Ignored realities: Downstream impacts of Mapithel dam

Jiten Yumnam Manipur of late, has seen several development processes targeting the land and natural resources of Manipur. Many of these development processes, both policies and specific projects are afflicted with larger social and environment challenges apart from longstanding and intergenerational impacts. In most situations, many of the impacts remain neglected or deliberately ignored. The […]

Jiten Yumnam Manipur of late, has seen several development processes targeting the land and natural resources of Manipur. Many of these development processes, both policies and specific projects are afflicted with larger social and environment challenges apart from longstanding and intergenerational impacts. In most situations, many of the impacts remain neglected or deliberately ignored. The […]

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2017/11/ignored-realities-downstream-impacts-of-mapithel-dam/

Mapithel Dam: The sorrow of Tumukhong village

Mamta Lukram The told and untold miseries engrossed in the construction of the Mapithel Dam over the Thoubal River in Manipur has attracted much of the international attention. In last visit of UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing and Land Rights, Miloon Kothari, in his meeting with the affected community at Thoyee Community Hall, on […]

Mamta Lukram The told and untold miseries engrossed in the construction of the Mapithel Dam over the Thoubal River in Manipur has attracted much of the international attention. In last visit of UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing and Land Rights, Miloon Kothari, in his meeting with the affected community at Thoyee Community Hall, on […]

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2017/09/mapithel-dam-the-sorrow-of-tumukhong-village/

Mapithel dam faces massive mud siltation

IMPHAL, Sep 7: Mapithel Dam Affected Villages Organisation (MDAVO) has claimed that the 21 months old Mapithel dam water reservoir has started facing a jolt of massive mud siltation stretching around 1 km from Shangkai to Thoyee village recently.
The p…

IMPHAL, Sep 7: Mapithel Dam Affected Villages Organisation (MDAVO) has claimed that the 21 months old Mapithel dam water reservoir has started facing a jolt of massive mud siltation stretching around 1 km from Shangkai to Thoyee village recently.

The post Mapithel dam faces massive mud siltation appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/mapithel-dam-faces-massive-mud-siltation/

Mapithel dam controversy : Forest perspectives

Jajo Themson Introduction : Almost all the development interventions especially mega projects interweave dimensional devastation of forest and its resources. There is intrinsic relationship between Forest and indigenous people in terms of social & cultural and economic that sustains their survival throughout different stages of their life. Nature produces the grass we use to feed […]

Jajo Themson Introduction : Almost all the development interventions especially mega projects interweave dimensional devastation of forest and its resources. There is intrinsic relationship between Forest and indigenous people in terms of social & cultural and economic that sustains their survival throughout different stages of their life. Nature produces the grass we use to feed […]

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2017/08/mapithel-dam-controversy-forest-perspectives/

Mapithel Dam

Although construction work of Mapithel Dam is now almost complete, the Gov-ernment’s plan to commi- ssion the dam may be postponed due to complaints and protests by the people of villages affected by the project.
The post Mapithel Dam appeared first on…

Although construction work of Mapithel Dam is now almost complete, the Gov-ernment’s plan to commi- ssion the dam may be postponed due to complaints and protests by the people of villages affected by the project.

The post Mapithel Dam appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/mapithel-dam/

Media consultation prog on Mapithel Dam held

IMPHAL, Apr 17: A media consultation programme on the topic ‘Mapithel Dam and its commissioning’ was orga-nised at Manipur Press Club today by Mapithel Dam Affected Villagers Organi-sation (MDAVO), JAC…

The post Media consultation prog on Mapithel Dam held appeared first on The Sangai Express.

IMPHAL, Apr 17: A media consultation programme on the topic ‘Mapithel Dam and its commissioning’ was orga-nised at Manipur Press Club today by Mapithel Dam Affected Villagers Organi-sation (MDAVO), JAC…

The post Media consultation prog on Mapithel Dam held appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/media-consultation-prog-mapithel-dam-held/

Mapithel Dam likely to be inaugurated within 20 days

IMPHAL, Mar 31: After much waiting, Mapithel Dam also known as Thoubal Multimurpose Project may be inaugurated within 20 days.
The post Mapithel Dam likely to be inaugurated within 20 days appeared first on The Sangai Express.

