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Today's topics:

* Photos and Newspapers of Mass Meeting on Flood on 29th Oct 2007 - 2 messages,
 2 authors
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/50552faca6dc4e5d?hl=en
* Fwd: [Aid-awareness] Titanium or Water? Trouble brews in Southern India by 
Nity Jayaraman - 1 messages, 1 author
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/af5b10af1b3ad18c?hl=en
* Fwd: Unable to deliver your message - 1 messages, 1 author
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/45315e8ad72a31b6?hl=en
* Can unhealhty people revive whole India and contribute effectively to the 
rise of a great nation? - 1 messages, 1 author
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/03a7e33e2597395b?hl=en

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Photos and Newspapers of Mass Meeting on Flood on 29th Oct 2007
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/50552faca6dc4e5d?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Tues, Oct 30 2007 4:54 am 
From: "Social Ownership"  


Respected Friends,

Please visit Photos of Mass Meeting on Flood on 29th October 2007 and News
Papers.
Please click in given below link--

www.localgovernance.org/floodmassmeeting2007.html

love
vivek
 



== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Tues, Oct 30 2007 6:21 pm 
From: "Dr. Subba Reddy"  


Dear Mr. Vivek Ji,

Congratulations on your great success of conducting Mass meeting.

Thank you for sharig Mass Meeting Photos.

Those are really Inspirational.

Keep it up and I wish you all the best for your efforts.

with best wishes and regards

Subba Reddy.




On 10/30/07, Social Ownership <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Respected Friends,
>
> Please visit Photos of Mass Meeting on Flood on 29th October 2007 and News
> Papers.
> Please click in given below link--
>
> www.localgovernance.org/floodmassmeeting2007.html
>
> love
> vivek
>
>
> >
>


-- 
Dr. N. Subba Reddy
Postdoctoral Research Scientist
POSTECH, Pohang,  KOREA
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phone:  82-54-279-5253, 82-54-279-0793
Join us and be a part of the next Indian Revloution led by youth!
www.bharatudaymission.org
 




==============================================================================
TOPIC: Fwd: [Aid-awareness] Titanium or Water? Trouble brews in Southern India
by Nity Jayaraman
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/af5b10af1b3ad18c?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Tues, Oct 30 2007 10:49 pm 
From: "Abhijit K"  


yet another example of  tata's inhuman acts..
- abhijit

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Priya Ranjan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Oct 31, 2007 1:22 AM
Subject: [Aid-awareness] Titanium or Water? Trouble brews in Southern India
by Nity Jayaraman
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

* * 
<https://secure.aidindia.org/aidadmin/donate/current/Donate.jsp>**<https://secure.aidindia.org/aidadmin/donate/current/Donate.jsp>

    Titanium or Water? Trouble brews in Southern India
by Nityanand Jayaraman, Special to CorpWatch
October 24th, 2007


   <http://www.corpwatch.org/img/original/10-22-Titamium-Rock.jpg>

More than 5,000 people converged this month in the southern Indian state of
Tamil Nadu to protest a deal that set the stage for the state government to
appropriate almost 10,000 acres of land and hand it over to Tata Steel
Corporation, a subsidiary of India's largest conglomerate. The June 2007
agreement allows the giant company to mine ilmenite in Sathankulam, an
agrarian pocket of India's coastal countryside.

This ilmenite, when processed, yields titanium metal and titanium dioxide
(TiO2), both extremely valuable products. But many locals are refusing to
sell out of concern that the ilmenite mining operations and loss of land
will destroy their traditional way of life and despoil the environment. At
least 40 percent of the population -- the landless and those engaged in
household industries -- depend on farming palmyra trees for subsistence or
supplemental income.

The Tamil Nadu government, has weighed in to side with Tata, and is
threatening to seize the land by eminent domain. "The district
administration, the state machinery and all its functionaries are engaged as
unofficial real estate agents for Tata, and these days you'll see all of
them trotting behind Tata officials trying to buy land," says S. Anandraj,
chairman of the local self-government in Sathankulam. Anandraj is a member
of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), a bitter political
rival of the party ruling the state of Tamil Nadu.

What aggravates the locals even more is the lack of transparency by Tata and
the government. Tata has promised to act fairly, but the June 2007
memorandum of understanding (MoU) between Tata and the state, as well as the
survey numbers of lands to be acquired, remain closely guarded secrets.
  *Titanium Conflicts
*
Both titanium mining and processing have had a contentious history. In 1999,
the indigenous people in the Okefenokee reservation in the southern U.S.
state of Georgia, successfully fought off Dupont's 1999 attempt to mine
titanium. In August 2006, villagers in central Vietnam forced titanium
mining operations to halt after mining resulted in groundwater contamination
and depletion. In the Kwale coastal area of Eastern Kenya, indigenous tribes
have been fighting a pitched battle with titanium giant Tiomin to prevent it
from mining titanium on ancestral lands.

In August 2006, the Nanjing Titanium Chemicals company in Jiangsu province
of Eastern China was ordered shut after it released 3,000 tons of untreated
wastes into the Nanhe River. The wastes virtually killed the river and
caused sickness among the residents of a nearby town. In February 1999, a
leading manufacturer of TiO2 in the UK released 8,000 tons of effluents
containing 37 tons of concentrated hydrochloric acid from a damaged
pipeline. More than 17 acres of land was affected with irreparable damage in
the near-term.


