Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

6 fishing hamlets to bear brunt

- Prayag Arora-desai

MUMBAI: The Bandra-versova Sea Link (BVSL), now scheduled for completion by August 2027, will directly impact artisanal fishing activities at six locations in Mumbai’s western suburbs, including the prominent koliwadas at Khar Danda and Vesave, and other smaller settlement­s at Kadeshwari Mandir (near Bandra fort), Chimbai village off Hill Road, Juhi Koliwada (in Santacruz) and Mora Gaon in Juhu.

As on Sunday, 2.07% of BVSL’S works have been completed. The constructi­on of piers and temporary gabion structures can be seen at Kadeshwari Mandir, Carter Road and Juhu Koliwada. The fisherfolk said the work has been on hold for at least four months now, which Maharashtr­a State Road Developmen­t Corporatio­n (MSRDC) officials attributed to monsoon season.

A group of Kathiyawad­i kolis, operating a small boat yard on Carter Road under the name Sarothiya Koli Samaj Matsyavyav­say Sahakari Sanstha, also said that they are vulnerable to the BVSL. “The bridge will pass about a kilometre from the shore. That’s where most manually driven boats, like mine, find the best catch these days. If they drill into the ocean floor there, it’s over for us,” said Mohan Solanki, one of the members of the community.

Despite the anticipate­d impact, MSRDC officials and the state fisheries department said they either did not have, or were unable to provide, data on the total number of the project-affected persons (PAPS).

The fisheries department officials also declined to provide data on the number of the registered fisherfolk, boats and sociein the project area. Dr Samata Shitut, district fisheries officer, did not respond to requests for a comment.

Rough estimates given by environmen­talists and members of the community suggest that there are between 600 and 800 boats (mechanised and nonmechani­sed) operating across these fishing hamlets that help sustain the livelihood­s of 2,000 to 3,000 families.

An affidavit filed by environmen­talists, fisherfolk and residents against BVSL in the National Green Tribunal (NGT), estimates that fishing around the larger Juhu coast sustains about 700 families. Vesave and Khar Danda are much larger colonies, for comparison.

Citing the example of the Bandra-worli Sea Link, which has allegedly depleted fish reserves, changed navigation routes, increased the rate of erosion and made tidal action around Dadar and Mahim Koliwada more intense, fishworker­s operating further up in the suburbs expect to face similar predicamen­ts.

Bhimsen Kopte, a resident of Khar Danda and member of the Danda Koli Samaj, said, “If you ask anyone at Worli or Mahim Koliwada, they will tell you that boats have to go further into the sea to find fish ever since the sea link came up. Whenever a VVIP passes over the bridge, fishermen are told to stop their activities a full day in advance. The same will happen to us now.”

Many emphasised that the bridge will diminish access to their customary fishing grounds, forcing them to take precarious detours around the structure and burn more diesel while doing so, besides causing further disruption to ecology that is already under stress from pollution and overfishin­g.

MSRDC’S own environmen­t impact assessment report (EIA) reveals more in this regard. Page 34 of the EIA report reads, “The constructi­on work phase would increase temporaril­y the water turbidity. This could affect marine flora because of a decrease in the possible received light.”

Environmen­talists and fisherfolk have criticised the EIA report for emphasisin­g the project’s “temporary” impacts while paying little to no considerat­ion towards permanent ramties ifications. “The dredging will cause permanent damage after constructi­on, not to mention the restrictio­ns on fishing that will be imposed during the build phase. There will be a permanent loss also of other coastal commons, such as areas for fish drying, net mending, boat parking and so on,” pointed out Stalin D, director of Vanashakti NGO, which was one of the eight appellants currently litigating in NGT to overturn BVSL’S regulatory clearances.

Despite concerns – which experts, environmen­talists and various fishing societies have conveyed to the government from time to time – a socio-economic survey to assess the impact of BVSL on artisanal fishing, first commission­ed by MSRDC in March 2019, has been delayed by at least a year. This was after fisherfolk demanded that it be assigned to the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), instead of the NGO that was initially appointed.

Confirming this, a senior official with the MSRDC said, “People raised some issues because the first consultant organisati­on did not have prior experience engaging with members of the Koli community. Their final report will be ready in two months. The report will be presented before a ‘consultati­ve committee’ headed by MSRDC vice-chairman, two other MSRDC officials and one from the fisheries department and four representa­tives from the fishing societies.”

“The committee will decide on the compensati­on, depending on the extent of damage to livelihood. The committee will decide on much compensati­on is to be paid, depending on the extent of damage to livelihood,” said the official.

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