Watching plumes of smoke gushing out of Japan’s nuclear power plants
on the TV screen in Amjad Bhai’s home in the village of Sakari Nate in
Ratnagiri District of Maharashtra, just across the creek from the
proposed 10,000 megawatt Jaitapur Nuclear Power Plant, was an
unnerving experience for Com. Khagen Das (MP) and myself.  We expected
to see fear written on the faces of our host, his family members and
other ‘affected’ people but all we saw was determination.  A
determination that was getting strengthened by the minute.  A
determination to protect their lives and livelihoods and oppose the
Power Plant to their last breath.

Com. Khagen Das and I were visiting the area as a 2 Member CPI(M)
delegation.  We were accompanied by State Sectt. Members, Kiran Moghe
and Ajit Abhayankar and also activists, Advait Pednekar and Mangesh
Chauhan.  Another comrade, Dr. Vivek Monteiro, was to have been with
us but he had been served an order by the Dsst. Collector by sms,
informing him that his presence in the district had been banned for a
week.  This was not unusual.  The district administration had, a week
ago, disallowed retd. Judges of the Supreme Court and High Court from
entering the area and listening to the people.

We were met at Ratnagiri station by a large police contingent and were
informed that no gathering of more than 5 people was permitted in the
affected area and that, not only would 2 policemen accompany us
throughout our visit but police and administrative officers would be
keeping a close watch on our movements to ensure that the Prohibitory
Orders were complied with!

We went first to the largest ‘affected’  village – Mithgavane – and
stopped at the home of Dr. Milind Desai, a much respected person who
is also the President of the local temple committee.  He had been
released on personal bond from jail a few days previous to our visit.
Several farmers from the village and also from another ‘affected’
village, Madban, had come to his house to meet us.  We were also
joined by Shri Ibrahim Kazi, a very respected Congressman of the area.
We asked Dr.  Desai about his arrest and he told us that the Chief
Minister, Prithiviraj Chauhan, had arrived in the area on the 26th
February and addressed a public meeting at the site of the proposed
power plant.  More than 5000 people – more than half of whom were
women – walked to the meeting from their villages in the burning sun.
All of them wore black badges in protest against the Plant.  They
gathered at the meeting place.  The Sub-Divisional Officer himself
invited Dr. Desai to speak on behalf of the villages.  He went to the
mike and made a very short speech:  I have come as the son of a
farmer, not as a doctor.  The ‘trailer’ that you are showing us is so
frightening that we dread to think of what the actual ‘picture’ will
be like.  You are telling us that this project costing at least 1 lakh
crores is the biggest of its kind in the world and you are throwing 15
crores of compensation money in our faces.  You should be ashamed of
yourselves because you are doing all this without asking us in the
first place and now against our will.  I know that because of what I
am saying, I will definitely be arrested in a few days but that is not
going to deter me.  Jai Bharat, Jai Maharashtra!

And, sure enough, more than 50 policemen surrounded his home in the
middle of the night of the 27th/28th and took him away to a filthy
lock-up where he was kept for several days before being sent to jail.
He was not alone.  17 other persons of the area were also arrested and
kept in similar conditions before they were released on personal bonds
of 25,000/-.  All of them were charged, among other things, under Sec.
307 (attempt to murder) but the person they were accused of attacking
was never named.  Altogether 250 identical notices have been served
now.  One of the recipients, 70 year old Pandurang Sadu Bange of Nival
village  had a heart attack on receipt of the notice and died.  He is
considered the second ‘martyr’ of the movement.
The first ‘martyr’ is the young Irfan Kazi, nephew of Ibrahim Kazi.
He was home for a short holiday from Dubai and was returning home on
his motorbike after dropping his children at school.  At 10.00 a.m. on
the 18th December, a car hired by the local police, rammed into him.
He was badly injured and died soon after at the PHC.  The car was
being driven by a policeman who was immediately removed from the area
and the actual driver was arrested by the police and taken to the PHC
where a huge crowd had collected.  The driver was then released into
this crowd by the police.  He was saved from lynching by local people
whom the police know very well.  The enraged people who were gathered
there were convinced that Irfan had been deliberately targeted by the
police and they engaged in some stone-throwing etc. but they were soon
dispersed.  Dr. Desai and others arrested along with him, including
those who had saved the life of the driver, have all been charged as
being involved in the violence of that day.  It is just a co-incidence
that they were arrested immediately after the CM’s public meeting
where they had all demonstrated their intense opposition to the power
plant.