The Tamil Nadu Department of Industries denied this reporter's request under
the Right to Information Act for a copy of the MoU. "Tata Steel," the
department replied, "has raised their objection on the ground that it is an
exclusive, privileged document of confidential nature and the disclosure of
such information shall harm the commercial confidence and competitive
position of the company."

*National Priority?*

Some 96 percent of the ilmenite extracted will be turned into titanium
dioxide, which is extensively used as a pigment in plastics, paint, sun
screen, food coloring and biomedical applications. The remainder is purified
to titanium sponge, an intermediate which is further processed to titanium
-- a corrosion-resistant metal that is half the weight of steel, but twice
as strong and is especially valuable for applications in aircraft, space and
other high-tech industries.

India's ilmenite resources are estimated at more than 21 percent of global
deposits, but much of it has not been tapped. Instead the country imports
most of its annual consumption of 70,000 tons of TiO2 as well as the
titanium metal it uses for defense and space research. Meanwhile global
demand for the metal is rising, indeed other big industrial countries --
like the U.S. and Russia -- have already stockpiled large quantities of the
strategic metal, says Dr. Placid Rodriguez, visiting professor at the Indian
Institute of Technology in Madras.

Rodriguez, who has headed various departments within India's nuclear and
defense research establishments, says that India should tap into this
growing market. "Our economic growth in this century will depend on bauxite,
iron and titanium," he says.

Realizing the potential for future production should the sector open up,
DuPont, the market leader in titanium dioxide pigment, already has set up
outposts in India. And companies like Boeing have also started to look to
India as a source of titanium metal. (Boeing's aircrafts are nearly 15
percent titanium in weight.)

For its part the Indian government is contemplating deregulation that would
allow 100 percent foreign direct investment in mining and processing. This
potentially lucrative new opportunity quickly attracted the attention of
Tata, one of India's oldest and biggest companies. (According to its
website, the Tata Group's businesses are now spread over seven business
sectors, 98 companies and six continents. "It employs some 246,000 people
and collectively has a shareholder base of over 2 million and market
capitalization of $70 billion as of October 2007.")

The company sees titanium mining is an important opportunity for
diversification. "For 100 years, Tata has remained a single mineral company
with its emphasis on steel," explains Dr. S. Asokan, Tata Steel's
executive-in-charge for the Titania project.

*Tata's Plans for Sathankulam*

But before Tata can proceed with the $625 million titanium project, it needs
to secure the land and displace thousands of local farmers and small
business people. As currently envisioned, the mining project involves land
spread over six villages in Sathankulam, a 24-square mile area about 35
miles from the southern port city of Tuticorin; Tata hopes to expand by an
additional 12 square miles over a 30-year period.

The complex operations will include a mineral processing plant to produce
titanium dioxide pigment and a coal-fired thermal power plant. A seawater
desalination plant to supply 16 million liters a day of fresh water, is
planned for Kulasekarapattinam, a seaside fishing hamlet about 12 miles from
the mining site. Tata will also set up tailing ponds that will hold up to 85
percent of the material mined in the form of slime (very fine sand) and
coarse sand.

Each year, Tata plans to remove 500,000 tons of ilmenite-rich sands, with 53
percent titanium dioxide, from slightly more than half a square mile. For
the first year, the operation will require more land to accommodate tailings
ponds.

"Government will consider land acquisition [through eminent domain]," says
Tamil Nadu government Industries Secretary Shaktikanta Das, "but we'll try
to arrive at a fair negotiated price. And we're urging Tata to directly
negotiate as well."

That negotiation depends on the value of the property, and the people and
the corporation have different ways to measure worth. "We selected the site,
because there is no cultivation, it is barren and there is no water," says
Tata Steel's Asokan. "When we demarcated the area, we excluded residences,
buildings, etc."
  *The Magic Palm

*Palmyra is also known as the "friend of the poor." It grows even under
adverse water conditions in all kinds of soil, and is often planted on open
plains as a windbreak.

Virtually every part of the tree can be used, value-added, and sold. Several
millennia ago, alcohol from palm sap was exported from India to places as
far away as Egypt. Today, the sap makes a healthy drink and a base for palm
sugar and jaggery (a traditional Indian form of unrefined sugar), as well as
an intoxicant. The fruits, seedlings and tubers are edible and the fronds
are widely used as roofing material. Leaves can be cut in strips and woven
into a variety of useful articles such as mats, boxes and toys. The thick
and sturdy mid-rib of the leaf is used as fence posts and the fiber inside
the trunks can be stripped, processed and used as bristles in brushes and
brooms.

Palmyra also has medicinal uses long exploited by locals and explored in the
Journal of Economic Botany. "The young plant is said to relieve biliousness,
dysentery, and gonorrhea. Young roots are diuretic and anthelmintic, and a
decoction is given in certain respiratory diseases. The ash of the spadix is
taken to relieve heartburn and enlarged spleen and liver. The bark
decoction, with salt, is used as a mouth wash, and charcoal made of the bark
serves as a dentifrice.

Sap from the flower stalk is prized as a tonic, diuretic, stimulant,
laxative and anti-phlegmatic and amebicide. Sugar made from this sap is said
to counteract poisoning, and it is prescribed in liver disorders. Candied,
it is a remedy for coughs and various pulmonary complaints. Fresh toddy,
heated to promote fermentation, is bandaged onto all kinds of ulcers. The
cabbage, leaf petioles and dried male flower spikes all have diuretic
activity. The pulp of the mature fruit relieves dermatitis."

