Orissa: CPI demands shifting of POSCO project

Bhubaneshwar, May 21 (ANI): Rejecting the Orissa Government’s formula of excluding 300 acres of private land from the proposed POSCO project site area near Paradip, the Communist Party of India (CPI) on Friday demanded that the entire site be shifted elsewhere.

Addressing the media CPI General Secretary A B Bardhan demanded an official statement on overall impact of the project on the state.

“Giving up only 300 acres of private land is a ridiculous idea. This cannot be a solution. We want the whole project to be shifted from the area identified near Paradip,” Bardhan said.

Bardhan termed his meeting with Orissa Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik as “very disappointing.”

On Thursday evening, Bardhan held a meeting with Patnaik along with state CPI leaders.

Bardhan said since over 4000 acres of land is needed for the plant, leaving out only 300 acres private land in Dhinkia village is meaningless.

He demanded to shift the project location elsewhere in Jagatsinghpur District or in areas bordering Puri District where displacement of people would be less.

“The government should realize that it is not just a piece of land but involves livelihood of the people depending on fertile land and betel vines for generations,” Bardhan said adding “Forest dwellers in the area cannot be uprooted in an illegal manner without holding proper village meetings.”

“Though it is billed as India””s biggest FDI capable of creating jobs, government must publish details about its cost in terms of loss of land, minerals, water and its adverse impact on poor people,” he added.

Describing Patnaik’s proposal for talks between protesters and Revenue Divisional Commissioner (RDC) as opening of a small window, Bardhan said any attempt to acquire land or conduct survey for the proposed 12mtpa steel plant pending discussion would be opposed tooth and nail.

He also demanded to withdraw charges against over 800 anti-Posco agitators. (ANI)

Pakistan’s rocket-shelling plunges market price of land beyond border

Chak Allah Bakhash (Punjab), Sept. 15 (ANI): The prices of farming land have plunged following past week’s rocket-shelling incident in the India-Pakistan border villages.

Local farmers say that it was already quite tough to find buyers for the land situated beyond fencing and the latest rocket-shelling incident has caused the prices to drop further.

Fenced from three sides, Village Chak Allah Bakhash at the International border has nearly 150 acres of land beyond fencing.

Balwinder Kaur, one of the natives in village Chak Allah Bakhash, said that it was already difficult for her to meet the daily expenditure.

Sucha Singh, another villager, said: “My family owns a piece of land across fencing and has been facing many difficulties while cultivating the land at the border. There are no takers for our land.”

Nearly 553 km long barbed fencing of the Punjab border along side Pakistan resulted in thousands of acres of land being left beyond fencing.

The price of the land spread before fencing line is nearly three times higher than the vast land spread beyond the fencing.

An acre of land, located before fencing, is available for approximately 600,000 to 10,00,000 rupees whereas more fertile land, located beyond the fencing, is worth about 200,000 to 300,000 rupees per acre.

Mandatory frisking by security men at the border gates of the fence and restricted working hours and few objections could be some of the reasons for a lesser price of land beyond fencing.

The farmers are worried that it would be difficult to find buyers for their lands. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Dadri farmers up in arms over proposed power project

Lucknow, Aug 29 (ANI): Hundreds of farmers took to the streets in Uttar Pradesh’s Dadri district, seeking return of farmland acquired to set up a power plant.

Reliance Power held by Anil Ambani’s ADA group had announced setting up of a 3,500 megawatt gas-based power plant in Dadri at a cost of 2.2 million dollars.

Farmers alleged that they were given a meagre compensation for their highly fertile agricultural land.

Farmers started the protest march from Reliance power project site in Dadri to Lucknow, on Thursday.

The protest was jointly organised by the farmers unions and the Congress Party.

Protestors said that their struggle was for justice.

