FrontLine

Tourism in a fragile zone

The Central government is pushing ahead with a mega developmen­t project in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands at the expense of the islands’ fragile ecosystem and threatenin­g the very existence of their vulnerable tribal groups.

- BY PURNIMA S. TRIPATHI

THE pristine beaches, mangroves, unique biodiversi­ty, protected species of giant leatherbac­k turtles, and cultural traditions of the Particular­ly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGS) of Andaman and Nicobar Islands on the Bay of Bengal may be sacrificed to commercial interests if the Central government has its way. A Rs.72,000-crore project mooted by NITI Aayog in early 2021 aims to push ahead with its mega components in two of the larger islands in the Union Territory’s 836 islands: Great Nicobar and Little Andaman.

The aim is to transform Great Nicobar Island, largely uninhabite­d and remote, into a transhipme­nt port and tourist hub, complete with an internatio­nal airport, a power plant, and residentia­l cities. Little Andaman will have a leisure zone in South Bay with a film city, a residen

tial district, and a tourism specific economic zone, while West Bay on the island will be developed as a nature retreat with theme resorts, underwater resorts, beach hotels, and high-end residentia­l villas.

Andaman and Nicobar Islands boast some of the largest mangrove forests, which act as natural barriers against extreme climate events, in India. They also have one of the rarest tropical forests, as well as diverse flora and fauna. The islands are also home to five PVTGS, namely, the Great Andamanese, the Jarawas, the Onges, the Shompens, and the Sentineles­e.

The giant leatherbac­k turtle, the largest of the seven sea turtle species on the planet (which can grow to be 6 feet long and weigh over 900 kg), nests only in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Andaman and Nicobar Islands. It is a protected species under Schedule 1 of India’s Wildlife (Protection) Act of 1972. But this spectacula­r ecosystem is facing a grave danger to its existence from the government’s ambitious developmen­t project.

The government has hired AECOM Infrastruc­ture, a Gurgaonbas­ed

firm, to plan and develop greenfield cities, one each in Little Andaman and Great Nicobar, with the goal of developing them as free trade zones similar to Hong Kong, Singapore, and Dubai and presenting visitors a unique experience by leveraging the islands’ unique location and natural features.

Environmen­tal Impact Assessment was completed in record time.

HASTY CLEARANCES

The Terms of Reference for environmen­tal clearances were granted with astonishin­g speed. By April-may 2021, the Expert Appraisal Committee (EAC) of the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change finalised the Terms of Reference for the Environmen­tal Impact Assessment, which was also completed in record time. The EAC specifical­ly states that while considerin­g the proposal the administra­tion has agreed that (a) the project will not disturb or displace Shompen and Nicobarese tribes, the two PVTGS living in Great Nicobar; (b) there will be a clear demarcatio­n of land for the project and for the tribes to avoid any conflict in the future; and (c) habitat rights of the tribal groups shall be taken care of in accordance with the Forest Rights Act. According to the EAC, the tribes will be eligible for compensati­on for the loss of their habitat (if any) and a fair compensati­on will be devised in addition to the resources already available for the welfare and developmen­t of Shompen while ensuring their survival as a community, their unique identity, culture and heritage.

A public hearing was held on January 27, 2022, apparently to apprise the tribes of the project details and assure them of the least possible disruption to their habitat and life. However, as in most cases like this, the public hearing was a crude joke on the tribal groups, with no invitation going out to the action groups speaking out for their rights. There was not a single representa­tive from anthropolo­gical organisati­ons, and written objections from their members submitted earlier were ignored.

“We were called to attend the meeting, but we did not know that we could submit our objections in writing. So whatever we were worried about, we conveyed to the government verbally,” said Barnabas Manju, chairman of the Tribal Council of Great Nicobar and Little Nicobar Islands, over phone. He said all through the process of project formulatio­n, at no stage were they consulted or their opinion sought. “We are not against the project as such, but we don’t want to be displaced from our jungles and land. This is the only life we know and would not want to be disturbed,” he said.

Displaced from their native villages following the 2004 tsunami, tribal people like Manju are living in camps in Campbell Bay. “But we want to return, we want to restart our

lives, engage in farming, hunting or other activities we used to do. There is nothing to do here. Some of us are forced to work as labourers,” he said.

With the impending project, people like him are beginning to lose hope that they can return to their villages one day. The project is likely to impact most the Nicobarese, of which Manju is a member, and the Shompen. The Shompen, who number only 237, and the Nicobarese, whose population is 1,094, feel left out of the entire process.

Many environmen­tal activists this writer spoke to confirmed that their attempts to draw the government’s attention, including through media reports, to the damage that can be caused to the people and the ecology have failed so far.

The Great Nicobar holistic developmen­t project includes a transhipme­nt port, an airport, a power plant, and a residentia­l city and will come up on 166 sq km. The island has a total area of 910 sq km. Over 130 sq km of some of the finest tropical forests will have to be denotified and destroyed for the project.

RAINFOREST­S, TRIBAL RESERVES TO BE DERESERVED

Tribal reserves of 84.1 sq km will have to be denotifed for the port in Galathea Bay, where the Shompens live. The tourist hub project for Little Andaman seeks to dereserve 200 sq km of rainforest­s and denotify 140 sq km of the Onge tribal reserve.

The giant leatherbac­k turtle nesting beaches are also under threat. Two of these are on Little Andaman and one on Great Nicobar island. The Galathea nesting beach, located along the south-east coast in Nicobar islands, was declared a wildlife reserve in 1997. Covering an area of 11.44 sq km, it is one of the most iconic nesting sites for the leatherbac­k turtle. The National Board for Wildlife denotified this reserve in January 2021 without assigning any reason. This means it will be open for port constructi­on activities.

