http://www.tehelka.com/story_main39.asp?filename=cr120708commerceoverthecommon.asp


*Commerce Over The Commons*

*The decision to lease 26 lakes in and around Bangalore to private operators
has provoked a flurry of protests, reports **SHRUTHI JAGANNATH *

THIRTY RUPEES to visit the Nagawara Lake in Bangalore, and no guarantee that
you will see a single bird. If disappointment wells up, wash it back with a
glass of something cold at the Café Coffee Day outlet, the star attraction
of the new concrete paving that rims the lake. And, under the shade of a
plastic tree that has sprouted nearby, you can pay to let your child play.
If even that isn't enough, a few rupees more can get you a ride on a water
scooter or a motorboat. Welcome to Lumbini Gardens, at what once was
Nagawara Lake.

For Bangalore's Lake Development Authority (LDA), this is only the first
step in its plans to similarly transform 25 other lakes in and around the
city. It has already leased out three — Agara Lake, Hebbal Lake and
Venkayanakere Lake — for an initial period of 15 years to private companies
such as Biota Natural Systems, East India Hotels (the parent company of the
Oberoi group) and ParC. The agreements, signed under the public-private
partnership (PPP) model, require the private entities to undertake desilting
operations, diversion of sewage water and other processes required for the
maintenance of the lakes. In return, the companies are allowed to set up
kiosks, jetties, play areas, gift shops and eateries, and to make
arrangements for water sports, boating, sport fishing etc. The LDA also
grants them the right to charge an entry fee.

The move has met with fierce opposition from the city's environmental and
citizens' groups. Says Leo Saldanha of Environment Support Group (ESG), an
NGO spearheading the protests, "We have Supreme Court guidelines which
unambiguously state that spaces belonging to the public should remain with
the public. Bangalore's lakes clearly fall within the definition of common
property, with the public having customary rights of use over them. The
leases granted to private companies are then directly in contravention of
the SC guidelines."

ESG has filed a public interest litigation this January, challenging the
validity of the leases. Their argument gains ground with a closer look at
the LDA itself. Formed in July 2002, the LDA is a registered society and not
a government agency, even though it was created following a government
order. An autonomous body for conserving natural and man-made lakes in
Karnataka, the LDA however has no jurisdiction to grant leases to private
operators.

YET ANOTHER issue that protestors have raised is the denial of ordinary
people's rights when public spaces are commercialised. "There is a certain
class privilege attached to the idea that only those who can pay can access
the lakes," says Rohan D'Souza, a campaigner with Hasiru Usiru, a citizens'
group involved with the campaign. "For years before the commercialisation of
Hebbal Lake, the local fishing communities fished there under licence from
the Fisheries Department. All that stands cancelled now — they are denied
access to lakes leased under the PPP model and their rights receive no
recognition at all." At the Nagawara Lake, fishing communities are allowed
access to demarcated areas of the lake from 3 to 7 am.

Livelihood fishing is bound to be threatened since commercial activity is
bound to destroy the ecology of the lakes. With this, the Karnataka State
Forest Department concurs. In a status report filed with the High Court of
Karnataka, the forest department has explicitly recommended that the lakes
be declared "nature or bird preserves". Acknowledging the dependence of
fishing communities and others on the lakes, the report argues for all
yet-tobe- developed lakes to be preserved as "shining examples of
ecologically wise integration of civic interest and biodiversity". The
report also takes a clear stand against commercial activities at such
locations, recommending against the introduction of food courts, water sport
facilities and other structural innovations, including artificial lighting.
It, however, suggests charging a minimal entry fee towards meeting costs of
maintenance.

At this point of time, the LDA is far from strapped for cash. In 1998, the
state government had applied for and obtained grants from the Norwegian
government to restore the city's lakes. Under this programme, weeds were
removed and the lakes were desilted and cleaned at huge costs. It took Rs
2.7 crore to restore Hebbal Lake, the Nagawara Lake cost Rs 5.19 crore while
the Venkayanakere Lake was restored at a cost of Rs 2.55 crore. And yet the
lake privatisation programme is presented as one that is essential if the
lakes are to be managed and maintained.

Ask the CEO of the LDA, CS Vedant, about the organisation's financial
situation and he clarifies, "Under the National Lake Conservation Programme,
the project proposals of the LDA are appraised and funds are granted by the
Central and state governments upon approval. So far, the LDA has received Rs
52 crore for the revival and rejuvenation of 14 lakes." Clearly money is not
the reason for the lakes being leased out. Says Vedant, "The LDA does not
have adequate staff to manage the lakes. Also, it is government policy not
to create too many permanent jobs, as it would increase its expenditure.
Hence, we have to find other means to get things done. The leases are one
such way."

There are problems with this argument, though. The private operators chosen
have no expertise in lake management at all. As D'Souza points out, Lumbini
Gardens, the leasee of Nagawara Lake, is a real estate group while the East
India Hotels group is in the hospitality industry. Their incompetence in
lake conservation is already on display. At Hebbal Lake, the dredging and
removal of vegetation has permanently destroyed the wildlife habitat — a
fact that is confirmed by the Forest Department in their June 2008 status
report. Officials from Lumbini Gardens were not available for comment, while
LDA CEO Vedant unceremoniously called the interview to a halt when
questioned on the report.

Apart from inappropriate selection of private operators, there are more
questions that remain to be asked. Has the LDA decision to privatise
Bangalore's lakes been taken in coordination with government agencies?
Besides the Forest Department's report condemning the proposal, the
Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) has identified the
Nagawara and the Venkayanakere lakes as sources of potable water for the
city. To this end, the BWSSB is considering removing food courts from these
sites, and putting a stop to boating activities there, so as to prevent
pollution.

ESG has filed a Public Interest Litigation in the Karnataka High Court
challenging the leasing of the lakes to private operators, which is now
being heard. The question of privatising Bangalore's lakes is only one part
of a larger debate about rights to common property resources. In 2002, the
Karnataka Industrial Areas Development Board forcibly acquired land from
farmers around the Bellandur Lake in Bangalore to hand over to Infosys. What
was clearly private land was moved into the public resource category in
order to be leased out to a private corporation. What really is different in
the LDA's decision to now lease entire lakes to private operators? Not very
much, it would appear. •

 *From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 27, Dated July 12, 2008*

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