BAMCEF UNIFICATION CONFERENCE 7

Published on 10 Mar 2013 ALL INDIA BAMCEF UNIFICATION CONFERENCE HELD AT Dr.B. R. AMBEDKAR BHAVAN,DADAR,MUMBAI ON 2ND AND 3RD MARCH 2013. Mr.PALASH BISWAS (JOURNALIST -KOLKATA) DELIVERING HER SPEECH. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLL-n6MrcoM http://youtu.be/oLL-n6MrcoM

Friday, May 3, 2013

Fwd: [initiative-india] FootPrints Issue 2 - 3rd May 2013



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: NAPM India <napmindia@napm-india.org>
Date: Fri, May 3, 2013 at 3:31 PM
Subject: [initiative-india] FootPrints Issue 2 - 3rd May 2013



Dear all,

We present the second issue of FOOTPRINTS, an initiative towards providing our friends and supporters updates news related to NAPM and its associate organisations as well as analytical articles, views and interviews. FOOTPRINTS will be issued on the 1st and 16th every month.

We have introduced two new sections - Policy Watch which will be an analysis of legislative bills and laws, and Movement Profile which will highlight the activities of different organisation every month. We've even introduced an Events section which will list all details organised by NAPM and associate organisations.

This fortnight's issue contains:-
1) The Maharashtra Irrigation Scam
2) Policy Watch: Street Vendors Bill
3) Aggravated Patriarchal Violence under Neo - Liberalisation - Gabriele Dietrich 
4) Movement Profile - Parayavaran Suraksha Samiti
5) Protest Updates

We encourage you to send in press releases, photographs, articles,  situation updates to be featured in Footprints
The matter should be related to NAPM alone. 
Please send all documents to napmdelhi@gmail.com


MOVEMENT OF INDIA, NAPM's English magazine, will continue as before.



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  MAHARASTRA IRRIGATION SCAM 
A
jit Pawar was forced to resign 
from the post of Deputy Chief 
Minister in wake of the unfolding 
irrigation scam. In his tenure as 
Irrigation Minister within a span of 
seven months in 2009, the cost of 
38 irrigation projects under the 
Vidarbha Irrigation Development 
Corporation (VIDC) escalated from 
Rs. 6,672.27 crore to Rs.26,722.33 
crore - a whopping Rs.20,050.06 
crore! Thirty irrigation projects 
were granted approvals in just four 
days — August 14, 2009 (11 projects); June 24, 2009 (10 projects); 
July 7, 2009 (5 projects); and August 18, 2009 (4 projects). The cost 
of these projects went up by six 
times the original cost to 33 times 
with the revised administrative approval granted by the VIDC. In the 
case of 12 projects, the cost shot 
up by more than twice the original 
estimates.
Still the white paper produced 
after an enquiry constituted by the 
Government of Maharashtra gave 
him a virtually clean chit, and he's 
again back in his chair. However, 
the taint will not leave and more 
evidence keeps surfacing, of not 
only his involvement but top leadership of other parties as well, including those in opposition. Former 
Prime Minister (late) Rajiv Gandhi 
had talked about the percentage 
syndrome, doling out 'money' to 
the authorities and power holders 
for garnering contracts and licenses, however, nothing seems to 
have changed even when his party 
in name of doing away with the 
license raj has taken the reform 
boat. Even today, masses continue 
to suffer, sacrifice and surrender to 
all those who fool and loot them in 
the name of development, economic growth and politics of progress.
Gosi Khurd Irrigation Project and 
Mahalakshmi Infra Projects 
Limited
Last year, when the irrigation 
scam came out, Gosi Khurd was 
one of the projects listed. We have 
now gathered fresh set of tax papers which clearly show payment of 
'speed money' to powerful politicians. Income Tax Assessment of 
Mahalakshmi Infra projects Limited 
show Rs 200 crores "investment" by 
the company in Ghodziri Branch 
canal of Gosikhurd – Right Bank 
Main Canal, in Tembhu project, 
Western Maharashtra; and one 
more 'untitled' project. Mahalakshmi Infra projects Limited (MIL, 
earlier known as Mahalakshmi 
Construction Company Ltd -MCCL) 
was investigated by the income tax 
department in 2011. The director's 
and other company officials' 
Volume 1, Issue 2
1st May 2013
In this issue:- 
 Maharashtra Irrigation scam: - the big names involved 
 Gabriele Dietrich on Gender Violence 
 Movement Profile: Parayavaran Suraksha Samiti 
FootPrints 
Policy Watch: Street Vendors Bill 4
Aggravated Patriarchal Violence Under Neoliberal Globalisation 
5
Movement Profile: Parayavaran 
Suraskha Samiti 
7
Protest Updates 9
Editorial 11
Inside this issue: 
N A T I O N A L A L L I AN C E O F P E OP L E ' S M O V E M E N T S 
Volume 1, Issue 2 
1st May 2013 
More Evidence of Top Leadership Involvement Page 2 FOOTPRINTS 
offices and residences were raided and 
an assessment report was prepared with 
order filed by the Deputy Commissioner, 
Income tax, Central Circle, Kolhapur on 
27th December 2011.
