ALTAB ALI Park London E1 Public meeting on Tipaimukh dam threat 3 PM Sunday 2 August 2009
Sunday, 2 August 2009
ALTAB ALI Park London E1 Public meeting on Tipaimukh dam threat 3 PM Sunday 2 August 2009
ALTAB ALI PARK Whitechapel Road London E1 TIPAIMUKH dam 3 PM Sunday 2 August 2009
ALTAB ALI PARK
Whitechapel Road
London E1
TIPAIMUKH dam
3 PM Sunday
2 August 2009
Another strange event occurs surrounding attempted visit of Tipaimukh dam site by a group of Bangladeshi politicians
IRB man kills colleague, shoots himself to death
Source: Hueiyen News Service
Imphal, August 01 2009: An IRB man posting in interior Churachnadpur district shot dead his two colleagues before committing suicide early Saturday, official report here said.
The incident occurred at an IB (Inspection Bungalow) located at Parbung where the purpose site for construction of Tipaimukh dam located this morning at around 7 am.
Personnel of the 1st IRB are guarding the IB, official source added.
Details reports of the incident could not be available immediately as the place of occurrence located in the interior part of the district where there is bad communication.
A team of from Churachandpur district headquarters has rushed to the spot.
The team likely to reach the area late to night out or next morning, a police officer here said when contacted.
However, he said the IRB personnel were posting there in connection with the visit of the 10-member all-party delegation of parliamentarians of Bangladesh who came to study the impact of the Tipaimukh dam at the project.
The officer quoting the initial report said that one of the personnel in the barrack opened fired when there erupted a quarrel with other personnel in the same barrack this morning.
After shooting to dead two of his colleagues, the IRB man committed suicide by firing himself with the weapon issued to him.
Another other personnel in the barrack sustained injuries in the shooting incident, he added.
Friday, 31 July 2009
Tipaimukh: Heavy rain delays Dhaka team's visit
The visiting 10-member team of Bangladeshi parliamentarians yesterday could not visit the site of proposed Tipaimukh Hydropower Project in the Indian state of Manipur due to heavy rain.
The delegation led by veteran AL lawmaker Abdur Razzak took off in a helicopter from Guwahati in Assam and headed to the project site but could not proceed further as heavy downpour forced it to return.
However, the delegation, which was scheduled to return to Delhi yesterday evening, stayed back in Guwahati and would make another attempt to visit the site today, Bangladeshi officials here said.
The delegation's attempt to visit the Tipaimukh site came a day after Indian Power Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde and officials assured the delegation that no irrigation project would come up downstream of the Tipaimukh and there would be no diversion of water from the river Barak on which the 1,500MW power project, entailing an investment of Rs 9,000 crore, is being developed.
Since its arrival in Delhi on July 29, the delegation had held talks with officials of Indian power, water resources and external affairs ministries besides Indian External Affairs Minister SM Krishna and Power Minister Shinde.
Both Krishna and Shinde assured the delegation that India would not do anything about the Tipaumukh project, which would harm Bangladesh's interest.
The Tipaimukh project is being developed in impoverished Churachandpur district of Monipur by government owned national hydropower corporation in joint venture with Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam and Manipur Government.
Govt faces acid test over Tipaimukh: Moudud
BNP leaders Barrister Moudud Ahmed and Hannan Shah among others at a roundtable discussion at the National Press Club on Friday. Photo: Focus Bangla |
Govt faces acid test over Tipaimukh: Moudud
Leaders of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) have urged the government to take immediate measures to gather necessary documents about the ..........More
Staff Correspondent
Leaders of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) have urged the government to take immediate measures to gather necessary documents about the country's maritime boundary and place to United Nations with a view to stopping hearing on the appeal of Myanmar which claimed ownership of a large area inside Bangladesh.
BNP Standing Committee member Barrister Moudud Ahmed and Adviser to Khaleda Zia, Brigadier General (Retd) ASM Hannan Shah made this call while addressing a roundtable discussion on 'conspiracy for occupying maritime boundary and sovereignty of Bangladesh’ organized by National Youth Forum held at the National Press Club yesterday.
Moudud Ahmed said neighboring countries India and Myanmar have already submitted their documents and necessary information about maritime boundary claiming ownership of huge area inside Bangladesh boundary. But Bangladesh government is yet to take any steps regarding the issue.
