No one's talking about this incident these days. Even when the news
broke in January there were not more than a few scattered reports in
the Indian press.

Anyone know what's happening?

Cheeni

http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=13620

Stolen for Steel: Tata Takes Tribal Lands in India
by Nityanand Jayaraman, Special to CorpWatch
May 24th, 2006

cartoon by Khalil Bendib

Jug-ger-naut n [Hindi Jagannath, lit., lord of the world, title of
Vishnu] 1: a massive inexorable force or object that crushes whatever
is in its path.
-Webster's Dictionary

Every year the festival of the Lord Jagannath swells the beach town of
Puri, about 300 miles west of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta). The climax
is a procession where hundreds of men pull giant statues of Hindu gods
mounted on three 45-foot chariots through the streets. Once started,
the momentum of their 16 enormous wheels makes the chariots difficult
to stop. Orissa's chief minister, UK-born Naveen Patnaik is an ardent
devotee of Lord Jagannath, and a passionate advocate of free-market
industrialization.

On New Year's Eve, he visited a temple in the eastern Indian state of
Orissa, and prayed that nothing should bar the way of a different
juggernaut: the state's industrialization.

Barely two days later, an agitated band of tribal villagers did just
that. Hundreds of Ho men, women, and children from the Kalinganagar
Industrial Estate about 100 miles from Puri arrived at the site of
Tata Steel's proposed 6 million ton a year steel plant. They demanded
that work stop until those already evicted by this and other projects
in the area were adequately rehabilitated. Police retribution was
swift and bloody: 37 injured and 13 dead, including 8 men, 3 women one
13-year old boy – all tribal – and one policeman.

Condemned as one of post-independence India's worst incidents of state
excess against indigenous peoples, the events of January 2 also
trashed the image of Tata Steel and threatened its plans to help boost
India's projected annual steel consumption of 100 million tons by
2020. Tata Steel spokesperson Sanjay Choudhry downplayed violence as
"A stray incident [that] should not derail a good thing."

That "good thing," according to Choudhry, is not only the Orissa
plant, but India's industrialization. With a 6.8 percent growth rate
over 10 years, the Indian economy has posted impressive GDP expansion.
GDP growth during 2003-2005 has hovered between 7 and 8 percent,
thanks to industrial investments and increased manufacturing activity.

However, India's claim to being the 4th largest economy is dulled by
its low rank – around 127 of 177 countries – in the Human Development
Index. The 53rd round of the National Sample Survey recently reported
that the percentage of India's rural poor increased from 35 percent in
1991 to 38.5 in 1997. While there is consensus regarding India's poor
performance in social and economic development indices, many,
particularly those who work among the poor, are opposed to the
government's aggressive push to industrialize, while agriculture – the
largest rural employer – is neglected.

Tata Steel, one of the country's largest firms has been in the
forefront of India's industrialization and an engine of growth. It is
part of Tata Group, a prestigious, family-owned Indian multinational
with 2005 revenues of $17.8 billion, the equivalent of about 2.8 per
cent of India's GDP. The company's website claims that the Tata Group
employs about 215,000 people, operates in 40 countries, and markets to
140 nations. About 66 percent of its equity is held by two family-run
philanthropic trusts. One of them, the Dorabji Tata Trust is the
largest grantmaker to NGOs in the country, surpassing even the
mega-funder Ford Foundation. Ratan Tata, the chair of Tata Sons – the
holding company – sits on the Ford Foundation's board.

But those struggling for tribal rights in Kalinganagar and elsewhere
remain unimpressed by the company's size or philanthropic image.
"Tatas are responsible for the slaughter of the Adivasis [indigenous
people] in Kalinganagar. They knew the situation was tense and still
insisted on going ahead with the construction using police force,"
says Rajinder Sarangi, an activist with the indigenous people's
movement for land-rights in the Kalinganagar area.

Sarangi is quick to point out that the movement became an anti-Tata
fight only after October 2004, when it became clear to local villagers
that the government and industries were reneging on promises to
rehabilitate displaced families. "The fight was against any take-over
of land, not against any one company," he says. "But Tata's sought to
overcome people's will with police force."

Within 24 hours of the killings, tribal youth armed with bows and
arrows had blocked off the Daitari-Paradip Expressway used by trucks
to transport iron ore and coal, and processed metals from local mines
and Kalingangar industries to the port town of Paradip. Villagers took
an oath over the cremation pyres of their martyrs to "not yield an
inch of land to industries," and to continue the blockade until their
demands were met: an end to displacement, punishment of the guilty,
compensation for the dead and injured, and rehabilitation of those
already displaced.