The assessment order brought out unquestionable truth and facts with details of 
'Speed Money' - all illegal, unjustifiable expenses incurred by the company to be 
categorized as payments non-permissible 
under law, and not for the purpose of the 
business. It also meant false statement of 
Income tax, under the law and thus a major loot of the state exchequer.
Details of money paid
Assessment report based on documents, 
diary and papers seized 
from the 
residences of 
its Director,
D h i r e n d r a 
Anant Bhat, 
show fine 
details of 
money paid 
during the 
pre -
t e n d e r i n g 
process for
garnering the 
contracts.
Some of the beneficiaries are Deputy 
Minister Mr. Ajit Pawar, Former BJP President Mr. Nitin Gadkari, Gopinath Munde, 
Sunil Deshmukh, MLA, Mr. Vijay Vadettiwar and their associates.
Documents seized from Bhatt also include details of money paid to the technical 
experts and officials in the Irrigation Department, Vidarbha Irrigation Development 
Corporation and Krishna Valley Development Corporation. Details of 'payments' 
worth 43.85 crores were obtained from D A 
Bhat who ultimately admitted, and so did 
the Chairman and Managing Director of 
MIL, Mr. Ravindra D Shinde that those 
payments ranging from 1 lakh to crores to 
each of the persons named by initials or 
short forms, with designations or nick 
names, were indeed made during the period of 2/3 years until the raid on 23th 
September 2009 and thereafter.
In just one branch canal project, with an 
estimated cost of 287 crores, 'Dada', also 
named as A.P. in certain seized pages, with 
amounts and details such as dates tallying 
with each other, took the largest of the 
share, Rs. 27,50,00,000/- i.e. 10% of the 
total project estimate – the 'normal' rate for 
'speed money' popularly known and taken 
as indispensable ! This amount was shared 
50—50 by the two partner firms, one the 
Assessor, MIL and its IT Venture Partner, 
M/s B. T. Patil and Sons Belgaum Construction Company Ltd. There is also mention of 'AB' who invested a part of the first 
year's (2006-07) unexplained Business Expenses of 200 lakhs i.e. 2 crores, divided 
into 50% as assistance to and for each of 
the JV Partner firms!
Nitin Gadkari and Gopinath Munde were 
also paid about Rs 50 Lakh and Rs 20 
Lakh respectively. Officials of MoEF – Ministry of Environment and Forest as well as 
Darda family also seem to have received 
their share. The analysis of the tax papers 
indicate that the 'percent' almost fixed and 
estimated since the beginning, escalating 
the project cost by atleast the same 
amount was "well-planned". The delays, 
irrespective of 'speed money' obviously are 
a part of the game that "get, set and go", 
only when the shares are obtained. And 
further official escalation in the cost also 
then becomes a demand.
Gosikhurd Dam project's, Left bank canal has became a mess with Nitesh Bhangadia, present MLC, BJP, another politician contractor getting his due score while 
Ghodziri branch with the above 
'entanglements' is still far from complete, 
with water yet to reach Asolamendha tank, 
the old tank of 1940's yet to be expanded, 
Nitin Gadkari and 
Gopinath Munde were also 
paid about Rs 50 Lakh and 
Rs 20 Lakh respectively. 
Officials of MoEF – 
Ministry of Environment 
and Forest, Darda family 
also seem to have 
received their share. VOLUME 1, ISSUE 2 Page 3 
11 more villages planned to be submerged 
for the same and irrigation benefits yet not 
obtained due to "lack of funds" for the minor network!
The CAG report, Maharashtra (civil), 
31.3.2011 brings out the story of Ghodziri. 
The report of the Deputy Commissioner 
also refers to the Tembhu Large Lift Diversion Project, started in 1999 but lying behind by years, even then the oustees of 
Wang - Marathwadi and other related projects are being drowned and displaced, 
since years in the name of water for 
Tembhu!
A reading of the detailed note on 
Tembhu seized during the raid show that 
the same MIL has tendered, cost of the material to be supplied for the project increased by 60% of the real market cost. 
