N KUMAR - Jharkhand: As BJP regime flouts norms to help Adani get land, media stays silent
This place was turned into a police
cantonment on the evening of 5 December 5. The police surrounded the entire
area. It appeared as if something big was about to happen. People with yellow
cards started arriving in large numbers on the morning of 6 December. The
police was allowing only these cardholders to enter. I enquired about the
mystery of the yellow card. I was told it was the pass to participate in Jan Sunvai.
Nobody told me who was distributing these cards." "The people at
the hearing were curtly asked whether they wanted to give their land to Adani?
They replied in the affirmative and the hearing ended. Those who did not
possess the card were not allowed to voice their opinion. They resorted to
sloganeering outside the venue. The police baton-charged them. There's still no
word on these yellow cards." Pradeep, a resident of
Godda district in Jharkhand's Santhal Pargana region, is breathless as he
narrates this story. Situated close to the border with Bihar, Godda has been
chosen to host Gautam Adani's two proposed power plants. The proposal has been
a subject of controversy for the past one year.
From threats to
allurements, all tactics have been employed to convince the farmers here to
give their land for the project. Jharkhand's BJP government has even changed
multiple rules to facilitate the venture. Pradeep was describing
a "public meeting" called to discuss acquisition of land for one of
the power plants. Several such meetings was held in Godda's Motia and Baksara
regions on 6 December. The venues were conspicuous by heavy police deployment.
However, it barely found a mention in the local media. "The construction
of this power plant is a certainty since the government is adamant about it,
and the media as well as the administration are backing it. "But even
1,600 MW of electricity supposed to be produced by these plants would not
alleviate the darkness in our lives and social tensions that are set to
follow," Pradeep says.
The site chosen for
one of the plants is in Motia-Dumaria. Most land owners here have migrated to
other areas and left their farms to tenants. The officials of Adani's company
believe land acquisition would be easier here since most land owners are not
directly employed in farming. The company and the
government, of course, doesn't seem bothered about the landless labourers and
tenant farmers who are dependent on this land for their very survival.
DIVIDE AND RULE: The Adani Group has
managed to get the support of a section of the land owners, if Pradeep is to be
believed. And this has led to tensions between them and the sharecroppers. Initially, the Jindals
had offered to build the power plant in Motia-Dumaria. The group had even
acquired land for this purpose in the hilly area of Godda. As per a contract
signed by the central government, electricity from this plant would be supplied
to Bangladesh. To fire up the plant, the Jindal Group had been allotted the
adjoining Jeetpur coal block. However, the tender was later cancelled.
From threats to
allurements, all tactics have been employed to convince the farmers here to
give their land for the project. Jharkhand's BJP government has even changed
multiple rules to facilitate the venture. Pradeep was describing
a "public meeting" called to discuss acquisition of land for one of
the power plants. Several such meetings was held in Godda's Motia and Baksara
regions on 6 December. The venues were conspicuous by heavy police deployment.
However, it barely found a mention in the local media. "The construction
of this power plant is a certainty since the government is adamant about it,
and the media as well as the administration are backing it. "But even
1,600 MW of electricity supposed to be produced by these plants would not
alleviate the darkness in our lives and social tensions that are set to
follow," Pradeep says.
The site chosen for
one of the plants is in Motia-Dumaria. Most land owners here have migrated to
other areas and left their farms to tenants. The officials of Adani's company
believe land acquisition would be easier here since most land owners are not
directly employed in farming. The company and the
government, of course, doesn't seem bothered about the landless labourers and
tenant farmers who are dependent on this land for their very survival.
DIVIDE AND RULE: The Adani Group has
managed to get the support of a section of the land owners, if Pradeep is to be
believed. And this has led to tensions between them and the sharecroppers. Initially, the Jindals
had offered to build the power plant in Motia-Dumaria. The group had even
acquired land for this purpose in the hilly area of Godda. As per a contract
signed by the central government, electricity from this plant would be supplied
to Bangladesh. To fire up the plant, the Jindal Group had been allotted the
adjoining Jeetpur coal block. However, the tender was later cancelled. Meanwhile, there was a
change of guard in Jharkhand and Raghubar Das of the BJP became the chief
minister. Fresh tenders were issued for Jeetpur coal block. This time the deal
was bagged by Adani's company. On 17 February 2016, Adani Group's Managing
Director Rajesh Adani signed a contract with then state energy secretary SKG
Rahate in the presence of the chief minister to build two power plants with a
combined capacity of 1,600 MW.
Jharkhand's energy
policy clearly states that it will have a right to at least 25% of the
electricity produced in any power plant that operates within its borders.
However, power generated in these power projects will be supplied to
Bangladesh. The company has agreed to supply a "predetermined
percentage" of power generated from one of the plants to Jharkhand. Initially, a place
called Paraspani was earmarked for this plant. The company prepared to acquire
2,200 acres of land for the purpose. But Jharkhand Vikas Morcha legislator
Pradeep Yadav raised his voice against it. The matter even echoed in the state
assembly. According to a senior
official of the Adani Group, Prabhakar Jha, the company originally planned to
set up a power plant in Gujarat's Mundra. But after bagging Jeetpur coal block,
it decided to build the power plant nearby to save on coal transportation cost
and "to aid Jharkhand's development".
The company has
purportedly chalked out several "development plans" for the region,
according to the official. Besides paying "fair compensation" for the
acquired land, jobs have been promised to locals below the age of 40. The
company has also pledged to spend a part of its profit on the development of
the region.
AT ADANI'S BECK AND
CALL: MLA Pradeep Yadav, who
claims the credit for cancellation of the project in Paraspani, rues that the
government is now "playing the same game" with the people of
Motia-Dumaria. Yadav has accused BJP government of "flouting all rules to
benefit the Adani Group". He claims the state will lose Rs 2,000 crore in
revenue annually as a result of the "favours" being doled out to the
company. "Everybody sees
how state officials are more active than even Adani's own employees in securing
a foothold for the company in Jharkhand. All leaders have only paid lip service
to the cause of the locals. Nobody is prepared to do anything beyond a
point," laments Jharkhand Vikas Morcha chief and former chief minister
Babulal Marandi.
Pallav, a local
journalist, has followed the issue since the beginning. He says, "This
controversy has divided the people of Santhal Pargana into two groups. The
company is giving benefits to a section of the society to further its agenda.
The BJP and other parties are backing it. This is the reason the politicians
have not taken up the issue," Pallav says. "The company
wants to divide the land it seeks to take into three categories on the basis of
the land survey of 1932 for determining compensation to the farmers. The survey
had categorised the best land as 'ubal', uncultivated land into 'dhani', barren
land as 'tikkar.' But, there has been a lot of change in the topography during
the nine decades. People have cultivated a large chunk of 'tikkar' land,"
Pallav adds.
The journalist
believes the Adani Group has chosen Motia-Dumaria for the power plant for a
reason. "The company is creating a wedge between the land owners and
others who are dependent on the land. It hopes to take the land by dividing the
society." "It is the first
case of its kind in the country where the government, political parties as well
as the administrative machinery are all going out of their way to benefit a
particular company. Many district officials have been brazenly transferred to
facilitate the project," says a senior government official, who asked not
to be named for fear of reprisals.
This official claims
the BJP regime is "pursuing the agenda of amending the Chhota Nagpur
Tenancy Act of 1908 and the Santhal Pargana Tenancy Act of 1949 with the sole
objective of favouring Adani". "The plan is to let the local farmers
and the company settle the matter between themselves without any intervention
from the government," the official notes. "Essentially, Adani's
people will get a free hand to do as they please."