http://bharatmukti.blogspot.com/2018/08/eco-hostile-resolution-on-goa-mining.html

The resolution taken unanimously passed by Goa Legislative Assembly on August 
03, 2018 strongly recommending re-starting of mining in Goa is completely 
eco-hostile act on behalf of all elective representatives in House. However 
this is no shocker. Mining companies of Goa are known to be funding State and 
National Political Parties both ruling and opposition, their MLAs are therefore 
obliged to push ahead the agenda of the mining corporate. Plus several MLAs of 
Goa are direct and indirect beneficiaries of mining industry with open and 
covert business links.

Curtorim MLA Reginald Lorenco who had raised public hopes with some dissent to 
mining, gave in. Cortalim MLA Alina Saldanha who is amongst the most sensitive 
and skilled having worked with late Mathany Saldanha and functioned as Goa’s 
Minister for Environment and Forest has betrayed for trees has no votes. Tribal 
Affairs Minister and Priol MLA Govind Gawde did not bother to have deeper look 
at the tribal communities’ expression of grievances arising from ecological 
damage caused by mining industry in Sonshi and Colomba. Their votes signified 
their co-option to the exploitative system in place.

The resolution to re-start mining in Goa completely exclude any mention to the 
ecological damage that mining has already caused: amount of water pumped out 
daily depleting ground water table, amount of forest land diverted for mining 
purpose, amount of trees cut down or buried alive under mining dumps, the 
intensity of pollution caused to the paddy fields and rivers.

On the contrary we have witnessed highly objectionable comments from the Chief 
Minister Manohar Parrikar who is also Goa’s environment Minister “Just on 
ground of environmental damage, is it right to stop mining activity?” Goa’s 
environment Minister has a mindset that is in needs of immediate correction. 
Can economy flourish by damaging environment? The very first meeting of the Goa 
State Pollution Control Board (GSPCB) minutes records that mining is biggest 
environmental pollution in Goa and barges transporting iron ore causes 
environmental pollution to Goa’s rivers, and massive public awareness is the 
need of the hour. When mining has caused such a high level of damage to Goa is 
it not the duty of the State government to stop mining forever and move people 
away from dependency on mining?

A month ago Indian Government’s Niti Ayog published study that warned of 
increasing shortage of fresh water in India. All water pumped out to extract 
ore in Goa is fresh water. Do any of the MLAs in Goa Legislative Assembly has 
data on how much ground water is pumped out from the legal and illegal mining 
pits in Goa ever since mechanization of mining in the decade of 1970s? Do they 
have information as to how many water bodies like wells in Sirgao has gone dry 
because of pumping out of ground water from mining pits? Do they have any data 
on how much of agriculture has been damaged due to flow of mining silt into 
paddy fields in Sattari, Bicholim, Ponda, Sanguem and Darbandora Talukas? How 
much unemployment and food insecurity has this created since 1970? It appears 
from the resolution that MLAs are only elected representatives lack moral 
courage and vulnerable to swings of cash and bullying. 

Latest advertisements in Delhi Print media claim that mining in Goa is 
sustainable and eco-friendly. The extracted ore has reached shores of China, 
Japan, Pakistan and other countries as per records published by Goa Mineral Ore 
Exporters Association and Goa’s ore is sustaining these foreign countries. From 
1945 Goa’s ore export has contributed immensely in resurrecting Japanese 
economy shattered by nuclear bombings. From 2000 Goa’s major share of exports 
went of China. Goa’s exports sustained Japanese and Chinese economies. How 
mining has sustained Goa’s ecology? 

In what way Goa’s mining is eco-friendly? Isn’t it repackaging of mineral 
farming concept? On the contrary very first minutes of GSPCB proves that mining 
is an eco-hostile industry causing irreversible damage to Forest, Agriculture, 
Horticulture and Rivers.

Former Chief Minister Pratapsingh Rane, Poriem MLA is worst of all for his 
claims of not being aware of ecological damage due to mining. He must visit 
Pissurlem, Sirgao, Cavrem, Bicholim, Lamgao, Colomba, Advalpal, Honda, Sonshi 
and meet people who are staying and are at the receiving end of the mining 
industry.

The resolution to re-start mining by modifying Central Government mining laws 
is eco-hostile decision that will inevitably lead to Goa’s ecocide.

Sebastiao Rodrigues

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