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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

A year on, Vedanta protesters await justice

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Sudarshan Varadhan -


A year after Indian police killed 13 people protesting against pollution from a copper smelter in this hardscrabble southern port city of Thoothukudi, tensions within the community and between residents and the police are still running high.


No officer has been arrested or charged in connection with the shootings, and a judicial commission set up to investigate has provided no updates on its progress.


The incident was one of the deadliest environmental protests in India in a decade. A working group of United Nations’ human rights experts last May condemned the “apparent excessive and disproportionate use of lethal force by police”. India’s National Human Rights Commission has dropped its inquiry, citing “adequate compensation” paid to victims and attempts by the state to restore law and order, according to a document reviewed by Reuters.


At the same time, people surrounding the Vedanta Ltd smelter, since shuttered by the state authorities for allegedly poisoning groundwater, say they are still being intimidated by local police. The company has consistently denied the pollution allegations.


Some residents allege they have been detained and beaten by the police, and that they have been refused the right to protest. One activist, S Mugilan, who released a video critical of the police shootings, has been missing since February 15 — the day he held a news conference in


state capital Chennai.


“People have been intimidated and forced into silence by the police,” said 79-year-old A W D Thilak, the head of the Thoothukudi Bar Association.


Local police say that all their actions since the shootings have been aimed at keeping the lid on any potential trouble, even if that means curbing some rights to freedom of speech or protest. However, they denied allegations of abuse by officers. Police shot at the protesters without warning on May 22, 2018, according to interviews with multiple witnesses at the time. On that day and on May 23, 12 people were killed with shots to the head and chest, half of them from behind, according to a Reuters analysis of post-mortem reports in December.


Another protester died after being allegedly beaten by the police, according to family members.


Police said at the time they were overwhelmed and had opened fire because they feared the protesters were about to attack people in government offices and apartments housing Vedanta workers. The Madras High Court in August asked the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to file charges within four months. Nine months later, no action has been taken.


A senior CBI official declined to comment on why no charges have been filed. A CBI spokesperson did not respond to a request seeking comment.


The Judicial Commission declined to comment. The National Human Rights Commission did not respond to a request seeking comment.


Meanwhile, Vedanta executives have been pushing to restart the smelter, which was run by its Sterlite subsidiary, with social media postings under hashtags such as #knowthetruth and #reopenSterlite.


The smelter was shuttered by a Tamil Nadu government order soon after the killings. The company, which is controlled by the billionaire Anil Agarwal, has said it regretted the shootings occurred and has consistently denied the plant polluted its surroundings.


Vedanta did not respond to specific queries on its executives campaigning for reopening its smelter, but said in a statement it had a “strong track record” of corporate social responsibility interventions.


The statement listed community schemes it was currently funding, including a plan to plant a million trees and a drinking water project.


Santhosh Raj, a 22-year-old protester who witnessed the death of the first man shot that day, said that in mid-January he was abruptly blocked by men on motorbikes who dragged him by his collar and forced him into a jeep, where he was blindfolded. — Reuters


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