Government spokesperson Das concurs: "Barring the few patches, and some
horticultural plots, the entire land is barren and not fit for agricultural
use." Only 345 acres are irrigated, he says.

*Land Value Disputed*

Locals disagree, pointing to irrigated patches and to stretches of cashew
nut and palmyra trees that protect against drought by deterring wind erosion
and retaining rainwater. They call their lands theri nilam -- a Tamil phrase
for the sweeping swathes of red sand dunes that can reach 40 feet high. Some
of the more prosperous farms are fenced off, with productive open and bore
wells. Others have coconut saplings, and drip irrigation. Cashew, palmyra,
acacia bushes and thorny scrub make up for the rest of the vegetation.
Vegetable crops, horticulture and palm products add to the agricultural
economy.

The palmyra or toddy palm tree is closely associated with the local economy,
culture and folk medicine. Members of the predominant Nadar caste are famed
palmyra workers, controlling the myriad businesses arising from this
versatile crop. While many well-to-do Nadars have moved into trading and
business, the community's poor live by the palmyra.

"Everybody finds something meaningful and remunerative in the palmyra," says
Poongani, a woman well into her 70s. As she speaks, her fingers deftly weave
dry fronds into a mat that will end up in a local market. Each mat takes
less than 20 minutes to complete, and will yield her three rupees ($0.08).
She doesn't own palm trees, she explains, but everyday she weaves 30 mats
she can earn enough to make ends meet.

While most residents say they will never sell their homeland to Tata, the
few willing to consider that option are balking at the price. Out of 14
people from the project area CorpWatch interviewed, the only one thinking
about selling called the quoted rates a "joke."

The steel giant is offering land owners roughly $1,250 per acre. Tata has
set aside two percent of the project cost ($12.5 million) for acquiring the
10,000 acres. The offer is generous, Tata says, since the officially
notified value for land in the project site "varies from Rs. 18,125 ($435)
to Rs. 116,000 ($2,900) per acre, with an average value of Rs. 40,315
($1,000)."

The government is actively promoting land sales. In August, it organized a
public hearing led by the Tamil Nadu Minister of Mines, K. Ponmudi. "The
Committee had open sessions in all six villages. In all villages, there was
overwhelming support for the project among landowners. Seventy to 75 percent
are in favor of the project," says Das.

This assessment of support, if accurate, has not translated into more land
for Tata. "In two and a half years, we have only acquired 17 acres," says
Tata's Asokan. "The government has told us that they will get land for us by
March-June 2008."

J. Saravanaraj owns a 22-acre farm in Thisayanvilai town that employs 210
people. He may spare 10 acres that are under cashew for Tata, but wants
$3,750 per acre. "It is false to say that these lands are empty. Even the 10
acres I'm willing to give has cashew stands. Each acre of cashew will yield
Rs. 10,000 - 15,000 ($250-$375) with zero maintenance," he explains.

On the remaining 12 acres, he has planted coconut, sapota, mango, lemon and
guava, and invested in two wells costing Rs. 300,000 each ($7,500). He has
also invested Rs. 1.5 million ($37,500) in a palm fiber mill and exports the
processed fiber used in brushes and brooms.

"We can't give up these lands. We may get compensation, but the workers
won't get anything, and some have worked with us for 20 years," Saravanaraj
points out.

*Cultural and Environmental Impact*

The indigenous people of the region also believe that few economic benefits
will flow to them and worry that Tata's operations will envelope homesteads,
schools, cemeteries, graves, farmlands and roads and entire villages.
"[Tata's] needs will wipe out our histories. What will I say where I'm from,
if my entire village -- where I was born and brought up -- is wiped out?"
asks S. Devadas, a landless farm laborer from Edachivilai, a hamlet in
Arasur 1 village in the project area.

They also fear that the mining will destroy their environment and health.
Ilmenite mining involves removal of vegetation and extraction of several
meters of soil. Besides the immediate implications of soil erosion because
of wind and rain, the large-scale deforestation could also induce local
climate changes.

Tata's Asokan counters that mine reclamation will actually improve local
hydrology and soil fertility. However, his presentation to CorpWatch failed
to identify and address several potential hazards including radiation.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency lists titanium as "Mineral ores
known to have TENORM [Technologically Enhanced Naturally Occurring
Radioactive] associated wastes." TENORM has natural radioactive content that
is increased by technological processing using acid leaching, solvent
extraction, electro or pyro of magnetic processing, or intensive use of
water.

The extracted sands are first concentrated to isolate the heavy minerals --
ilmenite, zircon, silmanite, monazite and rutile -- by washing the sands in
large quantities of water, and letting the heavy mineral content settle. The
various minerals are then separated using magnetic and electrical separation
processes. Waste, including radioactive minerals, is returned to the mining
site along with sand tailings and slime. Every 100 tons of heavy mineral
sand isolated from the theri sand yields about 53 tons of ilmenite and 5
tons of radioactive monazite, according to Tata Steel.

Nor did Asokan offer specifics about the complex variety of other
potentially toxic emissions generated during production. Tata is planning to
process the sands using a pollution-intensive method involving chlorine
that, according to the United Nations Environment Program, creates dioxin.
Listed under the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants,
dioxins are a potent carcinogen that bioaccumulates and magnifies up the
food chain to affect top predators such as birds of prey, large fish and
humans.