The government had imposed an April 20 deadline for ending the
blockade. "But it will be difficult, very difficult to break the
movement," says Sudhir Patnaik an activist and editor of Oriya
fortnightly Samadrishti,. Well-organized tribal people are maintaining
a round-the-clock vigil on their rock and log barricades, says
Patnaik, and hundreds more can pour in at the first sign of trouble.

Wise to the World

Not so long ago, the gently rolling lands where the steel plant is
planned had thick stands of forest interspersed with marginal
farmland. When big industry first came in the early 1990s, it was
welcomed. But soon the cultural, environmental, and economic costs
became apparent. Stone quarries have eaten into hillocks, replaced
forests, and devastated what little agriculture there was. Families
that had lived for generations in a village were asked for deeds
establishing their legal claims. "Those without title deeds were
forgotten. More than 500 families have just vanished without a trace.
They are probably in cities pulling rickshaws or living in the
margins," says Patnaik.

The Ho joined the large ranks of India's indigenous and other
marginalized peoples pushed aside in the name of economic growth.
Though tribal people comprise only 8 percent of the population, they
constitute at least 40 percent of those ousted from their homes to
make way for industries, mines, and dams. Another 20 percent are
dalits or "untouchables" occupying the lowest rung of the Hindu caste
hierarchy.

The Ho have a history of resistance and remember with pride that in
1821, their warriors had successfully beaten back the British. Their
October 2004 declaration not to yield more land to industries
continued that legacy. Several times in subsequent months, local
villagers collectively thwarted eviction attempts. In May 2005,
Kalinganagar villagers braved a baton attack by the police and blocked
the construction of a boundary wall by Maharashtra Seamless, another
steel company that has been allotted land in Kalinganagar Industrial
Estate. Before fleeing into surrounding forests, they knocked the
teeth out of the local administrator who ordered the baton charge.

Tata Steel entered the fray in 2004 after the government handed it
more than 2000 acres of "disputed" land for a steel plant. "The
government said they will take care of everything. We were to pay [the
Government] 335,000 rupees ($7,600) per acre, and they would do the
rehabilitation," says Choudhry. "The problem that the people have is
largely with the government. They are okay with us. Negotiations have
been ongoing on the matter of the rehabilitation package. We got a
sense that most people are willing and will take the package."

But local tribal groups distrusted not only the government, but Tata
as well. As recently as November 30, 2005, Visthapan Virodhi Jan Manch
(People's Forum Against Displacement) issued an ultimatum that the
Tata Steel and Maharashtra Seamless projects would not be allowed to
proceed until the issue of rehabilitation was settled.

"If they're a tribal friendly company, why should they come here
despite knowing that the locals didn't want to yield any more land,"
asks Sarangi. According to him, Tata Steel had three meetings with the
chief minister on December 26, 27, and 29. After the January 2 deaths,
legislators sought details of these meetings to no avail. "Even these
questions that were raised in the State Assembly have not been
answered," said Sangri.

Tata turns the blame squarely on the government. "The government had
told us that work should commence and directed us to build the
boundary wall. They were not expecting major trouble. Some cops were
there," Choudhry said.

In fact, some 300 armed riot police had been deployed, with another
platoon ready to protect the top government brass present to oversee
the boundary wall construction.

The tribals also came prepared for both negotiations and conflict; the
men carried traditional bows and arrows, and staves. When the meeting
broke down and the restive crowd moved in to prevent the construction,
police opened fire with rubber bullets and lobbed teargas shells. In
the melee, one policeman was hacked to death.

"After this, the men in uniform and gears ran amok, the officials
present doing nothing to restrain them. They were baying for blood,
seeking revenge, using the death of a colleague as an alibi. The
people, frightened out of their wits, ran, as the police shot
unrestrainedly from behind," according to a fact-finding report by the
People's Union of Civil Liberties (Orissa). Five corpses returned
after post-mortem were mutilated; enraged family members of the
deceased said one woman's breast was ripped off, and a young boy's
genitals mutilated, and all of them had their palms chopped off.

Tata's senior management quickly distance itself. Tata Sons Director
Jamshed J. Irani wrote to Financial Express that "No officer of Tata
Steel was present, nor was there any other involvement from the
company, which resulted in police firing."

But Tata was unwilling to abandon the project. "We are not in a
hurry," said Choudhry. "The trauma is fresh. It was a tragic accident.
We need to look forward and we'll continue talking to them," he adds.
"We have a long history of working with tribal people."