This increase, shown as "overheads" 
amount to 26.7% of the cost, that comes to 
about 105 crores, admitted by the Director 
Mr. Bhat specially entrusted with 
'operation distribution' to get contracts, get 
bills sanctioned, to obtain other clearances 
and keep all, even the each others' opponents, happy.
One more project details, without identification are found to indicate that 14.5% of 
the total 633 crores, bill sanctioned, i.e. 92 
crores are kept for doling out over and 
above the official / legitimate profit.
Inaction
It's obvious that this Assessment order 
could be sufficient to take action against 
the Assessed, and Receivers too could be 
tried under the Prevention of Corruption 
Act, 1988 for receipt of 'pecuniary advantage'. However, the Judicial Authority of 
Commissioner – IT - investigation was approached by the assessor and assessment 
order gave a partially clean chit! The Appellate report too, however, does not deny the 
expenditure as 'speed money' which would 
be an adequate basis to act. Who will bell 
the cat, may we ask ? The matter is still 
with the IT - Appellate Tribunal, Pune 
(ITAT) taking months if not years and there 
is no money for maintaining agency to 
'speed' the investigation. Meanwhile, Mahalakshmi Infra projects continue to progress and be involved in implementing 
projects.
Need for a committee of Enquiry
Can the same Madhav Chitale Committee 
(former chair of many other committees) 
have the courage, and commitment to investigate not only Ghodziri, Tembhu, 
Koyna (another mentioned in the same order of 27-12-2011) but all and every waterirrigation project during last 5 to 10 years 
at least? With those on the opposite 
benches uniting to gain, this is not likely.
We, as 
NAPM, while 
continuing to 
search details 
into the Water 
Scam feel 
ashamed of 
not only the 
v u l g a r 
remarks but 
more immoral, criminal acts of 
corruption –
misusing and 
mismanaging 
public money 
and resources 
including water, when we are faced with the worst 
drought in decades.
We demand and assert a need to appoint 
an impartial, independent Commission of 
Enquiry under the Commissions of Inquiry 
Act, 1952, chaired by a judge with integrity 
and honesty. The TOR for the commission 
must include : investigation into all projects - small and large: dam, canal or lifts 
by calling for all data, documents, files, 
summoning anyone concerned including 
ministers and Chief Minister and relying 
Can the same Madhav 
Chitale Committee (have 
the courage, and 
commitment to 
investigate all and every 
water-irrigation project 
during last 5 to 10 years 
at least? Page 4 FOOTPRINTS 
special Investigation Team (SIT) but also 
assisted by state and central agencies such 
as Directorate of Enforcement, ACB, EOW, 
CVC and IT dept.
POLICY WATCH: Street Vendors Bill 
"Rich and poor coexist in today's cities. We need to address the needs of 
both, for inclusive planning," said Mr. 
Maken at a press conference in January 
2013, on the Street Vendors (Protection of 
Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Bill. The Bill aims at regularising 
street vending by establishing a body, the 
Town Vending Committee(TVC), responsible for issuing licences, certificates to 
hawkers, demarcating vending zones and 
relocating vendors if and when necessary. . 
On zone demarcations Mr. Maken stated 
that once the Bill is passed It is expected 
that they [local bodies] will do it in a minimum period 
of time. 
"During that 
period, the 
local authorities or police 
cannot take 
a c t i o n 
a g a i n s t 
hawkers," he 
said.
The bill was 
introduced 
in the Lok 
Sabha in 
September 
2012 with 
the Standing Committee headed by Sharad Yadav submitting its amendments 
later. Some key amendments referred by 
the Committee were to lower the minimum 
age to 14 years and raising the share of 
hawkers union representatives in the 
Town Vending Committee to 40%. NGOs 
will comprise 10% and the remaining 50% 
will include bureaucrats, civic officials, police and other authorities. Another important amendment is that the number of 
hawkers allowed in a city will be 2.5% of 
the total population.
Medha Patkar, on behalf of NAPM, sent 
her comments on the Street Vendors Bill 
to the Standing Committee. She said that 
the primary objective should be to create 
an enabling environment for vending activities in an orderly fashion, regulating 
and curtailing the business should be secondary. Hawkers provide a market for the 
poor, with minimum investment and low 
profits. The government should facilitate 
the Vending Activities by providing not 
only land but other such minimum amenities for them and ensure that their 
sources and places of seeking livelihood is 
associated with their residential areas. 
Some of the recommendations made are:-
1. Provisions for vending zones should be 
an integral part of city or municipal development Plans or Town Master Plans 
at the initial stages itself.
2. The Vending Fee prescribed should be 
minimal and commensurate to the 
scale of business, type of business and 
should be minimal and not exceeding 
one day's income
3. In case a vendor is found to be involved 
in the vending activity without obtaining proper registration, the local authority should issue a temporary certificate valid for a specified period of 
time to enable the vendor to obtain 
permanent registration certificate.
