Fisherfolk oppose green corridor project
<http://newsite.thehindu.com/profile/author/T.-Nandakumar-576/>T. Nandakumar
<http://newsite.thehindu.com/profile/author/T.-Nandakumar-576/>
http://newsite.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/Fisherfolk-oppose-green-
corridor-project/article16397197.ece

A government proposal to relocate coastal communities has run into a wall
of protest by fisherfolk who feel that the project would deny them access
to the sea, deprive them of their livelihood and leave the coastal belt
open to encroachment.

To be funded by the Kerala Infrastructure Investment Fund Board, the Green
Corridor project involves the construction of a 15-m wide coastal road
linking fishing harbours, landing centres, tourist locations, and fishing
villages from Thiruvananthapuram to Manjeswaram along a distance of 522 km.
According to the draft report, a 35-m-wide green belt would be created
along the western side of the road to check coastal erosion.

The government has stated that the project estimated to cost Rs.7,881 crore
would protect the coastal areas from erosion during the monsoon and spur
the development of the coastal belt.
[image: Inline image 1]

But the proposal to relocate all the families living up to 50 m from the
coast has been met with stout opposition from the fishing community.

“We have come to know that about 20,000 families would be shifted to
apartment buildings 500 m away from the shoreline. This represents an
unscientific approach to relocation,” says T. Peter, secretary, National
Fishworkers Forum.

“Fishermen will be deprived of their livelihood if they are denied access
to the sea. Besides, most families would prefer independent houses to
apartments. But we were not consulted before the government decided to
formulate the project,” he said.

The NFF also fears that relocation of fishermen families would leave the
coast open for land grab and encroachment by tourist resorts and industries.

It wants the government to provide financial assistance up to Rs.10 lakh
for those families willing to relocate from erosion-prone areas of the
coast, while retaining ownership of the land, a proposal mooted in the LDF
manifesto.

“That way the number of houses requiring relocation would come down to
10,000, leading to a corresponding cut in the project estimate,” Mr. Peter
points out.

The NFF and the Kerala Swathantra Matsya Thozhilai Federation are
mobilizing the coastal communities for an agitation against the Green
Corridor project. They want the government to consult the stakeholder
communities before launching the project.

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