Sunday, March 17, 2013

Aranmula Consolidates: Camaraderie Unseen So Far

News Report of Volunteer Camp in Local Media 
With the agitation against the proposed airport at the wet lands of the heritage village now more than one year old there are rare scenes of camaraderie at Aranmula. Most of the people’s organizations of the region have come together with a singularity of purpose. It was the environmentalists, dalit organizations and radical political organizations like the Communist Party of India – (Marxist -Leninist) who took up the fight against
Photo Courtesy: New India Express
the airport project in the early days. Soon the district level leaders of the major political parties joined the agitation. The CPI(M) and CPI, some factions of the Congress Party and the RSP came out openly. So did the Hindu organizations, environmental NGOs and other informal groups.   Shelving their differences of opinion with regard to political questions they have all done the home work and are readying for the next scene.

Farm Labor Colony on Encroached Land Restored
Photo: Sreerenganathan K P
This is a fight that cannot be lost, it has to be won at any cost. More, Aranmulas  have to sprout across Kerala where the ecosystem is facing turmoil, said Mullakkara Ratnakaran, former Minister and Communist leader. The CPI(M) whose cadres lost their lands at Aranmula have taken pro-active steps of restoring lost lands and have launched a state wide agitation to retake lost agricultural lands. It is called the Second Land Reforms movement. Regarding this issue we have no politics, said Sugathakumari, who was assigned unanimously the task of coordinating the state wide agitation against the airport. What Kummanam Rajasekharan, Patron of the Paithruka Grama Karma Samithy, leaders of the CPI(M), CPI and other political parties reiterated. Each one took upon themselves the task of organizing their own groups as the airport company  has threatened that they shall start the work of the airport at any moment. What the Chief Minister of Kerala, Oommen Chandy also repeated.

Kummanam Rajasekharan attending a  Medical Service at Colony
Given the gravity of the situation, readying for any eventuality the people’s organizations have been organizing community meets in their own areas and among the followers. They have all reported confidence in dealing with any challenge. It was the marginal farmers and dalit families who first took up the struggle, who were first affected. That was when the problem at Aranmula was not known to outside world. When they saw one Abraham Kalamannil and his agents buying up lands and then filling it demolishing a hill, farm lands getting water logged and lands owned by various people illegally possessed, with fraudulent records, they filed complaints, police
cases. From the part of Kalamannil efforts were made to ruthlessly silence them using the local police who expressed helplessness as they had orders from top. Kalamannil sat through the persecution at the local police station where respectable people were insulted and asked to behave. Immensely funded from churches abroad, with a group of institutions called Mt. Zion Group, Kalamannil was also reportedly a State Committee Member of the ruling church affiliated political Party Kerala Congress (Joseph). It was then that the affected people decided to take up the issue as a people’s movement. Daring state government officials, despite pressure from top, booked the wrong doer and seeing the turn of events Kalamannil swiftly handed over the lands to a newly cooked up company and went behind the scenes. Reportedly Kalamannil made huge profits from the sales. The drama now took new dimensions, industrial area, aeropolis plans were freely used.

Samithy Leader K Krishnan Kutty addressig Ranni
Hindu Maha Sammelanam 
With the wider world coming to know the chain of events, alerted political parties and Hindu organizations at the temple town saw the threat and the Company with the powerful behind the curtains played new games. Even the Union President’s office in Delhi was misused. And with the turn of events Aranmula woke up and the people now are with one voice, no airport, restore the lands. The Hindu organizations including the nationwide volunteer group Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh have taken up the responsibility of shouldering the responsibility and Village, Taluk and District level volunteer groups are now ready for action.  Units in neighboring districts and states are also alerted and a long term plan of action chalked out.  Senior leaders of the organization having the responsibility of south India are camping at Aranmula. The left parties including the CPIM and CPI have their cadres from across the state posted at the site and the units are alerted for quick action any time. 'The Party has to take issue based and region relevant positions', said a senior CPIM leader. The local organizations like the Palliyoda Seva Samithy, other people’s organizations are also geared up. Statewide and nationwide strategies are being pursued and Aramula may see a chain of events in days to come. ‘Lines of communications are ready and Aranmula is waiting for the Sangha Nadam', referring to Lord Krishna in Kurukshetra, said Kummaam Rajasekharan, Patron of the Paithruka Grama Samithy. We are fully prepared for any misadventure on the part of the enemy and it is the path of Dharma, its the Lord’s wish, added Kummanam.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Saints to the fore Against the Aranmula Airport Plan

