(Recovered and Reloaded)
Why Hue
and Cry on irrigation Projects?
Vanam
Jwala Narasimha Rao
The Hans
India (15-06-2016)
There has been a hue and cry for no reason initiated by some of
the so called intellectuals on the inadequacy of compensation to the affected
people in the likely submerged areas of the proposed irrigation projects in the
state. Mallannasagar is one among them. The reservoir which would provide 50
TMC of water irrigating about 5 Lakhs of acres is designed in such a way that
hardly 5-6 villages are submerged. Here as against the land value of Rs 60, 000
per acre the state government offered Rs. 5.08 lakhs per acre besides one two
bed room house as well as compensation for all the other properties to be lost.
Settlements of all these will be in one go unlike the installment system under
land acquisition policy. Had it been in accordance with the GoI land
acquisition Act the compensation would be a maximum of Rs. 2 Lakhs per acre. In
fact The GoI Act stipulates that Compensation for project affected people are
decided by the project authorities as per existing Rehabilitation and
Resettlement policy of Centre/State whichever is more beneficial. Then, why is
this opposed?
Every one is aware when around 264 villages were submerged under Nagarjunasagar
project how many years it took for clearances of claims under acquisition
policy. Against this experience Government of Telangana brought the concept of
land procurement based on the consensus of farmer and adequate compensation.
Minimizing the likely submerged villages is thought of. For example as against
submerging of 64 villages and 59, 000 acres as per the design of Palamoor lift
irrigation of bringing water from Jurala, it is reduced to couple of small
Tandas and limiting to just 16, 000 acres in the new design from Srisailam
intake. Political and so called intellectual interference misleading
innocent people will only adversely affect the projects.
After
formation of Telangana State, Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao concentrated
on re-engineering of Irrigation Projects in the state aiming at providing
water for one Crore acres in all. Constructing as many barrages as possible
across River Godavari and making complete use of River Krishna waters is the
basis for the comprehensive policy of Telangana State Government irrigation
projects. LIDAR survey was taken up from Dummugudem to Kaleshwaram, Medigadda
to Yellampalli reservoir and Mid Manair to Basavapur reservoir and so on. This
includes among others the likely submerging villages aiming at minimizing the
number of displaced people. Irrigation officials have been instructed to
expedite the land procurement process for the projects. Chief Minister further
directed the officials to pay the value of land and property, which the farmers
would lose in the process of land procurement and also pay Rs 5.04 lakhs for
constructing a new house wherever they desire to have. All these amounts should
be released at one go. Care has been taken to ensure that the submergence is
bare minimum and loss to villages is very nominal, while constructing the
reservoirs.
According
to a reference material note circulated by Lok Sabha Secretariat in December
2013 on "Displacement and Rehabilitation of People Due to Developmental
Projects" in India, around 50 million people have been displaced due to
development projects in over 50 years. The note mentioned that India has
invested in industrial projects, dams, roads, mines, power plants and new
cities to achieve rapid economic growth. This has been made possible through massive
acquisition of land and subsequent displacement of people. In the erstwhile AP
alone due to projects such as water, industry, mines, power etc the total
number of displaced persons is over 32 Lakhs. As per the Resettlement and
Rehabilitation Plans cleared by Tribal Affairs Ministry, as many as 3.16 Lakhs
Persons were affected due to Development Projects since 1999 including 1.24
Lakhs tribals.
Dam building is one of the most important causes for development related
displacement. According to this report, during the last fifty years, some 3,300
big dams have been constructed in India. Many of them have led to large-scale
eviction of vulnerable groups. The situation of the tribal people is of special
concern as they constitute 40 to 50 percent of the displaced population. For
the Sardar Sarovar Dam more than 4 Lakhs people were affected and Narmada
Valley Development Project affected much more than this. Tehri project in
Uttarakhand established in 1979, affected more than a Lakh of people.
Barring a few exceptions, most projects did not have a clear-cut resettlement
plan. Resettlement was undertaken on a case-to-case basis. To mention a few,
there were projects like the Nagarjunasagar, Hirakud, Tungabhadra and
Mayurakshi dams did offer resettlement in the form of house sites to the
displaced but leading to long standing litigations. Dams, mining industries and
other developmental like SEZ projects have displaced people from their
homestead and the total number of displaced and affected people runs into
millions and one calculation puts it as the highest number of people uprooted
for development projects in the world. The land acquisition procedure has
however become a complex one, prohibiting the payment of fair compensation to project
ousters. Government of India Act also will not do much justice to them.
Another interesting example is that of Three Gorges Dam in China. The Three
Gorges Dam is the world’s largest hydropower project. The massive project set a
record in terms of displacing twelve Lakh people and flooding 13 cities, 140
towns, 1,350 villages as well as in its reservoir length of more than 600
kilometers. It is the largest hydroelectric dam in the world. It is located in
the middle of the three gorges on the Yangtze River, the third longest in the
world, in the Hubei Province of China. It is 3,937 miles long with an annual
discharge of 960 billion cubic meters of water into the East China Sea. Through
the Three Gorges Project, China has acquired the know-how to build large
hydropower schemes, and has begun exporting similar projects around the world.
The Three Gorges Dam is the world's largest power station in terms of installed
capacity (22,500 MW). In 2014 the dam generated 98.8 TWh of electricity.
The Chinese Government envisaged four goals for the Three Gorges Dam project
namely Flood Control, Power Generation, Navigation and Tourism. As the dam has
the capacity to reduce the impacts of flooding since it will have a flood
control capacity of 22.15 billion cubic meters. The earlier experience of
killing thousands of people and causing millions of dollars in damages was
permanently done away with the construction of the dam.
The way
in which the Chinese government compensates people moving out is called the
“lump sum” method. This method grants people the total net worth of their home
and land, according to criteria put in place by the government. The Three
Gorges Dam, despite some negative impacts on nearby affected society, does
offer the positive benefit of flood control.
There is
no denial of the fact that if the quality of life of people is to be improved,
development projects are a must. When we need to move from “developing to
developed” it is likely to affect some people in the larger interest of large
number of people. Let us remember the Greatest Happiness Principle of John
Stuart Mill: actions are good when they lead to a higher level of general
happiness, and bad when they decrease that level. Then why agitate?
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