"If the government plays a silent role and tries to play political game with this nationally important issue ignoring national interest, BNP along with the countrymen will resist it through launching countrywide movement," Moudud said, adding that the government is facing an acid test on Tipaimukh Dam whether the government is able to protect the country's interest or not. The government's sustainability depends on the success of the acid test.
Hannan Shah called upon the government to arrange a national convention on the maritime boundary issue ensuring presence of experts and opposition party. It is the high time to gather necessary documents and place it before international community for protecting the country's boundary from the aggression of India and Myanmar.
The ruling party will mainly be responsible for not protecting the country's interest and sovereignty, said Barrister Abdur Razzak.
Bangladesh Jatiya Party Secretary General Abu Naser Mohammed Rahmatullah, environment and water specialist Dr. S I Khan and Major General (Retd) Fazlur Rahman also addressed the discussion meeting.
Nazrul In Sylhet 109th anniversary of our National Poet
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Hasina party students, Chhatra League men occupy Girls school building in Sylhet town
Activists of Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL) occupied the newly built girls' dormitory of Sylhet Sarkari (government) College yesterday afternoon.
College sources said at least 40 BCL men broke into the four-storey building at around 3:00pm and took possession of 26 rooms there.
The college authorities however, suspended today's academic activities fearing untoward incidents.
Witnesses said the BCL activists, led by their college unit convener Debangshu Das, entered the building by breaking the lock of the main gate.
Debangshu claimed that the BCL men helped the general students occupy the rooms at the hostel.
Immediately after the incident, JCD and Shibir leaders met the college principal. They demanded ouster of the BCL men from the girls' hostel. Otherwise, they said their party men would occupy the remaining rooms of the dormitory.
Meanwhile, traders in the city yesterday blocked the road in Barutkhana area for 10 minutes protesting attack on one of their colleagues by Juba league cadres at Zindabazar on Monday night.
Police and witnesses said Juba League leader Bidhan Kumar Shaha and some of his party men beat up an autorickshaw driver as he parked his three-wheeler in front of a shop at Zindabazar at around 9:00pm on Monday.
As Kamal Ahmed, owner of a readymade garment store of a nearby market, protested the incident, the Jubo League men assaulted him.
Tipaimukh dam: Sylhet target of environmental strangulation......
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A delegation of Bangladeshi parliamentarians has arrived in north-east India to examine plans to build a hydroelectric dam. Many Bangladeshis worry that, if built, the Tipaimukh dam in the state of Manipur will reduce water flowing into its own north-eastern region. Work on building the dam has not yet started. But this is already a sensitive issue in Bangladesh, a country normally associated with having too much water. The leader of the main opposition party in Bangladesh has called on India to cancel the project for the sake of the millions of people in both countries, who she said would be harmed by it. There have been several street protests as well, by those who say that two rivers, which pass through Bangladesh's Sylhet region, could dry up if the dam is built. They have compared the proposals to the Farakka Barrage, which India built in the 1970s on the Ganges to divert water away from Bangladesh. Despite a later agreement between the two countries to share water, Bangladesh's north-western regions continue to suffer from shortages in the winter months. After meeting officials in Delhi, the Bangladeshi parliamentarians will travel to Manipur to visit the site of the proposed dam. They are to examine whether Bangladesh really does have something to fear. |
Source: Hueiyen News Service
Imphal, July 30 2009: Citizen Concern on Dams and Development today announced that if the authority try to construct the controversial Tipaimukh Dam without prior consent of the affected people, the body will try its best to block the construction of the dam.
Speaking at a press conference held at Manipur Press Club today, leaders of the body alleged the authority that the opinion of the affected people against the construction of dam during the public hearing was kept aside.
The body also condemned the environmental clearance given by the Union ministry of Environment and Forest in 2008 .
The clearance was given without the basis of the actual detail impact assessment reports of the dam which was compiled with the opinion expressed by the people to be affected by the dam, they said.
Despite objection from various different sides on the construction of the dam in an international river and becomes an issue in the international level, Central and Manipur government is trying to construct the dam at any cost, they alleged.
Newmai News Network add: The Barak river has been the source of livelihood of the Hmar people for generations, but it would stop being a source of livelihood once the Tipaimukh dam is constructed, said Joseph Hmar, spokesperson of Hmar Students' Union.
