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The government will set a humane precedence with the Punatsangchhu hydroproject PDF Print E-mail

Fair deal for displaced families?

The government will set a humane precedence with the Punatsangchhu hydroproject displaced

10 June, 2009 - The 89 families that will have to make way for the 1200 MW Punatsangchhu dam, the largest number of people ever displaced in such circumstances in Bhutan, may just get the compensation they desire.  The minister of economic affairs, Lyonpo Khandu Wangchuk, said...

that the government would work with Wangdue dzongkhag, national land commission (NLC), Punatsangchhu hydro project authority (PHPA), and other concerned organizations, to help the families find suitable agricultural land, and possibly even obtain additional benefits, such as employment and shares with the hydro project.

In April this year, the government informed the families they would have to relocate. As compensation, the government offered either land or monetary compensation. The families chose the land option with the encouragement of the government.

But then they were told they would have to find the new land themselves. Although some families have found land, most have not. One obstacle may be because the families are expected to find land within their own gewog. These families told Kuensel there was no suitable land left for them. As subsistence farming families, finding land with access to water is vital for them, along with soil conducive for agriculture.

The families approached Wangdi dzongkhag with alternative compensation packages that, they believed, would ensure their financial security. They requested they be given small plots of land in or around Wangdi town, or above the dam site, where they would build houses and become shopkeepers. The rest of their land, they said, they would exchange for shares in the project.

None of these proposals were accepted by Wangdi dzongkhag. The dzongkhag informed them no land was available either in Wangdi town or near the dam site. One farmer complained that land near the dam site had instead been given by the dzongkhag to persons from other gewogs, just before being informed to relocate. Receiving shares, they were told, was not a feasible idea with the current global recession, and returns were not guaranteed.

“The people are willing to be relocated, but they have serious concerns,” said Lyonpo Khandu Wangchuk, “and, from the government’s side, we’d like to say that we share the concerns of the people, we have a moral as well as sacred responsibility to provide good substitute land.”

The minister said instructions would be given to the dzongkhag administration and land commission to work on finding suitable land for the families “at the earliest possible time.” Asked how much time that meant, the minister said, “in the next few months.”

As for shares in the project, the minister told Kuensel that the government would “look into” the possibility. The minister believed it would be a meaningful gesture, allowing the families to have a regular income and equivalent to giving them land.

The managing director of PHPA, R N Khazanchi, said that PHPA was open to the possibility of giving the families shares in the project if the government instructed them to do so. “This is a decision that has to be made at the highest levels of government,” he said.

He, along with Lyonpo Khandu, pointed out that additional assistance would involve providing employment for the families during the construction phase, and eventually even electricity, water, roads and other infrastructure. “If they want,” said Lyonpo Khandu.

On the concerns of some families that they were not being kept informed, Lyonpo Khandu said, “The people have a right to information, and so we’ve instructed PHPA to work closely with the people from now on.” Lyonpo also said that PHPA had been instructed to speed up finalising the acquisition and compensating phase.

The Punatsangchhu dam will be completed in 2015. Several more dams will be constructed in an economic development plan to harness at least 10,000 MW of a 30,000 MW potential by 2020. Lyonpo Khandu said the compensation package for the Punatsangchhu would be a precedent for future families displaced by dams.

By Gyalsten K Dorji

 Thanks goes to:  Google news and Kuensel Online Newspaper

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 29 July 2009 )
 
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The Economics of Involuntary Resettlement: International Conference in India

An important  International Conference on Population Displacement and Resettlement by development projects  will take place on  April 10-12, 2012 at the Xavier Institute of Management in Bhubaneswar (XIMB), Odisha,  India. The conference is jointly organized by the Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneswar, the XLRI School of Business and Human Resources, Jamshedpur, and the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai.

XIMB, the lead organizing institution and the conference’s host, is one of India’s most eminent high education institutions in the area of management sciences. Private sector industries and the public sector recruit many managers and civil servants from among XIMB graduates. The Conference is prepared by a group of XIMB faculty, led by Professor Latha Ravindran, who was the first to introduce a training course on development-caused population resettlement in XIMB, one of few Universities in India that offer graduate training in this domain.

The Conference seeks to examine the theoretical, legal, financial and policy  issues intrinsic to development-caused displacement. Its Keynote Address will be given by Professor Michael M. Cernea, NR Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, Washington DC, and former Senior Adviser of the World Bank on Social Policies and Sociology. Among participants are both Indian and international scholars, researchers, students, and practitioners.

The risks and actual adverse impacts of development-induced resettlement on local people have been widely researched, but the capacity to deal with these issues is still largely lacking. Though there have been recent trends in training programs and university courses focusing on these issues, the need for effective and knowledgeable experts to assist in the resettlement process more crucial now than ever.

The conference will be an opportunity for researchers, project proponents, managers of R&R projects, professionals from civil society organizations and policy makers to deliberate, debate and identify possible solutions for critical unsolved issues pertaining to involuntary displacement, resettlement and rehabilitation on account of development projects.

 Towards this goal,  the organizers selected the following main topics for the sessions of the conference on Theoretical Perspectives, Legal & Policy Issues on Development-Induced    Displacement and Rehabilitation, 2.   Critical issues in Land Acquisition and Forced Displacement,3.  The Economics, Financing, and Planning for R&R,4.  Management of Impoverishment Risks under Urban  Displacement

Odisha is one of India’s  richest states in underground resources (iron, coal, rare metals etc.), but also one of its least developed, and has a high percentage of tribal groups amongst its population.  Many big  private sector corporations, national and transnational, are currently developing large scale projects  in Odisha in the extractive and processing industries in order to bring these resources into the industrial and economic circuit. Such developments, however, entail the need of large aggregate population displacements and relocations.  This has vastly increased the interest of the State Government and population in the issues of Development-caused  Forced  Displacement and Resettlement (DFDR). Odisha is one of India's states which has adopted its own State Policy for DFDR processes. 

Researchers from India  and abroad interested in attending this Conference may contact: 

Ms. Reena Ravichander

Xavier Institute of Management, Xavier Square, Bhubaneswar-751013, Odisha, India

Phone: +91-674-3983811 (D), 3012345 (30 lines); Mobile: +91-9437010686

Fax: +91-674- 2300995; Email:  This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

    Submitted by Joanna London

                                                                                          

 

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