IMPHAL, Mar 31: After much waiting, Mapithel Dam also known as Thoubal Multimurpose Project may be inaugurated within 20 days.

The post Mapithel Dam likely to be inaugurated within 20 days appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/mapithel-dam-likely-inaugurated-within-20-days/

MoS H&FW promises solution

IMPHAL, Mar 3: Union Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare Faggan Singh Fulaste has promised amicable solution for the people affected by the Thoubal Multipurpose Project provided BJP is elected to power in the State. He was speaking at an election rally of BJP candidate in Phungyar AC Somi Awungshi held today at […]

IMPHAL, Mar 3: Union Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare Faggan Singh Fulaste has promised amicable solution for the people affected by the Thoubal Multipurpose Project provided BJP is elected to power in the State. He was speaking at an election rally of BJP candidate in Phungyar AC Somi Awungshi held today at […]

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2017/03/mos-hfw-promises-solution/

MDAVO again says no to Mapithel Dam

IMPHAL, Oct 30 : Strongly opposing the ‘secret plan’ of the Irrigation and Flood Control Department (IFCD), Government of Manipur to inaugurate Mapithel Dam project in the last part of November this year, the MDAVO has asserted that several key components are yet to be put in place.

The post MDAVO again says no to Mapithel Dam appeared first on The Sangai Express.

IMPHAL, Oct 30 : Strongly opposing the ‘secret plan’ of the Irrigation and Flood Control Department (IFCD), Government of Manipur to inaugurate Mapithel Dam project in the last part of November this year, the MDAVO has asserted that several key components are yet to be put in place.

The post MDAVO again says no to Mapithel Dam appeared first on The Sangai Express.

Read more / Original news source: http://www.thesangaiexpress.com/mdavo-says-no-mapithel-dam/

Effect of Ramrei Village after being submerge under water by Mapithel Dam.

The Mapithel Dam, a component of the Thoubal Multipurpose Project in Manipur, was approved by the Planning Commission of India in 1980 and was conceived without the knowledge of the public, especially those who are going to suffer the brunt of its adverse impact. Originally slated to be completed in 1987, its construction started only […]

The Mapithel Dam, a component of the Thoubal Multipurpose Project in Manipur, was approved by the Planning Commission of India in 1980 and was conceived without the knowledge of the public, especially those who are going to suffer the brunt of its adverse impact. Originally slated to be completed in 1987, its construction started only […]

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2016/09/effect-of-ramrei-village-after-being-submerge-under-water-by-mapithel-dam/

Mapithel dam affected folks set deadline

IMPHAL, Aug 14: Mapithel Dam Affected Chingtam Organisation has threatened to disrupt the inauguration function of Mapithel dam if the Government does not invite them for talks on their demands within August 25. Organisation chairman Ramthar Shaiza told reporters at Manipur Press Club that the State Government has not compensated the villagers of six affected […]

The post Mapithel dam affected folks set deadline appeared first on KanglaOnline.

IMPHAL, Aug 14: Mapithel Dam Affected Chingtam Organisation has threatened to disrupt the inauguration function of Mapithel dam if the Government does not invite them for talks on their demands within August 25. Organisation chairman Ramthar Shaiza told reporters at Manipur Press Club that the State Government has not compensated the villagers of six affected […]

The post Mapithel dam affected folks set deadline appeared first on KanglaOnline.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2016/08/mapithel-dam-affected-folks-set-deadline/

More area submerged as Mapithel Dam rises

IMPHAL, July 9: The water of the Mapithel dam has increased in such an alarming rate that it has submerged more human settlements surrounding the dam and further threatens to do so. A team of media persons visited the affected villages wherein it had encountered untold hardship the villagers has been facing due to the […]

The post More area submerged as Mapithel Dam rises appeared first on KanglaOnline.