4. In case of violation of policy and rules 
the vendor must be given a fair and 
proper hearing. He should be free to 
choose anyone to represent his case. 
An investigation into the offense must 
be made and any charge should be 
leading to the limited penalty unless it 
is exceptionally harmful violation causing loss or damage to the public property or exchequer
5. In case of relocation proposed by the 
Town Vending Committee, the process 
Some key 
amendments...lower the 
minimum age to 14 years, 
raise the share of 
hawkers union 
representatives in the 
Town Vending Committee 
to 40%. VOLUME 1, ISSUE 2 Page 5 
should be transparent and the vendors consent should be obtained for 
such proposal. 
6. The street vendor who has to be relocated or evicted by the local authority 
from the site allotted to him should be 
given a minimum of 90 days notice instead of proposed 7 days notice. This 
is the minimum notice period granted 
to any employed person in case of relocation. 
7. Housing Rights: The vendor should 
also be allotted house plots or their 
bending zones within a range of 3-5 
Kms. This will save a considerable 
amount of travel time with all their 
goods everyday. Housing Rights as 
mandated in the Rajeev Awas Yojana
should also be made available to the 
street vendors. 
Aggravated Patriarchal Violence Under Neoliberal Globalisation 
Gabriele Dietrich 
One of the things which rattled the Indian Government recently is the fact 
that some Western countries have issued 
travel advisories describing India as unsafe for female tourists. This can affect the 
tourism industry and this is where 
"damage" is perceived. The tourist inflow 
has dropped by 25% compared to last year 
and the number of female tourists has 
dropped by 35%.
This is where it hurts. The fact that 
newspapers are bursting with rape cases 
involving young girl children of two, five, 
seven, ten, thirteen, fifteen years, often 
gang raped, mutilated, murdered, has triggered outrage among the affected population, but the readiness of the police to file 
FIRs and arrest the culprits is scandalously lagging behind, to put it mildly. The 
affected families may be offered bribes to 
drop the case or they will be bullied into 
submission. If one follows the Dalit Media 
Watch, it is obvious that the rapes of Dalit 
women and children are of disproportionally high number and that the families often lose their means of survival or even 
commit suicide in the effort to attain justice.
It is a sad period in the life of our country, where the outrage over the Delhi gang 
rape of 16th December 2012 had triggered 
the protest of tens of thousands of demonstrators despite section144 being in force, 
but the imagination often did not run any 
further than the demand for the death 
penalty, a demand vehemently rejected by 
women's movements. The recent death of 
Justice Verma, former head of the Supreme Court, under whose leadership a 
commission of three dedicated jurists 
processed 80000 submissions and condensed them into a report of 850 pages 
within one 
month, has 
left many of 
us with a trem e n d o u s 
sense of loss. 
The government ordinance signed 
in its sequel 
was only a 
pale shadow 
of what would 
have been required and 
possible.
A recent report on the conditions in juvenile homes in 
the country has characterised them as 
"hell holes" with rampant sexual abuse of 
female as well as male youngsters. A team 
of UN women is at present visiting the 
country to highlight the deteriorating 
situation. The declining juvenile sex ratio 
is another expression of the rampant son 
preference and girl rejection, converted into 
the lucrative illegal business of sex selective abortions and clandestine old fashioned but pervasive infanticide. Abundant 
research has shown that this is very 
A recent report on the 
conditions in juvenile 
homes in the country has 
characterised them as 
"hell holes" with rampant 
sexual abuse of female 
as well as male 
youngsters. Page 6 FOOTPRINTS 
directly related to the on going extraction 
of dowry and ritual gifts at festive occasions, clearly a form of on going original 
accumulation of capital by means of plunder and coercion, extracted by routine violence, which is taken for granted as being 
part of the family system. 
The affected women are willing to abort 
the female foetus or to commit infanticide 
in order to alleviate the violence visited on 
them and to "save their daughters from 
this kind of suffering." The message is that 
females are a misfortune best to be 
avoided and easily to be disposed of. Very 
absurdly, it is often not recognised that 
the way Motherhood is projected as a 
woman's destiny is very much at the root 
of proliferation of patriarchy. The "rape of 
the Motherland" is the primeval idiom of 
Hindutva for 
depicting minority communities as "the 
other" and to 
d e m o n i s e 
neighbouring 
nations.
It is significant in this 
context to perceive that 
women's organisations, 
Dalit movements and unions in the unorganised sector, supported 
by NAPM, held a massive rally in Villipiram in Tamil Nadu on March 30th, 2013 
in commemoration of International Working Women's Day. (In Tamil Nadu, as in 
many other parts of the country, March 
8th, International Women's Day, takes 
place during the whole month of March.) 