Photo: Arun Prijit
A Sanyasi  Sammelanam, Meet of Saints, at the Vijayananda Ashram, Kidangannoor, Aranmula resolved to take a lead role in the ongoing agitation against the proposed airport at Aranmula. After day long deliberations in association with the Paithruka Grama Karma Samithy it was decided that a multipronged strategy be adopted to salvage the heritage village and its famed places of worship. The resolution adopted at the conclave called on the state and Union governments to summarily drop the airport plan.

More than 28 ashrams in the state participated in the meet and several others send support notes. The venue of the Meet was at Nalkkalikkal, Aranmula where a sprawling campus and Samadhi of Swami Vijayananda, also known as Kaviyoor Swami, who took samadhi in 1960 is located. This ashram played a pivotal role in the reformation of the region and presently the campus has various institutions including schools.  The second phase meet to be organized shall be bringing together Saints from across Kerala and India. Expressing shock about the Hon. President of India advocating the private airport project in Aranmula Swami Vedananda pointed to the need for a pan-national movement that sensitizes the country about the very serious scenario unfolding in Kerala. Things are getting worse from bad, commented the aged Saint. Vested interests have garnered as much arrogance as to destroy a famous pilgrim town, that, a world heritage site.      

Photo: Pradeep Ayroor
Swami Viviktananda Saraswati, State president of the Chinmaya Mission, who inaugurated the event, said that the potential threats that the ill-conceived project raises are alarming and it will in time undo all that the heritage pilgrim town is known for. The timeless heritages that the past generations have handed down to us shall be protected at any cost said the Saint. The Meet resolved to have action plans at the micro-level, with village home visits and also macro-level, with coordination of state and national levels.   

Swami Garudadhwajananda wanted creative action plans, and asked that the land filled at the site be reverted to its old wetland status and the rest handed over to those landless. Kummanam Rajasekharan, Patron of the Pathruka Grama Karma Samithy, briefed the session of the developments so far. The Saints expressing anguish at the government’s laxity in punishing the wrong doers, like filling a river itself, capturing others lands with fake records, but still the culprits going scot free. They vowed to take any step necessary to counter the evil designs.   

Many of the speakers offered to lay down their lives if necessary , Swami Kailasanathananda and other saints offered their services for the agitation and to take on any misadventure from the part of the private company and the state government which is in league with the group. Swami Vedananda wondered about how the President of India was being misguided and expressed the apprehensions about the state of the country.  

Swami Golokananda of the Sree Ramakrishna Mission, actively involved in the movement, said that it is a fight of Dharma and Adharma, and felt sad that the traditions of heritage, culture, and communal amity at Aranmula are being damaged. The Saints shall organize Kudumba Yogams, family prayer meets,  across the region and also conduct a day long fast at the temple to begin with. The .Mathru Sanghom,Mother Saints, shall also organize prayer meets and door to door family meets and bring the women folk to the agitation.

Speakers at the conclave pointed to the traditions of honoring nature that is native to India and wanted the holy river Pampa restored to its ancient glory. At a time when the state, the country and the world are realizing the  follies of faulty development that such projects are take up is a tragedy. The Saints called upon the various Ashrams to come out and meet their duty to protect the traditions, heritage and nature. Rituals of worshiping water sources, like Varuna Yagya, necessary various Homams, were to be organized and they wanted the Saints to take up the Karmas. Paithruka Samithy members requested the Saints support in the planned World Water Day celebrations to be organized shortly.      