IMPHAL, July 9: The water of the Mapithel dam has increased in such an alarming rate that it has submerged more human settlements surrounding the dam and further threatens to do so. A team of media persons visited the affected villages wherein it had encountered untold hardship the villagers has been facing due to the […]

The post More area submerged as Mapithel Dam rises appeared first on KanglaOnline.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2016/07/area-submerged-mapithel-dam-rises/

Mapithel dam : Chadong Village submerges under water

Chadong Villagers witness submergence of their village along with all its priceless identities and history. The government`s developmental design has created another island in the State by submerging the erstwhile fertile

Chadong Villagers witness submergence of their village along with all its priceless identities and history. The government`s developmental design has created another island in the State by submerging the erstwhile fertile plains of village of Chadong. It is a classical case where the woes of the affected people are completely ignored by the State, imposing its policy by hoodwinking some people with compensation and militarizing the area to continue with its `anti-people` project.

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Houses evacuted after the water level rises in Chadong Village.  Photo by Deepak Shijagurumayum.
Houses evacuted after the water level rises in Chadong Village.  Photo by Deepak Shijagurumayum.
Houses evacuted after the water level rises in Chadong Village.  Photo by Deepak Shijagurumayum.
Houses evacuted after the water level rises in Chadong Village.  Photo by Deepak Shijagurumayum.
View of Mapithel dam from Chadong Villahe. Photo by Deepak Shijagurumayum.
Chadong villagewhich is going to submerge in few days by the water which was released from the Mapithel dam. Photo by Deepak Shijagurumayum.
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Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/mapithel-dam-chadong-village-submerges-under-water/

Another Wall of Injustice

By Jiten Yumnam In January this year, the Thoubal River was impeded by the Mapithel Dam. In the pipeline since the 1980s, the commissioning of the dam meant that the

By Jiten Yumnam

In January this year, the Thoubal River was impeded by the Mapithel Dam. In the pipeline since the 1980s, the commissioning of the dam meant that the backwater reservoir slowly began to rise, fill and spread, even though resettlement had not been completed. It was a despicable act by the Manipur government to forcefully commission the Thoubal Multipurpose Project. By June, due to the rains in the northeastern Indian state, the dam reservoir began to rise rapidly and submerged an extensive area of Chadong village, where many project-affected people reside. The reservoir began to submerge their agricultural land, grazing grounds and forest.

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Villagers protest after commissioning of the Mapithel Dam earlier this year Photo : Jiten Yumnam

As I write this, homes are being inundated by the rising waters. Villagers are compelled to rely on bamboo rafts to cross the river, given that the only bridge that connects Chadong with other villages along the Mapithel Valley has already been submerged. Most say they can not swim; turbulent waters in high winds pose a constant risk. The villagers are in deep despair as they watch their ancestral lands vanish. But right now they are most worried for their immediate livelihood as their cultivable land is lost to the rising water.

The Thoubal Multipurpose Project is intended to generate 7.5 MW of hydroelectricity and supply 10 million gallons of water each day to the state capital, Imphal. But the filling of the reservoir without addressing the concerns of affected communities – in the absence of holistic impact assessment of the dam – amounts to no less than harassment and is illegal. The Tangkhul Naga and Kuki people will lose their subsistence agricultural land and forests, their source of survival.

The blocking of the river has already led to the drying up of the Thoubal River in the immediate downstream stretch of the dam. The villagers in downstream villages, belonging to the Meiteitribe, are worried of extreme water shortages. The villagers can no longer fish and collect sand and stones brought down by the Thoubal River, which is an economic mainstay in addition to agriculture. Collection of firewood and seasonal food sources from nearby hills is getting disturbed as forest areas are being destroyed, also partly due to militarization in the region. The Mapithel Dam site is located in a highly seismic area, and villagers are concerned about a potential dam break.

