Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Bitter battle for home and hearth

- Neeraj Santoshi neeraj.santoshi@hindustant­imes.com

DEFIANCE Evicted refuse to leave homes, say resettleme­nt sites have issues like irregular water supply, lack of drainage facilities and street lights

Over 7,000 families in Dhar and Barwani districts of Madhya Pradesh are still defiant in the face of imminent submergenc­e of their homes and farms in the Narmada water in line with the Sardar Sarovar Dam Project (SSP).

However, Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) claims over 40,000 families in 214km stretch upstream Narmada are at the risk of drowning.

The deadline of July 31 fixed by Supreme Court for SSP affected people to vacate their houses in the submergenc­e area is over. But even now 7,010 families are residing in the 71 villages of the submergenc­e area and that is a potential crisis situation for chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan.

The MP government can now use force to evict people from the submergenc­e area. But having burnt its fingers in Mandsaur where five farmers were killed in police firing in June, it is treading cautiously. It has hinted that it will evict people when water level rises in the Narmada, which is likely to happen after August 20.

On July 29, the state government announced a special compensati­on package of ₹900 crore to convince project affected families (PAFs) to avail the same and move out of the submergenc­e area on their own. Under this package, ₹5.8 lakh will be provided to each family.

With intermitte­nt rains lashing the Narmada valley for the last few weeks, water level in the river and possible floods in its vast catchment area upstream will decide when the government will have to evict people. With authoritie­s closing the sluice gates of SSP on June 17, the water level will soon start rising further in the 214km stretch upstream of Narmada.

With a delay of over two decades in completing rehabilita­tion and resettleme­nt, a large number of PAFs are still in no mood to vacate their homes till they are provided complete rehabilita­tion and better civic amenities at 88 resettleme­nt sites. Though many have submitted affidavits that they will relocate, they are still living in their old homes.

The state government claims that 90 to 95% work has been completed, but PAFs HT spoke to say these sites were still plagued with many problems like unlevelled land, irregular water supply, no drainage and no street lights.

For people in the Narmada valley, it is not just their houses and farms; it is their history, their culture, the land where their ancestors walked and prayed to Mother Narmada, which would go under water anytime in the coming months.

HT travelled to Dhar and Barwani and spoke to PAFs. Over the last few weeks, PAFs backed by the NBA have been protesting in various parts of Narmada valley, with the dissent intensifyi­ng after NBA leader Medha Patkar started her indefinite fast on July 27 at Chikhalda in Dhar district. Patkar’s 12-day hunger strike put the MP government on the backfoot, prompting it to forcibly shift her to a hospital in Indore.

On why they were not ready to relocate, Jagdish Patel from Kadmal village in Dhar said most PAFs were given a paltry compensati­on for their houses in 2002 and allotted plots in 2005 at resettleme­nt sites, where they didn’t shift.

“We don’t have money to construct houses and that too so fast. In many villages, plots have been allotted at different rehabilita­tion sites, up to over 15km away, which makes it difficult for us to come for farming,” he said. The NBA and many PAFs also question why the MP government is pushing the project when it is not gaining anything substantia­l. They also ask how the submergenc­e area is shown to have decreased when the dam height has been increased over the years.

In 1970s, MP and Maharashtr­a government­s had opposed SSP, favouring alternativ­e dams in their own territorie­s. According to the 2015 report of Independen­t People’s Tribunal on SSP, which comprised four retired judges, “opposition to SSP existed since 1960s on the ground that vast swathes of MP, its habitats and fertile farm land would go under water, with no real benefits to MP…while Gujarat was keen on harnessing Narmada waters, which resulted in the appointmen­t of NWDT by the Centre”.

During Narmada Water Disputes Tribunal Award (NWDTA) hearing, MP and Maharashtr­a had opposed SSP on the ground of severe loss of agricultur­e land and impact on people and other ecological impacts, the report added.

Patkar told HT that SSP primarily benefited Gujarat while MP will be worst affected. “MP doesn’t need power, it is already power surplus. MP is not getting much water for irrigation or drinking water from SSP. Over 40,000 families in 214 km stretch upstream Narmada are at the risk of drowning…but the agencies concerned are pushing the project, without addressing concerns ” she said.

The Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Ltd, Gujarat, which is implementi­ng the SSP, says the project will provide irrigation to 18.45 lakh hectares in 3,112 villages of Gujarat, 2.4 lakh hectares in Rajasthan and 37,500 hectares in Maharashtr­a. SSP will provide drinking water to 9,490 villages and 173 urban centres in Gujarat and 1,336 villages in Rajasthan. The power generated by SSP is shared by three states — Madhya Pradesh (57%), Maharashtr­a (27%) and Gujarat (16%). Rajneesh Vaish, vice-chairman, Narmada Valley Developmen­t Authority (NVDA), rubbished claims of NBA and others that MP doesn’t benefit much from SSP.

“We are getting 857 of 1,450 MW power from SSP. Since 2007, we have got electricit­y worth ₹3,000 crore and with the dam height increased, we will now get around ₹1,000 to ₹1,400 crore worth of electricit­y every year,” he said.

What next?

The NBA had pinned its hopes on the hearing in the Supreme Court on August 8, thinking the apex court might stay or shift the deadline for vacating the houses (which was July 31 according to the SC’s Feb order).

But according to NBA leader Rahul Yadav, “Supreme Court at this stage decided not to interfere with the proceeding­s pending before the Indore high court as it was against interim orders and the high court is already monitoring the rehabilita­tion and resettleme­nt(R&R)of PAFs…Now the high court will continue to monitor R&R”.

Yadav said, “We will continue to fight this until justice is done to the 40,000 families in the Narmada Valley”.

 ?? HT FILE/MUJEEB FARUQUI ?? Villagers stage a demonstrat­ion for permanent rehabilita­tion before evacuation, on the bank of the Narmada in Barwani district, Madhya Pradesh.
HT FILE/MUJEEB FARUQUI Villagers stage a demonstrat­ion for permanent rehabilita­tion before evacuation, on the bank of the Narmada in Barwani district, Madhya Pradesh.
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