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Indian tribe in stunning
victory over mining giant Vedanta Resources
26 August 2010
An
Indian tribe in has won a stunning victory over
one of the worlds biggest mining companies,
Vedanta Resources. According to Survival International,
in an extraordinary move, Indias Environment
Minister Jairam Ramesh has blocked Vedanta Resources
controversial plan to mine bauxite on the sacred
hills of the Dongria Kondh tribe. Mr Ramesh said
Vedanta has shown a 'shocking' and 'blatant disregard
for the rights of the tribal groups'. The Minister
has also questioned the legality of the massive
refinery Vedanta has already built below the hills.
The news is a crushing defeat for Indian billionaire
Anil Agarwal, Vedantas majority owner and
founder.
In recent years the project
has come under unprecedented attack. The Norwegian
and British governments, the Church of England,
organizations such as Survival International,
and even insurance giant Aviva have all criticized
the company and its ethics. Survival International
has been in the forefront of a global campaign
against the mine for several years. Survival recruited
celebrities such as Michael Palin and Joanna Lumley
to champion the tribes cause; its supporters
have written over 10,000 protest letters to the
Indian government, and more than 600,000 people
have watched Survivals film Mine.
The tribes plight even came to the attention
of Avatar director James Cameron,
and the Dongria became known as the real
Avatar tribe.
The struggle has pitted the
8,000-strong tribe, nearly all of them illiterate,
against the might of an $8bn company and its founder,
himself worth some $6bn. The Dongria Kondh have
mounted numerous protests, and two of their leaders
were abducted and beaten before being released,
in an atmosphere of increasing violence.
In recent days an inquiry
panel set up by Minister Ramesh recommended the
mine be blocked, saying that Vedanta had acted
illegally and with total contempt for the
law.
Survival campaigner Dr Jo
Woodman, who experienced first-hand the atmosphere
of intimidation in the Dongrias hills, said:
This is a victory nobody would have believed
possible. The Dongrias campaign became a
litmus test of whether a small, marginalized tribe
could stand up to a massive multinational company
with an army of lobbyists and PR firms and the
ear of government. Incredibly, the Dongrias
courage and tenacity, allied with the support
of many people in , and Survivals supporters
around the world, have triumphed.
Survivals Director
Stephen Corry said: The era when mining
companies could get away with destroying those
in their path with impunity is thankfully drawing
to a close, though it remains significant that
Vedanta fought for its plans to the end, repeatedly
denying everything the tribespeople said. The
concerned public must remain vigilant about these
so-called development projects companies
simply cannot be trusted voluntarily to abide
by human rights standards, particularly when dealing
with tribal peoples who can't know what they're
up against.
Click here to read about
the Indian
Government Investigation Report.
Click
here to download a copy of the report (4.33MB,
)
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