune moment,
and things made so hot, the shit will definitely hit the ceiling

Thankfully, the discourse surrounding issues that threaten Goa, like mining,
SEZs, dirty real estate deals, has broadened in a way that our largely
illiterate politicians and their business associates and cronies just don't
seem to realize.

Yes, they can get their goons to bump off a few, frighten off a few more,
buy a handful off here and there, but the discourse surrounding these
burning issues grows exponentially. There are people not frightened of
saving the foothills of the Western Ghats, and this the mining companies
must realize before it is too late, before, courtesy the internet, they are
exposed to the entire world. They can try to kill one, but there will be two
more in her place. To protect the forest and water, believe me, there are
people who will join the fray...

The mining in Kawrem and Maina contnues unabated. On phone just now from
Margao, Cheryl D'Souza who farms in the area tells me that 2000 trucks have
been registered in Quepem, and at least 1,500 drive through every day, from
5 am in the morning till 9 pm at night. Sales to China apparently have
picked up. A new mining site has just begun just after Maina across the
Curca river. East of this the mining companies have already finished a large
area adjacent to the Kushawati.

The story from Maina is anything but happy, which is why one views with
disgust the reprehensible attempt by the Timblos to even hint at social
responsibilty. Claude Alvares, Cheryl tells me, recently told Father Mathias
and Rama Velip from Sulcorna and Collomb respectively, that they should go
on the roads and prepare for a final fight. That's easier said than done
Cheryl tells me, because at the end of the day, she is alone there.

But that's not really true. I believe her when she says that when the mining
machines come up the hill towards her farm, minister or no minister owning
the company, she and her daughter Aki will block their way. I believe her
because I do not know too many Goans today who would have refused the
astronomical sum she was offered to stay behind and do battle for her large
farm, the forests around it, the water and the wild life.

I know she won't be alone. Courtesy the mobile, media in Mumbai and Delhi
will be instantly alerted if she comes under attack as she daily expects to,
given the greed of some of our politicians and the arrogance they have that
they can actually get away with murder in this day and age. Courtesy the
alternative media we have at our disposal, within days we can alert
organizations throughout the world working on issues pertaining to the
environment, and get them to spread the word within their countries, the
nature and dealings and the petty profit that lures leading Goan
'Industrialists' to rape their own earth, and terrorize its inhabitants.

When we start doing this, it is known as Peoples' Social Responsibility. We
don't even have to pay someone like Sujay Gupta to do this, it's free...

Be the change Timblo, be the change. I am even tempted to ask you to send me
your email ID. At a substantial consultative fee, I'll put together a think
tank to help you and your mining friends to diversify your business
interests, show you how you can regenerate what you have destroyed while yet
understanding the true nature of investment and the requisite patience
needed, substantively ease your mining activities, and. lest we forget, make
money for yourself and others who work for you. But, more importantly, also
show you how to allow for the Timblo name to be recorded for the good it did
beyond raping the earth. If you understand this, you understand the true
nature of being an 'Industrialist' who strives in this difficult age we live
in, to actually be the change we all want. You will also understand what
'corporate social responsibility' really is.

Hartman de Souza

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