Business As Usual?

That history may be more impediment than advantage. A series of
incidents has tarnished Tata's image with tribal groups.

In the 1920s and 1930s, when it was still called Tata Iron and Steel
Company, TISC's largely tribal workers fought pitched battles with the
European or Parsi management. Work conditions and the right to
organize were important rallying issues, and over the years, the
company developed a reputation for union-busting, often by violent
means.

In 2000, TISCO allegedly bulldozed a spring that was the only source
of water for women from Agaria Tola and neighboring hamlets on the
periphery of Tata's coal mines in Eastern India.

Currently, in the Sukhinda Valley, not far from Kalinganagar, Tata
Steel and several smaller companies operate chromite mines. According
to Choudhry, Tata's presence in Sukhinda testifies to the company's
contribution to the local economy and its tribal-friendly credentials.

Sukhinda, though, was singled out as a highly polluted area by the
comptroller auditor general, and locals at Kalinganagar shudder at the
thought of a Sukhinda-like existence.

"For forty years, we have seen people queuing up to work the mines
with 100 grams of rice and one potato. This is not development, but
destitution," says Sarangi, who was part of a cycle rally along with
Sukhinda tribals in the immediate aftermath of the Kalinganagar
killings.

The Domsala River and 30 streams that run through the valley are
contaminated with dangerous levels of hexavalent chromium leaching
from overburden dumps. Made famous by Hollywood's story of Erin
Brokovich, hexavalent chromium causes irritation of the respiratory
tract, nasal septum ulcers, and irritant dermatitis rhinitis,
bronchospasm, and pneumonia.

One study funded by the Norwegian Government under the Orissa
Environment Program found that almost 25 percent of people living less
than 1 km from the sites suffered pollution-induced diseases.

Tata's attempts to expand its extractive business in Orissa have
repeatedly met with opposition from indigenous peoples. About a decade
ago, protests forced Tatas to withdraw from UAIL – a joint venture
with Norsk Hydro, and Alcoa–to mine bauxite in the neighboring
Rayagada district. In 2000, three tribal youth were shot dead during a
peaceful rally near the proposed mine site. [See "Norsk Hydro: Global
Compact Violator"]

Between 1995 and 2000, the company struggled to set up a steel plant
in Gopalpur-on-Sea, a coastal town in Orissa. Tata's clout is such
that the then prime minister laid the foundation stone. "The project
was to displace 20,000 people from 25 villages. Two villages were
forcefully displaced. However, the project finally failed because the
government was unable to come through with basic infrastructure such
as water, rail link, etc" says Prafulla Samantara, an environmental
and tribal rights activist with Lok Shakti Abhiyan, an Orissa-based
voluntary organisation. The Gopalpur project was abandoned only after
bloodshed. In August 1997, after police opened fire at a protest rally
in Sindhigaon, two women were crushed to death in the ensuing
pandemonium.

In the late 1990s, a Tata Group proposal to convert large portions of
Lake Chilika – a brackish water wetland of international prominence –
into an aquaculture farm hit rough weather. This project too was
quickly shelved after protests by the 120,000 fisherfolk who depended
on the lake for a livelihood.

Tata's Choudhry insists that his company is a good corporate citizen.
"We seriously believe that industrialisation – responsible
industrialisation – is the best way to bring better quality of life
for these people."

In the case of Gopalpur, Tata states that nearly 10,000 people who
were evicted to make way for the proposed steel plant are now
accommodated in a state-of-the-art rehabilitation colony, complete
with electricity, medical facilities and a technical training
institute to retrain community members and facilitate their shift from
an agrarian to an industrial economy. Before more people could be
evicted, the proposal was shelved due to public opposition.

Samantara puts the number of people evicted and rehabilitated at
around 5000. "In their original place, the people farmed, sharecropped
and lived off khevda (a fragrant wild flower used as a base by the
perfume industry). They were not rich, but were making do. Now, they
have been kicked off their land, and rehabilitated perhaps, but with
no industry and no agriculture, they have electric lines but no money
to pay the bills," he says.

While critics deprecate Tata's claims to responsibility as PR
posturing, Tata admits that its social commitment is tempered by the
realities of globalisation. The executive director of Tata Sons, R.
Gopalakrishnan, posed the dilemma in an interview with a British
magazine: "How to be an international company and, at the same time,
maintain its soul."

Best ask how to stop a juggernaut.

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