http://scroll.in/article/734792/please-help-me-get-my-passport-back-too-anti-nuclear-protestor-pleads-with-sushma-swaraj

POLITICAL CONTROVERSY
'Please help me get my passport back too,' anti-nuclear protestor
pleads with Sushma Swaraj
SP Udayakumar says he needs to travel abroad to fulfill academic
obligations and earn a living.
R Ramasubramanian  · Today · 09:05 am

Days after a British newspaper reported that Sushma Swaraj helped
fugitive businessmen Lalit Modi obtain UK travel documents after his
Indian passport was impounded, anti-nuclear protestor SP Udayakumar
has written to the external affairs minister asking for similar
“humanitarian help”.

In the message, a copy of which has been uploaded on his Facebook
page, Udayakumar pleaded with the minister to help him and hundreds of
others involved in the protests against the Koodunkulam nuclear plant
in Tamil Nadu to recover their passports. The documents were revoked
after “false and fabricated charges” were clamped on them by the
police, he claimed.

A great many of the protestors have been charged with sedition and
waging war against India.

Since 2011, Udayakumar, the coordinator of an organisation called the
Peoples’ Movement against Nuclear Energy , has been spearheading
protests against the Rs.15,000 crore  Koodankulam nuclear plant being
built in Tirunelveli with Russian assistance. They claimed that the
plant was unsafe and would destroy the livelihoods of the area's
fishermen.

Contentious history

The Jayalalithaa government had stopped the construction of the plant
in September 2011 but resumed activity in March 2012. The first unit
of the Koodunkulam nuclear plant attained its criticality last year.
However, the cases filed against Udayakumar and hundreds of villagers
were not lifted. Udayakumar, who returned from the US to India to
participate in the protests, has paid a heavy price for his
involvement, as have nearly 500 other participants.

Udayakumar  told Scroll.in that when a person from six villages in the
area arrive at the Tiruvananthapuram airport, an hour’s drive from
Koodankulam, "the immigration authorities just inform them that due to
filing of cases against them, their passports were impounded".

The villagers are always given the runaround when they try to get
additional information, he said. "They have to run from pillar to
post," he said. "If they go to the Koodankulam police station the
Station Officer will say that they have nothing to do with the matter
and direct them to the district Superintendent of Police ’s office and
the story is the same there too."

In addition to nearly 500 youths having their passports impounded, new
applicants are denied documents because the police refuse to give them
security clearance, claiming that they have cases against them, said
Udayakumar. Many of these youth were employed in the merchant navy, so
the revocation of their passports has rendered them jobless.

Udayakumar, who has a PhD in political science from the University of
Hawaii in the US, said that he is required to travel abroad to fulfill
academic obligations. Besides, he earns his living through teaching
stints in foreign universities.  "I told the minister that since I
have to support my aged parents, wife and two children on my earnings
I have to travel abroad for my academic activities," he said.

Inconsistent logic

He said that his letter tells Sushma Swaraj that "she cannot have a
partial humanitarian consideration". He explained, "She has to apply
the logic uniformly. More over neither I nor hundreds of youths of my
area were ever involved  in looting the country’s economic wealth."

In an order in 2013, the Supreme Court, while giving a go-ahead for
the nuclear plant, directed the Tamil Nadu government to seriously
consider the withdrawal of cases against the protestors.  “This was a
peaceful struggle and you cannot find a peaceful struggle like this
anywhere in the world," said Poovulugu Sundararajan, who is among the
people who have petitioned the Supreme Court against the commissioning
of the Koodankulam plant. "But the Tamil Nadu government did not
budge. Today, there  are 8,956 sedition cases and over 13,000 cases on
waging war against India still pending in the Koodunkulam police
station against hundreds of locals"

.For his part, Udayakumar said that he plans to move the Madras High
Court to have his travel ban lifted.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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