In addition to dioxin, the process also emits hydrogen chloride, chlorine,
acidic sludge, sulphur dioxide, carbon dioxide, heavy-metal laden solid
wastes, acidic organochlorine-contaminated effluent and particulate matter.
Aluminum, antimony, arsenic, lead and molybdenum are trace emissions from
TiO2 plants. Every ton of TiO2 processed through the chlorine method will
yield 2.4 tons of solid wastes, 90 kilograms of sulphur dioxide, and 3
kilograms of acidic and trace-metal-tainted effluents.

Other dangerous releases also cannot be ruled out. Titanium tetrachloride
reacts violently with water to release deadly hydrogen chloride fumes that
can hug the ground and spread over large areas, causing death and
destruction.

The biggest local concern, though, is water. Located in a rain shadow
region, the area receives sparse rainfall. Farmers, though, swear by the
Theri sands that "are like sponges. They store water during the rains, and
release it during dry seasons," says G. Sivaganesakumar, a farmer in
Naduvukurichi, a village that sits in the project area. "It doesn't matter
what the price of the land is. It doesn't matter whether Tata mines the land
or the government does. What matters is that if it is mined, the titanium
will disappear in 30 years. If not, the land will yield water forever. You
decide: Titanium or Water?"

*Selling Off the Future?*

Within that long-term context, locals see Tata's pledge of 1,000 direct, and
more than 3,000 indirect, jobs as part of a squeeze to get farmers out of
farming, without a clear roadmap for absorbing them into new industries. The
landless are even worse off since, as Secretary Das confirms, there is no
compensation package for them. "Landless people will get preference in
wage-earning jobs, in mine reclamation and revegetation," Das adds.

"We are being squeezed out from all sides," says Anandraj, who also runs a
wholesale vegetable store in Chennai, Tamil Nadu's state capital. "We're
farmers and traders. On the one hand, Tata is squeezing us out of farming.
To escape that if we go to the cities to set up shops, Reliance and Walmart
are there making life miserable for small traders."

Just in the last decade, more than 100,000 debt-ridden farmers have killed
themselves in some of the most prosperous agricultural areas of India. The
communities in Tata's path live in the shadow of that despair.
  *Trouble follows Tata
*
While this is Tata's first titanium operation, the company's operations
around India have a history of sparking opposition and violence (see Stolen
for Steel: Tata Takes Tribal Lands in India
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=13620). In January 2006, Orissa
state police gunned down 13 tribal people who were protesting the takeover
of land for a Tata Steel project in Kalinganagar.

And for the last two years, Singur -- a fertile farming economy about 25
miles from Calcutta in West Bengal -- has been a hotbed of violence. The
Communist Party (Marxist)-led state government has resorted to baton and
tear gas attacks, and harassment of those opposed to the takeover of land
for a Tata Motors' car project.

"We're illiterate," says K. Sakthivel, a landless laborer from Vemmankudi
village, less than 10 miles from the project site. "The land provides
dignified livelihoods for illiterate people. I don't understand Tata's
motive behind wanting everything. Why not do their business on some land and
leave some for us to survive? What use am I going to be for the Tatas? They
will want engineers. A few of us may get jobs as laborers. But what after
the Tatas leave, after the minerals are exhausted, after the land is dead?"

This is not the first time that the people of this part of Tamil Nadu have
faced mighty odds and fought back. In the 18th century, Veerapandiya
Kattabomman, a local chieftain, refused to cede land taxes to the British
East India Company. He was finally caught and hanged in 1799, but not before
the company suffered massive losses in a battle that sowed the seeds for the
independence struggle.

Again, "People are angry, very angry," says S. Anandraj, chairman of the
local self-government in Sathankulam, and a member of the All India Anna
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), the ruling party's political rival.

"If the government paid as much attention to agriculture as it did to
industry," says local farmer G. Sivaganesakumar. "This place would blossom."


But Tamil Nadu is faced with the threat that Tata could take its business
elsewhere. Tata Steel managing director B. Muthuraman has warned it that
Tata "will have alternative plans if things don't work out in Tamil Nadu."

Indeed, India has titanium-rich ilmenite deposits in the beaches of its west
coast, and the eastern seaboard states of Andhra Pradesh and Orissa, as well
as in Tamil Nadu.
 




==============================================================================
TOPIC: Fwd: Unable to deliver your message
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/45315e8ad72a31b6?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Tues, Oct 30 2007 10:58 pm 
From: "Abhijit K"  


BM-chennai, bm_delhi, bm_gwalior --> I was a member of all these yahoogrops
and joined with the intension of making people aware of the gravity of the
issues that this country is facing.

The mails are getting rejected now ... from all 3 yahoogroups.. !
Thanks a lot folks.

- abhijit


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Yahoo! Groups <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 31 Oct 2007 05:49:18 -0000
Subject: Unable to deliver your message
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


We are unable to deliver the message from <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.

