Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

CRPF trooper killed, another injured in Chhattisga­rh

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A CRPF trooper was killed and another injured when Maoists triggered a powerful blast targeting security personnel in a forested part of Chhattisga­rh’s Sukma district, officials said. Sub-Inspector Rajesh Kumar Bind was killed when an IED exploded around 7.45am between Pushwada and Tamilwada when the 206 Cobra Battalion of the CRPF was on a routine operation. Constable Manik Pinri was injured, CRPF DIG M Dinakaran said. in which 11 CISF personnel were killed, Thursday surrendere­d before the police in Malkangiri district. The hardcore female Maoist, identified as K Lakshmi alias Sweta alias Kumari, was carrying a reward of ~4 lakh, a senior official said. Malkangiri superinten­dent of police Jagmohan Meena said she will be provided with monetary assistance as per the ‘Surrender and Rehabilita­tion Scheme’ of the state government.

against Sterlite Industries Ltd’s copper plant in Tamil Nadu’s Thoothukud­i that came to a boil this week, leaving at least 11 people dead in police firing on Tuesday, have been simmering for over two decades. Regulators have failed to allay concerns of groundwate­r pollution by the plant that local residents have alleged is also responsibl­e for gas leaks.

Several audits done by government agencies have raised red flags about the company’s hazardous waste-management and pollution-control measures and clearances granted by the central and state regulators were challenged at every step.

The most recent controvers­y centres on an environmen­tal clearance granted by the Union environmen­t ministry to Sterlite Industries, now Sterlite Copper, in 2009 to expand the existing copper plant. The clearance was given after the company argued that since the upcoming second unit was within the State Industries Promotion Corporatio­n of Tamilnadu Ltd industrial area that already had a clearance, it did not need to hold public hearings to get another clearance.

“We do have all required permission­s on ground to proceed with our expansion project,” Vivek Thomas, a spokespers­on for Vedanta Ltd, said. Vedanta Ltd, the parent company of Sterlite Copper, is a subsidiary of the UK-based conglomera­te, Vedanta Resources Plc. The Thoothukud­i plant, set up in 1997, consists of a smelter, a refinery, a phosphoric acid plant, a copper rod plant and

RAIPUR: NEW DELHI:Protests

three captive power plants.

The Madras high court on Wednesday, however, ordered a stay on the expansion and directed that a public hearing be held. “We have been able to show that the expanded area is not part of SIPCOT, they cannot bypass the public consultati­on,” Shweta Narayan, an activist protesting against the plant, said.

The expansion, activists argue, will only add to the environmen­tal damage and health risks. “Already, existing pollution and health impacts are not being addressed,” said Narayan. “We want the plant shut down.”

A 2007 report by a Norwegian panel on ethics recommende­d that the Norwegian pension fund divest from Vedanta Resources because the “company’s hazardous waste management and illegal emissions are thought to have generated far-reaching pollution of soil, air, groundwate­r and drinking water.”

In 2013, the Supreme Court took cognisance of the pollution from the existing plant and fined the company ~100 crore for the environmen­tal damage it had caused between 1997 and 2012.

But the same year, Sterlite’s environmen­tal clearance was extended till 2015 as a result of an amendment to the rules extending the validity of clearances from five to seven years. In 2015, Sterlite again applied for an extension for five years, which was granted till the end of 2018.

Two environmen­t ministry officials with knowledge of the deliberati­ons, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the company was keen not to have the public consultati­on when it applied for the clearance for expansion. “The company was trying its best to get a clearance without public hearing because they realised that any public consultati­on would go against them,” one of the officials said.

Vedanta spokespers­on Thomas said that the allegation was not valid. “People have been protesting this plant for over 20 years, and it is unfortunat­e that the issue has got the attention it deserves because of the killings,” said Ritwick Dutta, an environmen­tal lawyer who has fought a case against Sterlite.

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