The subject of displacement in
North-East India is
very pertinent today and will remain so in the coming decades. The
author, Monirul Hussain, a professor of political science at Gauhati
Univerity, is quite familiar with the subject and has been involved in
the related issues for over a decade. The book itself, a
well-researched effort, based on field visits and a lot of data, is an
attempt to document the displacement caused by the various
developmental and other projects in the North East, and the responses
from the various quarters to such displacement. Hussain achieves this
purpose quite well.
The story of displacement has mostly gone “unnoticed, unattended and
unaddressed” and even “undocumented”. The story of displacement is not
just about alienation from land, but also from livelihood, culture and
community. And what is most revealing is that so far there has been no
example of just resettlement or rehabilitation for a single project in
India. In fact, the government has the legal power to displace people,
that too through the colonial legislation known as the Land Acquisition
Act (the current proposal to amend it could make it worse), but no
legal obligation to resettle or rehabilitate them.
But Hussain does not stop at displacement and lack of rehabilitation.
He shows that most such ‘mega’ projects fail to perform the task they
were built for. Hence he rightly says that it may be more beneficial to
decommission projects like the Dumbur Hydropower project in Tripura
since it is generating very little power,
and distribute the land thus freed up, among the tribals who were
displaced due to the project. Another very pertinent issue raised by
the author is that while the local people face adverse consequences in
every case, they almost never get any benefits from the projects.
Secondly, he has shown through figures how an overwhelming proportion
of the cost of displacement is paid by the tribals.
Similarly, he shows how wrong operation of hydropower projects leads to
flood disasters in the downstream areas, which are completely
avoidable. This is very relevant this year when the flood disaster was
brought about in the Lakhimpur district in Assam in June, in which the
sudden release of water from the Ranganadi dam played a significant
role, as highlighted by the Chief Minister of Assam. Similarly, the
author shows how embankment as a flood control measure has failed in
the North East, as it did in the case of the Kosi basin in Bihar,
causing a national catastrophe.
The story of how 45,000 Mizo tribals were forcibly displaced in the
1950s in the name of fighting insurgency reminds one of the Salwa Judum
campaign going on in Chhattisgarh today, which has been a disaster from
every angle.
The author sees some hope in the action of the Arunachal Pradesh
government, which at one stage declared that it will not allow any big
storage-based hydropower projects, despite the contrary wishes of the
Centre. He notes that the Arunachal government had to go back on this
decision, and it started signing a slew of MOUs (Memorandums of
Understanding) for a large number of big hydro projects. More recently,
the chief minister and Governor of Assam, chastened by the flood fury
that the downstream Assam faced in June 2008 due to the sudden release
of large quantities of water from the Ranganadi Hydro project, have
declared their opposition to big hydro projects in Arunachal Pradesh.
However, it may be noted that water is a state subject in India’s
Constitution. Power is a concurrent subject, but as far as hydropower
projects are concerned, the state can decide which projects to take and
which not to. If the Centre is getting away with imposing its wishes on
unwilling states despite this Constitutional arrangement, then that is
another big failing of our democracy.
The author is hopeful that the “popular politics of New Social
Movements will eventually lead to de-ethnicisation of politics of
identity in the North East”. That hope seems a bit far fetched though.
On the issue of democracy in development, he notes, “There exists a
significant deficit in the popular participation of citizens in Indian
democracy”. It must go down as one of the grand understatements of the
book. This volume is recommended reading for all who are concerned
about the costs of development, particularly government officials and
politicians at all levels.
The writer is a commentator on developmental issues.
http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1188225
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