Swami Garudadhwajananda, Swami Gangesananda, Swami Abhayanananda Theerthapadar, Swami Kailasanatha, were among the Saints who spoke. The Saints spoke about the tradition of supporting ascetics at the temple of Lord Parthasarathy at Aranmula and pointed to the native tradition of renounced ascetics being supported by the society at the great temples and vice versa. This tradition, which saw dilution in between at other places remains undisturbed at Aranmula, this shall be made more effective, said one of the Saints at the conclave.          

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Facts about the Proposed Airport at Aranmula

By Kummanam Rajasekharan, Patron, Aranmula
Paithruka Grama Karma Samithy
    The whole idea of an International Airport at Aranmula is irrational. The population of Aranmula is basically dependent on a sustainable agrarian model and they are hardly the frequent fliers. The so called development with five start hotels, malls and international tourism projects that are proposed together with the airport aim at another class of capital rich people and the present population will in time be displaced together with their culture can be easily visualized. Population displacement of the traditional agrarian people is already a chronic problem in the region. Second, why does Kerala need a fifth airport, this state is a narrow strip of land 600 km long and there are already four international airports available. A major city like Mumbai, as big as Kerala, has only two airports, one international and another domestic. Gujarat, three times bigger, has only one international and four domestic airports. The implications are that this is going to be unviable, or shall ruin the prospects of other existing public sector, and other, airports. Obviously motives of the promoters are suspicious.

Malayalam Poet, Nature Crusader , Sugathakumari
The KGS Group, who came on the scene after the former group lead by one Abraham Kalamannil, who was booked under various offenses, has been  making various claims to hood wink the people and this is an attempt to clarify some of these. With the agitation against the airport reaching another mile stone, people cutting across all political and other divisions joining hands against the airport project under the able guidance of Smt. Sugathakumari there are calls that Aranmula show the path for stopping all attacks on environment and survival systems that the people are silently suffering from. There are umpteen stories that have been reported by representatives from various regions in the state and the proposed Aikya Vedi is to address these.



Site Visit: V S Achuthanandan - Photo Courtesy: The Hindu
About the claims of creating jobs, first, an airport will hardly create the number of jobs as claimed by the clever promoters. Airports do not create so many jobs, it is the airways that nay, but no clear picture is available if the airline companies shall patronize this airport. With the skewed economy in Kerala drifting after independence the have – have not gap has increased and there is a high degree of unemployment is certain, but the people to be displaced directly and indirectly shall stand to lose in the long term. And the assumed jobs shall destroy large number of traditional jobs and the profit and loss picture shall be dismal.

All Party Meeting at Aranmula, Smt Sugathakumari
The area in question are prime wet lands. Due to wrong priorities and government policies paddy cultivation may be affected. But as per the laws of the land wet lands irrespective of whether they are cultivated are conserved for their utility in water balance and ground water recharge. It is only admissible to be filled only in exceptional cases, say where someone has no other land for building and even here the procedures are cumbersome. Here the areas under conflict are classified wet lands which have made the related laws a cruel joke and those in power who support this are ineligible to manage the state and its resources. There are clear reports from the officers of state that say that the land under question are all wet lands and watersheds.

These are areas with high degree of biodiversity. there are reports from highly eminent scientists like Dr. V S Vijayan, are available. Dr. Vijayan, former chief of the state biodiversity board, whose team of five scientists have studied the area and came out with the findings that these are home to a unique ecosystem of varied plants and animals. Apart from that there are reports from the officers of the state and central governments that prove the environmental wealth of the midland wet lands. Some of the findings are:

1. The loss of these wet lands shall prove detrimental to the ground water regime of the area and their filling shall lead to water shortages as a big majority depend on well waters. 2. These are flood plains of the Pampa river and by reclaiming the wet lands the flood waters shall enter the low lying areas that are now thickly populated 3. The hills that are to be razed down for filling the wet lands shall end up hazardous for the people as landslides can happen 4. There are many rivulets, sacred groves, temples in the area which are functioning as places of worship as also ecosystem safe guards. 5. The river Pampa which is being fed by these watershed springs shall become more dry as the water sources are killed.
Agitations: Kerala Sastra Sahitya Parishat

The Assembly Committee on Environment with people’s representatives have also endorsed all these arguments and have even asked for restoration of the streams wherever they are filled.

