When the Bengal famine broke out in 1943, the Hindu newspaper sent correspondent T.G. Narayanan to cover the story. Famine Over Bengal, based on this first-hand reportage, is a pioneering work of journalism.
When the Bengal famine broke out in 1943, the Hindu newspaper sent correspondent T.G. Narayanan to cover the story. Famine Over Bengal, based on this first-hand reportage, is a pioneering work of journalism.
Dalit of Odisha: A Case Study of the Dombos in Rayagada Districtijtsrd
The term Dalit,' in Sanskrit is both a noun and an adjective. As a noun, Dalit can be used for all three genders, masculine, feminine and neuter. It has been derived from the root word Dal' which means to crack, split etc. The word -Dalit' has come to mean that things or persons come under, the category of downtrodden, scattered, crushed, destroyed etc. The listed 93 Scheduled Caste communities of Odisha are known as Dalit in Odishan social system. But, in fact, the untouchables among the Scheduled Castes are the Dalits. The Schedule Caste and Schedule Tribes comprise about 16.6 and 8.6 , respectively of India's population according to the 2011 census . There are total population in socially untouchables and economically poor in the lowest point of social structure in Odisha. After of independence of India, their social, political, education justice, economic status has not been changed as expected. The examination and analysis of present status of Dalits will be made through empirical study. The outcome of this study will draw a clear picture of the position of Dalits in Odisha and it will motivate government and non government agencies to take initiative to promote Dalits. Paramananda Naik "Dalit of Odisha: A Case Study of the Dombos in Rayagada District" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-4 | Issue-1 , December 2019, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd29601.pdfPaper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/other-scientific-research-area/other/29601/dalit-of-odisha-a-case-study-of-the-dombos-in-rayagada-district/paramananda-naik
Marginalized Communities in the Globalized World: The Ministry of Utmost Happ...Jheel Barad
This presentation was presented in class presentation on M.A. English in the Department of English, MKBU. It deals with a paper titled Contemporary Literature in English, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness By Arundhati Roy. It tries to bring out the situation of the marginalized in the globalizing world in relation to The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.
Ethnic Cleansing in the Paradise of Earth A Study of “Our Moon Has Blood Clot...ijtsrd
The word ‘ethnic cleansing’ means a systematic and forced removal of certain ethnic or religious group by a more powerful ethnic or religious group, often resulting in making a certain area homogenous and practicing same religion. Most Kashmiri Pandits living in the Kashmir Valley left in 1990 as aggressor viciousness inundated the state. Some 95 of the 160,000 170,000 networks left in what is regularly depicted as an instance of ethnic purifying. For what reason did they leave What political developments have followed A large part of the current spotlight is on the individuals who have left Kashmir. The current paper attempts to investigate the injury of Kashmiri Pandit, who were dislodged from Kashmir valley during the political disturbance of 1990s, as depicted in Rahul Panditas wonderfully composed memoir Our Moon Has Blood Clots, deploring the deficiency of home, the story of the book is in first person, and the writer consistently portrays the encounters of his own just as his family pre 1990s and post 1990s. Chaotic panic was widespread. Fear and fright loomed large. Humanity was being hijacked while the confusion was confounded. Kashmiri Pandits and those Kashmiri Muslims who supported their Pandit brethren were running for their lives. Loud pro Islam and anti Hindu slogans were raised collectively by a multitude of humanity and relayed through powerful loudspeakers almost piercing the ear drums. These outbursts were not new to the Pandits in their homeland as they were accustomed to these shout outs at odd hours with tumultuous bangs and threats that were brewing in the valley of Kashmir. This was the starting of ethnic cleansing’ from the Valley of Kashmir. Subrata Mandal "Ethnic Cleansing in the Paradise of Earth: A Study of “Our Moon Has Blood Clots” by Rahul Pandita" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-5 | Issue-2 , February 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd38343.pdf Paper Url: https://www.ijtsrd.com/other-scientific-research-area/literature/38343/ethnic-cleansing-in-the-paradise-of-earth-a-study-of-“our-moon-has-blood-clots”-by-rahul-pandita/subrata-mandal
REPRESENTING CASTE AND GENDER UNDERPINNINGS OF THE ADIVASIS: JOURNEY FROM SUB...John1Lorcan
The vulnerable life experiences of the most marginalized or the tribal people labelled as “adivasis” are
less explored by the mainstream society. Tribal narratives unfold the hidden layers of indomitable politics
which situate them as subalterns. The alienation, silencing, othering, misrepresentation, and exploitation
of adivasis in the name of land as landless, and homeless has been an age- old practice. The paper
analyses the marginalized voice of a Dalit woman, and social activist named C.K. Janu through her
personal reflections in Mother Forest, which deftly sketches her journey from an ordinary tribal girl to an
Adivasi leader, and later as the chief spokesperson to protest the injustices of thegovernment. The study
refers to the theoretical underpinnings of Shailaja Paik’s Dalit Women’s Education, and discusses the
educational transformation of women from Dalit communities. The tribal woman’s fight against hegemonic
forces is represented through the conflict between civilization, and modernization.
REPRESENTING CASTE AND GENDER UNDERPINNINGS OF THE ADIVASIS: JOURNEY FROM SUB...John1Lorcan
The vulnerable life experiences of the most marginalized or the tribal people labelled as “adivasis” are
less explored by the mainstream society. Tribal narratives unfold the hidden layers of indomitable politics
which situate them as subalterns. The alienation, silencing, othering, misrepresentation, and exploitation
of adivasis in the name of land as landless, and homeless has been an age- old practice. The paper
analyses the marginalized voice of a Dalit woman, and social activist named C.K. Janu through her
personal reflections in Mother Forest, which deftly sketches her journey from an ordinary tribal girl to an
Adivasi leader, and later as the chief spokesperson to protest the injustices of thegovernment. The study
refers to the theoretical underpinnings of Shailaja Paik’s Dalit Women’s Education, and discusses the
educational transformation of women from Dalit communities. The tribal woman’s fight against hegemonic
forces is represented through the conflict between civilization, and modernization.
Narratives on Lost Terrains A Neocolonialist Reading of Select Contemporary F...ijtsrd
Neocolonialism, a term coined by Kwame Nkrumah, is defined as a covert project of the developed countries to exert their economic, political and cultural domination over the third world countries by making them follow blindly the ideas of development imposed by them and exploiting the land, labor and resources of these countries in a view of generating limitless profit. The paper studies two contemporary novels, Aathi 2011 and Swarga 2017 written by two renowned writer activists, Sarah Joseph and Ambikasuthan Mangadu of Kerala, and posits to underscore the prophetic vision in them that challenges the myopic ideas of development and the relentless ways of exploitation that are the hallmarks of neocolonialism. The paper also analyses the idea of the slow poisoning of nature that has been dexterously incorporated into the narratives, as a direct outcome of neocolonial endeavors. The paper also argues that by taking up the concept of bio imperialism into the ambit of its discourse, the writers have set a wake up call for all the stakeholders to be vigilant in their engagement with neocolonial forces. Dr. Sheethal S. Nair "Narratives on Lost Terrains: A Neocolonialist Reading of Select Contemporary Fictions in Malayalam" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-7 | Issue-4, August 2023, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd59830.pdf Paper Url:https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/english/59830/narratives-on-lost-terrains-a-neocolonialist-reading-of-select-contemporary-fictions-in-malayalam/dr-sheethal-s-nair
The 2015-16 National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4) provides information on population, health and nutrition for each state and union territory in India. The survey was conducted by the International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, for the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
The fieldwork for Kerala was conducted in all 14 districts of the state. Information was collected from 11,555 households, 11,033 women in the 15-49 age group, and 2,086 men between the ages of 15 and 54.
This state report for Kerala presents findings on several key socio-economic indicators like water and sanitation, marriage, fertility, contraception, children’s immunisation, sexual behaviour and domestic violence. It makes important observations too, like the near-universality of births in a health facility, the low rate of infant mortality, and the preference for sons.
The Health Survey and Development Committee were was appointed by the Government of India in October, 1943 with Sir Joseph Bhore as its Chairman to make a broad broad survey of present position with regard to health conditions and health organization services in British British India. Its chairman was Sir Joseph William Bhore, an Indian Civil Service officer. and provide recommendations for future developments.
The Committee recommended It the laid emphasis on integration of curative and preventive medicine at all levels, the development of primary health care centres, and major changes in medical education. It made comprehensive recommendations for remodelling of health services in India. Volume I
This volume (Vol 1) of the Committee’s report attempts to draws a picture of the state of the public health in India the country and of the existing health organisation of health services.
In December 1941, Japan’s entry into the Second World War The entry of Japan into the war in December 1941 marked the stage at which war conditions began to hadve serious adverse effects on India. Thus, , thus the statistical and other information in this report, which have been included for the purpose of throwing light on the state of the public health, was have been limited to the year 1941 and the preceding period of ten10 years.
The eight-member National Commission on Farmers, chaired by Prof. M.S. Swaminathan, was set up in 2004 by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government to assess the extent of India’s agrarian crisis. This first report was meant to assist central and state governments in arresting the decline of farm incomes and abating farmers’ distress. The report provides an overview of India’s agrarian economy and discusses the causes and effects of the agri-crisis, both environmental and policy-based. Its recommendations include setting up knowledge centres for farmers, framing a code of conduct for contract farming, ensuring better water management, providing food security, improving crop insurance and introducing insurance that covers accident, death and medical expenses. These steps, the report says, must be taken immediately to avert further damage. And that we must take Jawaharlal Nehru’s advice in this often-quoted remark from 1948: “Everything else can wait, but not agriculture.”
