Gulf News

Protests greet world’s tallest statue

CHIEFS OF 22 VILLAGES HAVE WARNED PM MODI TO STAY AWAY FROM INAUGURATI­ON EVENT

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Heads of 22 surroundin­g villages in Gujarat warn Modi to stay away from tomorrow’s inaugurati­on of mammoth figure of Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel |

Angry local communitie­s have warned India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi to stay away from the inaugurati­on tomorrow of the world’s biggest statue, a 182-metre high tribute to an independen­ce hero.

The Statue of Unity, which is twice the size of the Statue of Liberty, has been built in a remote corner of Gujarat state as a flagship project of conservati­ve leader Modi who is to open it on Wednesday.

But people living around the 29.9 billion rupee (Dh1.09 billion or $400 million) statue of Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel, who played a key role in unifying India after its independen­ce in 1947, want more compensati­on for damage to the environmen­t.

Posters of Modi with Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani in a town near the statue were torn down or had the faces blackened at the weekend.

Open letter

The chiefs of 22 surroundin­g villages have warned Modi to stay away from the inaugurati­on of the mammoth figure, which will push the 128 metre high Spring Temple Buddha in China into second place.

“We villagers are determined and would like to inform you that on October 31 you (Modi) are not welcome here. If you come here as an unwanted guest we won’t welcome you,” they said in an open letter sent to the district administra­tion.

“You and your companies have not only destroyed the natural resources, but are openly and brazenly exploiting them for business.”

The letter said that building the Statue of Unity and the nearby Sardar Sarovar Dam had “destroyed” the Narmada river, India’s fifth longest, while the local population did not have enough schools, hospitals and drinking water.

Local leader and former member of parliament, Amarsinh Chaudhary, said: “If Sardar Patel was alive today he would never have agreed to build such a statue at such a huge cost.

“This is being done for political gains as tribal groups in Gujarat are still suffering and devoid of basic human necessitie­s.”

Tight security

Chaudhary said protests were being planned for tomorrow’s inaugurati­on. Authoritie­s have already laid on tight security because of Modi’s presence.

Chotu Vasava, a legislator in the state assembly, said the statue should have been built in New Delhi, and that Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party government picked Gujarat to buy the votes of Sardar’s community.

More than 80 per cent of the local population are from tribal groups with special protected status. But the Gujarat government said the 185 families moved to make way for the statue had been compensate­d and given 475 hectares of new land.

 ?? Reuters ?? Work in progress at the constructi­on site of the “Statue of Unity” portraying Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel, one of the founding fathers of India, in Gujarat.
Reuters Work in progress at the constructi­on site of the “Statue of Unity” portraying Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel, one of the founding fathers of India, in Gujarat.

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