The overall benefit in construction of the dam is much less than the loss to be incurred, he stated.
He further stated that the Hmar people are not anti-development and alleged that the ministers of the state do not care for the feelings of the people.
Samson Remmei, president of United Naga Council (UNC) pointed out to the media that the government of Manipur cannot feel the pulse of the people in spite of the numerous protests and continued that the detailed plan of the project has not been shown to the public giving an indication of lack of transparency on the part of the government.
The impact due to the construction of the Tipaimukh dam is going to be multi-dimensional, said Jiten Yumnam, co-convener of Action Committee Against Tipaimukh Dam (ACTIP).
He said that the government should maintain transparency about the Tipaimukh dam and inform the people about any discussion regarding the dam.
Aram Pamei, convener of COLNAR said that the Barak river is very important to the people living near the river.
She said that different types of rare fishes and other species of animals and plants are going to disappear if the dam is constructed.
She continued that the government of India or Manipur or Bangladesh cannot decide anything without the consent of the people living near the Barak river.
- Bangla team makes aerial visit to Tipaimukh
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Guwahati, Jul 31 (PTI) A 10-member delegation from Bangladesh today made an aerial survey of the proposed Tipaimukh dam site on the Assam-Manipur border as the team failed to land due to inclement weather.
The team which arrived here yesterday to visit and study the impact of the proposed dam near Silchar in Barak valley on the availability of the river water to Bangladesh.
The delegation after four hours of the aerial visit came back to the city and said they would again try to visit the site tomorrow if the weather permitted.
"We shall see the weather report and if possible visit the site tomorrow or else we will go back to Delhi tomorrow," they said.
"We will go back to Dhaka and submit the report," they said.
By: Gabriel Chunga, Teddim Road, Churachandpur
The long awaited and much-debated Tipaimukh H.E. Project is of late being executed by a Joint Venture(JV) of NHPC Ltd.(69%), Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam Ltd.(SJVNL) (26%) and Govt. of Manipur(5%) without budgetary support of the Central Govt. A directive of the Ministry of Power has already been issued to that effect. The JV partners have been enthusiastic to take up the mega project. It is learnt that the Chief Secretary of Manipur has reviewed the developments in a meeting held at Imphal on 24.07.2009. Meanwhile, a Parliamentary Delegation accompanied by experts from Bangladesh is visiting the project in the last week of July 2009 on a fact-finding mission. There has been large-scale protest in Bangladesh against the project.
Myself, being one pro-development & educated citizen hailing from a going-to-be-buzzing town known politically as Churachandpur, South of Manipur (in India), have been eagerly keeping good track of this so-called Tipaimukh Project (‘a mega hydel project of 1500MW capacity, wow!’) in my home district (forgotten-for always) and was, rather dreaming of the developmental benefits that would be bestowed to my land (optimistic!). I started hearing as a child that NEEPCO is going to build a ‘big dam’ at Tipaimukh, and my father was always apprehensive about it. Today, I could decipher it more clearer, and I saw some pros and some anti(s) for the dam. I stood with the former, for I made a study on it and understood that it is preferable to ‘lose some to gain some with huge interest in the long run’. But today, I got a jolt, a shock to my innate being, with this sudden and abrupt news of ‘Joint venture thing’ with its entities derived from beyond the uncared geography of the northeast India. The power that may be, I am fixated now to think, are playing games with our life in the name of development. In other words, I started seeing an unknown snobby pot-bellied businessman with a fat briefcase devouring my ‘land-still-in-oblivion’, having his way, minting his dough, without considering the legible rights and basic needs of the sons of my soil. His dramatic smile was a contemptuous smirk to our helplessness with meticulous precision. Oh, it sucks! Anyway, whose line is it anyway to decide this way to put us in such uncertainty?
Going by the developments for execution of the project, the following points of importance are brought out for appraisal of the concerned and redressal by the appropriate authorities before the problems precipitate. It is needless to assert that large nos. of NGOs, public forums and social organisations concerned with environment, ecology and humankind are sceptical about the much-debated project. The specific points brought out herein below give a detail in-road to the ‘state of affairs’ concerning the project.