This mobilisation had a very significant 
perspective. The focus was on the one 
hand to highlight the enormous violence 
unleashed by a backward caste dominated 
political party on five villages in Dharmapuri District in November 2012 inflicting material loss on the Dalit population, 
in retaliation for intercaste marriages, 
which were an expression of the Dalit progress in education and more work opportunities in some urban places. In this context, the demand of the rally was for the 
freedom to break caste by inter-marriage 
in the spirit of Dr. Ambedkar's abolition of 
caste.
At the same time, the gathering registered a vehement protest against the violation of Tamil women in Sri Lanka by the 
Sinhala army, which not only forces 
women into prostitution and helps the appropriation of Tamil lands in the North 
Eastern parts by outsiders, but even enforces a form of racist colonisation, which 
decimates the Tamil population further. 
The protest connected the critique of caste 
and patriarchy in connection with the coercive forces of the State and of militarisation. We can also draw parallels with the 
protracted struggle against AFSPA in 
North East India and in Kashmir. In all 
these places, the coercive forces of the 
State are enforcing ruthless policies of 
"development" through extraction of mineral resources, destruction of forests and 
self - reliant agriculture, neglect of food 
security, privatisation and overuse of water. The rape of women and the rape of 
the forces of nature seem to run parallel. 
Modern capitalist patriarchy allies with 
fundamentalist forces in this venture. 
We need to turn the tide and change this 
ruthless mode of extraction (it is not even 
"production", just plunder). We have to 
show that rampant violence and murders 
are not the last word. The uprisings for a 
life of dignity and non-violence will continue. We owe this to the future generations, who need a liveable world.
Gabriele Dietrich is the National Convener of NAPM 
based in Madurai and can be reached at 
The way Motherhood is 
projected as a woman's 
destiny is very much at 
the root of proliferation 
of patriarchy. VOLUME 1, ISSUE 2 Page 7
MOVEMENT PROFILES: PARYAVARAN SURAKSHA SAMITI, GUJARAT 
PSS and its struggle towards preventing another Bhopal Tragedy 
Michael Mazgaonkar 
Gujarat advertises itself as the fastest 
growing state in the country but little 
does it mention the costs involved. The entire industrial spread in Gujarat is severely polluted and yet the Gujarat Pollution Control Board continually allows new 
companies to set up units here. There are 
over 50 industrial estates in the Golden 
corridor from Ahmedabad through Nandesari, Ankleshwar and Vapi, housing many 
chemical estates, hazardous industries 
that have been phased out of Europe and 
US and dumped into India. The ground 
water in each of these areas is excessively 
polluted, mercury levels are shockingly 
high, rivers spew effluents while plants 
and vegetables show high levels of heavy 
metals. Government monitoring is as good 
as absent. Many environmental organizations believe that Gujarat is sitting on a 
chemical time bomb that could go off any 
day.
The Paryavaran Suraksha Samiti, (PSS) 
is an environmental organization that was 
set up in 2000 to combat this disaster 
waiting to happen. It has conducted numerous surveys and observed that people 
living inside the industrial estates and 
surrounding villages cope with extreme 
amounts of air, water and soil pollution as 
well as bad health infrastructure. Monitoring and regulation by the Gujarat Pollution Control Board (GPCB) is practically 
non-existent and availability of information about the pollution or its health effects on the residents is scarce. Whatever 
bit of information exists isn't shared with 
the affected communities. PSS works with 
marginalized communities affected by 
such industrial pollution, working proactively, organizing protests and meetings 
with the government to create awareness 
and force the government to take action to 
reduce the toxic pollution.
Battles fought
More than a lakh of people living in 
Ankleshwar are exposed to polluted 
ground water which has mercury levels 
well above the WHO standards. Hazardous 
solid wastes are routinely dumped from its 
industrial estates into lands surrounding 
the estates. Amla khadi (a rivulet flowing 
through the industrial estate) in Ankleshwar carries extremely toxic, often acidic, 
dark brown or black effluents around the 
year, while Bil Khadi of Vapi carries dark 
red acidic effluents all through the year 
making its water level contain mercury 
more than 96 
times the WHO 
levels. The foul 
smell from 
A n k l e s h w a r 
can be felt up 
to a distance 
of 30 km. 
Ankleshwar, 
along with 
Vapi is a pollution hot-spot 
and would 
rank among 
the dirtier 
places in the 
world. A CPCB 
report regarding the central effluent Treatment Plant (CETP) in Vapi showed that the 
treated outlet water on certain occasions 
was more polluted than the inlet from factories!