This report, by the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP), provides price recommendations and non-price measures for mandated kharif crops for the 2017-18 market season. The CACP, set up in 1965, was originally called the Agricultural Prices Commission but was given its present name in 1985. It prescribes the minimum support price (MSP) for 23 agricultural commodities to the government. These include 7 cereals, 5 pulses, 7 oilseeds and 4 commercial crops. CACP is attached to the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare, Government of India.
In order to arrive at the MSP, the CACP takes into account factors such as cost of production, the overall demand-supply situation, domestic and international prices, changes in input costs, inter-crop price parity, terms of trade, efficient use of resources, and the impact of MSPs on price levels.
The report furnishes most of its data in tables, graphs and charts.
Since 2005, the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) has provided data on schooling and children’s ability to do basic reading and arithmetic. Since 2006, the report has focused on the age group 5-16. This report for 2017 focuses on rural youth in the age group aged 14-18 since they are close to an income-earning age. It tries to understand their preparedness to lead productive adult lives.
In particular, the report examines what the youth are doing, whether they can apply basic reading and arithmetic skills to everyday situations, their familiarity with routine digital and financial processes, and their educational and career goals. The findings are based on data gathered from 28,323 youths, 23,868 households, and 26 rural districts in 24 states.
The National Family Health Survey (NFHS) was conducted by the International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, for the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. It provides information on population, health and nutrition in each state and union territory of India. This report presents key findings of the survey’s fourth round, conducted in 71 districts of Uttar Pradesh from January 2015 to August 2016. Previous surveys were conducted in 1992-93, 1998-99 and 2005-06.
NFHS-4 surveyed 572,000 households in 640 districts of India as per the 2011 census. In Uttar Pradesh, data was gathered from 76,233 homes, and a total of 97,661 women (aged 15-49) and 13,835 men (aged 15-54) were interviewed.
The survey collected information on the socio-economic characteristics of households, fertility, infant and child mortality, family planning, reproductive health, maternal and child health, nutrition, water, sanitation, quality of health services and health insurance. In particular, it interviewed women about marriage, work, contraception, sexual behaviour, HIV/AIDS status and domestic violence as well as their children’s immunisations and illnesses. Similarly, men were interviewed on these topics, in addition to their attitudes towards gender roles and lifestyles.
The report furnishes district-wise data collected by the survey in tables and estimates of sampling errors in the appendix.
This gazetteer, published in 1907, describes various aspects of Odisha’s Baleswar (or Orissa’s Balasore in British times) district. It surveys the district’s economy, society, politics and administrative setup, as well as its history, geography, climate, biodiversity and natural resources. It says that the name Baleshwar is derived from a temple dedicated to “Mahadeo Baneswar, i.e. Siva, the Lord of the Forest.”
By the time of the 1901 census, the district had an average population density of about 200 persons per square kilometre. This was a mobile population with a high rate of migration – large numbers of people moved to the Sunderbans to work as cultivators and field labourers and to Kolkata to work as porters and manual labourers. The caste system, the gazetteer says, was deeply ingrained in the region. The lower castes preferred to work in the mills, where people of different castes worked alongside each other.
The Bengal District Gazetteers were prepared by British colonial administrators for the districts of Angul, Balasore, Cuttack, Koraput and Puri, and the ‘Feudatory States of Orissa’. Ten years after Independence, in 1957, the responsibility of compiling the district gazetteers was transferred from the Centre to the states. In 1999, this responsibility (in Odisha) was transferred from the Revenue Department to the Gopabandhu Academy of Administration.
The Aadhaar Act aims to provide “efficient and transparent” delivery of subsidies, benefits and services to Indian residents by assigning them unique identity numbers. The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), set up under this Act, is responsible for helping people ‘enroll’ or sign up for Aadhaar numbers, verifying their identity information, issuing Aadhaar numbers, and authenticating information provided by individuals on the request of public or private entities.
The Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on March 3, 2016, and it became an Act on March 26, 2016. An earlier version, the National Identification Authority of India Bill, 2010, was introduced in the Lok Sabha on December 3, 2010, but withdrawn in March 2016. The UIDAI became a statutory authority after the Aadhaar Act was passed, but it had been functioning as an office attached to the Planning Commission (now NITI Aayog) since 2009. Around 30 petitions challenging the government on different aspects of the Aadhaar Act have reportedly been submitted to the Supreme Court, and the matter will come up for hearing later this year.
This gazetteer, published in 1908, is the first of Angul district in Odisha. It describes various aspects about the district – its economy, society, politics and administrative setup, as well as its history, geography, climate, biodiversity and natural resources. It does so for the district’s two sub-divisions: Angul and the Khondmals.
The Marathas, who had maintained half a century of suzerainty over Odisha, surrendered Angul to the British in 1803. Angul’s chief entered into an agreement with the East India Company; he promised to say loyal to it and pay an annual tribute. After a series of rebellions though, the British invaded and occupied Angul in 1848. The district came under direct colonial rule and in 1891 it was merged with the Khondmals.
The Bengal District Gazetteers were prepared by British colonial administrators for the districts of Angul, Balasore, Cuttack, Koraput and Puri, and the ‘Feudatory States of Orissa’. After Independence, in 1957, the responsibility of compiling the district gazetteers was transferred from the Centre to the states. In 1999 in Odisha, this responsibility was transferred from the Revenue Department to the Gopabandhu Academy of Administration.
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Dalit of Odisha: A Case Study of the Dombos in Rayagada Districtijtsrd
The term Dalit,' in Sanskrit is both a noun and an adjective. As a noun, Dalit can be used for all three genders, masculine, feminine and neuter. It has been derived from the root word Dal' which means to crack, split etc. The word -Dalit' has come to mean that things or persons come under, the category of downtrodden, scattered, crushed, destroyed etc. The listed 93 Scheduled Caste communities of Odisha are known as Dalit in Odishan social system. But, in fact, the untouchables among the Scheduled Castes are the Dalits. The Schedule Caste and Schedule Tribes comprise about 16.6 and 8.6 , respectively of India's population according to the 2011 census . There are total population in socially untouchables and economically poor in the lowest point of social structure in Odisha. After of independence of India, their social, political, education justice, economic status has not been changed as expected. The examination and analysis of present status of Dalits will be made through empirical study. The outcome of this study will draw a clear picture of the position of Dalits in Odisha and it will motivate government and non government agencies to take initiative to promote Dalits. Paramananda Naik "Dalit of Odisha: A Case Study of the Dombos in Rayagada District" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-4 | Issue-1 , December 2019, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd29601.pdfPaper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/other-scientific-research-area/other/29601/dalit-of-odisha-a-case-study-of-the-dombos-in-rayagada-district/paramananda-naik
Marginalized Communities in the Globalized World: The Ministry of Utmost Happ...Jheel Barad
This presentation was presented in class presentation on M.A. English in the Department of English, MKBU. It deals with a paper titled Contemporary Literature in English, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness By Arundhati Roy. It tries to bring out the situation of the marginalized in the globalizing world in relation to The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.
Ethnic Cleansing in the Paradise of Earth A Study of “Our Moon Has Blood Clot...ijtsrd
The word ‘ethnic cleansing’ means a systematic and forced removal of certain ethnic or religious group by a more powerful ethnic or religious group, often resulting in making a certain area homogenous and practicing same religion. Most Kashmiri Pandits living in the Kashmir Valley left in 1990 as aggressor viciousness inundated the state. Some 95 of the 160,000 170,000 networks left in what is regularly depicted as an instance of ethnic purifying. For what reason did they leave What political developments have followed A large part of the current spotlight is on the individuals who have left Kashmir. The current paper attempts to investigate the injury of Kashmiri Pandit, who were dislodged from Kashmir valley during the political disturbance of 1990s, as depicted in Rahul Panditas wonderfully composed memoir Our Moon Has Blood Clots, deploring the deficiency of home, the story of the book is in first person, and the writer consistently portrays the encounters of his own just as his family pre 1990s and post 1990s. Chaotic panic was widespread. Fear and fright loomed large. Humanity was being hijacked while the confusion was confounded. Kashmiri Pandits and those Kashmiri Muslims who supported their Pandit brethren were running for their lives. Loud pro Islam and anti Hindu slogans were raised collectively by a multitude of humanity and relayed through powerful loudspeakers almost piercing the ear drums. These outbursts were not new to the Pandits in their homeland as they were accustomed to these shout outs at odd hours with tumultuous bangs and threats that were brewing in the valley of Kashmir. This was the starting of ethnic cleansing’ from the Valley of Kashmir. Subrata Mandal "Ethnic Cleansing in the Paradise of Earth: A Study of “Our Moon Has Blood Clots” by Rahul Pandita" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-5 | Issue-2 , February 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd38343.pdf Paper Url: https://www.ijtsrd.com/other-scientific-research-area/literature/38343/ethnic-cleansing-in-the-paradise-of-earth-a-study-of-“our-moon-has-blood-clots”-by-rahul-pandita/subrata-mandal
REPRESENTING CASTE AND GENDER UNDERPINNINGS OF THE ADIVASIS: JOURNEY FROM SUB...John1Lorcan
The vulnerable life experiences of the most marginalized or the tribal people labelled as “adivasis” are
less explored by the mainstream society. Tribal narratives unfold the hidden layers of indomitable politics
which situate them as subalterns. The alienation, silencing, othering, misrepresentation, and exploitation
of adivasis in the name of land as landless, and homeless has been an age- old practice. The paper
analyses the marginalized voice of a Dalit woman, and social activist named C.K. Janu through her
personal reflections in Mother Forest, which deftly sketches her journey from an ordinary tribal girl to an
Adivasi leader, and later as the chief spokesperson to protest the injustices of thegovernment. The study
refers to the theoretical underpinnings of Shailaja Paik’s Dalit Women’s Education, and discusses the
educational transformation of women from Dalit communities. The tribal woman’s fight against hegemonic
forces is represented through the conflict between civilization, and modernization.