“This demonstration is a long struggle that depicts the battle between justice and injustice. The way in which the 2500 acres of highly fertile land snatched from farmers by sighting the dream of a power project was wrong…five years have been passed but there is no sign of power plant,” said Pramod Tiwari, senior Congress leader. (ANI)

Indian farmers along Pakistan border in Punjab resent restriction

Amritsar, Aug 28 (ANI): Anguished Indian villagers in Punjab, whose farms lie across the fencing along the Pakistan border have staged a protest over problems faced in tilling their fields.

The protest was staged under the banner of the Jamhuri Kisan Sabha (Democratic Farmers Council) and the Border Area Sangharsh (Struggle) Committee.

Hundreds of agitating farmers gathered in Bhindi Saiydan village of Amritsar on Thursday, saying that the Border Security Force has enforced stiff restrictions, giving them little access to till their land and tend the crops.

“We are facing a lot of difficulties. The gate opens at 9 in the morning and around 1 to 2 pm in the afternoon, they ask us to go back. If any farmer has work left, they even ask those farmers to leave,” said Balbir Singh, a farmer.

“We also demand that close relatives of these border farmers be given employment opportunities,” said Satnam Singh Ajnala, president of Jamhuri Kisan Sabha.

Amritsar and Tarn Taran districts alone have about 170-kilometre long border with Pakistan.

India began setting up a long fence along the disputed border with Pakistan in the mid-90s to stop militant groups and illegal immigrants from sneaking into Indian territory.

Pakistan initially objected to the fence, but India hurriedly set it up at least 2-4 km away from the border line in some places, saying they were coming under heavy firing from across the border.

As a result, vast areas of fertile land in Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, were left outside the fence, leading to protests from Indian farmers. (ANI)

Chomu emerges as favourite shopping hub for agricultural equipments

Jaipur, July 4 (ANI): Chomu, a small town near Jaipur, is emerging as favourite hub for the purchase of agriculture equipments and machines.

In spite of being surrounded by non-fertile land, people in this region are economically self-sufficient because of their technical capabilities.

The agricultral machinery business in the town has flourished a lot due to sufficient availability of the raw materials.

“Unlike other villages, sufficient raw materials are available in our village. Therefore we have so many agro-machinery manufacturing workshops. Secondly the agriculture sector is also booming,” said Nathuram Jangid, agriculture machine fabricator.

The machines fabricated in the town are being supplied to Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Punjab and Uttaranchal.

According to the factory owners, the reason behind the success is that their machinery is more advanced, accurate and well fitted. That is why farmers prefer using the machinery manufactured in Chomu at their farms.

“Our machines are famous across the country because we use original bearing and original fittings. The buyers opt for our machines when they realise that our machines give superior service to them,” said Vijendra, another agriculture machinery fabricator.

There are over 150 small and medium sized Agro machinery manufacturing factories in this town.

Various types of Agro machineries are produced here but the owners claim that thresher, cultivator, plough and fodder cutting machines are always sought for. By Lokendra Singh (ANI)

Bhattacharjee ordered police firing in Nandigram: Forward Bloc

Kolkata, April 20 (IANS) West Bengal Chief Minister Buddahdeb Bahttacharjee had ordered the police firing in Nandigram March 14, 2007 that claimed 14 lives, the state’s ruling Left Front partner Forward Bloc alleged Monday.

Speaking at a meet-the-press programme, Bloc state secretary Ashok Ghosh said Bhattacharjee had made the admission at a Left Front meeting after the incident that followed months of siege over the East Midnapore district zone by Trinamool Congress-led farmers in protest against the state government’s bid to acquire land for setting up a chemical hub.

Fourteen persons died, the majority of them falling to police bullets, and several women were raped and molested March 14, 2007.

‘Bhattacharjee told the Front leaders ‘I have ordered the firing. I take responsibility. I won’t blame anybody else. But what I did was wrong’,’ Ghosh said.

The statement, coming days ahead of the Lok Sabha polls, is bound to see the opposition claiming some brownie points, as was evident from Trinamool chief Mamata Banerjee’s comments during the day.

