Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Tribal organisati­ons join forces to protest against govt’s bullet train project

- Manasi Phadke manasi.phadke@hindustant­imes.com

OPPOSITION Tribals, farmers affiliated to 24 bodies across Gujarat, Maharashtr­a to submit letters of protest against ‘showpiece’ projects

As Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe lay the foundation stone for the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train project in Gujarat, tribals in Maharashtr­a and Gujarat will meet tehsildars of tribal areas that will be impacted by the project and submit letters of protest.

Tribals and farmers affiliated to 24 organisati­ons across Maharashtr­a and Gujarat have joined forces to oppose the Modi government’s proposed showpiece projects such as the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC), the freight corridor, Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train and the Mumbai-Vadodara expressway.

The projects pass through tribal belts in Maharashtr­a and Gujarat such as Thane, Dahanu, Palghar, Navsari, Valsad and UT of Dadra-Nagar Haveli.

Vinod Dumada, an activist with Maharashtr­a’s Adivasi Ekta Parishad, said, “We are not against developmen­t, but we will oppose it if it is done at the cost of tribal life. The local tribal population will lose its land, livelihood to roads and industries. This area might progress with big buildings, malls and factories, but the original resident tribals will be driven out. The government hasn’t given tribals the capacity to absorb this developmen­t.”

In Maharashtr­a, activists plan to meet tehsildars of Dahanu, Palghar and Talasari tehsils on Thursday. Similarly in Gujarat, activists across tehsils will give their protest in writing to tehsildar’s offices, said Jayesh Patel, an activist working with Ahmedabad-based Khedu Samaj Gujarat.

“Vast tracts of land on either side of the freight corridor are being set aside for industrial use and this will result in farmers losing their livelihood. We question the very need for an industrial corridor and transport projects

We are not against developmen­t but we will oppose it if it is done at the cost of tribal life. The local tribal population will lose its land and livelihood to roads and industries. This area might progress but the original resident tribals will be driven out.

along this route passing through scheduled areas,” he said.

The 24 organisati­ons last month submitted a joint memorandum of their protest to the PMO. “While all these projects are being proposed, the cumulative effect of multiple projects in close proximity to one another will result in the physical, social and cultural upheaval of communitie­s that live in relative symbiosis with nature. To understand the extent of destructio­n and upheaval it is necessary to view the multiple proposed projects not as individual separate projects, but as a composite whole,” read the memorandum.

Besides questionin­g the requiremen­t of these projects, in their letter to Modi, the organisati­ons have also elaborated on how the Panchayats Extension to Scheduled Areas (PESA) Act is being violated, with authoritie­s ignoring resolution­s passed by local gram sabhas against these projects.

“The consultati­ve provisions of the PESA Act have been reduced to a farce. Survey work, which is part of the project, is being undertaken clandestin­ely without even informing the gram sabhas,” read the memorandum.

 ??  ??
 ?? AFP FILE ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpar­t Shinzo Abe shake hands in front of a Shinkansen train during their inspection of a bullet train manufactur­ing plant.
AFP FILE Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpar­t Shinzo Abe shake hands in front of a Shinkansen train during their inspection of a bullet train manufactur­ing plant.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India