REPRESENTING CASTE AND GENDER UNDERPINNINGS OF THE ADIVASIS: JOURNEY FROM SUB...John1Lorcan
The vulnerable life experiences of the most marginalized or the tribal people labelled as “adivasis” are
less explored by the mainstream society. Tribal narratives unfold the hidden layers of indomitable politics
which situate them as subalterns. The alienation, silencing, othering, misrepresentation, and exploitation
of adivasis in the name of land as landless, and homeless has been an age- old practice. The paper
analyses the marginalized voice of a Dalit woman, and social activist named C.K. Janu through her
personal reflections in Mother Forest, which deftly sketches her journey from an ordinary tribal girl to an
Adivasi leader, and later as the chief spokesperson to protest the injustices of thegovernment. The study
refers to the theoretical underpinnings of Shailaja Paik’s Dalit Women’s Education, and discusses the
educational transformation of women from Dalit communities. The tribal woman’s fight against hegemonic
forces is represented through the conflict between civilization, and modernization.
Narratives on Lost Terrains A Neocolonialist Reading of Select Contemporary F...ijtsrd
Neocolonialism, a term coined by Kwame Nkrumah, is defined as a covert project of the developed countries to exert their economic, political and cultural domination over the third world countries by making them follow blindly the ideas of development imposed by them and exploiting the land, labor and resources of these countries in a view of generating limitless profit. The paper studies two contemporary novels, Aathi 2011 and Swarga 2017 written by two renowned writer activists, Sarah Joseph and Ambikasuthan Mangadu of Kerala, and posits to underscore the prophetic vision in them that challenges the myopic ideas of development and the relentless ways of exploitation that are the hallmarks of neocolonialism. The paper also analyses the idea of the slow poisoning of nature that has been dexterously incorporated into the narratives, as a direct outcome of neocolonial endeavors. The paper also argues that by taking up the concept of bio imperialism into the ambit of its discourse, the writers have set a wake up call for all the stakeholders to be vigilant in their engagement with neocolonial forces. Dr. Sheethal S. Nair "Narratives on Lost Terrains: A Neocolonialist Reading of Select Contemporary Fictions in Malayalam" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-7 | Issue-4, August 2023, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd59830.pdf Paper Url:https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/english/59830/narratives-on-lost-terrains-a-neocolonialist-reading-of-select-contemporary-fictions-in-malayalam/dr-sheethal-s-nair
The 2015-16 National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4) provides information on population, health and nutrition for each state and union territory in India. The survey was conducted by the International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, for the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
The fieldwork for Kerala was conducted in all 14 districts of the state. Information was collected from 11,555 households, 11,033 women in the 15-49 age group, and 2,086 men between the ages of 15 and 54.
This state report for Kerala presents findings on several key socio-economic indicators like water and sanitation, marriage, fertility, contraception, children’s immunisation, sexual behaviour and domestic violence. It makes important observations too, like the near-universality of births in a health facility, the low rate of infant mortality, and the preference for sons.
The Health Survey and Development Committee were was appointed by the Government of India in October, 1943 with Sir Joseph Bhore as its Chairman to make a broad broad survey of present position with regard to health conditions and health organization services in British British India. Its chairman was Sir Joseph William Bhore, an Indian Civil Service officer. and provide recommendations for future developments.
The Committee recommended It the laid emphasis on integration of curative and preventive medicine at all levels, the development of primary health care centres, and major changes in medical education. It made comprehensive recommendations for remodelling of health services in India. Volume I
This volume (Vol 1) of the Committee’s report attempts to draws a picture of the state of the public health in India the country and of the existing health organisation of health services.
In December 1941, Japan’s entry into the Second World War The entry of Japan into the war in December 1941 marked the stage at which war conditions began to hadve serious adverse effects on India. Thus, , thus the statistical and other information in this report, which have been included for the purpose of throwing light on the state of the public health, was have been limited to the year 1941 and the preceding period of ten10 years.
The eight-member National Commission on Farmers, chaired by Prof. M.S. Swaminathan, was set up in 2004 by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government to assess the extent of India’s agrarian crisis. This first report was meant to assist central and state governments in arresting the decline of farm incomes and abating farmers’ distress. The report provides an overview of India’s agrarian economy and discusses the causes and effects of the agri-crisis, both environmental and policy-based. Its recommendations include setting up knowledge centres for farmers, framing a code of conduct for contract farming, ensuring better water management, providing food security, improving crop insurance and introducing insurance that covers accident, death and medical expenses. These steps, the report says, must be taken immediately to avert further damage. And that we must take Jawaharlal Nehru’s advice in this often-quoted remark from 1948: “Everything else can wait, but not agriculture.”
This report, by the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP), provides price recommendations and non-price measures for mandated kharif crops for the 2017-18 market season. The CACP, set up in 1965, was originally called the Agricultural Prices Commission but was given its present name in 1985. It prescribes the minimum support price (MSP) for 23 agricultural commodities to the government. These include 7 cereals, 5 pulses, 7 oilseeds and 4 commercial crops. CACP is attached to the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare, Government of India.
In order to arrive at the MSP, the CACP takes into account factors such as cost of production, the overall demand-supply situation, domestic and international prices, changes in input costs, inter-crop price parity, terms of trade, efficient use of resources, and the impact of MSPs on price levels.
The report furnishes most of its data in tables, graphs and charts.
Since 2005, the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) has provided data on schooling and children’s ability to do basic reading and arithmetic. Since 2006, the report has focused on the age group 5-16. This report for 2017 focuses on rural youth in the age group aged 14-18 since they are close to an income-earning age. It tries to understand their preparedness to lead productive adult lives.
In particular, the report examines what the youth are doing, whether they can apply basic reading and arithmetic skills to everyday situations, their familiarity with routine digital and financial processes, and their educational and career goals. The findings are based on data gathered from 28,323 youths, 23,868 households, and 26 rural districts in 24 states.
The National Family Health Survey (NFHS) was conducted by the International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, for the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. It provides information on population, health and nutrition in each state and union territory of India. This report presents key findings of the survey’s fourth round, conducted in 71 districts of Uttar Pradesh from January 2015 to August 2016. Previous surveys were conducted in 1992-93, 1998-99 and 2005-06.
NFHS-4 surveyed 572,000 households in 640 districts of India as per the 2011 census. In Uttar Pradesh, data was gathered from 76,233 homes, and a total of 97,661 women (aged 15-49) and 13,835 men (aged 15-54) were interviewed.
The survey collected information on the socio-economic characteristics of households, fertility, infant and child mortality, family planning, reproductive health, maternal and child health, nutrition, water, sanitation, quality of health services and health insurance. In particular, it interviewed women about marriage, work, contraception, sexual behaviour, HIV/AIDS status and domestic violence as well as their children’s immunisations and illnesses. Similarly, men were interviewed on these topics, in addition to their attitudes towards gender roles and lifestyles.
The report furnishes district-wise data collected by the survey in tables and estimates of sampling errors in the appendix.
This gazetteer, published in 1907, describes various aspects of Odisha’s Baleswar (or Orissa’s Balasore in British times) district. It surveys the district’s economy, society, politics and administrative setup, as well as its history, geography, climate, biodiversity and natural resources. It says that the name Baleshwar is derived from a temple dedicated to “Mahadeo Baneswar, i.e. Siva, the Lord of the Forest.”
By the time of the 1901 census, the district had an average population density of about 200 persons per square kilometre. This was a mobile population with a high rate of migration – large numbers of people moved to the Sunderbans to work as cultivators and field labourers and to Kolkata to work as porters and manual labourers. The caste system, the gazetteer says, was deeply ingrained in the region. The lower castes preferred to work in the mills, where people of different castes worked alongside each other.
The Bengal District Gazetteers were prepared by British colonial administrators for the districts of Angul, Balasore, Cuttack, Koraput and Puri, and the ‘Feudatory States of Orissa’. Ten years after Independence, in 1957, the responsibility of compiling the district gazetteers was transferred from the Centre to the states. In 1999, this responsibility (in Odisha) was transferred from the Revenue Department to the Gopabandhu Academy of Administration.
The Aadhaar Act aims to provide “efficient and transparent” delivery of subsidies, benefits and services to Indian residents by assigning them unique identity numbers. The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), set up under this Act, is responsible for helping people ‘enroll’ or sign up for Aadhaar numbers, verifying their identity information, issuing Aadhaar numbers, and authenticating information provided by individuals on the request of public or private entities.
The Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on March 3, 2016, and it became an Act on March 26, 2016. An earlier version, the National Identification Authority of India Bill, 2010, was introduced in the Lok Sabha on December 3, 2010, but withdrawn in March 2016. The UIDAI became a statutory authority after the Aadhaar Act was passed, but it had been functioning as an office attached to the Planning Commission (now NITI Aayog) since 2009. Around 30 petitions challenging the government on different aspects of the Aadhaar Act have reportedly been submitted to the Supreme Court, and the matter will come up for hearing later this year.
This gazetteer, published in 1908, is the first of Angul district in Odisha. It describes various aspects about the district – its economy, society, politics and administrative setup, as well as its history, geography, climate, biodiversity and natural resources. It does so for the district’s two sub-divisions: Angul and the Khondmals.
The Marathas, who had maintained half a century of suzerainty over Odisha, surrendered Angul to the British in 1803. Angul’s chief entered into an agreement with the East India Company; he promised to say loyal to it and pay an annual tribute. After a series of rebellions though, the British invaded and occupied Angul in 1848. The district came under direct colonial rule and in 1891 it was merged with the Khondmals.
The Bengal District Gazetteers were prepared by British colonial administrators for the districts of Angul, Balasore, Cuttack, Koraput and Puri, and the ‘Feudatory States of Orissa’. After Independence, in 1957, the responsibility of compiling the district gazetteers was transferred from the Centre to the states. In 1999 in Odisha, this responsibility was transferred from the Revenue Department to the Gopabandhu Academy of Administration.
This article from Social Science & Medicine, a peer-reviewed journal, uses the lens of medicine to understand India’s social history. The author examines how different systems of medicine – biomedicine (based on biological or biochemical principles), Ayurveda, Unani, among others – were perceived in mainstream Indian national politics in the first half of the 20th century. Not only did the British colonial state give biomedicine “cultural authority” over indigenous medical systems, but nationalist leaders and later governments did too. This has greatly shaped the contemporary view of medical practices. The article discusses the three main positions (listed in the Factoids) of policy-makers and the influential Indian elite on national healthcare, including the opposing views of former prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Mahatma Gandhi. The author uses as his source material the proceedings of the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh) Legislative Assembly and the published views of national leaders. He concludes that the bias of both the colonial and national governments is the major reason for the “deterioration and decline” of Indian indigenous medical systems.
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare developed the National Health Accounts (NHA) in 2001–02 to support the governance of health systems and enable the design of more effective health policies. This report provides an estimate of the total health expenditure for 2004-05 (taking into consideration the launch of the National Rural Health Mission in 2005), and gives provisional estimates of the health expenditure from 2005-06 to 2008-09.
In the computation of NHA, the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) definition of health expenditure was adopted. NHA includes expenditure on inpatient and outpatient care, hospitals, specialty hospitals, health promotion centres, rehabilitative care centres, capital expenditure on health, medical education, and research and training. It excludes expenses on water supply, sanitation, environmental health and the mid-day meal programme.
The Hindu centre for Politics and Public Policy is an offshoot of the Hindu publications group. It aims at promoting research and debates on public institutions delivery and policy frameworks.
The report describes the processes – and the politics – that led to the creation of ‘Other Traditional Forest Dwellers’ (OTFDs), which includes forest-dwelling Dalits. The report explores the limitations of the Act, which precludes forest-dwelling Dalit communities from accessing their rights and forest resources.
The report also documents movements of resistance by Dalit forest dwellers and Adivasis in Chitrakoot and Sonbhadra districts of Uttar Pradesh, and Kandhamal district of Odisha. At times, there were conflicts between Dalits and the scheduled tribes (STs); at other times, they came together to fight for their rights. The report suggests amendments to the Forest Rights Act and caste-sensitive strategies that recognise the rights of these communities.
This article from the Economic and Political Weekly, a peer-reviewed journal, discusses India’s various medical systems and the historical conditions under which allopathy or modern medicine (usually a synonym for ‘western’ medicine) assumed dominance. British rule in India, it says, was responsible for allopathic medicine becoming the backbone of independent India’s health services. The article adds that India’s ruling classes and upper castes advocated the cause of biomedical science because they saw it as a sign of ‘modernisation’. All of this contributed to the entrenchment of three streams of health providers in independent India. The articles lists these as: ‘qualified’ allopathic doctors (who have dominance over the other streams), ‘qualified’ ayurvedic, unani and homeopathic doctors (who have been relegated to a secondary position) and ‘unqualified’ health providers (who sometimes become the mainstay of health services in rural areas).
This article from the Economic and Political Weekly, a peer-reviewed journal, examines the political motivations that have historically shaped India’s public health services. It says that while the state was committed to providing healthcare, there were contradictions in its approach, which explain its ineffectiveness. For instance, its ambition could not be matched with its infrastructure and resources, so it relied heavily on foreign aid, which supported mostly techno-centric – and not people-centric – programmes like malaria eradication. It says that the failure of this programme left a huge dent in the India’s commitment to public health.
The National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS) was set up in 2004 by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government as an advisory body and a watchdog for the informal sector. That same year, the Prime Minister’s Office asked the NCEUS to examine the National Policy on Urban Street Vendors. The policy’s objective was to provide urban street vendors with a supportive environment in which they can earn their livelihoods. After consulting various stakeholders, the Commission recommended a revision of the policy’s implementation mechanisms.
The NCEUS noted that the urban poor in most Indian cities worked in the informal sector because of a lack of jobs in rural areas, few employment opportunities in the formal sector, and low levels of education that restricted access to better-paying jobs. As unorganised sector workers, street vendors did not have government-assisted social security.
The National Commission on Macroeconomics and Health (NCMH) was established in March 2004 to strengthen disease control and primary healthcare in India. Its overall objective was to assess how increased investments in the health sector impact poverty and economic development.
In this report, the Commission discusses the economic basis for investing in health and how public financing can be most effectively utilised. It discusses the critical issues plaguing the health sector, such as inequitable access to basic services, inefficiencies in the system, and an absence of patients’ rights.
The report states that liberalisation of the economy increased employment opportunities and incomes, thus reducing poverty levels. These developments also introduced changes in lifestyles, increased urbanisation and connectivity, and enhanced access to information. Together, this has had a profound impact on the epidemiologic and health-seeking behaviour of people.
The rising demand for health services has revealed the inadequacies of the current healthcare system, both in the public and private domains. It is the responsibility of the government to provide an efficient healthcare system, along with health education, preventive programmes, curative services, and affordable health services for the poor. This report reviews the public and private healthcare systems, and provides policy makers with a framework to improve the funding of public health.
The National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS) was set up in 2004 by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government as an advisory body and a watchdog for the informal sector. This report by the NCEUS recommended a social security scheme for unorganised workers, which would cover minimum benefits such as old age pension, life insurance, maternity benefit, disability benefit (accident compensation), minimum healthcare and sickness benefit. The NCEUS argued that the government needed to move beyond limited social assistance schemes and introduce a full-fledged social security programme for all kinds of workers, especially unorganised workers. The Commission also drafted the Unorganised Workers’ Social Security Bill, which forms part two of this report.
This article from the Economic and Political Weekly, a peer-reviewed academic journal, traces the history and development of medical science in India, ranging from systems of witchcraft to allopathy. The author also compares the Chinese, Greek and Egyptian systems of medicine to Ayurveda and outlines their similarities. He discusses the growth of modern medicine and the dismal state of the public healthcare system in India. The article concludes that the country’s poor healthcare structure can be attributed to its strong feudal culture, which promoted both rational and irrational medical practices.
The National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS) was set up in 2004 by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government as an advisory body and a watchdog for the informal sector. This NCEUS report reviews labour laws and social security systems that apply to workers in the unorganised sector.
It observes that while existing laws have some provisions for conditions of work for certain workers, there is no comprehensive legal framework for the “basic and minimum conditions of work” for unorganised sector workers. Therefore, it proposes comprehensive and protective laws for agricultural and non-agricultural workers in the unorganised sector that will regulate conditions of work, social security, welfare and livehood promotion. Given the differences in the conditions of work for agricultural and non-agricultural workers, two bills are proposed.
The bills also incorporate a National Security Scheme for agricultural labourers and non-agricultural workers in the unorganised sector. In case of disputes over the implementation of the bills, the NCEUS recommends conciliation through resolution instead of bureaucractic and time-consuming legal procedures. The dispute resolution process may involve the participation of workers’ representatives or elected representatives of local bodies.
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare published the first Annual Report to the People on Health in September 2010. The report’s objective was to examine critical macro-level issues related to health, in particular, the constraints faced by the government in providing universal healthcare, and the challenges in the organisation, financing and governance of health services.
The report provides information about key health indicators such as life expectancy at birth, infant mortality and maternal mortality, and explains the variation in their numbers in different states. It also provides an overview of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), which was launched in 2005 to revitalise and scale up basic health services in rural areas. Besides this, it discusses the non-availability of skilled healthcare providers and their uneven distribution across the country, and suggests remedies for this problem.
Lastly, the report lists key policy issues related to health that, according to the ministry, need to be debated widely and drafted into a new health policy. Some of these issues are increased public investment in healthcare, public-private partnerships in the health sector, access to safe drinking water and sanitation, good quality education for healthcare providers, use of modern technology and technological audits of the sector, rising out-of-pocket expenditure on drugs, reduced emphasis on preventive healthcare, limited participation of community organisations, and investment of the states in primary healthcare.