‘We knew all along that he (Buddhadeb) is responsible for the firing. He is, after all, the police minister. Now he must reply to what Ghosh has said,’ Banerjee maintained.

Ghosh also termed the Tatas as ‘traitors’ for shifting the Nano small car project from the state’s Singur to Sanand in Gujarat.

Global auto major Tata Motors announced the shifting of the prized project last October after two years of sustained protests by the Trinamool Congress-led protestors demanding return of fertile land which they alleged was forcibly taken by the state government for the car project.

‘What the Tatas have done is grossly wrong. They have done injustice to the people. They are traitors,’ Ghosh said.
Indo Asian News Service

Vietnam admits dam resettlement programmes inadequate

Hanoi – Vietnam’s efforts to resettle villagers displaced by the massive Son La hydroelectric project have been slow and inadequate, government officials said Thursday.

Most of the villagers displaced by the dam in the mountainous northern province of Son La belong to ethnic minorities. National Assembly member Ksor Phuoc, an ethnic Jarai who heads the assembly’s Committee on Nationalities and its Group for Resettlement and Supervision of the Son La Hydroelectric Plant, said those resettled felt insecure in their new homes.

In some resettlement areas, Phuoc said, displaced villagers have already arrived, but roads, power lines, and schools have yet to be built.

“In those places, children have to travel to schools far from their new homes,” Phuoc said.

Phuoc’s comments echoed a report delivered Tuesday to Vietnam’s National Assembly Standing Committee on the resettlement of people displaced by the dam.

The report said the process is behind schedule and likely to cause resentment among those resettled.

Authorities have so far moved 62 per cent of the 91,000 people who will be displaced by the dam’s holding reservoir. Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said Wednesday that resettlement had been held up by delays in awarding compensation to displaced households.

The government granted each displaced household between 50 million and 70 million Vietnamese dong (2,800 to 4,000 dollars) to build a new house. But Phuoc said the actual cost of the new houses was between 200 million and 300 million dong (11,500 to 17,000 dollars).

Phuoc said hundreds of households were still unsure how to earn a livelihood, two years after being resettled in their new locations.

Nguyen Thai Hung, Deputy Head of the Management Board for Displacement and Resettlement in the Muong Lay district of Son La province, said that besides infrastructure, the resettlement areas lacked good farmland.

“The fertile land is already allocated to local people before the displaced arrive,” Hung said. “Authorities can only allocate land in mountainous areas which are very difficult to farm.”

Hung said most of the resettled were used to growing lowland wet rice, and had to learn new methods for growing upland dry rice. He said they had received little help from agricultural experts in learning how to work the land they had been granted.

The Son La Dam is the largest ever built in Vietnam, with a capacity of 2,400 megawatts and an estimated cost of 2.5 billion dollars. It is scheduled for completion in 2015.

The dam has been controversial since it was first proposed, partly because of the resettlement issue and partly due to environmental concerns. The province of Son La is prone to earthquakes, and if the dam fails, it could flood the city of Hanoi.(dpa)

Live From Ceres: Climate Change Requires Bold Thinking

Tilde Herrera

Harnessing solar power from space. Plug-in electric vehicles accounting for the majority of vehicles on the road by 2020. Getting involved in one’s community to develop a world-class recycling project.

These are examples of bold steps society needs to take to address the challenges of climate change and resource depletion. Action begins at the personal level yet the stakes couldn’t be higher collectively, according to Lester Brown, author and founder of the Earth Policy Institute.

“Most of us in this room talk about saving the planet but what we’re really talking about is saving civilization itself,” Brown said Thursday during the opening keynote speech on the second day of the annual Ceres conference in San Francisco. “If we continue as business-as-usual or anything close to it, climate change will become so disruptive that the stresses on civilization will probably be unmanageable.”

Already the signs of ecological distress can be found in all corners of the world, Brown said, from melting glaciers in China threatening the country’s ability to grow grain in some regions to a dwindling underground aquifer that’s sending Saudi Arabia to scout fertile land in other countries to grow its food.