The watersheds once filled and the riverine streams filled, hills razed down, the results on the river and its water availability shall be reduced and the important functions like boat race and the ritual of Thiruvonathoni shall become unviable. It is already grave with water scarcity making movement of boats difficult, water shortages have become chronic. It is from the same river bed that water supply systems are drawing water at most places. The threat is to survival systems, apart from the symbiotic culture of Aranmula, what is also a heritage, perhaps the richest heritage, with its nature worshipping beliefs and rituals. Urbanization that shall ensue shall simultaneously Thus people offer harvested paddy to the deity to this day and most of the agrarian operations are linked to belief, the agrarian beliefs and rituals are deeply intertwined to the heritage and its conservation. This in its turn is linked to the protection of survival systems. Thus the inappropriate location of an airport at Aranmula has become a challenge on the people. It is not that the government has no alternate lands for the purpose, there are unclaimed estates, other open areas where an airport can easily be located. But some of the hidden agendas drive the airport project exactly at Aranmula, that close to the temple itself.
V M Sudheeran Addressing the People

The watersheds once filled and the riverine streams filled, hills razed down, the results on the river and its water availability shall be reduced and the important functions like boat race and the ritual of Thiruvonathoni shall become unviable. It is already grave with water scarcity making movement of boats difficult, water shortages have become chronic. It is from the same river bed that water supply systems are drawing water at most places. The threat is to survival systems, apart from the symbiotic culture of Aranmula, what is also a heritage, perhaps the richest heritage, with its nature worshipping beliefs and rituals. Urbanization that shall ensue shall simultaneously Thus people offer harvested paddy to the deity to this day and most of the agrarian operations are linked to belief, the agrarian beliefs and rituals are deeply intertwined to the heritage and its conservation. This in its turn is linked to the protection of survival systems. Thus the inappropriate location of an airport at Aranmula has become a challenge on the people. It is not that the government has no alternate lands for the purpose, there are unclaimed estates, other open areas where an airport can easily be located. But some of the hidden agendas drive the airport project exactly at Aranmula, that close to the temple itself.
Dharna, T V Babu, KPMS, chairing  

It is a clear case of violating all laws of the land that has happened in Aranmula. We doubt if the company can cite at least one single case where they have complied with the statutory needs. It is a series of violations that the company has been indulging in from the days of its inception, naked violations of law is to them part of the game. There are umpteen laws they have violated like those regulating Land Utilization, Land Use, Scheduled Caste protection, and a host of others. At least nine laws are violated as has been pointed out. With the merits of the case the district administration has frozen the land acquired and the company as per rules has very less land in its custody now. This despite an ordinance rushed through classifying the area as industrial.

The company has dished out claims that the airport is for the Sabarimala pilgrims. They say there is an
Agitation CPIM
estimated six crore pilgrims coming to Sabarimala and out of this one in 200 shall use the airport. The reality is otherwise, tose who came by the existing Nedumbassery airport at Kochi in the last season was hardly 3000 and it is common knowledge that the Sabarimala pilgrimage is a composite one with the pilgrims preferring to visit a series of temples in south India together with the Sabarimala temple. And secondly the traditional pilgrimage to Sabarimala has its norms and a good majority take the Erumeli route where the distance between the existing and proposed airports becomes negligible. Such claims only prove the ignorance of the involved people regarding the basic principles of Sabarimala pilgrimage. Thus it is a clever device they have used to make public opinion favorable. The local MLA and others who show such regard to the Sabarimala pilgrims should at least help provide basic sanitary facilities to the pilgrims at Aranmula.