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Alchemy of Iniquity - Resistance and Repression in India's Mines (Dec. 2008)
1. Cover Design: Brinda Datta
COVER PHOTOGRAPH: ROBERT WALLIS / PANOS PICTURES
(Cover) Adivasi as well as migrant workers loading coal in the Saunda colliery of Central
Coalfields Ltd in Hazaribagh district of the state of Jharkhand, India. Workers are often
underpaid and suffer from all kinds of respiratory diseases.
PRICE: RS 400
The triumphant celebration of market utopias is remaking the world in the image of capital
and its many temptations. Drunk on neo-liberal fantasies, nation-states are madly jostling
with one another for an ever-greater share of global markets and resources. This rat-race is
triggering stampedes in which many lesser, fragile worlds are being flattened.
This photo-book is a story of one such Euclidean nightmare in India’s mineral-rich states of
Orissa, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. The voracious appetite for minerals, so vital to fire the
cylinders of economic growth, is cruelly and cynically wrecking the lives of India’s Adivasis,
who happen to inhabit the much-coveted El Dorados.
It’s a shame that only a handful of photojournalists have chosen to capture the way sensitive
cultures and ecologies have been mutilated by the extractive industries. We hope this modest
documentation would inspire shutterbugs to train their lenses on one of the grimmest and
most disregarded facets of India’s economic success story.
PANOS SOUTH ASIA
ALCHEMY OF INIQUITY
P
Resistance & Repression in India’s Mines
a photographic enquiry
P
ALCHEMY OF INIQUITYResistance&RepressioninIndia’sMines
7. CONTENTS
6
INTRODUCTION
12
THE ADIVASI WAY OF LIFE
34
DEVASTATION & DISPLACEMENT
80
REPRESSION & RESISTANCE
105
LIST OF PEOPLE’S STRUGGLES AGAINST MINING PROJECTS
106
PHOTOGRAPH CREDITS
8. T
INTRODUCTION
he world is once again smitten with a rake called globalisation. The long romance
with socialist sweethearts having turned sour, it seems to have fallen hopelessly
into the beguiling arms of laissez faire capitalism as the only utopia against the evils
of want, decay, disease and strife.
But much as we may sing hosannas to the beatitude of the “invisible hand”,
unbridled obsession with growth is ripping many vulnerable worlds asunder and
spawning dystopias amidst mushrooms of affluence. Few would disagree that our
epoch is aquiver with uncertainty and anxiety as never before. The old world, with its
mosaic of distinctive civilisations, is crumbling under the steamroller of finance capital
to pave the way for a unified global marketplace. In this brave new world presided over
by Mammon, almost nothing — ideas, things, peoples, cultures, eco-systems, nation-
states — seems immune to the vicissitudes of the free market. Those who refuse to
An Adivasi working on a coal waste-processing site. Having
lost their lands, Adivasis in the region can look forward
to little more than underpaid work as contract labourers.
Bokaro district, Jharkhand, 2006.
9. fit into the market straitjacket are soon morphed into a parody of their original self,
or condemned as pariahs in their own homes, or simply perish.
This at least has been the deplorable fate of a large number of India’s indigenous
communities, or Adivasis (original inhabitants, literally), as we call them. Over the
last several centuries the four horsemen of the “civilising” crusade — colonialism,
Christian missionaries, nationalism, Hindu revivalism — have ridden roughshod over
these vulnerable cultures, leaving them battered and scattered. Now the free market
has joined this horde as the fifth horseman, and together they might yet accomplish
the unfinished business of assimilating the “noble savages” into the mainstream of
“modern civilisation.”
One of the most heartbreaking enactments of this tragedy can be seen in the three
Indian states of Jharkhand, Orissa and Chhattisgarh, which together account for 25
per cent of India’s Adivasi population. Although entitled to some degree of protection
under the Constitution, the Indian state has regularly reneged on its promises and
robbed them of their lands and livelihoods in the name of nation-building. The opening
up of the economy to private and foreign capital has only ratcheted up the scale of
dispossession and disenfranchisement.
More than anything else, it is the insatiable appetite for the cornucopia of minerals
buried underneath the Adivasi homelands that has accursed their idyllic lives and
poisoned their rivers and forests. History of mining projects in this region, as anywhere
else in the world, is littered with contradictions between the rhetoric of progress and
enlightenment and the reality of pain, injustice and deprivation. The gangrenous bodies
around the uranium mines in Jaduguda (Jharkhand), the blighted fields around Sukinda
(Orissa), the recent butchering by the police of 12 Adivasis protesting takeover of their
10. lands in Kalinga Nagar (Orissa), the internecine war between Maoist guerrillas and the
state-sponsored Salwa Judum mercenaries in Chhattisgarh, and the mass exodus of
uprooted Adivasis from their blood and poisoned-soaked hearths to venal and degrading
urban hovels are just a few reminders of how the Adivasi world is being dismantled.
This book is an attempt to capture in images the starkness and poignancy of this
terrible nightmare, of the mutilation of the human soul and defilement of nature, of
the unconscionable abuse of state power and the amoral cupidity of finance capital.
But that doesn’t describe the whole picture, for it’s not all that easy for either the
state or capital to completely break, alienate or co-opt the human spirit. The Adivasis
have always valiantly fought back to claim what is rightfully theirs. Were it not for their
dogged and heroic resistance, the mineral wealth of this region would have been totally
plundered by now. The Kalinga Nagar massacre of January 2006 has only made them
more resolute in their resistance to the mining juggernaut, most notably the struggle
led by Dayamani Barla, a journalist activist from the Munda tribe, against Arcelor Mittal’s
proposed steel plant in Jharkhand’s Khunti district. As the graffiti on the wall of a house
declares, “we will lay down our lives but we will not part with our lands.”
This visual journey into the beleaguered Adivasi universe is divided into three
frames. The first gives us a glimpse of the Adivasi way of life as yet unshaken by mining
tremors. It may not be an exaggeration to say that these forest-dwellers were much
happier, contented, productive and creative before they were duped by the Trojan gift
of development. Soon enough they found themselves bulldozed out of their Edenesque
havens and shoved into the morass of modernity. Equally undoubtedly, mining has
irreparably ruptured the intricately woven fabric of ecosystems that sustained a diversity
of life, including the Adivasis.
11. 10
The second frame highlights the pain and ruin brought upon these people and their
homes by the mining juggernaut. The aborted Mahua flowers, the poisoned rivers,
the bloodied earth and blackened skies, the denuded forests, the withered bodies and
tormented souls, the once gentle hearts seething with helplessness, rage and revenge
— all crying witnesses to the crimes of mining projects.
The third and last frame captures the fighting spirit of a David valiantly defending
his vulnerable world against a ruthless, rapacious and diabolical Goliath.
As the two antithetical worlds collide, will the Mahua tree be able to stand its own
against the more powerful bulldozer? Is there no hope for an amicable co-existence
in which the Adivasis have the right to determine the course of their future? This
may remain a fantasy unless we “moderns” shed our stereotype of the Adivasis as
“backward” and “uncivilised”, unless we recognise and respect their subsistence
economy as one among many modes of existence, perhaps even more sustainable
and equitable, and unless we rid ourselves of the perverse notion that free trade and
technology can solve our current social and ecological crises.
It is our hope that the images in the book will in their own little way help reframe
our mindsets about what it means to be “modern” without deriding the Adivasi
worldview as irrational or backward.
Bauxite mining has devastated villages and forests
inhabited by the Oraon and Majhi Adivasis, forcing
them to leave their lands in search of livelihood.
Mainpat, Surguja district of Chhattisgarh, 2007.
15. 14
For generations the Adivasis have lived in harmony with their immediate
environment. They have evolved their own peculiar sense and sensibility about
nature and around which they have woven their own desires of mind, body
and soul. This fine-tuned relationship is reflected and celebrated in their arts,
languages, fashions, cosmologies, healing systems, languages, appetites, manners,
and moral values, things that go into the making of what we might vaguely call
culture or civilisation.
Though under constant assault by images and technologies from dominant
cultures for centuries, the Adivasi creative spark hasn’t dimmed and can still be
seen in their weaves, their frescos, their coiffures, their pottery and metal-craft,
their brews and potions, their music-making, their hunting expeditions, and
their intuitive knowledge of other life forms, among other things. It is ironical
therefore that these creative and talented people should be labelled as “unskilled”.
Indeed those who ridicule the Adivasis as “backward” and “jungli” are stupidly
blind to the absurdity of their own hubris even as they decorate their living rooms
with Adivasi handicraft.
But the delicately-woven tapestry between nature and the Adivasi way of
life has been ripped time and again by outsiders of various creeds—colonialists,
missionaries, capitalists, and nationalists—seeking either to “civilise” the “savages”
by ordaining them into their faith (first the Christian missionaries and now
the Hindutva zealots), or to plunder their rich natural treasures such as rivers,
forests and minerals, or, we might add, to convert them into subaltern subjects
of a political project or ideology.
18. 17
Men of the Gond tribe out hunting with bows and arrows in the
nearby forest. But they might soon be cast out of their hunting
grounds as the advancing Bailadila iron ore mines threaten to
swallow their hearth and home.
Dhurli village, Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh, 2007.
