‘ Coal India misleading tribals’
India’s state- owned Coal India Limited, the world’s largest producer of the fossil fuel, allegedly violated human rights by snapping up lands belonging to tribal groups in the country’s Northeastern region without properly consulting or involving them, a new report by Amnesty International highlighted.
According to the report, “When Land Is Lost, Do We Eat Coal?”, Coal India subsidiaries, the Central and state government authorities in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Odissa, failed to ensure meaningful consultation with Adivasi communities on land acquisition, rehabilitation and resettlement.
The report, based in part on interviews with 124 affected landowners, authorities and lawyers, also alleges that public consultations conducted in the three mining areas were “seriously flawed.”
In addition, pollution control authorities made few attempts to reach out to the villagers, who were not formally literate, to explain the impacts of mining, the authors say.
“The government plans to nearly double coal production by 2020, and Coal India wants to produce a billion tonnes of coal every year. Yet the company and the Centre and state don’t seem to care to speak or listen to vulnerable Adivasi communities whose lands are acquired and forests destroyed for coal mining,” Aakar Patel, executive director of Amnesty International India, said in a statement.