1. It is understood that early this year the Govt. of India had decided to form a Joint Venture with NEEPCO as the leading partner holding 51% or more share in a meeting held in the Ministry of Power attended by the Secretary(Power), NEEPCO, NTPC, NHPC, SJVNL and Govt. of Manipur. However, in a surprising subsequent development, NHPC, now, is entrusted suddenly with the leading role with 69% share, and the rest with SJVNL. NEEPCO, not figuring anymore! What a jolt, Tipaimukh Project a game of dices?
2. It can be recalled that NEEPCO alongwith Govt. of Manipur conducted Public hearings and processed for environmental clearance. The MOEF has since cleared the project from environmental angle as per the statutory notifications and submissions by NEEPCO. So, change in the executing authority apparently requires re-holding of Public hearings, for it was a hearing of the public with NEEPCO, not NHPC, etc. In public hearings several understandings, policies and commitments are made. With NEEPCO, it is an understanding with NEEPCO, not NHPC. Therefore, NHPC has to go for their Public hearing to publicise their policies towards how best they are trying to develop the public with this project. NEEPCO has done that, people understood and accepted.
3. The modality of forming JV under NHPC leadership is yet to be finalised. The interest of the public would remain uncertain till the issues are deliberated upon and sorted out in entrusting specific responsibilities on the JV partners. Public interest cannot be bestowed on assumptions and presumptions. The project can turn out to be a ‘Casino-lotto-like’ business instead of Socio-economic developmental project.
Therefore, the questionable developments and appropriate timely necessary actions desirable from the legal and logical angles have been –
i) To stop all developmental activities pertaining to Tipaimukh HEP till holding of fresh Public hearings by the new executing agencies and subsequent statutory clearances.
ii) The new agencies, being a separate authority will need to have Public hearing on fresh terms & conditions.
iii) A State Govt. has the say in selection of the executing agency. The Legislative Assembly of Manipur, in 2003 resolved that the project would be executed by NEEPCO. Accordingly, the project was entrusted to NEEPCO and a formal MOU was signed between Govt. of Manipur and NEEPCO to that effect. A gazette notification was made. Will not the instant case be a gross violation of the set norms, if decisions like this are to really be accepted without the resolution of a full assembly of the government?
iv) The statutory formalities including notification under Sec. 18(a) of Electricity Act were fulfilled, as per prevalent norms, for execution of Tipaimukh H.E. Project by NEEPCO. No comments if constitutional acts are not law and not binding!
v) The scope of appointment of unemployed local people in Tipaimukh H.E. Project, expected to be over 3000 nos. i.e., 2 nos. per megawatt, is likely to be lost as NHPC, the lead partner in the JV is a ‘National Organisation’ having different policy of Recruitment which is not binding to appoint local people only. NEEPCO has already fine-tuned its recruitment policy for this project by an understanding arrived at with the public concerned.
vi) NHPC has failed to execute the Loktak Downstream Project as per terms for over the last 10 yrs. On failing in all fronts NHPC has now managed to rope-in Govt. of Manipur by way of entering into Joint Venture so that their failure and responsibilities are shared and covered. Too many cooks spoil the broth!
vii) NHPC will get scope to off-load their already huge surplus manpower from their different projects to Tipaimukh H.E. Project; thereby drastically upsetting the employment opportunity of the local people. This cannot be allowed by depriving the unemployed local people the scopes of employment, which otherwise, would have been unquestionably be granted with executors from the NE region like NEEPCO.
Under such a situation the public has the right to know and be apprised of the detail background atleast on the following issues –
i) The detail background of deciding on execution of the project including decisions / resolutions taken at the Govt. levels at different times.
ii) The statutory norms / regulations for deciding the executing agencies for such projects.
iii) The details of the decision points in the Ministry of Power in finalising the executing agencies in respect of the projects in the other states more particularly in the N.E. States. Having said much, if I am to opt ‘dam or no dam’ I would honestly welcome the project, but on one, and only one condition.
The project can be executed by anyone who is ready to hear the voices, see to the desires, honours the rights and preserved the values of the public concerned, no matter profit or loss for the executor. Desirably, NEEPCO should continue the execution as it is a regional entity having already associated with the local people since long. Effected masses should be comfortable in all matters. This, I very well understood, is one of the PM’s Special package for Socio-economic development of most neglected and backward areas/region, and that promisingly without dearth of funds. So why worry? Let’s shun wealth-making business, and start with ‘a little Act of Random Kindness (ARK) ARK)’.
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