In the 200 km stretch between Sarigam 
(South Gujarat) and Baroda (Central Gujarat) chemical industries stand on lands 
acquired for engineering units. These industries are not just hazardous, but also 
disrespectful of pollution control laws. PSS 
and the people of Sarigam have been protesting against the air, water and noise 
pollution in this area, and took umbrage 
A CPCB report 
showed that treated 
outlet water on certain 
occasions was more 
polluted than the inlet 
from factories! especially when a particular company with 
a poor track record of pollution control, 
sought to expand its unit for manufacturing a fungicide. While it should have been 
GPCB's responsibility to pull it up, it was 
the people with PSS who collected data, 
coordinated surveys, obtained scientific 
proof of the pollution levels of the area and 
questioned expansion plans.
PSS, in collaboration with Farmers Action Group, sampled air along the 
"infamous" Effluent Channel Project, the 
Ankleshwar GIDC, and the Vadodara Petrochemical Complex as part of a collaborative effort with the International Bucket 
Brigade. The air samples were sent to Columbia Analytical Services Inc.,USA for 
testing which revealed alarming levels of 
cancerous and 
dangerous toxins contaminating the air at 
the Vadodara 
and Ankleshwar Industrial 
Estates. The 
c h e m i c a l s 
found harm the 
reproductive 
system, the 
central nervous 
system, kidneys and liver.
Lignite has 
been mined from Rajpardi area (Bharuch 
district) for over 15 years, leading to loss of 
ground water and rivulet streams for five 
villages in the area. Instead acidic water 
flows through the streams and the waste of 
the mines are finding their ways into the 
fields. With the Gujarat Mining Development Corporation being insensitive to the 
people, the people put up a strong demonstration and forced its officials to visit the 
fields and villages and listen to the complaints. With PSS's support the villagers 
forced the mining company to set up a 
separate water supply scheme for them!
Demand accountability
Despite having one of the worst industrial 
tragedies of the world, India's monitoring of 
air pollution is woeful with no standards 
for ambient air pollution. Disregarding the 
state pollution control board's statements, 
PSS has discovered that the regulatory authorities neither collect enough data neither do they have the wherewithal to measure newer and more poisonous gases in 
the atmosphere. GPCB has the capacity to 
monitor only a few air and water pollution 
parameters. Samples for organic pollutants, heavy metals, dioxins and other complex pollutants that are known to be extremely toxic, are never tested.
With no data or political will to take action against air pollution, the health of the 
workers and citizens is at stake. A slow reenactment of the Bhopal tragedy is taking 
place in Gujarat where crops are wiped out 
due to a single release of industrial emission, rich agricultural lands are devastated 
due to chronic exposure to emissions and 
people are threatened by rising cases of 
cancer.
PSS, in its decade long struggle against 
the state government has demanded a 
complete balance sheet for each industry 
to hold them accountable for chemicals 
they use and release into the environment, 
immediate data collection and analysis of 
air samples at all industrial estates, along 
all effluent channels and at effluent dumping sites and regular testing by the pollution control boards, and making of the test 
results, public.
Page 8 FOOTPRINTS 
A test conducted by the 
Central Pollution Control 
Board revealed exceeded 
levels of lead, cadmium 
and chromium in waste 
collected from Coca - Cola 
bottling plants. Panchayats Reject Coke Expansion Plea
18th April, Mehdiganj (UP): 15 panchayats 
have moved the government to reject Coca 
- Cola's application for expanding its bottling operations and end current groundwater extraction in Mehdiganj, Varanasi 
district, to save community water resources. Coca-Cola has applied to the central and state government to increase its 
groundwater usage from the current 
50,000 cubic meters annually to 250,000 
cubic meters annually for its bottling plant 
in Mehdiganj. 
The panchayats have cited difficulty in 
accessing water for drinking and farming 
purposes in surrounding villages. The current status of the area's groundwater supply has been declared 'critical' by the government, for which Coca - Cola is solely responsible. During the soft - drink makers 
11 year stay in Mehdiganj, the water table 
dropped to 7.9meters (26 feet). Further 
more a test conducted by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) revealed exceeded levels of lead, cadmium and chromium in waste collected from Coca - Cola 
bottling plants. The waste was being distributed to farmers as fertilizers. Waste 
from Mehdiganj revealed excessive cadmium and chromium amounts. Coke's 
'water—harvesting' and 'water—neutrality' 
measures are a sham with company officials admitting the failure of their initiatives.
In spite of such drastic effects no public 
notices were served to local communities 
nor public hearings held regarding this application for expansion. 