At the same time, glimmers of innovation and ambition are fueling a new approach to renewable energy and energy efficiency, including PHEVs and a massive expansion of wind, solar and geothermal in places as far-flung as Algeria, Texas and Turkey.

The theme of bold thinking underscored the conference Thursday. Examples included PG and E’s plan to buy 200 megawatts of solar energy that is to be generated in space and beamed down to earth beginning in 2016. The utility announced it signed a carefully structured contract for the deal this week.

“It may work, it may not,” PG and E CEO Peter Darbee said after Brown’s speech. “So we structured a contract where we only pay for the energy to the extent that we get it. There’s no risk for us. There’s no risk for ratepayers along the way so why shouldn’t we enter into a contract so long as we ensure that it operates safely for the public? That’s what we required of them.”

Darbee admits many think PG and E “has lost it with this one,” he said. “A lot of people think the CEO is crazy, but that’s what bold is all about.”

Darbee scoffed at the naysayers who claim climate change will cost too much to address. “That is nonsense and the people of world who say it’s too expensive don’t have a clue about the expense of not dealing with this problem,” he said.

The costs go beyond dollars and cents, Brown said.

“From time to time, I go back and read about earlier civilizations that have declined and collapsed,” he said. “Those whose archeological sites we study today, one of the themes that keeps coming up is that the most common reason for civilization declines has been food shortages.”

Until recently he rejected the idea that the food system could be our undoing.

“But as a I began to think about it more I realized that the trends — the environmental trends underlying our food system — are increasing in number and we have not reversed a single one,” Brown said.

He pointed to soil erosion, melting glaciers, rising seas, desertifcation, collapsing fisheries, all of which impact food systems. The signs of stress are evident in the case of grains, whose prices have increased dramatically in the face of rising demand as environmental conditions increasingly impair the capacity to grow crops.

“If we can’t turn these trends around, we’re in trouble,” Brown said, “just as the earlier civilizations were.”

Lebanese farmers accuse Israelis of flooding their land

Lebanese farmers accuse Israelis of flooding their land Beirut – Lebanese farmers on Tuesday accused Israel of deliberately flooding their land with excess rainwater from an Israeli orchard across the border, according to media reports.

Voice of Lebanon radio reported that the water flooded fields near the southern town of Mais al-Jabal on Tuesday, ruining crops and properties.

Lebanese farmers who called on the Lebanese army and United Nations peacekeeping forces in southern Lebanon (UNIFIL) to launch an investigation, according to the report.

An army source in southern Lebanon said the army and UNIFIL had dispatched teams to look into the claims.

Farmers in the area charged that the flooding was part of a systematic practice by Israeli authorities to turn the highly-fertile land into swamps by channelling rainwater into the fields via trenches, which the say were dug for that purpose.

The farmers said the army and UNIFIL have in the past intervened to protect crops. (dpa)

Africa’s “oldest human sacrifice” found in Sudan

London, Feb 6 (ANI): Archaeologists have unearthed a 5,500 year-old Stone Age tomb in northern Sudan, which they believe confirms the location of Africa’s “oldest human sacrifice.”

According to a report in the Telegraph, the archaeological team from France found the tomb in a graveyard in Al-Kadada, north of Khartoum.

They dug up the tomb of a man and a woman facing each other in a ditch, with bodies of two women, two goats and a dog buried nearby.

The discovery of the group “confirms” excavations last year which found traces of the oldest human sacrifice ever identified in Africa, according to Jacques Reinold, a researcher for the French section of the Sudanese antiquities department.

The ancient unearthed bones date from between 3,700 and 3,400 BC, a period considered as one the key stages in the transition from a hunting to a farming society.

The Al-Kadada region, on fertile land alongside the Nile, is regarded as one of the cradles of humanity in the Neolithic era.

Reinold’s team also unearthed polished axes, a millstone, make-up palettes and ceramics at Al-Kadada. (ANI)