[Two other villagers have died from heart attacks while protesting
against the 2,800-megawatt nuclear power plant, supported by the Congress-led
state government, which is to be built on 1,313 acres of Gorakhpur village, 185 acres of Badopal village and four acres of
Kajal Heri village. Haryana will receive 50 percent of the generated
electricity.]
By Betwa Sharma
Betwa Sharma
Badlu Ram at a private hospital in Fatehabad,
Haryana on
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Badlu Ram tugged against the tattered strips of the white gauze that bound his
hands and legs to the hospital bed in the town of Fatehabad . "Please free me," he pleaded. On July 13, Mr.
Ram had attempted suicide by consuming pesticide. "It was my duty it was
my duty," he repeated.
Mr. Ram, 60, said he had failed to protect his family's 26 acres of
land, which the government plans to acquire for building a nuclear power plant
near Gorakhpur village in Fatehabad district of Haryana state.
Back in the village, Mr. Ram's wife, 58-year-old Bhuri Devi, recalled
that two land recording officers had come to survey their property. The
villagers attacked them, and a police case was filed against Mr. Ram. "We
live with the fear of losing our land, but this shattered him," she said.
The family also believed that the fear of being evicted killed Ishwar
Singh, Badlu Ram's elderly uncle, who had rallied against the nuclear plant and
died of a heart attack. "We saw him get sick with worry," said Ms.
Bhuri.
Two other villagers have died from heart attacks while protesting
against the 2,800-megawatt nuclear power plant, supported by the Congress-led
state government, which is to be built on 1,313 acres of Gorakhpur village, 185 acres of Badopal village and four acres of
Kajal Heri village. Haryana will receive 50 percent of the generated
electricity.
This summer, Haryana residents have been rioting over the long power cuts.
The state's daily power demand of 6,500 megawatts, which is not being met, is
increasing 15 percent every year. Ajit M. Sharan, Haryana's power secretary,
explained that the state was bearing the brunt of the national coal shortage.
"Also, the coal mines are very far away so the transportation costs as
much as the mining," he said.
Presently, Gorakhpur gets about two hours of electricity a day. Mr. Sharan
guaranteed that villages within a 10-kilometer (six-mile) radius of the nuclear
power plant will get electricity.
"In my experience, poor villages nearby rarely benefit,"
said Madhuresh Kumar, national organizer of the National Alliance of People's
Movements. "But the people who come to run the facility live in a
neighboring complex with the best facilities."
Nuclear power contributes 2.4 percent, or 4,780 megawatts, of India 's total installed capacity. The government has a target
of generating 63,000 megawatts of nuclear energy by 2032. M.R. Srinivasan, the
recently retired head of the government-owned Nuclear Power Corporation of India , which is building the plant near Gorakhpur , asserted that the country had no choice but to harness
nuclear power as a cleaner form of energy. "How else can we meet our
energy needs?" he said. "There are very few options available."
M.V. Ramana, a physicist from Princeton University who specializes in nuclear safety, countered that the
coal shortage argument had been made for the past 60 years but so far the
government had failed to deliver nuclear power. "There is no reason to
think it's different now," he said. "The economic, social and
political costs outweigh any benefits it may have."
Anti-nuclear activists point to recurring accidents at nuclear power
plants. Last month, two workers at the nuclear plant in Rawatbhata, Rajasthan,
suffered exposure to radioactive tritium. In 2009, 50 workers at the nuclear
power plant in Kaiga, Karnataka, were exposed to radiation after tritium made
its way to the water cooler, which the Nuclear Power Corporation said was
deliberately contaminated in a possible "act of mischief."
Mr. Ramana also argued that nuclear power plants in India have a history of mishaps. "The old nuclear
reactors are badly designed," he said. "The record of small accidents
shows signs of a heart attack waiting to happen."
The Haryana government is offering farmers a little over 3 million
rupees ($54,000) per acre of acquired land. The total compensation increases to
almost 4.6 million rupees per acre after adding 400,000 rupees if there is no
legal challenge to the land acquisition cost and 21,000 rupees per acre as an annuity
for 33 years. The annuity will increase every year by 750 rupees, which amounts
to a little over 1 million rupees.