"Communities have primary rights over 
the use of groundwater, and we have decided that it is in the best interest of the 
communities to not allow Coca-Cola to expand and put an end immediately to its 
current groundwater use," said Mukesh 
Kumar, Sarpanch of Nagepur panchayat. 
Repressive Canal Work in Narmada 
Valley
Badwani, Dhar (MP): Adivasis and farmers 
from Mandil, Mundla, Khadkal (Rajpur 
Tehsil, Badwani Dist) and Malangaon, 
Karoli, Chhota Barda etc. (Tehsil Manavar, 
Dist. Dhar) faced the repression of the BJP
-led Madhya Pradesh Govt, which is pushing ahead the canal work in violation of all 
norms on agricultural safeguards, environmental compliance and rehabilitation. 
The Collector of Badwani with BJP leaders and the local MLA went to some of the 
adivasi villages the previous day purportedly for inspection, but had no meaningful 
dialogue with the poor adivasi-farmers. Instead the Collector and his entourage resorted to most vulgar abuse, threatening 
the people and activists that no questioning of any sort would be tolerated.
Only last month in Nandra village farmers were arrested for valiantly questioning 
the Omkareshwar canal work. False cases 
were registered against them and excavation undertaken destroying standing crop.
The people were trying to tell them that 
surrounding lands were affected the existing canal dug before, by huge rubble deposited on un-acquired portions of land, 
severe water logging. Also 60% land oustees had not been provided alternative cultivable land etc. The Collector did not listen to any of the issues raised by the people and was only harping on canal construction at any cost. This situation of repression is similar in Malangaon, Karoli, 
Nandra and other villages and people have 
to question this with the Expert Committee's report in their hands. 
The most recent MoEF Expert Committee's 2nd Field Visit Report has concluded 
huge gaps in Narmada canal planning and 
VOLUME 1, ISSUE 2 Page 9 
PROTEST UPDATES Page 10 FOOTPRINTS 
work. It has recommended that farmers 
who have faced impacts of muck disposal 
or destruction of un-acquired land must 
be compensated, 60% land oustees should 
be provided alternative cultivable land, onfarm safeguard measures must be completed before canal work, canals should 
not be pushed in irrigated villages at a distance of 3 kms from Narmada etc. It also 
recommended that the administration and 
NVDA must have a dialogue with NBA and 
the farmers, which are being flouted.
Demand:-
 Immediate implementation of all the recommendations of the MoEF Expert 
Monitoring Committee and execution of 
command area and farm safeguard 
measures before any canal construction 
and mitigation of health impacts.
 Annual compensation for muck disposal 
on un-acquired land, destruction of 
standing crop due to water logging and 
alternative land based rehabilitation to 
farmers losing more than 60% land
 Demand review of canals in irrigated villages and detailed consultation with 
farmers.
People Oppose Vishnugad - Peepalkoti 
HEP in Ganga Valley
14th March Alaknandaganga valley: A 
demonstration was held on the occasion of 
International Anti Big Dam day. Across the 
country, there has been no rehabilitation 
of the people displaced by big dams, environmental norms have been grossly violated. Even the proposed power generation 
is yet to begin. In Uttrakhand the situation 
of the dams constructed so far is very dismal. The dams pose a danger not only for 
the river but also spell doom for the state. 
For seeking their rights, Tehri Dam displaced people went to the Supreme Court 
and only then some semblance of rehabilitation has happened. For the last 21 years 
litigation has been going on in the case between N.D. Juyal and Shekhar Singh V/s 
GoI. The struggle for rehabilitation has 
been spearheaded by the anti dam campaigners.
In Uttrakhand on Alaknandaganga under construction Vishnugad–Peepalkoti 
HEP area men and women of the affected 
villages of Kaudiya , Durgapur, Harsari, 
Naurakh, Tagari etc. protested under the 
banner of Matu Jansangthan. In Harsari 
village people gathered at the dam site 
where the construction of tunnel is under 
way; the work was stalled and THDC officials were gheroed. After this the procession proceeded to the THDC office at Siyasedh ,shouting slogans like Ganga ko 
aviral Bahene do ,Badhe bandh Dhoka hai, 
and vowed to continued their struggle . 
Narinder Pokhariyal said that for the 
last 9 years his village people are facing the 
consequences of this proposed dam but the 
company has not shown any concern. Even 
Hatt village people are hanging on to mere 
assurances only. Geeta devi said that while 
the people here have lost their sleep due to 
site blasting at night the government is 
sound asleep. Women at various villages 
Masuri Devi, Nandi Devi, Bhadi Devi all 
protested dams on the river.