The email address used to send your message is not subscribed to this
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Abhijit K" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 11:19:17 +0530
Subject: Fwd: [Aid-awareness] Titanium or Water? Trouble brews in Southern
India by Nity Jayaraman
yet another example of  tata's inhuman acts..
- abhijit

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Priya Ranjan < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Oct 31, 2007 1:22 AM
Subject: [Aid-awareness] Titanium or Water? Trouble brews in Southern India
by Nity Jayaraman
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

* * 
<https://secure.aidindia.org/aidadmin/donate/current/Donate.jsp>**<https://secure.aidindia.org/aidadmin/donate/current/Donate.jsp>

    Titanium or Water? Trouble brews in Southern India
by Nityanand Jayaraman, Special to CorpWatch
October 24th, 2007


   <http://www.corpwatch.org/img/original/10-22-Titamium-Rock.jpg>

More than 5,000 people converged this month in the southern Indian state of
Tamil Nadu to protest a deal that set the stage for the state government to
appropriate almost 10,000 acres of land and hand it over to Tata Steel
Corporation, a subsidiary of India's largest conglomerate. The June 2007
agreement allows the giant company to mine ilmenite in Sathankulam, an
agrarian pocket of India's coastal countryside.

This ilmenite, when processed, yields titanium metal and titanium dioxide
(TiO2), both extremely valuable products. But many locals are refusing to
sell out of concern that the ilmenite mining operations and loss of land
will destroy their traditional way of life and despoil the environment. At
least 40 percent of the population -- the landless and those engaged in
household industries -- depend on farming palmyra trees for subsistence or
supplemental income.

The Tamil Nadu government, has weighed in to side with Tata, and is
threatening to seize the land by eminent domain. "The district
administration, the state machinery and all its functionaries are engaged as
unofficial real estate agents for Tata, and these days you'll see all of
them trotting behind Tata officials trying to buy land," says S. Anandraj,
chairman of the local self-government in Sathankulam. Anandraj is a member
of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), a bitter political
rival of the party ruling the state of Tamil Nadu.

What aggravates the locals even more is the lack of transparency by Tata and
the government. Tata has promised to act fairly, but the June 2007
memorandum of understanding (MoU) between Tata and the state, as well as the
survey numbers of lands to be acquired, remain closely guarded secrets.
  *Titanium Conflicts
*
Both titanium mining and processing have had a contentious history. In 1999,
the indigenous people in the Okefenokee reservation in the southern U.S.
state of Georgia, successfully fought off Dupont's 1999 attempt to mine
titanium. In August 2006, villagers in central Vietnam forced titanium
mining operations to halt after mining resulted in groundwater contamination
and depletion. In the Kwale coastal area of Eastern Kenya, indigenous tribes
have been fighting a pitched battle with titanium giant Tiomin to prevent it
from mining titanium on ancestral lands.

In August 2006, the Nanjing Titanium Chemicals company in Jiangsu province
of Eastern China was ordered shut after it released 3,000 tons of untreated
wastes into the Nanhe River. The wastes virtually killed the river and
caused sickness among the residents of a nearby town. In February 1999, a
leading manufacturer of TiO2 in the UK released 8,000 tons of effluents
containing 37 tons of concentrated hydrochloric acid from a damaged
pipeline. More than 17 acres of land was affected with irreparable damage in
the near-term.


The Tamil Nadu Department of Industries denied this reporter's request under
the Right to Information Act for a copy of the MoU. "Tata Steel," the
department replied, "has raised their objection on the ground that it is an
exclusive, privileged document of confidential nature and the disclosure of
such information shall harm the commercial confidence and competitive
position of the company."

*National Priority?*

Some 96 percent of the ilmenite extracted will be turned into titanium
dioxide, which is extensively used as a pigment in plastics, paint, sun
screen, food coloring and biomedical applications. The remainder is purified
to titanium sponge, an intermediate which is further processed to titanium
-- a corrosion-resistant metal that is half the weight of steel, but twice
as strong and is especially valuable for applications in aircraft, space and
other high-tech industries.

India's ilmenite resources are estimated at more than 21 percent of global
deposits, but much of it has not been tapped. Instead the country imports
most of its annual consumption of 70,000 tons of TiO2 as well as the
titanium metal it uses for defense and space research. Meanwhile global
demand for the metal is rising, indeed other big industrial countries --
like the U.S. and Russia -- have already stockpiled large quantities of the
strategic metal, says Dr. Placid Rodriguez, visiting professor at the Indian
Institute of Technology in Madras.

Rodriguez, who has headed various departments within India's nuclear and
defense research establishments, says that India should tap into this
growing market. "Our economic growth in this century will depend on bauxite,
iron and titanium," he says.

Realizing the potential for future production should the sector open up,
DuPont, the market leader in titanium dioxide pigment, already has set up
outposts in India. And companies like Boeing have also started to look to
India as a source of titanium metal. (Boeing's aircrafts are nearly 15
percent titanium in weight.)

For its part the Indian government is contemplating deregulation that would
allow 100 percent foreign direct investment in mining and processing. This
potentially lucrative new opportunity quickly attracted the attention of
Tata, one of India's oldest and biggest companies. (According to its
website, the Tata Group's businesses are now spread over seven business
sectors, 98 companies and six continents. "It employs some 246,000 people
and collectively has a shareholder base of over 2 million and market
capitalization of $70 billion as of October 2007.")

The company sees titanium mining is an important opportunity for
diversification. "For 100 years, Tata has remained a single mineral company
with its emphasis on steel," explains Dr. S. Asokan, Tata Steel's
executive-in-charge for the Titania project.

*Tata's Plans for Sathankulam*

But before Tata can proceed with the $625 million titanium project, it needs
to secure the land and displace thousands of local farmers and small
business people. As currently envisioned, the mining project involves land
spread over six villages in Sathankulam, a 24-square mile area about 35
miles from the southern port city of Tuticorin; Tata hopes to expand by an
additional 12 square miles over a 30-year period.