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Villagers are compelled to rely on bamboo rafts to cross the river after the Mapithel Dam inundated the only bridge in the area Photo : Jiten Yumnam

The ongoing filling of the Mapithel Dam reservoir is accompanied with full-scale deployment of security forces of the government of India while subduing all affected peoples’ call and resistance against the blocking of the Thoubal River. Villagers strongly opposed the forceful filling up of the dam reservoir as a clear example of undemocratic and anti-indigenous peoples development. This has created political disenchantment and a fear psychosis among the affected villagers.

The ongoing effort to finalize Mapithel Dam construction is moving ahead, despite the fact that the National Green Tribunal is still considering the violation of forest rights under the Forest Conservation Act, 1980 and the Forest Rights Act, 2006. In clear procedural violations, the Ministry of Environment and Forest, government of India accorded final forest clearance for Mapithel Dam only on December 31, 2013, more than 30 years after the project was approved in 1980, and that too without conducting any site visit to the affected area.

The rehabilitation and resettlement (R&R) is being carried out in a piecemeal and divisive manner and has already caused much controversy and human rights violations, resulting in confusion and division among affected communities. Due to the failure of the agreement on R&R, the government of Manipur constituted an Expert Review Committee in January 2008. However, the government withdrew from the process after seven rounds of talks, the last held in February 2011. The government of Manipur forcefully began verification at Lamlai Khunou and Chadong Village in October 2012, despite community objections. The verification is a direct violation of the stay order of the Gauhati High Court on April 25, 2012.

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Agricultural land partially submerged in Chadong village by Mapithel Dam Photo : Jiten Yumnam

The construction of Mapithel Dam is still fraught with the absence of a detailed impact assessment on communities with their rightful participation, especially regarding the impact on forest land and other livelihood sources. The plight of the affected communities remains uncertain as project authorities continue to fill the dam reservoir with military presence on their land, suppressing their democratic rights. Mapithel Dam is yet another clear symbol of development injustice.

The filling of the reservoir should be stopped until rehabilitation has been satisfactorily completed while free, prior and informed consent of the indigenous people is taken on board. The militarization of the region, in the name of battling insurgents, too should be halted immediately. Lastly, all forms of involuntary displacement in violation of the UN Declaration on Indigenous Peoples Rights, 2007 and the recommendations of the World Commission on Dams, 2000 should be put to a stop. Now.

  • Jitin Yumnam is Secretary, Centre for Research and Advocacy (Manipur), and can be contacted at: jitnyumnam@yahoo.co.in
  • Source : http://www.internationalrivers.org/blogs/328-20

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/another-wall-of-injustice/

The School at Chadong

Chadong village will no longer be where it has been for generations. In the weeks ahead, all that once constituted the village would be underwater. An artificial lake reservoir is

The bridge connecting Chadong village to other villages lay submerged in water.

The bridge connecting Chadong village to other villages lay submerged in water.
Photo: IFP

Chadong village will no longer be where it has been for generations. In the weeks ahead, all that once constituted the village would be underwater. An artificial lake reservoir is in the making, now that the Mapithel Dam Project over the Mapithel river which meanders down into the valley to become the Thoubal river, is complete and the dam floodgates are being lowered. The beautiful Chadong village, nestled in a narrow valley, is below the dam height and will be submerged. If the government has its way to convince all the villagers to agree to an alternate site for the village in the higher reaches of the same mountain range, a new Chadong village will hopefully grow to prosper there as a lakeside settlement. They will no longer have their beloved river and the strips of flatlands which nurtured their paddy fields to behold with pride, but a new, miles wide lake in its place. It has not been an easy farewell for the villagers, as media reports and photographs of the agony of those who have been resisting evacuation are evidence. They are now forced to abandon their homes on makeshift rafts and canoes as the flood waters continually rise to engulf their former homes. Now that the inevitable has happened, we do hope the government is liberal in its resettlement package, and help Chadong set roots again in the new site. For Chadong village, it could be a nightmare in the years ahead if they find it impossible to readjust to the new environment and economic macros, but it could also be the promise of the boons and bounties of a brave new world of opportunities as a lakeside town. We do hope the latter is ultimately the destiny of the village. We also hope the government ensures the blue print for such a future is not lacking in details or materials. Our prayers are with the village. Our gratitude too for the sacrifice they are made to make for what is believed to be the greater common good. We also hope it does come to be for the greater common good from which the tormented villagers are the greatest beneficiaries in the long run.