Farm holdings vary from 1 acre to 50 acres. Ram Singh Bishnoi, the
district revenue officer, said that almost 1.65 billion rupees of compensation
has already been distributed to 269 farmers of Gorakhpur from a total of 689 whose land needs to be acquired .
But the majority of farmers don't want to move.
On July 17, a public hearing in Gorakhpur village to discuss the nuclear plant fizzled out. The
farmers were furious about the high number of police officers deployed around
the venue to crack down on any unrest. "First our colonizers were white,
and now they look like us," said Satveer Siyag, a 38-year-old farmer from
a neighboring village, who is afraid of the danger posed by the plant to the
environment and health of residents nearby.
At the hearing, Nalinish Nagaich, executive director of the Nuclear
Power Corporation, assured farmers that the plant would have no detrimental
effect on the environment. "The radiation that you get from eating a
banana every day is the same as what you get from sitting on the periphery of a
nuclear power plant," he told them.
Previously, however, instances of poor health near nuclear plants have
been recorded. In 1991, the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research,
based in the United
States ,
found that people who lived within 10 kilometers of the Rawatbhata nuclear
plant in Rajasthan had a higher number of chronic illnesses, solid tumors,
miscarriages, stillbirths and children with congenital deformities. Thesefindings,
also published in Hindi in 1994, led to the first protest to shut down the
reactor later that year.
Mr. Siyag said farmers had learned about the problems of disposing
nuclear waste. They also knew about the Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine , the Three
Mile Island radiation leak in
the United
States
and the Fukushima nuclear crisis in Japan . "If Japan with all its technology can't keep people safe, then how
can we?" he said.
R. Rajaraman, emeritus professor of theoretical physics at Jawaharlal Nehru University , argued that accidents cannot eliminate the option for
nuclear energy. "By that logic, why didn't we shut down all the chemical
plants after the Bhopal Gas Tragedy?" he said.
The real problem, according to Dr. Rajaraman, is dislocating people.
"The government has always been insensitive about displacement," he
said. "It should be more participatory because doling out cash isn't
enough."
For many farmers, money cannot replace land. "I don't care if
they offer a crore [10 million rupees] for every acre," said Balraj
Sharma, a 38-year-old farmer with 25 acres. "This land has been with us
for generations, and I intend to give it to my children."
But the next generation has different aspirations. Several young
people in Gorakhpur want to leave farming, which is causing family divisions
about whether to accept the government's offer.
Hoshiyar Singh, 45, owns 50 acres of land, which will rake in a hefty
amount of compensation. But Mr. Singh, who lives with an extended family of 50
members, is afraid that money will break up his household. "Farmers have
no identity without land," he said.
The Gorakhpur farmers also contend that good farming land is being
taken away. They earn approximately 30,000 rupees per acre every six months.
But the government has found large parts of the land to be waterlogged. Experts
describe the Gorakhpur soil as average for Haryana and Punjab ,
which have highly fertile soil.
Farmers are growing wheat, rice and cotton in this soil. The Land
Acquisition Bill 2012 provides that "irrigated multi-cropped land"
should only be procured as a "last resort" -- a provision that
several states have opposed. Citing the need to safeguard food security, the
Parliamentary Standing Committee on the bill has recommended that this clause
be expanded to "any land under agriculture cultivation."
The Supreme Court of India ruled last year that private property of
farmers should only be acquired if "absolutely necessary." It blasted
state governments for a "very casual approach" in the acquisition of
rural land. "If land of such persons is acquired, not only the current but
the future generations are ruined, and this is one of the reasons why the
farmers who are deprived of their holdings commit suicide," Justices G.S.
Singhvi and S. J. Mukhopadhaya wrote in their judgment.
Mr. Ram, who is expected to recover from his suicide attempt, came
home on Monday. "But the problem has not gone away," said Ms. Bhuri,
his wife, speaking over the phone. "I'm prepared to defend this land with
my blood."