The complex operations will include a mineral processing plant to produce
titanium dioxide pigment and a coal-fired thermal power plant. A seawater
desalination plant to supply 16 million liters a day of fresh water, is
planned for Kulasekarapattinam, a seaside fishing hamlet about 12 miles from
the mining site. Tata will also set up tailing ponds that will hold up to 85
percent of the material mined in the form of slime (very fine sand) and
coarse sand.

Each year, Tata plans to remove 500,000 tons of ilmenite-rich sands, with 53
percent titanium dioxide, from slightly more than half a square mile. For
the first year, the operation will require more land to accommodate tailings
ponds.

"Government will consider land acquisition [through eminent domain]," says
Tamil Nadu government Industries Secretary Shaktikanta Das, "but we'll try
to arrive at a fair negotiated price. And we're urging Tata to directly
negotiate as well."

That negotiation depends on the value of the property, and the people and
the corporation have different ways to measure worth. "We selected the site,
because there is no cultivation, it is barren and there is no water," says
Tata Steel's Asokan. "When we demarcated the area, we excluded residences,
buildings, etc."
  *The Magic Palm

*Palmyra is also known as the "friend of the poor." It grows even under
adverse water conditions in all kinds of soil, and is often planted on open
plains as a windbreak.

Virtually every part of the tree can be used, value-added, and sold. Several
millennia ago, alcohol from palm sap was exported from India to places as
far away as Egypt. Today, the sap makes a healthy drink and a base for palm
sugar and jaggery (a traditional Indian form of unrefined sugar), as well as
an intoxicant. The fruits, seedlings and tubers are edible and the fronds
are widely used as roofing material. Leaves can be cut in strips and woven
into a variety of useful articles such as mats, boxes and toys. The thick
and sturdy mid-rib of the leaf is used as fence posts and the fiber inside
the trunks can be stripped, processed and used as bristles in brushes and
brooms.

Palmyra also has medicinal uses long exploited by locals and explored in the
Journal of Economic Botany. "The young plant is said to relieve biliousness,
dysentery, and gonorrhea. Young roots are diuretic and anthelmintic, and a
decoction is given in certain respiratory diseases. The ash of the spadix is
taken to relieve heartburn and enlarged spleen and liver. The bark
decoction, with salt, is used as a mouth wash, and charcoal made of the bark
serves as a dentifrice.

Sap from the flower stalk is prized as a tonic, diuretic, stimulant,
laxative and anti-phlegmatic and amebicide. Sugar made from this sap is said
to counteract poisoning, and it is prescribed in liver disorders. Candied,
it is a remedy for coughs and various pulmonary complaints. Fresh toddy,
heated to promote fermentation, is bandaged onto all kinds of ulcers. The
cabbage, leaf petioles and dried male flower spikes all have diuretic
activity. The pulp of the mature fruit relieves dermatitis."

Government spokesperson Das concurs: "Barring the few patches, and some
horticultural plots, the entire land is barren and not fit for agricultural
use." Only 345 acres are irrigated, he says.

*Land Value Disputed*

Locals disagree, pointing to irrigated patches and to stretches of cashew
nut and palmyra trees that protect against drought by deterring wind erosion
and retaining rainwater. They call their lands theri nilam -- a Tamil phrase
for the sweeping swathes of red sand dunes that can reach 40 feet high. Some
of the more prosperous farms are fenced off, with productive open and bore
wells. Others have coconut saplings, and drip irrigation. Cashew, palmyra,
acacia bushes and thorny scrub make up for the rest of the vegetation.
Vegetable crops, horticulture and palm products add to the agricultural
economy.

The palmyra or toddy palm tree is closely associated with the local economy,
culture and folk medicine. Members of the predominant Nadar caste are famed
palmyra workers, controlling the myriad businesses arising from this
versatile crop. While many well-to-do Nadars have moved into trading and
business, the community's poor live by the palmyra.

"Everybody finds something meaningful and remunerative in the palmyra," says
Poongani, a woman well into her 70s. As she speaks, her fingers deftly weave
dry fronds into a mat that will end up in a local market. Each mat takes
less than 20 minutes to complete, and will yield her three rupees ($0.08).
She doesn't own palm trees, she explains, but everyday she weaves 30 mats
she can earn enough to make ends meet.

While most residents say they will never sell their homeland to Tata, the
few willing to consider that option are balking at the price. Out of 14
people from the project area CorpWatch interviewed, the only one thinking
about selling called the quoted rates a "joke."

The steel giant is offering land owners roughly $1,250 per acre. Tata has
set aside two percent of the project cost ($12.5 million) for acquiring the
10,000 acres. The offer is generous, Tata says, since the officially
notified value for land in the project site "varies from Rs. 18,125 ($435)
to Rs. 116,000 ($2,900) per acre, with an average value of Rs. 40,315
($1,000)."

The government is actively promoting land sales. In August, it organized a
public hearing led by the Tamil Nadu Minister of Mines, K. Ponmudi. "The
Committee had open sessions in all six villages. In all villages, there was
overwhelming support for the project among landowners. Seventy to 75 percent
are in favor of the project," says Das.

This assessment of support, if accurate, has not translated into more land
for Tata. "In two and a half years, we have only acquired 17 acres," says
Tata's Asokan. "The government has told us that they will get land for us by
March-June 2008."

