Public
hearing to assess POSCO environmental impact draws flak
Controversial plans to build
a port and steel plant – part of a memorandum of understanding with the
Orissa government affecting over 4000 acres of farm and forest land – have
come under further criticism after a public hearing effectively barred many
people affected by the giant project from attending.
South Korean steel company
POSCO’s plans for mining, processing and exporting – valued at over 520,000
million rupees (US$12bn) and India’s largest foreign investment to date –
could displace over 20,000 people in Orissa and lead to environmental
problems.
Last month clashes were
reported between police and villagers opposed to the port and steel plant.
Protestors have blockaded villages in an attempt to keep their land.
Although the state is
legally bound to hold an environmental impact meeting, the one held on
Sunday (April 15) was organised some 25 kilometres away from the planned
site, requiring a journey that few poor farmers and villagers could afford.
“If the
government has any decency they would declare this hearing null and void,”
said ActionAid programme manager Madhumita Ray who was at the hearing.
“The
meeting was held too far for many affected people to take part, in direct
contravention of environmental impact assessment guidelines.”
As a result, out of the
500-600 people attending, under 20% were from the eight villagers that the
project will flatten.
Despite assurances from
Orissa state government that just 500 families will be affected and promises
of a comprehensive compensation package, many at the meeting were sceptical.
One retired teacher said he
had “seen so many companies come and go
with false promises about employment and local benefits.”
“These industries do not provide employment to our people and
they want to grab our land,”
he said.
“The mood was against the POSCO plans. People clearly do not
want to see mass displacement from land and livelihoods and have serious
concerns over the social,
environmental and
economic impact,”
added Ray.
While Orissa’s chief
minister Naveen Patnaik assured that the project would be carried out with
"a humane face and in a peaceful way," protestors hope that plans can still
be blocked.
Scientists
have also raised serious concerns. The proposed port
near Paradeep in the district of
Jagatsinghpur “would play havoc with Gahirmatha marine sanctuary, protected
forests and the migratory path of endangered Olive Ridley turtles,” says
environmentalist Biswajit Mohanty.
Last month, neighbouring
West Bengal state mothballed plans to hand over farmland to a new chemical
complex after 14 protestors were killed by police, while earlier in January
plans by Tata Steel to open a new plant in Orissa were overshadowed by the
deaths of 13 people in Kalinga Nagar.