Press Release    11th April, 2010, Day 3 IPT

INDEPENDENT PEOPLE’S TRIBUNAL ON LAND ACQUISITION, RESOURCE GRAB 
& OPERATION GREEN HUNT
9th – 11th April, 2010, Constitution Club, New Delhi



The Independent People's Tribunal concluded today with the jury comprising of 
Justice (Retd.) Sawant, Justice (Retd.) Suresh, Professor Yash Pal, Dr. P. M. 
Bhargava, Dr. Mohini Giri and Dr. K S Subramanian presenting an interim 
recommendation report to the public, Government and the media on the issues of 
on Land Acquisition, Resource Grab and Operation Green Hunt. The interim report 
was drafted by the jury members after three days of deliberations and hearings 
of depositions and testimonies from affected people and activists from the 
states of Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Orissa. 

Presenting the recommendations of the jury before the media, public and 
Government, Justice (Retd.) Sawant said “There is a perception within the 
Goivernment and media that by organising meetings like the IPT, we, everyone 
present in this room are supporting the Maoists and the death of the 76 CRPF 
jawans. Let me clarify this position for once and for all: We are not 
supporting the Maoists. We do not support violence in any form, State or 
otherwise. We here are discussing problems of the tribals and the crisis that 
is pushing people to a brink of desperation and escalating the cycle of 
violence.” It is clear that the state had let the tribals and the poor of this 
land down. Instead of restoring their faith in the Constitution of India, its 
judiciay and its spirit, the Government asked for abjuring of violence. “Are 
these morals only to be remembered in such times, and to be forgotten when 
atrocities are committed by the state itself?” Dr. P M
 Bhargava noted that the civil society needs to stand resolute in resisting the 
current development paradigm and that the case of the BT Brinjal was a case in 
point for small victories of the people. “The patience of the masses is running 
out if some serious rethinking is not.” Dr. Mohini Giri lamented on the fact 
that the Government took no notice of People’s Tribunals like these and 
recommendations that emanated from it. She criticised the Government for their 
lack of understanding of the issues that were affecting people and implored 
them to do so immediately. 

The interim report of the Jury states “gross violation of the rights of the 
poor, particularly tribal rights, which have reached unprecedented levels since 
the new economic policies of the 90’s. The 5th Schedule rights of the tribals, 
in particular the Panchayat Extension to Scheduled Areas (PESA) Act and the 
Forest Rights Act have been grossly violated. These violations have now gone to 
the extent where fully tribal villages have been declared to be non-tribal. The 
entire executive and judicial administration appears to have been totally 
apathetic to their plight. It could well be the severest indictment of the 
State in the history of democracy anywhere, on account of the sheer number of 
people (tribals) affected and the diabolic nature of the atrocities committed 
on them by the State, especially the police, leave aside the enormous and 
irreversible damage to the environment. (Attached is the interim jury report).

The first session of the day took stock of the situation in Orissa with regards 
to industrial and mining projects, land acquisition and people's resistance 
movements against such displacement, disposession. Addressed by activists 
Praveen Patel, Praful Samantra, Abhay Sahu and photographer Sanjit Das, the 
narratives pointed out to how corporate greed colluding with government 
officials was bleeding out the tribals. Praveen Patel presented a paper on the 
'Political Economy of Mining' and pointed out that under the current policy, 
foreign companies were getting away with virtual robbery, taking huge profits, 
paying very little in taxes and in fact exacting a huge price from the poor 
(especially tribals) who are displaced and who suffer severe health and 
livelihood impacts from the rampant pollution. 

The problematic exploitation of iron and bauxite ore was further highlighted in 
Praful Samantra's talk. For example, the sites containing the most bauxite ore 
are located atop mountains and correspond to the sources of numerous streams. 
Mining the ores amounts to ruining the water supply for the adivasis living in 
the area, while leaving the company with zero liability. Protests are 
suppressed in a manner similar to that seen in other states: “...in the last 
year 14 people have been shot dead. In the last 6 months, villagers have been 
banned from leaving their areas, even to go to the hospital. In September 2009, 
30 innocent villagers were put in jail and branded as Maoists. We went there 
and fought for them because they were innocent. The administration assured us 
that they would be released but they are still in jail now. Their families are 
starving now.”

Abhay Sahu, a leader of the Anti-POSCO movement, spoke about the situation on 
ground. Local people have been protesting the proposed port project, to be 
built by POSCO which would ruin the lucrative beetle vine cultivation as well 
as destroy the livelihood of lakhs of fishermen. He testified on the 
intimidation tactics used by the State-company nexus to kill the protests: “On 
29 November 2007, state and company goons set fire to a village in my area. 
They occupied all schools and building in the area. When people started 
fighting back, the police had to abandon their posts.”