Those in power are shameless in shifting stands. There is a campaign of lies that the company and the Kerala Chief Minister, who has come to be allied with the company. This is the case with the Union Defense Minister, A K Antony as well, who said initially that the ministry will not give sanctions to the airport on security grounds but later back tracked for unknown reasons. The statement of Antony that it comes under the classified area of INS Garuda, but in a matter of twenty days he changed the stand. This happened with Vayalar Ravi, then Minister of Aviation, and another Malayali, who now says that the airport may go on. The only grace in this regard is the Union Minister of Environment who has steadfastly refused to give a No Objection Certificate. It is obvious that the former honorable ministers shall have to own up and confess their sins in days to come. 

That the Congress leader and Vice Chairman P J Kurien, and Anto Antony MP are using all their might in Delhi to see the airport through is a matter of grave concern. Political connections of the KGS Group may help them with the government but at the ground level the people of Aranmula and the wider people of Kerala are beyond their reach. The battery of permissions that are required from the Village Office to Panchayat, District to State are all pending and the till date the company has not come out with a transparent plan, or other convincing project milestones. The only thing they are doing is calling Press Meets and making the Chief Minister make statements.

The former Left Front government clearing the airport plan in principle and asking the company to find its own sources of land, which on enquiries show that the company managed by telling that they have already acquired 350 acres of land. Just before this the Industries Secretary had issued notified the Aranmula area as industrial area, as learned without the ministry in the know of the matter and just before the elections. This Secretary had blindly accepted the survey numbers of 2000 acres of land given by the company. This axis between the Secretary and the KGS Group has provided the company a foothold and it is curious that the Secretary managed to issue a Gazette notification for a company with suspicious backgrounds and with no asset base or standing. The possible reasons need not be sought far.

The company claims that they only require 500 acres of land and that they shall not demolish even a single house. A lie repeated a thousand times will not become truth. No international airport can be built with 500 acres of land, the existing airports in Kerala at Thiruvananthapuram, Kochi are around 1300 acres each. The Aerotropolis concept that has been announced includes an airport and spread around it a huge commercial hub which will require nothing less than 3000 acres to build. There are also allegations that the proposed airport and the area shall be made Special Economic Zones which implies far more dangerous scenarios. And to claim that they need not demolish even a single house for the project is plain absurd to begin with. Taking only the areas that come under the survey numbers notified more than 400 houses are to be acquired. In any case the people of Aranmula and the discerning people outside shall not give in to any plan that put their life in jeopardy.

Heritage of Aranmula, both tangible and intangible, are rooted in the values and beliefs of the people, ecosystem and culture. This is nurtured through generations and for regions like Aranmula this has been conserved without much damages compared to other similar regions. It is an intimate and private area of the people’s beliefs. An international airport and related establishments, what is to be worse if the aerotropolis plans come true, shall irreversibly damage the existing values, beliefs and damage the ecosystem irreversibly and that will not be permitted by the people. 

Friday, March 8, 2013

Fantasies of Airporting Aranmula: A Spot Report

Kozhithode, a river blocked downstream by earth fill 

It is a case of what a poet wrote, in Malayalam, Thala Aruthu Koduthu Jnanoru Thoppi Vangi, I bought a fancy hat selling my head. About so called development at the cost of the survival systems. With an illegal and unviable airport coming up in the wet lands of Aranmula, fifth airport in a very small state, the Aranmula Puncha, and the human habitations around, are readying for a battle. It is a fight to survive. ‘This is a war that has begun on the banks of river Pampa and it is time now for conscientious people to make their positions clear’ tells Mohan Aranmula, a poet, dalit leader and former Panchayat President. He sings loud, his own poem. On one side is a monstrous project, KGS Aranmula International Airport Limited, floated by a private company, which has bought vast areas of the wet lands and filled it. They have also, with impunity, filled Kozhithode, a key tributary of Pampa and also another river, the back bone of the wet lands here, Karimaram thode. They purchased and razed down hills as earth fill and were busy buying more. What has created havoc in the riverine ecosystem. The shocked people are watching in disbelief, those who have made a habit of duping the graceful farmers are crossing all borders, tells the old timers.

