The Church of England and one of Britain's leading charities have been
revealed as shareholders in a London-based company behind a controversial
aluminium mine in India which campaigners allege will wreak environmental
destruction.



Vedanta Resources, a FTSE 100 company whose majority shareholder is the
Indian billionaire Anil Agarwal, won permission last month for its
subsidiary Sterlite Industries to begin work on an open cast mine for
bauxite, the raw form of aluminium, in a remote corner of the densely wooded
Niyamgiri Hills in Orissa state, eastern India.



The site of the mountain is considered sacred to the indigenous Kondh tribe
which worships the hill as a god. The tribe forages in the forest for food
and also farms. The villagers and environmental groups claim that the
600-hectare mine will destroy the forest eco-system and threaten the
livelihoods of the Kondh tribesmen.



The allegations, which were backed in a 2005 report by the Indian Supreme
Court, are disputed by Vedanta, which insists the mine will operate in a
sensitive and responsible manner as well as bringing much-needed economic
development to the area. An investigation by The Ecologist magazine has
found that investors in Vedanta include the Church of England and the Joseph
Rowntree Charitable Trust – which uses its £120m endowment fund to make £5m
of grants each year – as well as local authorities and major British finance
houses.



The trust, which is separate from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, bought
shares in Vedanta late last year worth £1.5m to £2m through its independent
fund manager. Both the charity and the Church of England said they were
awaiting responses from Vedanta before deciding whether to disinvest.



The investments, many of which are managed by third-party fund managers,
have been made or maintained despite a decision last year by Norway's
sovereign pension fund to exclude Vedanta from its portfolio on the grounds
that such a holding would carry "unacceptable risk of complicity in present
and future severe environmental damage and systemic human rights
violations".



Pressure to follow suit is expected to be put on investors ahead of
Vedanta's annual general meeting in London next month. Activists are calling
on investors to sell their shares if Vedanta does not suspend its plans for
the mine.



The Niyamgiri Hills, the source of more than 30 springs and two rivers, are
renowned for their myriad wildlife – they are home to more than 300 species
of rare plants and animals including tigers, leopards, monkeys, deer and
elephants.



In 2005, the Central Empowered Committee of the Indian Supreme Court stated:
"Any mining in the areas is bound to destroy the biodiversity and affect the
availability of water for the local people".



Kondh tribesmen have complained that an existing bauxite refinery owned by
another Vedanta subsidiary has led to the eviction of 100 families and the
generation of caustic soda waste which has contaminated groundwater. The
Orissa Pollution Control Board described the seepage of caustic soda from
the site last year as "alarming".



The Church of England said its holding in Vedanta did not contravene its own
investment rules and its advisory body on ethical investments was seeking a
response from the mining company on the claims against it. A spokesman said:
"Disinvestment is the last resort and we would rather use the Church's
influence as an investor to get any shortcomings in corporate responsibility
addressed. We do engage with mining companies about the effects of their
operations on local communities."



The Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust said it was awaiting a response from
Vedanta about the "very serious questions" raised about its activities.
Stephen Pittam, the secretary of the trust, said: "If we do not receive a
response from Vedanta then we will certainly disinvest. We are surprised not
to have heard from them. A company has a responsibility to engage with its
shareholders."



Vedanta said it did "not accept" the allegations made by campaigners and
said the mine would generate income to tackle disease in the area as well as
offering employment and education.


It said in a statement: "The planned bauxite mine was the subject of a
detailed and intensive examination by the Supreme Court of India. This
examination included its environmental impacts, an assessment of whether it
had the support of the majority of the local community and the suggestions
that have been made about it. Following this examination, permission was
granted for it to proceed."

*Friday, 26 June 2009 / independent.co.uk*

Related Post -
http://mines.jharkhand.org.uk/2009/06/threat-to-domain-of-dongria-kondh.html

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