We were given one example after another to demonstrate the total
opposition of the ‘affected’ people to the project:
Only 112 persons (out of 2000 ) who owned only 2% of the total land in
Mithgavane have accepted compensation from the State Govt.  None of
them resides in the area.  Even after Minister Narayan Rane announced
an enhanced compensation of 10 lakh rupees per acre, not a single
person has come forward to accept it.
In 2010, all the Sarpanches and Gram Panchayat members of the 5
‘affected’ villages resigned their posts after all 5 Gram Sabhas had
passed unanimous resolutions opposing the project.  Smt. Manda
Wadekar, a Gram Panchayat member of Madban told us that she was the
first to resign and then all others followed suit.
On 22 December, Akha Teej, a public hearing was held by the
Maharashtra Pollution Board which had done a survey in the area.
Against the norms, only one English copy of their survey report was
made available to one Panchayat.  Despite this and the fact that the
day chosen was considered the most auspicious in the year and there
were many weddings, between 800 – 1000 people attended and all of them
opposed the project.
In December, 2010, all the 70 primary and secondary schools in the
area observed a total strike by the students.
The entire area boycotted all Govt. celebrations of 26th January
saying that when there was no democracy in the area why should they
celebrate Republic Day.

The feelings of those who we met in Dr. Desai’s house were echoed even
more vehemently by the fisherfolk from Sakhari Nate that we met.  They
included many women, one of whom was wearing a burkha.  The entire
fishing population of more than 7000 is Muslim.  These women along
with many others from their village had already faced police lathis
and teargas when they were walking to a protest meeting held in the
Bhagwati temple at Madban a few months ago.  They told us in no
uncertain terms that they were willing to face bullets.  Zubeida,
Shahnaz, Zuleikha, Hajra, Barkat, Fatima, Rukhsana – all of them are
involved in the fishing industry.  They dry fish and they also sell
fish house-to-house in Rajgadh and other places several kilometers
from their homes.  It is very hard work but they said that even if
they earned 20/- a day from their ‘honest labour’ they preferred that
to the crores that the Govt. was talking about.  Majid Gowalkar told
us  - I employ 11 people.  The Govt. says that they will give us jobs
after the project comes.  But we are already giving more than 10,000
people from outside work at 250-300 rupees a day.  And we are feeding
our own families.  So why should we accept ruination and then beg for
jobs that we will never get.

It is important to understand the total opposition to the project.
People are not opposed to development.  They said – there is not a
single college or hospital in this area.  We would contribute to the
Govt. building colleges, universities and hospitals but there is no
talk of these things.  They are opposed to a project that they know,
despite all the lies and prevarications that the Govt. is resorting
to, will displace them and destroy their livelihoods.  They are
extremely well informed.  They know all about the report submitted by
the NEERI which has relied only on secondary date;  which has
falsified facts about the fisherfolk;  which has not studied the
impact on marine fauna and flora;  which has not done a cost-benefit
analysis.  They know that the environment clearance given by Shri
Jairam Ramesh mentions that the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board’s own
study has not even started.  They know that the water to cool the
plant is going to be pumped out of the estuary bordering their village
where all the fish and prawns of the waters around use to spawn.  They
know that the 6 lakh litres of water per second that will be pumped
out will be full of fish eggs and babies and that this water will come
back into the sea, hot and polluted.  The farmers know that their
delicate crops of Alfonso mango and cashew will be ruined by the
pollution that the plant will bring.  Local fishermen and farmers have
visited other sites and have seen for themselves what the Govt. means
by ‘resettlement and rehabilitation’ and they want none of it.
The ‘affected’ areas that we visited are extremely prosperous.  The
farmers and fisherfolk produce the best mangoes and also the best fish
and sea food in the region.  They are responsible for exports running
into crores every year.  They employ more than 12,000 migrant workers
all year round and their villages exude prosperity and hard work.  The
landscape around is lush and the waters sparkle.  The attachment of
the people to their land and to their professions is extremely strong
and it is this that explains their determined resistance and
willingness to sacrifice.  They have made an open offer to the State
Govt. to hold a referendum in the area – as was done in the area of
the proposed Reliance SEZ.  The Govt has responded with repression,
arrests, unaffordable bail bonds, threats and externment orders that
are being processed.  To please M. Sarkozy during his visit to India,
it has gone to the extent of transferring the land of farmers who have
NOT accepted compensation to the NPCIL.


After hearing the people of the area and in the light of many facts of
the case, including the fact that this French technology is so far
completely untested, our delegation expressed its full support to them
and to their three demands –  1) Cancel the Jaitapur Nuclear Project,
2) Return the lands which have been forcibly acquired and 3) Withdraw
all police cases filed against the movement activists and also the ban
orders and create a suitable environment for dialogue.

Subhashini Ali


http://www.facebook.com/notes/kamayani-bali-mahabal/cpim-delegation-visits-jaitapur-nuclear-power-plant-affected-people-subhashini-a/10150458155080179

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