While we hope for the best, it is also difficult not to be sceptical at the same time, considering there are so many unscrupulous men (and increasingly women) in position of power at various levels of the government structure, and others enjoying the borrowed halos of power by being its brokers or else sycophantic followers of those who wield power. This predatory class of men entrusted with state power have time and again shown they can without remorse make capital of the misery of others. In the immediate context, this was loudly and painfully visible in the picture of the brand new Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan, RMSA, scheme school building, constructed recently by the Education Department, Government of Manipur at Chadong village. What exactly can be made of this? It is again difficult to believe the entire decision making process of the district and state administration were not aware that the Mapithel Dam construction was nearing completion and site of the school would soon be underwater. If indeed they were unaware of this, they deserved to be dismissed from their jobs not only for their ignorance but for the waste they have caused to public tax money. Or are these politicians, bureaucrats, technocrats and contractors, so staunched in their belief in the theory of evolution that they believed by the time the dam is commissioned, children in the area as well as teachers who would be posted there would have developed gills to breath underwater.

In all likelihood, there were some who were desperate to make quick bucks. Funds for the school building under the Central government scheme would have already been earmarked in the befuddled planning process and these officials instead of pointing out the flaw in the scheme, would have seen an opportunity to make a double kill by building this school under the scheme and after it has submerged, seek more funds to build another, and in the process line their pockets twice for the same job. Two very contrasting pictures which can generalise the power structure in Manipur are therefore visible yet again in the Chadong episode. On the one hand are ordinary villagers made to make huge sacrifices for the benefit of a belief in a greater common good, and on the other are power brokers and power mongers jumping at the opportunity to enhance their selfish vested interests by manipulating and skewing this same greater common good, of which the institution of a village school definitely is a visible symbol. Besides taking care to ensure the welfare of new Chadong village, we hope the government also will institute an inquiry into this blatant and atrocious waste, if not robbery of public money, and fix responsibilities.

Leader Writer: Pradip Phanjoubam

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/the-school-at-chadong/

Who is listening to Chadong?

By Oinam Doren `Our feet has been tied with paya (a kind of rope made with bamboo strips) and left to die here`, laments Alungwon Muivah (52years old) who is

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By Oinam Doren

`Our feet has been tied with paya (a kind of rope made with bamboo strips) and left to die here`, laments Alungwon Muivah (52years old) who is accompanying her 7 months pregnant daughter in law Chonchon Horam to the hospital. As we sat together in the boat floating on top of a vast lake which was once a blooming green field, Alungwon says she is feeling giddy. She had never seen so much water in her life.

Chadong village which is located in Ukhrul district of Manipur is one among the 11 villages that will soon be submerged under the Mapithel Dam construction of the Thoubal Multi Purpose Project. On January 10 this year, the Thoubal River was blocked, leading the water levels to rise and submerging process has already begun. Mapithel Dam stands 66 metres high and 1074 metres long. The project is set to produce 7.5 megawatt of electricity while providing 10 million gallons of water daily to Imphal, the state capital. But the project comes at the cost of displacing over 12,000 people; submerge around 11 villages and 777.34 hectares of paddy fields, 110.75 hectares of homestead, 293. 53 hectares of jhum land and 595.1 hectares of forest land.

Chonchon Horam who is just 19 years old and pregnant is experiencing giddiness and going through complications as urination has stopped. The nearest hospital is in Yaingangpokpi which is about 2 hours away and all vehicular transport movement has stopped. The two bridges connecting Chadong to the outside world, the vast green fields surrounding the village and some houses has already gone under water. As electricity has been disconnected, there is no way to charge the mobile phones and make calls for emergencies. After waiting for our turns, the only boat in the village rowed by an amateur boy takes us for a 15 minutes ride. While I was in the boat, I came to know of the problem and offered both Alungwon and Chonchon to take them to the hospital in our car. But to reach Khullen where our car was parked, Chonchon has to walk for about an hour in the scorching sun in the rough terrains and over two newly built log bridge which was not secure.

