An order by the Uttarakhand High Court imposing a Rs 10000 fine each on five environmental activists for a PIL filed by them, will serve to intimidate and deter any citizen from raising environmental and social concerns that conflict with the interests of corporate projects.
On 7 February 2021 a glacier with debris rolled down to Raini village situated 20 km from Joshimath at the confluence of the Dhauli and Rishiganga rivers, submerging the Rishiganga Power Project and washing away 30 workers working at the site. The debris filled waters then rolled on, destroying buildings in its wake, and submerged the 530 megawatt Tapovan Vishnugarh project, killing some 170 workers working on this project.
Local citizens and activists have for decades been raising concerns about the steep human and environmental costs of building large projects on Mountain Rivers. Their repeated warnings have been ignored in spite of the fact that these concerns stand validated by the repeated accidents of the kind witnessed in February 2021. Since politicians in power tend to make decisions aimed at short-sighted and expedient gains for their own class and for big business, they tend to ignore social and environmental concerns. It is the job of courts to uphold the environmental laws and the larger public good in these matters, as well as the constitutional rights of ordinary citizens. This is why five people (Sangram Singh, Sohan Singh, and Bhawan Rana from Raini village; Atul Sati and Kamal Raturi from Joshinath) filed a PIL in the Uttarakhand HC seeking cancellation of the Rishiganga and Tapovan Vishnugarh projects. The HC has unfortunately fined the petitioners steeply deeming the PIL to be âhighly motivatedâ and accusing the petitioners of being âmere puppets in the hands of an unknown puppeteerâ. Such language seems to stem from an ideological hostility to environmental activism rather than from any specific facts relating to the petitioners who are well known and respected activists in Uttarakhand.
We may recall that in March 2021, the same bench of the Uttarakhand HC imposed a fine of Rs 50,000 on a petitioner who had filed a PIL seeking that exams for the post of assistant conservator of forests be held after the Kumbh Mela at Haridwar was over, to avoid exposing candidates to coronavirus infections that the influx of out-of-state devotees to the Kumbh might cause. The court dismissed the petition as frivolous on grounds that the exams were being held two weeks before the Mela was to begin. But the fact is that the influx of lakhs of devotees and visitors into Uttarakhand had begun long before the formal start of the Mela. Moreover now we know that the petitionerâs cause was far from frivolous -it stands vindicated because the Mela did indeed prove to be a super-spreader event, contributing hugely to the second wave of Covid-19 which killed lakhs of people all over India.
We would urge the courts to be less hasty in dismissing petitions raising life and death matters of public interest. In the specific case in point, we strongly protest the imposition of a fine on CPIML activist Atul Sati as well as Sangram Singh, Sohan Singh, Bhawan Rana, and Kamal Raturi. These activists deserve respect and gratitude for their work to save the Himalayan rivers and mountains, reminding us in India that we are not the owners of these rivers and mountains; we are, to use the words of Karl Marx, âsimply its possessors, its beneficiaries, and have to bequeath it in an improved state to succeeding generations.â