ATTAPPADI

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Sand mining sharks on the rampage, raze down Attappadi hills mercilessly

Published: 25th November 2013 09:25 AM
Last Updated: 25th November 2013 09:26 AM
Large-scale demolition of hills has been reported from Narassimukku in Agali village and Vellakulam, Nallasingha and Adwanapetti in Kottathara village of Attappadi for building residential colonies and ayurveda resorts without proper clearances.
In Narassimukku, on the banks of river Bhavani, over 200 plots have been created in an area of about 20 acres, by mowing down the hills and these have been put up for sale.
“In the recent rains, all the sand of the hills which had been mowed down, was washed away into the river,” Attappadi Samrakshana samithi president M Sukumaran said.
One of the machines used for levelling of the hills in Narassimukku has been seized by Ottappalam Sub Collector Karthikeyan. He told ‘Express’ that some persons were leveling the land to grow medicinal plants based on the clearance of the Village Officer.
“We told them that the permission of the Collector is needed for this purpose and it is in this context that the machinery was seized,” he said. “In Uppukarathode near Narassimukku, houses were proposed to be built by realtors in similarly reclaimed land. We had received a tip-off that rocks were being blasted in a pond. Similarly river sand was being illegally mined from the Bhavani river, without the the permission of the District Collector. Subsequently, the District Collector directed the seizure,” said Assistant Special Officer of Attappadi and Sub Inspector V Krishnankutty.
The Agali Village Officer, on the directions of the Collector, seized 15 loads of river sand. Similarly, the blasting of rocks to produce granite was also stopped. The bags of cement which were stored in the building of the beneficiaries’ committee of the Attappadi Hill Area Development Society (AHADS) was also seized. “Most of these plots were part of adivasi land which cannot be transferred.
Therefore, the construction works were under way using fake documents. The report of the former Chief Secretary K Jayakumar, who conducted an inquiry into the windmill issue in Nallasingha ooru, had brought out this fact,” said M Sukumaran.
Sukumaran further said that plots were being sold in Vellakulam ooru too in the name of an organic farm by realtors. He pointed out that the Centrally-sponsored Kundah soil conservation project was implemented in the 1990s and crores of rupees were spent on this account.
“However, the levelling of the Attappadi hills has resulted in those efforts being wasted as all the soil is now being washed away,” he said.
Similarly, the `219-crore Japanese-funded eco-restoration project was also implemented in Attappadi for nearly a decade, and it aimed at conserving the soil and restoring the ecological balance. “The present activities however, have rendered all those efforts waste,” said Sukumaran.


 Police begin collecting data on prayer halls in Attappadi.

http://newindianexpress.com/states/kerala/Police-begin-collecting-data-on-prayer-halls-in-Attappadi/2013/10/30/article1863440.ece

The police have started collecting data on Christian missionary institutions functioning in the Attappadi tribal belt. A team of officials led by Agali DySP R Salim met representatives of various sects functioning within the Agali police station limits at his office on Tuesday.

 Express had earlier reported on the conversion drive conducted by various Christian denominations in the region following the recent incidents of malnutrition deaths.

The Intelligence Wing of the State Police had also submitted a report to the Home Department warning on the possibility of communal tension in the area. Salim said the police are in the process of collecting data about institutions run by the missionaries, including prayer halls, schools, hospitals, de-addiction and meditation centres. ‘’We have asked them not to engage in any type of conversion activities,” he said.
 It is learnt that most of the representatives who attended the meeting were Pentecostal pastors who were specifically accused in the Intelligence report as luring tribal population to their faith. The police are learnt to have planned a similar meetings at the Sholayur police station limits this week. The officials termed the data collection a cumbersome task as many of the prayer halls were functioning in the houses of pastors or converted tribals. “As churches need to register with the local panchayat, some sects run prayer halls in the residences of pastors or converted tribals to bypass the rule,” they said.  Attappadi block panchayat president Usha Raju said the initiative, though belated, is a welcome move. “The pastors have succeeded in converting a significant population in hamlets like Pothupadi, Vattilakki and Kattekad,” she said.

Maruthi, secretary of Thaikula Sangham, an organisation of tribal women in Attappadi, alleged that many of Sangham’s development project proposals were rejected by the government. But missionary organisations easily bag them which gives them genuineness among the tribal population,” she said.

Attappadi battleground of communal forces:

Published: 26th October 2013 08:37 AM
Last Updated: 26th October 2013 11:00 AM
The intelligence wing of the State Police Department has alerted on the possibility of a communal eruption in the tribal belts of Attappadi, Palakkad, due to the alleged conversion activities of Christian missionaries and the possibility of Hindu organisations raking up the issue.
As many as seven Christian sects are active in the area and a single sect alone operates 14 churches, one meditation centre and two guest houses, a report prepared by the wing claimed, adding that a large number of Church-run schools, dispensaries and hospitals are functioning in Attappadi.
“Squads of missionaries visit hamlets on a daily basis to lure tribals to their sect. Pentecostal pastors regularly visit and distribute pamphlets in the hamlets of Osathiyoor, Pothupadi, Kadambara, Melekandiyoor, Keeripathi and Anakatti,” the report stated.
The two-page report added that some churches bring tribals to meditation centres, once a week, to attract them to the faith. “Converted persons are used as agents to lure others. Also, the missionaries distribute food and clothes among them to attract the poor residing in the 192 hamlets”, the report stated and added that the proactive missionaries are creating troubles in tribal hamlets. “In a hamlet called Keeripathi, a pastor named Natarajan publicly damaged the images of Hindu gods which stoked communal tension in the area. Such incidents have forced some tribal chieftains to ban entry of pastors to their hamlets”, the report, submitted to the Home Secretary, stated.
There is meticulous planning involved in these activities, as the tribal folks are converted without any change in their official documents to avoid losing government benefits. A residential school run by the missionaries in the area makes the children follow Christian rituals, resulting in the alienation of tribal culture, the report added.

‘Move to silence victims of windmill scam in Attappadi’  

Confirming the worst fears of tribal activists across the state, it has been revealed that a clandestine move is on to silence victims of the massive windmill scam in Attappadi.
Mannarkkad MLA N Shamsudeen told ‘Express’ that intermediaries had approached him also in order to involve political class in these discussions.
“Discussions are on in Attappadi to silence victims of the windmill scam. Intermediaries are offering money to tribals and, in return, taking over their land. Political parties, their local leaders and some so-called activists are also involved in these discussions,” he said.
“Last year, they had tried to contact me for such a high-level discussion. But as the discussions had no legal standing, I abstained from it and the whole move collapsed. They didn’t contacted me again but the discussions are still on,” the MLA told ‘Express’, in the sidelines of a national seminar organised by the Muslim Youth League in Ernakulam.
The allegedly dubious methods used by corporate giants to acquire alienated tribal lands and install windmill farms in Attappadi was reported in the media three years ago. It later came to be known as Attappadi windmill scam.
31 windmills
It was alleged that 31 windmills were set up by Suzlon Energy Limited and Sarjan Realties Limited on tribal land and that it was procured through fraudulent means.
A committee headed by the Chief Secretary had noted that 374.48 acres of tribal land on which Suzlon had set up windfarms were procured using fabricated documents and betraying tribals.
However, on the basis of a petition by Suzlon, the High Court stayed the government’s decision to recover about 85.21 acres of tribal land which is in possession of the company.
The company also obtained a stay against the police arrest of its directors and staff.
 
Source:  By Nidheesh M K | ENS - KOCHI Published: 26th August 2013 | The New Indian Express | newindianexpress.com