Visit Indian Travel Sites
Goa,
Kerala,
Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh,
Delhi,
Rajasthan,
Uttar Pradesh,
Himachal Pradesh,
Assam,
Sikkim,
Madhya Pradesh,
Jammu & Kashmir
Karnataka
|
MNCs funding elected representatives: Medha Patkar | Noted social activist Medha Patkar has alleged that
multinational companies are not only providing funding for elections, but also to individual elected representatives. Addressing hundreds of tribals during a
week-long rally to oppose proposed projects by South Korean steel maker POSCO
and the mining group Vedanta Resources near here, Patkar said: "These industries
are not labour-intensive. These are becoming corporate power and they are holding
and ruling this country because they are now not only funding the elections but
also funding the individual elected representatives." "That is what has given
them such an extra unconstitutional power that the decisions related to the development
plans and projects that are no more rational, no more legal, no more constitutional,"
she added. Threatened by these projects, the tribals and other affected villagers
have formed a powerful people's movement named Posco Pratirodh Sangram Samiti
and Vedanta Vishvavidyalaya Virodhi Sangharash Samiti. Patkar said such projects
would only benefit corporates and not the tribals. Covering a distance of 150
kilometres, over 200 tribals hailing from 120 villages began their protest rally
from Dhinkia village on Saturday. The Vedanta Resources wants to mine bauxite
for its aluminium refinery in Orissa. The project however,has been bogged down
since 2005 since tribals opposed it saying it will rob vulnerable residents of
their ancestral homes and also traditional means of livelihood. According to officials
of the Vedanta Resources, the company has so far invested $823 million in the
plant, and it will spend another $1.23 billion to expand the capacity to six million
tonnes from one million tonnes by 2011. Ranked number four among the steel makers
in the world, POSCO has said that it requires about 4,000 acres of land, of which
a large part is forested. But the social activists have contended that the construction
will force the tribal villagers off their farmland and displace about 20,000 people. |
|
|
|
|
|