20. 19
Women of the Santhal tribe earn a pittance by selling plates made from the leaves of the sal tree. A family spends more than 12
hours (6 in the morning to 6 in the evening) a day to collect one bag of sal leaves containing 1000-1200 leaves. On the second
day, they stitch the leaves and make plates. On the third day, the plates are dried and made ready for binding and sale. Three days
of hard labour fetches the entire family a mere sum of 10-12 rupees.
Jarwadih village, Deogarh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
(left) A tribal saucer and spoon used by the Gond tribe living in a forest village not far from the Bailadila iron ore mines.
Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh, 2007.
21. 20
Adivasi women gathering Mahua flowers that are used to make the local brew.
The village, Donga Mahua, gets its name from the large number of Mahua trees
dotting its landscape. These trees are now being poisoned by toxic fumes released
by sponge iron plants mushrooming in the area. India has emerged as the largest
producer of sponge iron in the world. In 2001 there were only 23 plants; today
they number over 200.
Donga Mahua village, Raigarh district, Chhattisgarh, 2007.
22. 21
Santhal Adivasi children return from the forest with firewood and
fodder for their cattle. Forests and farmland used as commons by the
Adivasis are disappearing in Jharkhand as mining activity spreads in
the state.
Jarwadih village, Deogarh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
23. 22
An Adivasi mother and her son lighting a fire with leaves outside
a house whose walls are decorated with Adivasi art featuring
spiritual animist representations.
Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
24. 23
A member of the Malhar tribe renowned for their fine metal work,
drawing on the mineral resources around them. He is making clay
casts for metal (copper/brass) pots.
Kendwatoli village, Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
25. 24
Rock art is considered to have sacred ritualistic significance and this site, dating from 7,000 to 5,000 years before the present era,
is one of the finest examples in Eastern India. The Isco pictograph site is over 100 feet in length under a rock overhang and also
has other deep caves. It is called kobara by the local Munda and Oraon indigenous people whose mud houses come within a few
hundred yards of it. The motifs painted on the rock are still found in the tribal architecture of the region. It is threatened by the
noise and disturbance of the Rautpara Opencast Coal Project. The project threatens to evict members of the Munda tribe.
Isco village, Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
26. 25
Traditionally animist, Adivasi communities erect megaliths as part of their belief in ancestor worship. This ancient megalith site is
threatened by encroaching coal mines. Research is being carried out to ascertain whether there is a link between people who had
erected megaliths across Jharkhand and present-day Adivasis. But this is being downplayed by the Indian government, which does
not want to bolster the Adivasi claims of their ancestral rights to land.
Barwadih village, Latehar district, Jharkhand, 2005.
27. 26
The Hindu deity Jagannath painted over an ancient megalith beside
a Hindu temple. According to experts, this is one of the numerous
examples of Hindus trying to supplant Adivasi beliefs with their own.
Silawar village, Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
28. 27
Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve at the Hazaribagh Roman Catholic
church. Most of the congregation are Oraon Adivasi. Many Adivasis
have been converted to Christianity by foreign missionaries. On the
rear left wall is a painting depicting coal mining and steel mills – the
unstoppable forces transforming Jharkhand.
Hazaribagh, Jharkhand, 2005.
29. 28
The Adivasis, happily cocooned in the embrace of nature, and hence fragile,
have always been under siege from outsiders, be it empires, religions, or nation-
states. Different ideologies have tried in their own diabolical ways – from coercion
to deceit to co-option – to “civilise” and assimilate them into the mainstream.
Forced to occupy the treacherous middle ground between what they are and
what they “should be”, their indigenous selves have been fractured and scattered
irrevocably.
Of all the evils that have befallen Adivasis, none has been more pernicious than
the idea of development and progress. And of the all development projects none
has been more devastating for the ecology on which their lives are so precariously
hung than mining and hydroelectric projects. Even the formation of new states
based on a strong tribal identity, such as Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh, has failed
to articulate an alternative politics and ethics that respects and protects what is
legitimately theirs. Indeed, the ruling political class in these states continues to
cut Faustian deals with capital to mine the rich mineral wealth of the region,
while the poor Adivasi valiantly resists, often in vain, the pillage of their hearths
and homes.
A farmer’s field facing a factory making sponge
iron, an extremely polluting activity. There are
about 30 such factories in a perimeter of 40 miles.
Sambalpur district, Orissa, 2007.
31. 30
Farming will cease if the 24 new mines which are
planned, get a go-ahead, displacing 203 tribal villages.
Karanpura valley, Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
32. 31
An Adivasi settlement in the ominous shadow of
a thermal power plant.
Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
34. 33
Adivasi women walk along a railway
line past the colossal Bokaro steel
plant that processes much of the
minerals found in the province.
Bokaro district, Jharkhand, 2005.
38. 37
Mining is inherently inimical to
environment. Therefore sustainable
mining, a concoction of spin-doctors in
the mining business, is nothing but an
oxymoron. Mining damages, disfigures,
corrodes, corrupts, and eventually lays
waste not only to vibrant ecosystems
but also to unique cultures inextricably
woven into their fabric. Ever since
the British started mining coal in
the Dhanbad region of present-day
Jharkhand district, millions of Adivasis
in the states of Orissa, Jharkhand and
Chhattisgarh have been uprooted from
their lands and yoked into industrial
slavery of all kinds. In Jharkhand
alone, about one million Adivasis have
fled their homes in search of a living
in other parts of the country, while an
equal number of outsiders have entered
the region in search of work in the
ever-expanding industrial-commercial
complex.
A disfigured landscape in the West
Bokaro coal mining region.
Bokaro district, Jharkhand, 2005.
39. 38
A board just outside a TISCO (Tata Iron Steel Co) coal mine in
the west Bokaro region preaching the virtues of environmental
conservation. But in truth almost all mining companies are
guilty of pious fraud as they cannot but put up a false facade to
gloss over the devastation caused by mining.
Bokaro district, Jharkhand, 2005.
40. 39
A woman and her child wash at a pond under banks of coal dust.
People are forced to live amid poisoned ruins of their former
homes.
Katras coal mine, Dhanbad district, Jharkhand, 2005.
42. 41
Jindal coal mines that feed the
extremely polluting sponge-iron
plants in the region.
Donga Mahua, Raigarh district,
Chhattisgarh, 2007.
43. 42
The Talabira coal mines in Orissa’s Sambalpur district illustrate how open-cast mining can
impair natural and human endowments. Run by Birla’s Hindustan Aluminium Company
(HINDALCO), the mines have destroyed the beautiful sal forests, polluted the air and poisoned
water bodies. The quality of life of over 140 farming families displaced from their moorings has,
if anything, worsened as the lands around the mine have been rendered unfit for agriculture
–almost all water bodies are covered by a fine layer of black coal-dust throughout the year. As for
rehabilitation, the displaced families have been shoved into poorly designed, cramped houses and
only a few men have been offered jobs in the mines.
45. 44
Khageswar Rohidas, 31, a member of the Other Backward Classes, used to own 2.5 acres of
land and cashew trees. He has lost everything and has been waiting for compensation for the
last three years .
Talabira coal mine, Sambalpur district, Orissa, 2007.
48. 47
Noamundi, in the West
Singhbhum district of
Jharkhand, is the iron ore
capital of India. Most of the
mines here are being run by
the Tatas. The area is also one
of the most polluted. The dust
from the iron ore paints the
earth and the sky red as the
trucks rumble past non-stop.
49. 48
Red iron ore dust from mining activity around Noamundi
covers every surface affecting crops, animals and humans.
Noamundi, West Singhbhum district, Jharkhand, 2007.
50. 49
Thousands of trucks move incessantly every night from dusk to dawn
carrying iron ore to Jharkhand’s steel mills and to ports for shipment
to China. When the trucks roll, all other traffic must get off the road.
52. 51
Radha Bai and her alcoholic brother are from the Dhruv tribe. Now jobless, they
remember the time when they used to play in the forest which no longer exists.
Bailadila iron mine area, Dantewada district, Bastar, Chhattisgarh, 2007.
(left) Gond Adivasis continue to live the best they can despite the loss of their lands to
the iron mine.
Bailadila iron mine area, Dantewada district, Bastar, Chhattisgarh, 2007.
53. 52
Children at a Tata school staffed by volunteer
teachers (mostly wives of Tata employees).
Inside Tata’s compound it is a different world
for those who are either employees or who
are allowed to attend Tata-sponsored schools
and health clinics. Outside the Tata bubble, a
much grimmer world confronts the majority
of Adivasis displaced by mining.
Jamshedpur, Jharkhand, 2005.
54. 53
Known as ‘Pittsburgh of India’, Jamshedpur is a city that was designed by Tata to house the employees of its giant steel plant.
Unfortunately almost none of the Santhals who were displaced by the steel mill received employment or compensation. Their
village of Jujsai Saloud at the edge of the mill is now a slum where they scrape a living by selling bits of coal gleaned from the
mill’s slag-heap.
Jujsai Saloud slum, Jamshedpur, Jharkhand, 2005.
55. 54
Workers at an open-cast coal mine.
Bokaro district, Jharkhand, 2006.
A mining project invariably sculpts a moonscape around it, a sort
of miasmic desolation that mirrors Dante’s vision of hell. Farmlands
and forests falling in the mine’s shadow are rendered barren, forcing
farming families to become wage labourers in the underbelly of
mines or cities. Mining not only scars beautiful landscapes but it
also poisons bodies and blights souls. Those who live in the mine’s
belly and those who live off it are both constantly exposed to a deadly
cocktail of emissions that engulfs everything around it.