J. Saravanaraj owns a 22-acre farm in Thisayanvilai town that employs 210
people. He may spare 10 acres that are under cashew for Tata, but wants
$3,750 per acre. "It is false to say that these lands are empty. Even the 10
acres I'm willing to give has cashew stands. Each acre of cashew will yield
Rs. 10,000 - 15,000 ($250-$375) with zero maintenance," he explains.

On the remaining 12 acres, he has planted coconut, sapota, mango, lemon and
guava, and invested in two wells costing Rs. 300,000 each ($7,500). He has
also invested Rs. 1.5 million ($37,500) in a palm fiber mill and exports the
processed fiber used in brushes and brooms.

"We can't give up these lands. We may get compensation, but the workers
won't get anything, and some have worked with us for 20 years," Saravanaraj
points out.

*Cultural and Environmental Impact*

The indigenous people of the region also believe that few economic benefits
will flow to them and worry that Tata's operations will envelope homesteads,
schools, cemeteries, graves, farmlands and roads and entire villages.
"[Tata's] needs will wipe out our histories. What will I say where I'm from,
if my entire village -- where I was born and brought up -- is wiped out?"
asks S. Devadas, a landless farm laborer from Edachivilai, a hamlet in
Arasur 1 village in the project area.

They also fear that the mining will destroy their environment and health.
Ilmenite mining involves removal of vegetation and extraction of several
meters of soil. Besides the immediate implications of soil erosion because
of wind and rain, the large-scale deforestation could also induce local
climate changes.

Tata's Asokan counters that mine reclamation will actually improve local
hydrology and soil fertility. However, his presentation to CorpWatch failed
to identify and address several potential hazards including radiation.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency lists titanium as "Mineral ores
known to have TENORM [Technologically Enhanced Naturally Occurring
Radioactive] associated wastes." TENORM has natural radioactive content that
is increased by technological processing using acid leaching, solvent
extraction, electro or pyro of magnetic processing, or intensive use of
water.

The extracted sands are first concentrated to isolate the heavy minerals --
ilmenite, zircon, silmanite, monazite and rutile -- by washing the sands in
large quantities of water, and letting the heavy mineral content settle. The
various minerals are then separated using magnetic and electrical separation
processes. Waste, including radioactive minerals, is returned to the mining
site along with sand tailings and slime. Every 100 tons of heavy mineral
sand isolated from the theri sand yields about 53 tons of ilmenite and 5
tons of radioactive monazite, according to Tata Steel.

Nor did Asokan offer specifics about the complex variety of other
potentially toxic emissions generated during production. Tata is planning to
process the sands using a pollution-intensive method involving chlorine
that, according to the United Nations Environment Program, creates dioxin.
Listed under the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants,
dioxins are a potent carcinogen that bioaccumulates and magnifies up the
food chain to affect top predators such as birds of prey, large fish and
humans.

In addition to dioxin, the process also emits hydrogen chloride, chlorine,
acidic sludge, sulphur dioxide, carbon dioxide, heavy-metal laden solid
wastes, acidic organochlorine-contaminated effluent and particulate matter.
Aluminum, antimony, arsenic, lead and molybdenum are trace emissions from
TiO2 plants. Every ton of TiO2 processed through the chlorine method will
yield 2.4 tons of solid wastes, 90 kilograms of sulphur dioxide, and 3
kilograms of acidic and trace-metal-tainted effluents.

Other dangerous releases also cannot be ruled out. Titanium tetrachloride
reacts violently with water to release deadly hydrogen chloride fumes that
can hug the ground and spread over large areas, causing death and
destruction.

The biggest local concern, though, is water. Located in a rain shadow
region, the area receives sparse rainfall. Farmers, though, swear by the
Theri sands that "are like sponges. They store water during the rains, and
release it during dry seasons," says G. Sivaganesakumar, a farmer in
Naduvukurichi, a village that sits in the project area. "It doesn't matter
what the price of the land is. It doesn't matter whether Tata mines the land
or the government does. What matters is that if it is mined, the titanium
will disappear in 30 years. If not, the land will yield water forever. You
decide: Titanium or Water?"

*Selling Off the Future?*

Within that long-term context, locals see Tata's pledge of 1,000 direct, and
more than 3,000 indirect, jobs as part of a squeeze to get farmers out of
farming, without a clear roadmap for absorbing them into new industries. The
landless are even worse off since, as Secretary Das confirms, there is no
compensation package for them. "Landless people will get preference in
wage-earning jobs, in mine reclamation and revegetation," Das adds.

"We are being squeezed out from all sides," says Anandraj, who also runs a
wholesale vegetable store in Chennai, Tamil Nadu's state capital. "We're
farmers and traders. On the one hand, Tata is squeezing us out of farming.
To escape that if we go to the cities to set up shops, Reliance and Walmart
are there making life miserable for small traders."

Just in the last decade, more than 100,000 debt-ridden farmers have killed
themselves in some of the most prosperous agricultural areas of India. The
communities in Tata's path live in the shadow of that despair.
  *Trouble follows Tata
*
While this is Tata's first titanium operation, the company's operations
around India have a history of sparking opposition and violence (see Stolen
for Steel: Tata Takes Tribal Lands in India
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=13620). In January 2006, Orissa
state police gunned down 13 tribal people who were protesting the takeover
of land for a Tata Steel project in Kalinganagar.

