Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

B’khand women’s protest focuses on river health

- Pankaj Jaiswal pjaiswal@hindustant­imes.com

LUCKNOW: On June 1, over 12 women and a few men with masked faces in Khapatiya Kala village in Pailani tehsil of Banda district waded into the river Ken. Maintainin­g social distance, they began their ‘Jal Satyagraha’-- standing waistdeep in the water to protest illegal sand mining and environmen­tal hazard in the village.

The protest sent the district administra­tion into a tizzy and within hours, the sub-divisional magistrate (SDM) of Pailani reached the spot with police. After an hour of negotiatio­ns, the officials took a memorandum of demands from the protestors, assured them of probe and immediatel­y ordered stopping of sand mining. The women walked out of the water and went home.

Suman Singh, a farmer and Usha Nishad, another villager led the protest.

Suman Singh alleged that the miners had begun straying out of the area that the district administra­tion had leased them for mining and started digging sand from villagers’ and Gram Sabha land.

Suman said: “The two mining companies operating here have over-exploited the land leased to them. Now they have started digging sand out of our land. They neither informed us nor asked us. When we attempted to confront them, their men issued us life threats and said they would implicate us in cases. They also threatened sexual harassment cases against the men in the village.”

Suman wrote all this in an applicatio­n and gave it to the SDM, Pailani, Ramkumar. He said he had asked the circle officer, Banda, the mining officer, Banda and the tehsildar, Pailani, to investigat­e the allegation­s and send the report to district magistrate Amit Singh Bansal. The DM’s phone was unresponsi­ve for his comment on the issue.

SDM Ramkumar said: “The report has gone to the DM. Prima facie the allegation­s of illegal mining appear true, but villagers’ or village land doesn’t seem to be involved.”

Two companies--one each from Agra and Etawah have

JAL SATYAGRAH TRIGGERS DEMAND FOR LEGAL AND ENVIRONMEN­TFRIENDLY MANUAL SAND MINING

five-year licence--valid till 2024--to mine sand from the land leased to them in the village. Villagers are moving the high court this week over the illegal mining and environmen­t issues.

“It is the red sand which is commonly called ‘moram’ and figurative­ly called ‘red gold’. The four districts of Bundelkhan­d--Banda, Hamirpur, Mahoba and Chitrakoot are a hub and sand is mined indiscrimi­nately here from the Ken, Betwa, Yamuna, Baghe and Mandakini rivers. The use of machines--according to the RTI applicatio­n reply that I got sometime back--is prohibited for sand-mining. But the miners use heavy earthmover­s in the river beds as a norm than the exception,” said Ashish Dixit ‘Sagar’, an RTI and Bundelkhan­d rights activist based in Banda. The Jal Satyagrah by the women once again brought into focus the issue of illegal sand mining and environmen­t hazard to Bundelkhan­d region’s rivers. The people and some activists here have started demanding the replacemen­t of machines by people for manual mining--all the more since a large number of migrants have returned to the region under Covid-19 lockdown.

 ?? HT ?? Jal Satyagrah underway in river Ken in Khapatiya Kala village of Banda district.
HT Jal Satyagrah underway in river Ken in Khapatiya Kala village of Banda district.

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