Women and children in particular bear the brunt of this tragic
rupture as they are suddenly wrenched from the cosy comfort of
their traditional homes and thrown into a ruthlessly exploitative
world of which they have little knowledge.
57. 56
Working at a stone-
crushing mill – a typical
day of labour for Adivasis
displaced from agricultural
work.
Ichak village, Chatra
district, Jharkhand, 2005.
58. 57
Adivasi women carry coal while being watched by
their managers who are non-Adivasi men.
Urimari village, Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
59. 58
Families, including children, work in a small coal
dump between Hazaribagh and Ranchi collecting
coal to be sold in local markets earning them a
few rupees a day.
Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2005.
62. 61
There are thousands of displaced
Adivasis and poor immigrants
engaged in so-called illegal
mining. Often working as slaves
for the coal mafia, desperate
men, women and children risk
their lives by scouring for coal
in fiery underground mines.
Others “steal” coal from coal-
dumps and sell it to the “bicycle
thieves”, desperate young men
who haul 200-300 kg of coal
over as many as 100 km so that
they can make a measly Rs 250
by selling it to poor urban folk.
As the terrain is undulating,
they often trek in bands of 5-10
people. Most of them are in their
twenties but look much older.
Men pushing bicyles laden with coal
to be sold in Ranchi.
Giddi colliery, Hazaribagh district ,
Jharkhand, 2006.
63. 62
Inhabitants of a relatively new village situated next to an
abandoned mine near Hazaribagh. The villagers dig for residual
coal using primitive methods.
Hazaribagh district , Jharkhand, 2006.
66. 65
The coal scavenged at the nearby dump or disused mining site
is often coked outside the villagers’ homes. Bicycles are being
loaded to transport the coal to Hazaribagh.
Karati village, Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2006.
67. 66
Villagers pushing their bicycles overloaded with
sacks of coal across hilly terrain. It is an arduous
journey which can take an entire day.
Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2006.
Adivasis scavenging the leftovers of
processed coal in a disused coal mine
in the West Bokaro mining region.
Bokaro district, Jharkhand, 2006.
70. 69
Lodna is a village in the middle of the coal mines of
Dhanbad, India’s first coal city, in Jharkand. Its inhabitants,
mostly migrant workers from Bihar, survive on the remains
of abandoned mines and by doing small jobs. Following a
major caving in of the underground galleries, the village
has been evacuated. But people do not know where to go,
nor have they received any help yet.
73. 72
It’s appalling to note that until recent times millions of
Adivasis displaced from their lands by development projects
were never compensated, let alone rehabilitated. And it is
nothing short of a scandal that the state has been displacing
people with utter disregard of their constitutional rights through
the draconian Land Acquisition Act of 1894. Following violent
and bloody protests against acquisition of land for industrial
projects in places like Nandigram and Kalinga Nagar, the state
was finally jolted into tabling a hurriedly redrafted national
policy on rehabilitation and resettlement in December 2007.
The controversial Bill, widely criticised for its anti-people and
pro-corporate bias, is languishing in the Parliament in the face
of vehement opposition. Meanwhile, state governments and
corporations continue to resettle and rehabilitate displaced
Adivasis with horrendous apathy to their sensibilities. It would
be a fantastic burlesque were it not so tragic.
74. 73
The village of Agaria Tola sits on a precipice with two mines on either side – TISCO west Bokaro collieries on the eastern flank and
East Parej project of Central Coal Fields India on the west. The 200 households living here have not been listed as project-affected,
nor have they received any rehabilitation package. The World Bank is funding this project to the tune of Rs 480 million to provide
a rehabilitation package. Most of the 20 villages affected by the mines have been shifted out. Only Agaria Tola remains.
Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2007.
76. 75
Boys of the formerly nomadic Birhor tribe draw
graffiti on the walls of their homes in their
resettlement colony close to the town of Sultana,
Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand, 2006.
77. 76
Birhor Adivasis returning to a resettlement camp after hunting
with nets. Traditionally nomadic hunters, the Birhor have been
forced to settle in government-made camps to make way for
mining and other industrial projects in Jharkhand.
Itchak resettlement camp, Chatra district, Jharkhand, 2005.
78. 77
A Birhor Adivasi youth inside his resettlement
house at the Ichak resettlement colony.
79. 78
Khageswar Rohidas received less than a third of what was due to him after his house was
demolished. All he got was this bit of concrete on the firm’s re-housing site.
Talabira coal mine area run by HINDALCO, Sambalpur district, Orissa, 2007.
80. 79
A resettlement site built by bauxite mining company UAIL (Utkal Aluminium International
Limited) for the Adivasis displaced by bauxite mining. This mining project on tribal lands led
to the famous popular resistance movement of Kashipur which after a 13-year long battle
drove out three big multinational companies.
Kashipur, Rayagada district, Orissa, 2007.
83. 82
Ever since Birsa Munda’s revolt against the British in the 1890s,
Adivasis have waged a valiant, if sometimes losing, battle against
usurpation of their lands. The struggle for land rights increased in
number and intensity as independent India set up steel and mining
companies in the interest of nation-building. The ever-mounting
appetite for coal, iron and other important minerals began to
swallow Adivasi lands one by one, resulting in a bloody cycle of
repression and resistance that continues to plague the region. The
gruesome fracas in January 2006 between the police and armed
Adivasis protesting the takeover of their land by Tata’s steel project
in Kalinga Nagar, Orissa, is a tragic and ominous portent of the
apocalypse that awaits this mineral-accursed region.
84. 83
(left) A Santhal protestor strikes a defiant
pose in front of graffiti that says “the
water, forest and land are ours.”
Pachwara village, Pakur district,
Jharkhand, 2003.
A memorial for two Adivasi brothers who
died fighting the British and who have
become symbols of resistance against the
new wave of neoliberal colonialism.
Ulhara village, Hazaribagh district,
Jharkhand, 2005.
85. 84
A hul (revolt) against the Panem Coal Mines
Ltd—a joint venture between Punjab State
Electricity Board and a private company called
Eastern Minerals and Trading Agency, coal
company’s mining project by the Rajmahal
Buru Bachao Andolan. In this rally, Santhals of
32 villages took part, agitating with traditional
arms.
Pachwara village, Pakur district, Jharkhand,
2003.
87. 86
Villagers opposed to the POSCO steel project breaking a
six-month-old police siege of their villages.
Balitutha village, Jagatsinghpur district, Orissa, 2008.
88. 87
Graffiti in Hindi saying “Naveen Jindal Go
Back” by the Visthapan Virodhi Samiti
opposing the JINDAL Steel Plant.
Asanbani village, Jamshedpur district,
Jharkhand, 2005.
89. 88
In one of the bloodiest battles over land
between Adivasis and the state on January 2,
2006, 21 Adivasis were killed in police firing
(13 died on the spot and 8 died of injuries in
hospital) atTata’s Kalinga Nagar steel complex
in Orissa’s Jajpur district. The tribal people
were protesting the construction of a boundary
wall for a proposed mega steel plant by Tata
Steel when the violence broke out.
Tata Steel had been alloted 2400 acres in
Kalinga Nagar for the construction of a six
million tonne plant. The government had
purchased this land in 1994 at the rate of
Rs. 37,000 per acre, which it sold to the Tata Co. for Rs. 3,50,000 per acre. It made a net profit
of Rs. 72 million, while the Tatas made a neat saving of over Rs. 8.7 million over the market
price of Rs. 0.5-0.7 million per acre. This was the bone of contention that forced the Adivasis to
prevent the bulldozers from destroying their houses and taking over their lands that fatal day on
2nd January.
A lesser known fact is that the first, and probably the last, land survey was done in 1928 under
the British Raj, resulting in 60 per cent of the Adivasi areas not being surveyed. Thus 60 per cent
of Adivasis in Orissa do not have land papers, while those of non-Adivasis have been surveyed and
are documented. Despite a Supreme Court ruling, the state government had not moved a finger to
grant papers to this mass of Adivasis.
90. 89
The funeral of 13 Adivasis who were killed by the police
while protesting Tata’s steel plant at Kalinga Nagar.
Veer Bhumi ground, Ambagadia, Jajpur district, Orissa,
January 2006.
91. 90
A protestor at a mass rally organised by the Jharkhand Mines
Area Coordination Committee to protest the killing of 13
Adivasis killed in the Kalinga Nagar massacre.
Kalinga Nagar, January 2006.
92. 91
Family members of Ati Jamuda who took part in
the Adivasi agitation in Kalinga Nagar and who was
brutally killed in police custody.
Chandia village, Jajpur district, Orissa, 2007.
94. 93
A poster campaign by the Communist Party of India
protesting the Kalinga Nagar massacre.
Kalinga Nagar, February 2006.
95. 94
Adivasis shouting slogans calling for the end of police tyranny at a rally
protesting the death of a man in police custody picked up in a raid on
their village following a robbery in a jewellery store in Bokaro. The police
randomly picked the tribal village and grabbed several boys as suspects.
(right) The mother mourns the death of her son who was a worker at the
Bokaro steel mill.
Gumla town, Gumla district, Jharkhand, 2005.
97. 96
The Dongria Kondh, a unique tribe in the state of Orissa, is in danger of losing their lands and
hence their cultural identity. They live on the lush-green slopes of the Niyamgiri Hills in the district
of Kalahandi. They worship the hill as god as it sustains their life.