As we walk along together apologising to Chonchon about the situation and our helplessness, Alungwon shares with us her dilemma. Her husband died after 10 years of marriage leaving her with 5 kids to raise. Her only source of income was piggery, cultivating rice in the fields and collecting wild vegetables from the hills surrounding the village to sell. But all this activities has been stopped as the rising water from the dam has submerged the fields and the jungles. Their house is just waiting to be submerged in a few weeks time and they have to relocate to a new place. As we reach Khullen, we took another rough ride in our car in the bad roads for about an hour and dropped them to the government primary hospital in Yaingangpokpi.

As for now, the people in Chadong village badly need more boats, medical attention and quick rehabilitation support from the government and other agencies before the water engulf the entire village in a few weeks or months time. But so far, no officials have visited the village except for making loud claims in local newspapers.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/07/who-is-listening-to-chadong/

Chadong villagers left in a lurch as government maintains silence

  By Grace Jajo IMPHAL, June 25: The issue of Mapithel dam affected population remains unattended from the State government`s side even as Chadong villagers witness submergence of their village

The bridge connecting Chadong village to other villages lay submerged in water.

The bridge connecting Chadong village to other villages lay submerged in water.
Photo: IFP

 

By Grace Jajo

IMPHAL, June 25: The issue of Mapithel dam affected population remains unattended from the State government`s side even as Chadong villagers witness submergence of their village along with all its priceless identities and history.

Such involuntary displacement of indigenous people from their habitat amounts to various aspect of rights violation by the State going by the UN statutes.

For almost three weeks, the rising water level has cut off all routes connecting Chadong Village with the outside world as the bridge connecting the village with other villages remain submerged in water.

The government`s developmental design has created another island in the State by submerging the erstwhile fertile plains of village of Chadong.

`This year our farm land was submerged with the onset of monsoon and we have been trying to survive from our homestead products. And we await our dire future lamented a widow from the village.

A single boat handled by two amateur oarsmen help the villagers cross the flooded water, the villagers said.

`If there is a case of child delivery, sick people or emergency cases, we are in a dire situation,` one of them said.

On the other hand, hordes of people irrespective of age and sex from the other side of the river flood the river bank trying to find some amusement.

`It is unfortunate that the insensitive picnickers are enjoying our misery,` said an elderly villager.

He also told this reporter that the elders in the village are helplessly watching the increasing water level. `Some of them would cry while some compose wailing folk songs in despair` he said.

The Mapithel Dam Project was halted by the National Green Tribunal as it did not have the necessary forest clearance from the Union Ministry of Environment and Forest (MoEF).

In 2010 the first stage project clearance was granted by MoEF later the second stage clearance was obtained unfairly, alleged a member of the Mapithel Dam Affected Village Organisation(MDAVO). MDAVO has appealed against the clearance to the National Green Tribunal.

A case is also pending with the Manipur High Court.

Another member of the organisation added, the project is a clear violation of indigenous communities` rights over our ancestral land and forest.

It is a classical case where the woes of the affected people are completely ignored by the State, imposing its policy by hoodwinking some people with compensation and militarizing the area to continue with its `anti-people` project, he alleged.

The State government has also insisted on this compensation as inclusive rehabilitation without settling the rights of the affected people. Now our farms are submerged and soon our habitation and our church will also go underwater, he said.

He continued that this was after aborting the Expert Review Committee which was meant to develop a State Rehabilitation and Resettlement Policy for development induced displacement of indigenous people.

About I57 households who refused the compensation and demanded the State to legally process through the Expert Review Committee stayed back in their village despite the State employing even men in uniform, he said.

The security personnel stationed near the school scared the children and there was no academic session in the village school this year. Yet the teachers posted in this school continue to draw their salary, said one of the parents.

