Gulf News

Work on Kerala mega port at a standstill

Protest leaders allege constructi­on of Vizhinjam port will exact toll on livelihood

- — Reuters

[We] would not be removing the shelter despite the court order. We are willing to be arrested in large numbers if need be.”

Eugine H. Pereira | vicar general

On the main road to billionair­e Gautam Adani’s planned Vizhinjam mega port on the southern tip of India, a shelter built by the coastal region’s Christian fishing community blocks the entrance, preventing further constructi­on.

The simple 1,200 square-feet structure with a corrugated­iron roof has since August stood in the way of ambitions for the country’s first container transshipm­ent port — a $900 million project that seeks to plug into the lucrative shipping trade flowing between juggernaut manufactur­ers in the East and wealthy consumer markets in the West.

Protest seats

Decorated with banners proclaimin­g “indefinite day and night protest”, the shelter provides cover for roughly 100 plastic chairs, although the number of protesters taking part in the sit-ins on any one day is usually much lower.

Across the street, supporters of the port have set up their own shelters.

Even when protester numbers are low, up to 300 police officers with batons will gather nearby each day to carefully monitor the situation. Despite repeated orders by Kerala state’s top court that constructi­on should proceed unhindered, the police are unwilling to take action against the protesters, fearful that doing so will set flame to social and religious tensions simmering over the port.

For Adani, the world’s thirdriche­st person according to Forbes, it’s a high-stakes impasse with no apparent easy solution.

Reuters interviewe­d more than a dozen protesters as well as port supporters, police officials and reviewed hundreds of pages of filings in legal actions brought by the Adani conglomera­te against the Catholic priests leading the protests and against the state government. All point to an intractabl­e divide.

Charges of erosion

Protest leaders allege constructi­on of the port since December 2015 has resulted in significan­t erosion of the coast and further building promises to wreak havoc with the livelihood of a fishing community they say numbers some 56,000.

They want the government to order a halt to constructi­on and independen­t studies on the impact of the port’s developmen­t on the marine ecosystem.

The Adani conglomera­te plans to send heavy vehicles to the port tomorrow after the court this week said vehicle movement should not be blocked. In October, vehicles that tried to exit the port had to turn back.

Eugine H. Pereira, vicar general of the archdioces­e leading the protesters, said they would not be removing the shelter despite the court order. “We are willing to be arrested in large numbers if need be,” he said.

Adani Group said in a statement the project is in full compliance with all laws and that many studies conducted by the Indian Institute of Technology and other institutio­ns in recent years have rejected allegation­s relating to the project’s responsibi­lity for shoreline erosion.

 ?? Reuters ?? Police keep an eye on the entrance of the proposed Vizhinjam Port in the southern state of Kerala.
Reuters Police keep an eye on the entrance of the proposed Vizhinjam Port in the southern state of Kerala.

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