Straddling 30km on both sides of the
border of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, the region known as
Singrauli saw its people scatter as seven power plants and several coal
mines arrived on the rim of the Gobind Ballabh Pant reservoir in the
mid-1970s.

But three decades
later, farmers
and forest dwellers, mostly scheduled castes and scheduled tribes,
uprooted to make way for industry, are still waiting for compensation,
jobs and rehabilitation, even as unemployment pushes them deeper into
poverty.
Landless in India: Manti Naha
(centre), a widow from Dibulganj in Uttar
Pradesh, did not own arable land at the time of displacement. She,
among others, is not entitled to any compensation. Today, she lives on
alms
Their predicament serves as both a reminder of how resettlement and
rehabilitation has been carried out—and failed—before and as a warning
to the millions who remain in the path of land needed for industrial
development. For their part, the companies in Singrauli seem resigned
to the situation, mainly citing growing populations that make unclear
who is entitled to what.
Resettlement issues are usually governed by the state’s revenue
administration and funded by the firms, but there is a lack of
awareness among officials about the living conditions of the poor, said
Nandini Choudhury, a senior executive at the New Delhi-based industrial
project consultancy Green Sea. “Post-project monitoring in India is
very poor. And, in many cases, the compensation does not reach people,”
she added.
Today, land is even more of a burning issue as several big-ticket
industrial projects face opposition from locals unwilling to give up
their land. The growing troubles have also forced the Union government
to address the problems faced by those displaced long-ago, for the
first time seriously.
India still does not have a national rehabilitation and resettlement
Act. Such a Bill is now pending before a parliamentary panel, but many
say it fails to address issues of those whose homes and livelihoods
have already been devastated—such as the people here.
Ravaged landscape
Less than 2km south of state-run NTPC Ltd’s oldest 2,000MW plant in
Shakti Nagar, in Uttar Pradesh’s Sonbhadra district, is the sprawling
Chilka Tand colony, where many of the 2,086 displaced people were
shifted after their land was identified for the power complex in 1977.
Pushed to the edge of the Khadia coal mine—a ravaged landscape of
dug-out mountainside stripped of any vegetation—residents daily battle
dust and disease. Every afternoon, dynamite blasts the core of the
overhead hill in the hunt for coal, sending gusts of gray dust blowing
into their homes.
Homes flood during the monsoons when mud sludge flows down the mined
hills, creating breeding grounds for gastrointestinal ailments and
malaria. And the community toilet, provided by the power company, has
been shut since it was built several years ago.
In the dozen resettlement colonies for the displaced, there is no clean
water or proper health care. Nearly 30% of the people who live near the
power plants suffer from bronchial asthma, according to a doctor at the
local public health care centre, who requested anonymity.
According to Sahyog, a local non-profit group representing the
displaced, about 45,000 people faced mass displacement due to the power
plants and coal mines in Uttar Pradesh’s Sonbhadra district alone.
NTPC tied up with Uttar Pradesh’s special area development authority to
improve and build infrastructure at the colonies, but the deal broke
off last year due to differences over money.
Joblessness
Adding to the gloom, joblessness has accelerated as automation
increases and migrants from Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh flock here.
“It has become difficult to distinguish who is a land oustee and who is
not. We are already overstretched to provide facilities to everybody,”
said an NTPC official, who works in the corporate social responsibility
department of the Singrauli power station. This person, who requested
anonymity, said the firm has a budget of Rs43 lakh for each of its
three settlement colonies, but the population has reached 7,000, more
than anticipated.
At Dibulganj, 20km away and the site of state electricity board’s
1,600MW Anpara thermal power station, land oustees are still fighting
for jobs promised in 1978. The 1,207 families that lost a total 3,195
acres of land, were each promised a job, but only 304 people are
employed today as clerks, peons and labourers. Now, as the company has
plans to lease out surplus land to another private plant, the 1,200MW
Lanco Anpara Power Pvt. Ltd, local protests have erupted again.
A senior official at the Anpara power station, who requested anonymity,
said a board order had specified that no land oustees be given jobs if
they hadn’t got one within the first seven years of displacement.
Anpara power station is run by the state-run Uttar Pradesh Rajya Vidyut
Utpadan Nigam Ltd.
“It’s grave injustice,” said Shyam Jaiswal, a clerk at the Anpara power
plant and a trade union leader. “First they acquired our land and kept
promising we will get jobs when they expand capacity. Then they gave
the land away to another company and changed the rules for employment.”
He said many of the jobless belong to families evicted in the early
1960s by the Rihand dam, which created the Gobind Ballabh Pant
reservoir.
Living on alms
Many others, who did not own any arable land at the time of
displacement, such as Manti Naha, a frail widow with a wizened face,
were not entitled to any compensation at all. Today, she lives on alms
from passers-by of the Anpara station, gathering rice and dal from
different homes. “I have to walk 2km every day to get one meal,” said
Naha, whose two sons, a truck driver and a wage labourer, are away in
Allahabad and Lucknow. “I can’t ask them for money because they need it
too.”
“It will turn into another Nandigram if people do not get their
entitled compensation, land and jobs,” warns Pankaj Mishra, who works
with Sahyog. “About 90% of the people are unemployed here,” adds
Mishra, who recently filed a public interest litigation against Anpara
power plant on behalf of the land oustees.
According to Sahyog, the coal mines of Northern Coalfields Ltd, a
subsidiary of Coal India Ltd, have evicted thousands, and some 2,000
forest dwellers and 600 families are still owed money or jobs. Asked
for comment, V.K. Singh, Northern Coalfield’s chief, said: “Everyone
wants a job, which is the main cause of discontentment. But it’s not
possible to give it to everyone.”
Across the border
The problem also spills across the border into Madhya Pradesh where
NTPC’s 3,200MW Vindyachal super thermal power plant is located. Some
2,300 families were displaced when the plant was set up in 1982. Six
hundred families are still waiting to be rehabilitated, according to
Upendra Pandey, a member of Bishthapit Yuva Parishad, a local
organization.
A larger issue of displacement, according to Green Sea’s Choudhury, is
not about opposing industrialization, but offering decent compensation
packages.
“People are willing to give up their land if they get a good deal,”
Choudhury said. “In Singrauli, when people were displaced by the Rihand
dam, they were literally thrown out without any compensation. People
are not willing to take risks anymore when they have seen what has
happened to others.”
http://www.livemint.com/2008/07/15235830/Three-decades-on-promises-unf.html
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