Another woman who was selling her products on the bank of the flooded water said, it has been more than a month since the water submerged our connectivity. Each day and each night we anticipate our fate with fear yet the government seems to be least bothered. Nobody had come to check on our welfare, the concern Minister, MLA and administrators are all keeping silent. We are shocked at their attitude, she said.

Another young teacher from Ramrei Ato adds, the government told us that the river will be blocked to use the water for downstream irrigation and for generating hydel power but neither have they initiated the irrigation process nor the machinery setup for the same.

It is a forceful displacement. Even the new settlement site that the government proposed has not progress beyond initial ground leveling, said a student activist from the village.

He said we cannot shift there yet nor build temporary shelters since even the basic facilities like water and electricity are missing.

The dam water has been blocked since January 15 changing the whole physical façade of the downstream areas too.

The Mapithel Dam Project was approved by the Planning Commission in 1980 and construction had started since 1989 through the State IFCD department without obtaining the required clearance and without adhering to required procedures.

The Dam will submerge 1,215 hectares of land which includes 595 hectares under forest cover. According to the CAG report, the project has annual irrigation potential of 33,400 ha, with a cultivable command area of 21,862 ha. It will increase drinking water supply to Imphal city and surrounding areas by 45.46 million litres a day and generate 7.5 MW hydel power for rural electrification, according to the CAG report of 2003-04.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/chadong-villagers-left-in-a-lurch-as-government-maintains-silence/

Chadonang partially submerged, villagers lament government`s attitude

IMPHAL, June 17: A media team visiting Chadonang Village in Ukhrul district had to use boats to wade through the water which had already started submerging large parts of paddy

Villagers posed behind a banner demanding review of Mapithel Dam before its construction.

Villagers posed behind a banner demanding review of Mapithel Dam before its construction.

IMPHAL, June 17: A media team visiting Chadonang Village in Ukhrul district had to use boats to wade through the water which had already started submerging large parts of paddy fields in the village.

Large parts of paddy fields in the surrounding area have been submerged in water reportedly ever since the Mapithel Dam Watergates were closed on January 15 this year.

Villagers of Chadonang, Thawai, Riha and Ramrei convened a public meeting today at Chadonang Village wherein the villagers also resorted to sloganeering and demanded `Don`™t evict us by force,` `Review Mapithel Dam first, construct later,` etc.

In the name of development, the government has cut off the livelihood of the villagers, lamented Chadonang Village chief Wungnaoyo.

He said the paddy fields which provide the villagers who are mostly farmers with their livelihood are already submerged in water and it is very likely that water would soon enter the houses.

Wungnaoyo also said that the villagers are not against the construction of the Mapithel Dam, but are against the fact that the expert committee formed to determine the compensation for the affected people is yet to submit its report. The committee is suppose to determine the compensation to be paid for the affected homesteads, land, forest, paddy fields, etc. he said.

At the same time, a case against the construction of the Mapithel Dam is still pending before the Manipur High Court and the National Green Tribunal, he continued.

We are not against developmental works, but the affected villagers should be properly compensated, he continued.

`Treat us like humans,` Wungnaoyo lamented before adding we are also people of the land.

Deteriorating livelihood in the name of development is a serious issue noted Citizen Concern for Dam and Development, CCDD Convenor Yumnam Jiten and said that previous dams constructed in the State all have failed drastically in their purposes.

He said Mapithel Dam will submerge more than 595 hectares of land.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2015/06/chadonang-partially-submerged-villagers-lament-governments-attitude/

Grievances of the Displaced Villages by the Mapithel Dam Multipurpose Project

by: N.K. Shimray The State Government has failed to address the grievances of the affected people and had given the facts of which all the general public are quite aware… Read more »The post Grievances of the Displaced Villages by the Mapithel D…

by: N.K. Shimray The State Government has failed to address the grievances of the affected people and had given the facts of which all the general public are quite aware… Read more »

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Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/07/grievances-of-the-displaced-villages-by-the-mapithel-dam-multipurpose-project/