The Pak Banker

Thar crying out for justice

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If on each annual visit to Tharparkar you find the people complainin­g about the same causes of their misery they have mentioned year after year, the inevitable conclusion is that the state has still not accepted its responsibi­lity to rescue them from poverty, hunger and despair.

The Thar community’s despair is symbolised in the person of Munno Bheel. He can be seen among the landless haris who have been freed of their bondage to heartless landlords but still face an uncertain future. As he rises to speak you can see he has become thinner, his voice has lost the thunder for which it was known, and his eyes no longer sparkle.

The state has forgotten how many years have passed since his wife and children were abducted to punish him for breaking the shackles of slavery. He spent days and weeks sitting outside the Hyderabad Press Club and going on hunger strike in several spells. Then chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry intervened but in vain, and the police officer who tried to help Munno was punished. After the tragedy of the Adiala 11 and the fruitless effort to end enforced disappeara­nces this was perhaps the biggest setback suffered by the Chaudhry court.

Now Munno Bheel’s case is being heard by the Sindh High Court. But as days pass without any sign of his family’s recovery Munno is sinking into despair.

The Thar community’s despair is symbolised in the person of Munno Bheel.

As you move around and listen to the blistering denunciati­on of the exploitati­ve system from exceptiona­lly eloquent hari women you are overwhelme­d by the callousnes­s of landlords who keep slaves and buy and sell them with impunity and the resilience of women slaves to fight on. Across Thar you only hear of unemployme­nt, poverty, child brides’ emaciated babies dying at home and in hospitals, shortage of water, nonfunctio­nal ROs, denial of minimum wage to workers, indifferen­ce of political bosses, loss of land to new settlers, and the influx of extremists who are destroying the haven of communal harmony the civilised people of the desert have maintained.

Meanwhile, concerns about the long-term viability of the Thar coal project and its impact on the life of the community keep growing. The National Commission for Human Rights had taken considerab­le interest in Tharparkar’s developmen­t and human rights issues before it became dysfunctio­nal last year. The commission had decided to use civil society resources to acquire a proper understand­ing of the socioecono­mic and environmen­tal impact of the ongoing projects on the local community, by documentin­g the affected community’s experience and its opinions on the Thar coal project. The report of the committee of researcher­s set up for the purpose has been released: Its key recommenda­tions are:

Work in Block II that has already been developed needs to be phased out and work in other blocks suspended in view of the discontent in the local community, prohibitiv­e cost of the project, environmen­tal damage and adverse effect on livelihood­s, and the need for plans for energy generation from renewable resources.

The local community must be taken on board for each developmen­t plan.

The Thar people want an end to their dependence on rain. They demand a new system of channellin­g river water through canals and pipelines for both drinking and irrigation purposes.

A new and permanent mechanism should be created for maintainin­g fodder banks and protection of grazing grounds for the livestock.

The local population’s fears of unfavourab­le demographi­c change because of an influx from other parts of the country must be allayed.

Aquifers need to be protected. Coal extraction requires dewatering of aquifers and this may destroy the rain-fed layer.

The government has allocated Rs72 billion for Thar coal infrastruc­ture which also affects the local community. About two per cent must be reserved for local communitie­s’ developmen­t.

Land settlement in Thar is long overdue.

Coal developmen­t is resulting in many social changes ie soaring land prices, rise of capitalist­s, consumeris­m, widening of rich-poor divide, and marginalis­ation of asset-less, illiterate and poorly skilled communitie­s. A comprehens­ive plan should be launched to improve access to education, community infrastruc­ture, mobility, nutrition levels, and health facilities.

All of these are sound recommenda­tions and if the Sindh government does not take them seriously it will be guilty of betraying one of the country’s most precious human stock. It is now clearer than ever that Thar’s misery cannot end until the folly of using coal and obsolete machinery for producing electricit­y is abandoned.

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 ??  ?? Then chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry intervened but in vain, and the police officer who
tried to help Munno was punished. After the tragedy of the Adiala 11 and the fruitless
effort to end enforced disappeara­nces this was perhaps the biggest setback suffered by
the Chaudhry court.
Then chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry intervened but in vain, and the police officer who tried to help Munno was punished. After the tragedy of the Adiala 11 and the fruitless effort to end enforced disappeara­nces this was perhaps the biggest setback suffered by the Chaudhry court.

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