And for the last two years, Singur -- a fertile farming economy about 25
miles from Calcutta in West Bengal -- has been a hotbed of violence. The
Communist Party (Marxist)-led state government has resorted to baton and
tear gas attacks, and harassment of those opposed to the takeover of land
for a Tata Motors' car project.

"We're illiterate," says K. Sakthivel, a landless laborer from Vemmankudi
village, less than 10 miles from the project site. "The land provides
dignified livelihoods for illiterate people. I don't understand Tata's
motive behind wanting everything. Why not do their business on some land and
leave some for us to survive? What use am I going to be for the Tatas? They
will want engineers. A few of us may get jobs as laborers. But what after
the Tatas leave, after the minerals are exhausted, after the land is dead?"

This is not the first time that the people of this part of Tamil Nadu have
faced mighty odds and fought back. In the 18th century, Veerapandiya
Kattabomman, a local chieftain, refused to cede land taxes to the British
East India Company. He was finally caught and hanged in 1799, but not before
the company suffered massive losses in a battle that sowed the seeds for the
independence struggle.

Again, "People are angry, very angry," says S. Anandraj, chairman of the
local self-government in Sathankulam, and a member of the All India Anna
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), the ruling party's political rival.

"If the government paid as much attention to agriculture as it did to
industry," says local farmer G. Sivaganesakumar. "This place would blossom."


But Tamil Nadu is faced with the threat that Tata could take its business
elsewhere. Tata Steel managing director B. Muthuraman has warned it that
Tata "will have alternative plans if things don't work out in Tamil Nadu."

Indeed, India has titanium-rich ilmenite deposits in the beaches of its west
coast, and the eastern seaboard states of Andhra Pradesh and Orissa, as well
as in Tamil Nadu.










-- 
Abhijit Minakshi
About my name: www.geocities.com/abhijit1303/aboutname.txt
 




==============================================================================
TOPIC: Can unhealhty people revive whole India and contribute effectively to 
the rise of a great nation?
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/03a7e33e2597395b?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Wed, Oct 31 2007 12:45 am 
From: "Ravi Kant Pathak"  


Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Vandemaatram!

I am reaching you again with a question: "Can unhealhty people revive whole
India and contribute effectively to the rise of a great nation?"

When I raise such question, I must admit, I am unhealhty. At the same time I
fully realize that I am on a great misison: Uday of Bharat (Rise of India).


"* It is impossible for unhealhty people to win swaraj [self-rule].
Therefore we should no longer be guilty of the neglect of the health of our
people"* - Mahatma Gandhi, 1940, Implication of constructive work.

... and we must not forget that *'morals are closely linked with health. A
perfectly moral person alone can achieve perfect health'*.

Through internet thousands of people joined BM and many other like minded
organization. However, most people, including me, I find are unhealthy;
physically as well as spiritually.  We have no moral right to join any such
organization of high ideals as BM, if we are not committed to its ideals and
works. The primary reason for a large number of lethargic human mass in BM
is their poor health. For instance, most people in the BM do not
maintain their body-discipline,  live self-indulged lifestyle and most
believe that purpose of their bodily existence is self-pleasure/comfort. We
find it uncomfortable to check our consumption habits and self-pride
attitudes. People with such a low consciousness possess no capacity to bring
large scale changes in the massive and diverse country like India. This mail
is not to dishearten a group or an individual but a humble reminder of the
duty towards yourself; Self-purification. How many of consciously strive to
overcome our own laziness and self-indulging tendencies and lust. I have not
only experienced such habit within me, but also experimented on them. At
many times, I have experinced a perfect health. and I am writing this based
on my experiences only. when BM was initiated We envisioned of only few
hundred whole hearted, selfless and disciplined soldiers in the misison.
Today we are a junk of lethargic intellectuals. I strongly believe only
merely through intellect one niether can achive a strong character nor can
become a compassionate human being. But through self-restrained living and
self-purification one can contribute efectively in every walk of life. BM
expect atleast this from you. If you finf youself unfit to be in this great
mission, you are humbly request to make yourself fit and contribute
effectively to the nation building.

Although I am not advocating any 'ism' or 'sect' or so called religion' in
worldly sense, I strongly recommend YOGA to be adopted by all well wisher of
humanity in genrla and India in particular. But This should not be the end,
rather it is a beginning of new emergence. We all have to emerge from our
embodied self to the Universal Self. and That is the path for India's rise.
We must dream to return our villages and make them a prefered place to live
in all respect.

How many of you made serious attempt to overcome self-indulging attitude and
contribute effectively in nation building? How many of you thought of
contribute someway or the other; inferiority, insecurity and self-pride are
killing Indian in every walk of life. Even in Mission like BM we are facing
such a problems. NO one is forcing you to be in BM, but if you are here
please maintian your dignity and do something. I seriously look forward to
clean up the organization,not by the use of functionary authority, which in
ignorance have been used in past for the same task, but simple moral force.
If your conscience are clear of an eligible BM member pleaase come forward
and contribute to the missionground work: Establishment of BM Centres on the
ground.  but remember, try hard to attain good health and to an extent
attain perfect health. THIS IS TIME FOR PRAYER AND SELF-REFLECTION!  jai
hind!
WITH TRUTH
RAVI
-
Join the second Indian freedom struggle: http://bharatudaymission.org/

Ravi Kant Pathak
Department of Civil and Structural Engineering
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Hung Hom, Hong Kong
phone: 852-34003961 (Office);
           852-27199005 (Residence)
           852-95712014 (if U dont find me at above numbers)
 



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