According to the project report, the bay mouth, through which the giant turtle travels to the nesting beach, is about 3 km wide, but it will be reduced to 300 metres by constructi­ng breakwater­s at the opening. This apparently is to provide unhindered access to the turtle to its nesting site, but it is doubtful whether the turtle will even approach the nesting site once dredging and other activities start. Although the plan is to stop constructi­on from November to February, which is the nesting season, and have dim lights and sound mufflers in the area, activists are worried that interferin­g with the natural habitat will itself drive them away.

“The best mitigation plan for these turtles is to have no plan at all. If the project begins then nothing can mitigate the disaster awaiting Galathea Bay and its turtles,” writes Pankaj Sekhsaria in Monumental Folly, published by the environmen­t action group Kalpavriks­h in December 2021, a compilatio­n of reports on the project and official minutes, notices, circulars, and so on. Sekhsaria, a professor at IIT Bombay, has been documentin­g the ecological history of Andaman and Nicobar Islands for years.

VULNERABLE TRIBAL GROUPS

The Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion (CERD), a top UN body, has sought informatio­n from the Indian government on

the impact of the project on PVTGS. The committee received a complaint in January this year and sent a letter to the Government of India, through its permanent representa­tive in Geneva on April 29, seeking answers to the questions raised. The letter states that the two projects will have a harmful impact on five PVTGS, which are already on the verge of extinction, inhabiting these islands.

According to this letter, the Nicobar project will put significan­t ecological pressure on the islands and their surroundin­gs. The Andaman project, it says, will require dereservin­g 32 per cent of the forest reserves and denotifyin­g 31 per cent of the tribal reserves, with negative consequenc­es for PVTGS.

The letter reminds the Indian government that these projects violate the existing laws and policies that protect PVTGS and their habitats, namely, the Shompen Policy of 2015, which establishe­s priority of tribal rights over large-scale developmen­t projects, the Forest Conservati­on Act

of 1980, the Andaman & Nicobar Islands (Protection of Aboriginal Tribes) Regulation of 1956, and the Indian Forest Act of 1927.

The CERD has asked the government about the measures it has adopted to prevent any adverse and irreparabl­e impact on PVTGS, and the impact the projects will have on the ecosystem, biodiversi­ty, livelihood and existence of these tribes. It has sought informatio­n on the steps taken to ensure strict adherence to laws and policies. The letter requested a response by July 15, 2022.

It is not known whether the government replied to CERD, but efforts by this writer to elicit a response from the Andaman and Nicobar authoritie­s proved futile. Senior IAS officers directly in charge of forest and environmen­t as well as the Chief Secretary’s office, which also oversees the holistic developmen­t project, refused to answer.

Speaking from Great Nicobar island, Tarun Karthick, founder and editor of Nicobar Times, told this

writer that except for the tribal population, others living in the island chain, mostly settlers, are in support of some developmen­t.

“It may or may not be this project necessaril­y, but people want developmen­t so there is not much opposition on the ground. Even political parties have been quiet on this issue,” he says. This, perhaps, is why the lone Andaman and Nicobar MP, Kuldeep Rai Sharma, of the Congress has not uttered a word against the project.

The compulsion­s could be many, but as Pankaj Sekhsaria rightly states in the concluding remarks of his book: “The Andaman & Nicobar Island system lies at a very fragile and vulnerable intersecti­on of the geological, ecological and sociocultu­ral. The NITI Aayog plan completely ignores these realities and pushes ahead with an illusory agenda of economic growth and developmen­t. To go ahead with it will be to perpetuate a monumental folly the price paid for which cannot even be imagined.” m

 ?? ?? A GIANT leatherbac­k turtle on the Galathea Bay nesting beach, Great Nicobar Island. (Right) The tracks of a giant leatherbac­k turtle after she has nested on the beach and returned to the ocean. The wildlife sanctuary here was denotified in January 2021 to explicitly allow for a port project.
A GIANT leatherbac­k turtle on the Galathea Bay nesting beach, Great Nicobar Island. (Right) The tracks of a giant leatherbac­k turtle after she has nested on the beach and returned to the ocean. The wildlife sanctuary here was denotified in January 2021 to explicitly allow for a port project.
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 ?? ?? PILLOBHABI SHELTER, Campbell Bay. Displaced from their native villages following the 2004 tsunami, many tribal people are living in camps here.
PILLOBHABI SHELTER, Campbell Bay. Displaced from their native villages following the 2004 tsunami, many tribal people are living in camps here.
 ?? ?? SUBMERGED CAMPBELL BAY in 2006. The tectonic vulnerabil­ity has been ignored in the scientific and financial evaluation of the project.
SUBMERGED CAMPBELL BAY in 2006. The tectonic vulnerabil­ity has been ignored in the scientific and financial evaluation of the project.
 ?? ?? THE NICOBARI MEGAPODE. Low-lying coastal forests, the preferred habitat for this endemic and rare bird, will be taken over for the Great Nicobar project, seriously threatenin­g its future.
THE NICOBARI MEGAPODE. Low-lying coastal forests, the preferred habitat for this endemic and rare bird, will be taken over for the Great Nicobar project, seriously threatenin­g its future.
 ?? ?? A JARAWA TRIBESMAN, an undated photograph. The islands are home to five Particular­ly Vulnerable Tribal Groups.
A JARAWA TRIBESMAN, an undated photograph. The islands are home to five Particular­ly Vulnerable Tribal Groups.

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