The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Young, female and fighting for India’s forests

- Ammu Kannampill­y

People think only environmen­talists need to fight for the environmen­t, but that’s not true.

Neola Pereira

MOLLEM, India: Fronted by a 20-year-old in pigtails, the dancing flash mob swings into action, campaignin­g to save a threatened wildlife reserve – part of a growing, youthled environmen­tal movement rattling Indian authoritie­s.

The battle between the state and environmen­tal activists is not new in India, where impoverish­ed tribal communitie­s have long complained of being displaced in the pursuit of economic growth.

But it has rarely been fought by young women like Neola Pereira, who turns up at protests dressed in skinny jeans, fluent in internet-speak, and ready to dance.

“People think only environmen­talists need to fight for the environmen­t, but that’s not true,” the business student told AFP.

Pereira has campaigned for months to stop a government plan to expand train tracks, widen a highway and build an electricit­y transmissi­on line that will slice through Mollem National Park — home to endangered tigers and other big cats.

The existing railway line transports thousands of tonnes of Australian, South African and Indonesian coal daily through Goa, on the coast of the Arabian Sea.

It snakes through the park, part of a mountain range named by the United Nations as one of the world’s eight “hottest hotspots” of biodiversi­ty.

Further expansion, activists say, would devastate the ecological­ly sensitive reserve and turn the lush state into a coal hub.

‘The flame travels faster’

By her own admission, Pereira never expected to get her hands dirty in the fight against fossil fuels.

India’s urban middle-class youth have, until recently, been far more preoccupie­d with securing university admissions and competing for a limited pool of white-collar jobs than environmen­talism.

But that is starting to change, sparking a heavy-handed government response.

In February, police arrested Disha Ravi, a 22-year-old climate campaigner, on charges of sedition, for allegedly creating a “toolkit” on organising protests and sharing it with Swedish activist Greta Thunberg on social media.

“Young women like me don’t just want to build a career, we want to use our voice for change,” said Pereira, who was herself detained by police in December and sees Ravi as a hero.

The #SaveMollem campaign has won support from retirees, churchgoer­s and especially youth, thanks to internetfr­iendly tactics, including a

“Jerusalema” dance challenge taken up by hundreds of people across Goa.

“Social media is helping a lot... it means the flame travels faster”, said zoologist Hycintha Aguiar, who conducted research in Mollem from 2019 to 2020.

“I had refrained from getting involved in activism earlier but what is happening here is very disturbing,” the 26-year-old told AFP.

‘The government is scared’

Every day, huge ships laden with imported coal dock at Goa’s Mormugao port, where the cargo is loaded onto trucks and finally into railway wagons destined for neighbouri­ng states.

Infrastruc­ture giants JSW Steel and the Adani group, whose billionair­e owners are said to be close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, operate their own coal handling facilities at the port.

It has sparked allegation­s that the controvers­ial projects are intended to boost their bottomline.

Goa’s power minister Nilesh Cabral — who is also its environmen­t minister — dismissed fears of the state turning into a coal hub as a fiction conjured up by campaigner­s.

But he defended the Mollem plans, saying that although the park’s biodiversi­ty would be “disturbed” by the rail expansion, it would eventually recover.

The projects would also improve connectivi­ty for Goans, he told AFP, adding: “When we say standards of living, why should we not be (on) par with other people?”

Many locals are unconvince­d. “As a child I enjoyed the nature of Goa,” said Mariano Proenca, a 68-year-old priest who attended one of Pereira’s recent protests.

“Now, because of these projects destroying it, children will not be able to see nature,” he told AFP.

Pereira is preparing for a long fight, dismissing fears of a crackdown. But in December, officers boarded a private bus carrying protesters, and ordered the driver to take them to the police station.

“We were trapped... screaming for help”, Pereira recalled.

Minutes later, they were livestream­ing the incident on Instagram, racking up over 200,000 views and prompting others to come to their aid.

“The government is scared because... we have reached so many people”, she said.

“I am very sure of winning this battle.” — AFP

 ??  ?? A cargo train with empty rakes, used to transport coal, is seen at the Kulem railway station in Goa.
A cargo train with empty rakes, used to transport coal, is seen at the Kulem railway station in Goa.
 ??  ?? A shipment of coal is unloaded from a cargo vessel at the Mormugao Port Trust in Goa.
A shipment of coal is unloaded from a cargo vessel at the Mormugao Port Trust in Goa.
 ??  ?? Water is sprayed onto a shipment of coal after being unloaded from a cargo vessel at the Mormugao Port Trust in Goa.
Water is sprayed onto a shipment of coal after being unloaded from a cargo vessel at the Mormugao Port Trust in Goa.
 ??  ?? Young environmen­tal activists hold posters and banners outside a meeting at Altona in Goa.
Young environmen­tal activists hold posters and banners outside a meeting at Altona in Goa.
 ?? — AFP photos by Indranil Mukherjee ?? A stretch of barren land next to remaining greenery is seen at a project site in the Mollem National Park, where a controvers­ial government programme is set to expand train tracks, widen a highway and build an electricit­y transmissi­on line through the protected reserve.
— AFP photos by Indranil Mukherjee A stretch of barren land next to remaining greenery is seen at a project site in the Mollem National Park, where a controvers­ial government programme is set to expand train tracks, widen a highway and build an electricit­y transmissi­on line through the protected reserve.
 ??  ?? Pereira waits for others to arrive for a meeting at Altona in Goa.
Pereira waits for others to arrive for a meeting at Altona in Goa.
 ??  ?? Zoologist Hycintha Aguiar (left) and environmen­tal activist Julio Aguiar collect pieces of coal fallen onto railway tracks from a cargo train at the Kulem railway station in Goa.
Zoologist Hycintha Aguiar (left) and environmen­tal activist Julio Aguiar collect pieces of coal fallen onto railway tracks from a cargo train at the Kulem railway station in Goa.
 ??  ?? Young environmen­tal activists hold posters and banners as they wait to start a flash mob at Altona in Goa.
Young environmen­tal activists hold posters and banners as they wait to start a flash mob at Altona in Goa.

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