Since 2002, the survival of the hills and of the tribe itself has been thrown into doubt by the
London-based mining company Vedanta’s plans to mine bauxite from these hills. A protected forest
area, it is home to endangered animals including tigers, leopards and elephants as well as hundreds
of species of rare plants and trees. Besides, the land is a “Schedule V Area”, protected under Section
18 of the Indian Constitution, which means it cannot be transferred to private companies without
the consent of tribal people.
However, the company has already built what Anil Agarwal, the owner of the company, calls a
“Rolls-Royce quality bauxite refinery” at the foot of the hills, destroying several tribal villages in the
process, in anticipation of the arrival of the three million tons of bauxite the area is said to contain.
Unfortunately for the Kondhs, India’s Supreme Court too has ditched them as it finally, after a long
litigious battle, gave green signal to the company to mine bauxite from the Niyamgiri Hills. The
Kondhs have vowed to continue their fight nevertheless.
Dongria Kondh men
and women protesting
in Bhubaneswar against
Vedanta’s mining of bauxite
from Niyamgiri Hills.
Bhubaneswar, Orissa, 2006.
98. 97
Kad dei and her family. She is the wife of Sukru Majhi, a popular,
well-informed village headman who was campaigning to save
the Niyamgiri Hills from Vedanta’s bauxite mining project. He was
allegedly knocked down dead by a mining company vehicle.
Lanjigarh, Kalahandi district, Orissa, 2007.
99. 98
Dewa Ganga Markam, a 19-year-old youth
from the Muria tribe, joined the SPO (Special
Police Officer) as part of the controversial
anti-Naxalite (Maoist rebels) campaign called
Salwa Judum. He says it was his choice to join
the campaign and he intends to return to his
village after there are no Naxalites left.
Dornapal camp, Dantewada district,
Chhattisgarh, 2007.
The Naxalites subscribe to the revolutionary ideology of Mao Zedong.
Unlike their ideological cousins in Nepal, they are yet ready to shun the gun in
favour for the ballot box. They control a large region popularly referred to as
the red corridor, stretching from Andhra Pradesh in the south to the Nepalese
border in the north. Reports of trains being hijacked, or of audacious attacks
on State apparatuses like police stations, have become more frequent.
The Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the rebels
as “the single biggest internal security challenge ever faced by our country”.
Nowhere is this conflict more acute than in the dense forests of southern
Chhattisgarh state, which for the past two years has backed a “people-led”
campaign, called Salwa Judum (Peace March in local parlance), against the
Naxalites by arming thousands of villagers with guns, spears and bows and
arrows. Child soldiers are often ranged against opponents of similar age.
101. 100
Rajkumari, 21, is another Muria tribal who refused to reveal if the decision to join the Salwa Judum
was hers.
Dornapal village, Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh, 2007.
102. 101
Special Police Officers of the Salwa Judum securing a path to the governmental camps for villagers
willing to escape their villages.
Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh 2007.
103. 102
Some of the thousands of refugees who were
forced to leave their villages and go to the
Polampalli government camp.
Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh, 2007.
By all accounts, the Salwa Judum campaign has already turned into a Frankenstein. Entire
villages have been emptied as tribal communities flee from the burnings, lootings and killings. The
civil conflict has left more than 50,000 people camping under tarpaulin sheets without work or food
along the roadsides of southern Chhattisgarh.
Many allege the reason why the government has opened a new front in this battle lies beneath
Chhattisgarh’s fertile soil, which contains some of the country’s richest reserves of iron ore, coal,
limestone and bauxite. Above ground live some of India’s most impoverished and vulnerable
Adivasis.
India’s biggest companies have moved stealthily into the forest areas, buying up land and acquiring
the rights to extract the buried wealth. Last year the Chhattisgarh government signed deals worth
130 billion Indian rupees (£1.6bn) with industrial companies for steel mills and power stations. The
Naxalites have begun a campaign against such industrialisation, which the State sees as necessary
to create jobs and provide the raw materials for economic growth.
However, in October of 2008, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), which had been
mandated by the Supreme Court to probe the alleged excesses committed by the Salwa Judum, gave a
clean chit to it. More importantly, the Commission rubbished allegations that the state government
was propping up the campaign.
106. People’s struggles against mining projects in the eastern
states of ChhatTisgarh, Jharkhand Orissa
Jharkhand
Chatra: Struggle against expansion of coal mines in
Tendwa by Coal India Ltd.
Seraikela: Struggle against Tata’s steel plant in
Tentoposi village. Villages fear takeover of their
lands.
Gumla and Khunti: Struggle against Arcelor Mittal’s
iron-ore mining project.
Dumka: Protests against Jindal’s coal-mining project
Latehar: Struggle against Abhijeet Infrastructures
Group’s coal-mining project at Chitarpur as well as
against HINDALCO’s bauxite-mining project.
Hazaribagh: Struggles against displacement by NTPC’s
coal-mining project in Karanpura valley, which is also
the site of 5000-year-old megaliths. The project is likely
to displace about 14000 people.
East Singhbhum: Struggle against Bhushan Steel’s
land acquisition for its steel and power plant. Also
agitation against Uranium Corporation of India Ltd’s
plan to mine uranium at Pundihansa.
Dhanbad: Protests against Bharat Coking Coal Ltd’s
plan to evacuate thousands of people from Jharia,
which is sitting on fires in the mines underneath.
Chhattisgarh
Raigarh: Protests against Jindal’s coal-mining project
that will affect five villages. Also protests against the
profusion of extremely-polluting sponge iron plants.
Bastar: Agitation against displacement by Tata’s steel
project in Lohandiguda, and by National Mineral
Development Corporation’s steel plant in Nagarnar.
Dantewada: Agitation against forcible acquisition of
land by Essar Steel in Dhurli and Bhansi villages.
Orissa
Jajpur: Tata’s steel plant in Kalinga Nagar and Tata’s
chromite mines in Sukinda, dubbed as one of the 10
most polluted places on earth.
Angul: Protests against coal-mining projects of
several companies including Tata, Jindal, Bhushan
Steel, and NALCO.
Jagatsinghpur: Protests against land acquisition by
the Korean company POSCO’s steel plant.
Jharsuguda: Struggle against Vedanta’s alumina
smelter plant and sponge iron plants of various
companies.
Kashipur: Struggle against mining of bauxite by
HINDALCO.
Kalahandi: Struggle against Vedanta’s alumina
smelter in Lanjigarh as well as against its plans to
mine bauxite from the Niyamgiri Hills, the abode of
the endangered Dongria Kondh Adivasis.
Sambalpur: Farmers’ struggle against indiscriminate
use of Hirakud reservoir water by mining corporations
such as Bhushan Steel and Vedanta. Protests against
dumping of effluents from mining and sponge iron
plants into the Mahanadi, Orissa’s largest river.
Dhenkanal: Protests against grabbing of land and
repressive tactics by Bhushan Steel.
Keonjhar: Protests against new iron-ore mining
projects by corporate giants like Arcelor Mittal and
POSCO, in this already heavily-mined district. About
100 mines are already in operation.
Koraput: Protests against Vedanta’s bauxite mining
project.
109. 108
OTHER PANOS SOUTH ASIA PUBLICATIONS
Caterpillar and the Mahua Flower: Tremors in India’s Mining Fields
June 2007, ISBN 978-99933-766-7-5, PB, Rs 150
On the Brink: Desperate Energy Pursuits in South Asia
June 2006, ISBN 99933-766-6-3, ISBN 978-99933-766-7-5, PB, Rs 150
Disputes Over the Ganga
October 2004, ISBN 99933-766-4-7
The Unheard Scream: Reproductive Health and Women’s Lives in India
2004, ISBN 81-86706-70-4, HB, Rs 400
Himalayan Waters
January 2001, ISBN 99933-304-7-7, HB
110.
111. Cover Design: Brinda Datta
COVER PHOTOGRAPH: ROBERT WALLIS / PANOS PICTURES
(Cover) Adivasi as well as migrant workers loading coal in the Saunda colliery of Central
Coalfields Ltd in Hazaribagh district of the state of Jharkhand, India. Workers are often
underpaid and suffer from all kinds of respiratory diseases.
PRICE: RS 400
The triumphant celebration of market utopias is remaking the world in the image of capital
and its many temptations. Drunk on neo-liberal fantasies, nation-states are madly jostling
with one another for an ever-greater share of global markets and resources. This rat-race is
triggering stampedes in which many lesser, fragile worlds are being flattened.
This photo-book is a story of one such Euclidean nightmare in India’s mineral-rich states of
Orissa, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. The voracious appetite for minerals, so vital to fire the
cylinders of economic growth, is cruelly and cynically wrecking the lives of India’s Adivasis,
who happen to inhabit the much-coveted El Dorados.
It’s a shame that only a handful of photojournalists have chosen to capture the way sensitive
cultures and ecologies have been mutilated by the extractive industries. We hope this modest
documentation would inspire shutterbugs to train their lenses on one of the grimmest and
most disregarded facets of India’s economic success story.
PANOS SOUTH ASIA
ALCHEMY OF INIQUITY
P
Resistance Repression in India’s Mines
a photographic enquiry
P
ALCHEMY OF INIQUITYResistanceRepressioninIndia’sMines