India moves on river plan, critics warn of disaster
- From: ano457@xxxxxxxxx
- Date: 28 Aug 2005 09:52:14 -0700
India moves on river plan, critics warn of disaster
28 Aug 2005 09:42:32 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Terry Friel
NEW DELHI, Aug 28 (Reuters) - Two key states have agreed to start the
first stage of a $200 billion plan to link India's rivers, a scheme
critics condemn as a recipe for ecological disaster and violence from
those it will force from their homes.
The deal between Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh is a major step
towards a project first mooted by the British a century ago becoming a
reality, but many details remain to be worked out before work on even
the first canal and dams can start.
"It would be wrong to promise early results," Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh said at last week's signing in New Delhi.
The first stage involves building a 230 km (145 mile) canal diverting
water from the Ken river to the Betwa in northern Madhya Pradesh and
building a dam and small hydroelectric plant in the middle of the Panna
tiger reserve, one of the most successful.
More than 8,500 farmers and villagers will be forced from their homes
just for the dam, and an unknown number by the canal.
Backers say river linking, which will eventually see 30 links across
India, will provide irrigation, improve crop production, increase
drinking water, provide hydroelectric power and help alleviate floods
and droughts.
"It's a bold and historic initiative that will change the country's
water management paradigm," said former prime minister Atal Behari
Vajpayee, whose government revived the programme.
ECOLOGICAL DISASTER
Almost three quarters of farmland is not irrigated, hostage to the
annual monsoon as the major source of water.
But critics say river linking will create untold damage, undermine food
security and create widespread civil unrest.
"It's really about spending money," said well-known activist Vandana
Shiva, of the Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology,
which has carried out its own detailed study and is helping organise
grassroots opposition to the Ken-Betwa project.
"The Ken-Betwa link is a pilot to show the positiveness of river
linking, but it is going to show the negativeness," said Shiva, who
served on Vajpayee's river linking committee.
Shiva said the project was based on flawed science and was being driven
by vested interests who would gain from the huge construction projects
and the shift towards water-intensive money crops, such as sugarcane
and fruit and vegetables for export.
"The dam inside the Panna park will wipe out the core of the park," she
added.
She points out the Ken and Betwa rise from the same mountains and will
therefore be high or low at the same time, making diverting water from
the Ken damaging during floods and impossible during droughts.
She also says the affected area, Bundelkand, is already well served by
an ancient system of man made lakes and water tanks, adding the project
would take control of water away from local communities and into the
hands of the central authorities.
"That will be one more reason of ecological breakdown, more corruption
and more political instability," Shiva said.
Local villagers, farmers and activists, including former members of the
state assembly, have begun organising opposition to the project and
have already staged protest marches.
Shiva warned local opposition could lead to violence if the government
continued to ignore it, similar to peasant-based insurgencies in other
areas by rebels known as Naxalites.
"Here are people stating their grievances. They are not being listened
to and you are going to push them to the kind of situation you are
trying to overcome in the Naxalite areas," she said. "They will fight.
They'll fight."
She also warned police would have to fire to disperse protesters, as
they did during a rally over water in the western desert state of
Rajasthan this year.
"If every river link is going to mean killing and shooting then you
will have civil war in this country."
.
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