BHUBASNEWAR, India, 2010 Feb 23 (IPS) - When 5,000 indigenous Dongria Kondhs
trekked Sunday to Niyam Dongar hill, the abode of their presiding deity
Niyam Raja, and designated it as inviolate, it meant they were stepping up
their resistance to a controversial alumina refinery and bauxite mine
project here.


They carried out religious ritals to Niyam Raja - the sacred dispenser of
law, and then put up a totem pole in the area located in Niyamgiri hills in
their homeland Lanjigarh, a bauxite-rich hilly area in Kalahandi of Orissa
state in eastern India. This was the latest act of defiance here against the
backdrop of unrest since 1997 among communities, environmental and rights
activists over the 2.13 billon U.S. dollar mining project by Vedanta
Aluminium Ltd, the Indian arm of London-based Vedanta Resources Plc.






The alumina refinery, capable of producing one million tonnes of alumina
from bauxite per annum, has been operating for over a year now at the
foothills of Niyamgiri. Alumina is used in the production of aluminium
metal. Since 2007, Vedanta has been seeking clearance for a six-fold
expansion of its refinery and 721-hectare bauxite mining project. The
bauxite project however has been stalled by a forest law. The mining
operations would affect some 8,000 Dongria, Kutia and Jharania Kondh in 112
tribal and dalit villages in Kalahandi and adjacent Rayagada district, two
of the most underdeveloped areas in Orissa.



For the forest-dwelling locals, Vedanta's mining project would result in the
demolition of the Dongria's centuries-old sacred grove on Niyamgiri,
threatening their ancient way of life, right to water, food, livelihood and
cultural identity.



"These villages never had basic amenities like medical facilities, drinking
water and properly functioning schools. The mining project will now take
away even the sources of livelihood from them," explained Dadhi Pusika,
leader of Niyamgiri Surakhya Samity (Nayamgiri Protection Committee) that
was formed by members of affected villages.


"Life is so hard. Old women and children are dying. They are living like
dogs," said 45-year-old Ladha Sikaka of Lakpaddar village, referring to the
impact of the alumna refinery.

Six people from Rengopalli and villages near the refinery and its huge red
mud pond - a receptacle of wastewater that is a mix of highly toxic alkaline
chemicals and heavy metals - have died over the past year from undiagnosed
respiratory ailments.


  <http://www.jharkhand.org.in/adivasi>



The Orissa State Pollution Control Board has issued several warnings to
Vedanta since its refinery trial started in 2006, calling its attention to
the shoddy protective lining of the red mud pond that leeches wastewater
into Vamsadhara river flowing next to it. Villagers use that water for
drinking.



Skin rashes and sores are common among residents. Some 40,000 truckloads of
bauxite are transported to the refinery from outside Orissa per year,
creating colossal air pollution from dirt roads, says Bhubaneswar-based
environmentalist Biswajit Mohanty.



"If the mountain remains, our children remain, rains come, winter comes, the
wind blows - the mountain will bring all the water, crops will grow. If they
take away the rocks, water will dry, we will die," said Ladha. "The mountain
is our soul, we will lose our soul."



"We cannot allow mining even if we are beheaded," he added.



The Dongria's Sunday protest comes on the heels of Amnesty International's
recent report on the Vedanta project, called 'Don't Mine Us Out of
Existence'. The report alleges that 12 pollution-affected villages have
never received direct information on the refinery.



Green activists say the gravest concern pertains to water. Hilltop mining
will dry up perennial water sources, while possible poor management of
refinery wastewater could degrade surface water and pollute groundwater too.
There is also concern about the huge quantities of water that the expanded
refinery will consume daily.



An expansion of the current Vedanta project would mean its bauxite
requirement would jump from three to 18 million tonnes per annum, resulting
in not just one but possibly several open-cast mines on Niyamgiri.



But Vedanta clarifies that its mineralisation area of three million tonne
per annum is mere 3.5 percent of 250 square-kilometre hill range, and that
its 30-metre deep excavations would not disturb the water table 78 metres
below ground level.



Three rivers, Vamsadhara, Sakota and Nagavalli, flow four, 7.5 and 13 km
respectively from the mine's buffer zone, as do perennial streams. The
larger rivers provide drinking water and irrigation to hundreds of thousands
in Kalahandi, Rayagada and the neighbouring state of Andhra Pradesh.
Watchdog groups point out that excavation will destroy the hills' water
recharging capacity because the porousness of the bauxite layer increases
water retention. This will eventually kill the rivers, make the habitat
drier and affect agriculture, wild vegetation and pasture, they add.



Pavan Kaushik, head of corporate communications for Vedanta group, countered
this in earlier letter to journalists. "Bauxite extraction... removes a hard
rocky layer called laterite which will allow rain water to percolate deep...
increasing afforestation post-mining."



Flash floods, which are common here, will be aggravated by hilltop
deforestation. A flash flood in Vamsadhara can breach the red mud pond,
causing disastrous wastewater spills into the river.



Three-quarters of the targeted hill have thick forests. The 300 species of
plants in them include 50 species of medicinal plants and trees, six of
which are in the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of
threatened species. An elephant reserve, the forests are home to tigers,
leopards, barking deer.



A tribal woman from Sindhabahal said, "The forest gives leaves, bamboo,
roots, medicinal herbs, fruits, juice from the giant palm trees (to make
liquor). These we sell or use for food. Hill slopes, known as 'dongar', are
our cultivation fields."



Local will have nothing less than the cancellation of Vedanta's Niyamgiri
mining lease.



They want the India Forest Rights Act of 2006, which gives forest-dwelling
communities rights to land and other resources, implemented. They have
demanded an irrigation dam from perennial hill streams, schools in each and
one hospital for every 10 large villages, assured daily wage work under
government schemes and support prices for forest products.



"The government is largely satisfied with its (Vedanta) pollution control
measures at this time," said a senior official of the Orissa government,
Vedanta's stake-holding partner, who spoke to IPS on condition of anonymity
because "Vedanta has become a political issue".



But "Vedanta's corporate social responsibility however needs to shape up,"
he underscored.



In an email reply to IPS, Mukesh Kumar, Vedanta's chief operating officer at
Lanjigarh, says that his company believes in sustainable development. "It is
providing livelihood to tribal people through vegetable cultivation,
pisciculture, poultry and goatery. Nutrition to children, health check-ups
and malaria control are other programmes. Direct and indirect employment has
been given to 20,000 people while 13 villages now have electricity," he
added.



Meantime, the London-listed mining major Vedanta Resources Plc has been
seeing international investors sell their stakes in it due to ethical
concerns over the Orissa project. Britain's Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust
is the latest to leave, after the Church of England, the Norwegian
government and Martin Currie Investment Management.



Said woman tribal leader Kulunji Sikhola: "It is our land; we will sit - the
Dongria people - and decide directly".

*TerraViva, a UN journal / ipsterraviva.net/UN/currentNew.aspx?new=7210*

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