Even small Hydro Electric Projects have 
a huge impact in Uttrakhand. On 24th July 
and 3rd Aug 2012 due to cloud bursts in 
the Assi Ganga river valley, the under construction Kaldigahat and Assi ganga Phase
-I and II Hydro electric project and Bhagirathi Ganga in Maneri Chal phase II 
caused lots of destruction. There is no Volume 1, Issue 2 Page 11 
Editorial 
S
imply defined rape is an un-consented, 
forced act of sexual intercourse irrespective of gender. However Indian laws 
still refuse to acknowledge marital rape as 
a criminal act with the current Criminal 
Law (Amendment) Ordinance 2013 disregarding the Verma Commission's recommendations. The Ordinance, remaining 
loyal to the Criminal Law (Amendments) 
Bill 2012 and other predecessors, states 
that marital rape is not an offence if the 
wife is above 16 years of age obviously forgetting that child marriage is a criminal 
act. In the same breath the ordinance 
fixes the Age of Consent at 18 years. Such 
is the absurdity of our legislators.
This reluctance to acknowledge marital 
rape as a serious offence is justified as saving the institution of marriage from dissolution. An institution's success is dependent on the well – being of the individuals 
who are a part of it. Economic independence and socio – political emancipation 
mean nothing if women do not have the 
right to their own bodies. The Verma Commission report clearly states that rape and 
sexual assault are an expression of power. 
Let's take off the feminist glasses and even 
then marital rape grossly violates the right 
to life as it causes physical, mental and 
emotional harm. Hence the State should 
uphold this fundamental right as it is not 
in conflict with the directive principles nor 
does it threaten the integrity of the nation 
By continuously turning a blind eye the 
state is not only going against the promise 
to ensure to all its citizens justice, equality 
but also against the UDHR, CEDAW and 
other international charters. 
Status quo supporters feel that criminalising forced sexual relations in a marriage could victimise husbands, making it 
easy for wives to walk away from the marriage with a hefty compensation which is a 
valid argument but are we to ignore the 
many women who are victims of marital 
rape? Such conundrums test the efficiency 
of a system and so it is up to our legislature and judiciary to build a strong system, 
putting their analysis and reasoned foresight to the test. 
Most importantly the approach should 
also be holistic providing complete protection from possible future threats from the 
in – laws, compensation and maintenance 
for her well being especially if she cannot 
return to her maternal home, a safe house 
while the case is going on and the judgement is passed.
This reluctance is inexcusable especially 
at time when we have ascribed legal status 
to live – in relationships and provided protection against harassment at the workplace. It is a reflection of a society striving 
so hard to fit into the contours of the modern world but refuses to let go completely 
of its archaic notions. 
account or record of the deaths of the 
workers. The villages along Assiganga have 
been badly affected; pathways have been 
eroded. But no action has been taken 
against the builder.National Alliance of People's Movements (NAPM) started as a 
process in 1992 amidst the Ayodhya backlash and globalization 
spree and took a definite shape in 1996 after a long national 
tour of 15 states by senior activists. It is an alliance of 
progressive people's organisations and movements, who while 
retaining their autonomous identities, are working together to 
bring the struggle for primacy of rights of communities over 
natural resources, conservation and governance, decentralised 
democratic development and towards a just, sustainable and 
egalitarian society in the true spirit of globalism. We stand 
against corporate globalisation, communalism and religious 
fundamentalism, patriarchy, casteism, untouchability and 
discrimination of all kinds. We believe an alliance emerging out 
of such a process with shared ideology and diverse strategies 
can give rise to a strong social, political force and a National 
People's movement. In its quest for a larger alliance, beyond the 
people's movements, NAPM also reaches out to integrate 
various civil society organisations and individuals working 
towards similar goals.
C/O 6/6,
Jangpura B, Mathura Road, 
New Delhi 110 014 
India 
National Alliance of People's 
Movements 
Telefax : 91 11 2437 4535 
Mobile: 9818411417 
FB: www.facebook.com/ napmindia 
Footprints is an NAPM initiative towards providing 
our friends and supporters updated news of 
NAPM's and its associates activities, analytical 
articles, views and interviews. The newsletter will 
run on a fortnightly basis and will be issued on the 
1st and 16th each month. We encourage you to 
send in press releases, photographs, articles, 
situation updates to be featured in Footprints.
Movement of India, NAPM's English magazine, will 
continue as before. 
Page 12 FOOTPRINTS 
Events 
State Level Seminar on Minimum Wages 
Patna, 2nd May
After the May Day celebrations at Araria, a 
delegation of about one hundred workers 
will leave for Patna to be part of the state 
level seminar on minimum wages to be 
held on 2nd May at the BIA Hall (opposite 
Bihar State Museum), Patna.
Contact details: Kamayani - 9771950248, 
Ashish - (9973363664)

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