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* Community Protests Coca-Cola Plant in India - 1 messages, 1 author
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/30a0a878376b67ad?hl=en

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TOPIC: Community Protests Coca-Cola Plant in India
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/30a0a878376b67ad?hl=en
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== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Thurs, Oct 25 2007 12:50 am 
From: "Social Ownership"  


*Community Protests Coca-Cola Plant in India
*
Community Files Police Report Accusing Coca-Cola of Water Theft and
Pollution

For Immediate Release
October 25, 2007

*Ballia, Uttar Pradesh, India (October 25, 2007):* Over 600 people marched
and rallied against the Coca-Cola bottling plant in the village of
Sinhachawar in Ballia district in India yesterday, demanding that the plant
be shut down permanently.

The community has accused the bottling plant of pollution and also illegally
occupying land held by the village assembly.

A visit by community members to the factory premises in May 2007 found the
bottling plant indiscriminately dumping its hazardous waste inside and
outside the factory premises.

In 2003, the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) of India assessed the
sludge at eight Coca-Cola bottling plants, and found them all to contain
excessive levels of lead, cadmium or chromium. As a result, the CPCB ordered
the Coca-Cola company in India to treat its waste at all its bottling plants
as industrial hazardous waste, and deal with it accordingly.

Four years later, the Coca-Cola bottling plant in Sinhachawar has failed to
follow the orders. In particular, the dumping of such hazardous waste
violates the Hazardous Wastes (Management and Handling) Rules, 1989 from the
Ministry of Environment and Forests of India.

"We are demanding that the Coca-Cola bottling plant cease its operations
permanently because they are destroying our land and water, the very source
of our livelihoods," said Mr. Baliram Ram of the Coca-Cola Bhagao, Krishi
Bachao Sangharsh Samiti, the main organizer of the protest.

The Coca-Cola bottling plant in Sinhachawar has also built its boundary
walls encompassing some land that is owned by the village assembly. In
December 2005, villagers noticed that the Coca-Cola bottling plant had
blocked access to a public road that went through the bottling plant. The
villagers forcibly removed the gates placed by the bottling plant on either
side of the road. The community is alleging that the Coca-Cola bottling
plant illegally occupies another 1.5 acres of village assembly land.

The community is also concerned about water shortages in the area as a
result of the extraction of water by the Coca-Cola bottling plant. The area
is already experiencing water shortages, and the villagers point to other
communities in India around Coca-Cola bottling plants where the water crises
have been severely exacerbated as a result of Coca-Cola's operations

The bottling plant in Sinhachawar is a Coca-Cola franchisee owned unit
operated by the Brindavan Bottlers Limited, which is owned by India's
largest bottler of Coca-Cola, the Ladhani Group of Companies. The bottling
plant is in the process of being bought by the Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages
Private Ltd, the subsidiary of the Coca-Cola company.

The protest at the Coca-Cola bottling plant came a day after another
demonstration at the District Magistrate's office in Balia on October 23
where community members presented their demands to the District Magistrate.

The bottling plant has come under increased scrutiny after the community
visit to the plant which confirmed that Coca-Cola was carelessly and
illegally dumping its waste around the factory premises and into the
surrounding fields.

The head of the village council, Ms. Chinta Devi, has led the campaign to
permanently shut down the plant. Last month, the union of village council
heads in the district passed a resolution against the Coca-Cola bottling
plant, insisting that it be shut down.

The protest at the Coca-Cola bottling plant ended after community members
lodged a police report accusing the plant of pollution, illegal land
occupation and theft of water.

The Coca-Cola company's operations in India have been challenged by various
communities across India who are experiencing severe water shortages as well
as polluted water and land as a result of the company's practices. The
Coca-Cola bottling plant in Plachimada, one of the company's largest in
India, has been shut down since March 2004.

The local campaigns to challenge Coca-Cola in India have found tremendous
support internationally, and particularly among college and university
students in the US, UK and Canada. Over twenty five colleges and
universities have taken actions against the Coca-Cola company.

The full report of the May visit to the Coca-Cola bottling plant with images
can be found at
http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2007/cokebaliafact.html, in
Hindi at
http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2007/baliahindireport.pdf

For more information, visit
www.IndiaResource.org<http://www.indiaresource.org/>

---ends---
[image: []]
 



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