Lingaraj Azad, a tribal rights activist, talked about the delicate balance of 
nature in Niyamgiri, Orissa where the Dhongria Kondh tribe has dwelled for 
centuries. The Niyamgiri hill is under threat from Vedanta Resources for its 
bauxite reserves. “We have abundant herbs and trees. In the hills, there are 
8000-9000 people in 200 villages. These people know nature and nature knows 
them. Soil, earth, water, trees—these are regarded as God and prayed to. They 
have no material possessions except Nature and all of it. There is no concept 
of private property, it is all for common use”. The Niyamgiri mining project 
has been receiving international media attention after the human-rights 
violations at Vedanta mining sites were made public. 

Ajit Bhattacharjea, a journalist, stressed that lands in tribal areas were 
community property and did not belong to the State. Handing these lands to 
corporates needed to stop. Banwari Lal Sharma appealed to the politicians: “We 
need to spread a message of peace and make these politicians understand that we 
are not their enemies but we are all friends. When they sell away the country 
they are selling away parts of themselves.” 

The session after break saw several eminent personalities addressing the 
audience, including Arundhati Roy, Shoma Chaudhury, Bianca Jagger, Arun 
Aggarwal, Kavita Srivastava and Advocate Shanti Bhushan. Arun Aggarwal 
presented a well researched paper on the Economics of Mining. According to him, 
revenue from mining activities to the state accounted for a measly 1.4% of 
total profits while the rest was pocketed by the corporation. The politics of 
mining was so complicated and corrupt that the nexus could be tracked between 
the corporations, politicians and police. For him, the fact that the ultra left 
movement was situated in areas of mineral wealth concentration, mining 
activities and displacement of people was a point of great importance and not 
to be ignored. He recommended that all mining activity should be conducted by 
Government owned enterprises so that the profits could be distributed more 
equitably. Shanti Bhushan, in a surprise address, asked the
 civil society to not remain silent but condemn violent acts by Maoists. 
Accepting the fact that tribals had been exploited for years, he added that 
civil society’s silence on condemning the recent carnage was being perceived as 
their support of Maoist violence. “How can you accept an armed resistance and 
overthrow of the State with violence? What is the agenda of the Maoists? If 
they mean well, then why don’t they give up arms and participate in elections? 
Let it be all done in the open.” Shoma Chaudhury, Editor-Features, Tehelka 
spoke on the role of the media and accepted that the debates and discussions on 
television channels were resolutely and sadly binary. The discussions on these 
topics needed to be made more complex, because they required a combination of 
solutions. “Keeping out perspectives – whether the Government’s, Civil 
Society’s or the general public will only narrow down the discourse on these 
complex problems that we find
 ourselves in. This exclusion in itself is a very dangerous trend and needs to 
be arrested”. She added “There is no place for violence in a democracy. Agreed. 
However, did democracy exist in the states of Chhattisgarh, Orissa? Democracy 
does not only mean election. The judiciary, police, forest officials and 
magistrates all represent India’s democratic structure and it is these very 
institutions that have failed the people.” Bianca Jagger, returning from a 
visit to Orissa, spoke about her experience with the Dongria Kondh tribe. She 
said that despite being a foreigner she related to the problem of India’s 
tribals. Her experience of having worked as a human rights activist in Latin 
and Central America shows that indigenous communities everywhere are being 
pressurised by the current development paradigm. Saying that there is a lot to 
be learnt from indigenous communities and their ecologically sustainable 
lifestyle, she added “I request the
 Government of India to retrospect into why there is an armed insurrection to 
begin with?”. Arundhati Roy began by asking a very poignant question “Does the 
government want war or peace?”. In the current context of anti-maoist 
operations and rampant industrial activity that was displacing people, she said 
“it seems to me that war is a synonym for creating an ideal investment 
climate.” According to her, in the 1970’s and 80’s, democracy was the single 
largest threat to imperialist, capitalist western nations, who overthrew 
democracies in Latin America. Now however war is being in Afghanistan and Iraq 
to install democracy and all its associated institutions. She questioned the 
nature of democracy, as it existed today, saying that “democracy and democratic 
institutions have been reduced to being vessels of Free Market Capitalism”.

The Independent People’s Tribunal will continue [read: was held] from 9th – 
11th April, 2010, at the Constitution Club, New Delhi. This is [read: was] 
organized by a collective of civil society groups, social movements, activists, 
academics and concerned citizens in the country.

For more information, please contact: Sherry 9953466107; Purnima 971178868

Peace Is Doable

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