Kurunthar Uthaman, farmer whose lands became lakes
‘Our farm lands are water logged, lakes got formed between hamlets. Despite far too many laws being violated, complaints made, ironically the state machinery is supporting the wrong doers’, tells  Kurunthar Uthaman, a farmer and the Secretary of the Karshaka Sanghom, who has only a fragment of his old paddy fields. With political clout and international capital they go scot-free despite the violence to nature, people. Uthaman has been fighting the battle from the start. ‘It is only an appetizer’, says Sreeranganathan, a photographer and key activist in the struggle, ‘this huge project is a looming threat, the ecosystem, landscape and community profile are heading for total anarchy’. That is when the peace loving people of Aranmula reacted. Unhealthy interventions in nature and large scale land alienation are chronic problems in the region. And for Kerala with its high density of population farm lands are dear. Farm lands are now real estate for traders, rice cultivation systemically damaged. And unhealthy crops like  rubber promoted at state cost. Last few decades saw an invasion. ‘In the melee Aranmula may trigger a chain reaction, it should’, said Mullakkara Ratnakaran, a former Agricultural Minister talking at a local meeting.

‘The revival of our farm lands, the lost paddy field culture, shall start at Aramula said Ratnakaran. Aranmulas shall sprout at every paddy field in Kerala, what shall rewrite history', the Communist leader added. No wonder almost all major political parties in Aranmula have come together, a rare feat achieved. There are Communists, Socialists and the Hindutwa folks all there, so also, various social and environment activist groups. Meanwhile at Aringottu Kavu, one of the hills within the wetlands and with a place of worship, Sacred Grove and a Mahadeva temple, the company has offered huge sums to buy the adjoining lands. The large number of temples and Sacred Groves, Kavu and Malanadas, forming part of the nature worshiping culture are now coming under the area ear marked for the airport. It was declared ‘Industrial Area’ by a dubious special Gazette notification. The people living in and around the beautiful Pallimukkom Goddess temple, at Kidanganoor, a part of Aranmula, when talked to had no fear though.

Scenic Beauty: Pallimukkom Temple, Pond and Sacred Grove
‘It cannot happen’, says a temple neighbor, about the airport becoming a threat to the temple. The slogans at the protest rallies are provocative. ‘These are just non-issues before us, if we react there shall be turmoil, they know, let us wait. Look at the Goddess images, she always has weapons, though she is graceful, forgiving, but not always',  he added. The determination in his words was evident. This temple, part of the rice culture here, has a pond, a patch of wilderness protected as a Sacred Grove, and ancient temples. Gods of a rain forest people, enthralling natural beauty. The hillocks that spread around the vast paddy field wet lands have important ecological functions, like giving a home to pollinators and pest eating birds, how they are kept unmolested and sacred. The first harvest goes to the Gods here, that is the belief.  Many of the hills coming under the proposed plan are called Malanadas, and part of the belief systems of the people. But to the Mt. Zion group, and its owner Abraham Kalamannil, that started the project, these are just mud hills good for filling wet lands. It is a people who have been brain washed, heavily funded from abroad. Though later seeing the people’s wrath they pulled back with the company called KGS group later pushed in front. 'If this group violated the laws to protect the ecosystem, laws made to save a land, they went scot-free; but when the affected people violated the other laws, burned their earth filling machinery, the state reacted and far too many criminal cases were leveled on them' what is a common refrain. The unsuspecting owners of wet lands who were not cultivating it for some time were in for a surprise, their lands were captured making false records. This included poor dalit laborers and the operation was with the connivance of government officials. Despite proof, despite some low level officers taking nominal action, the state government refuses to act against the Mt. Zion group who did it first. And some of the land losers with other landless farmers have made huts on a part of the land.   

As agitations at Aranmula and across the state spread like wild fire the investors who want profits from real estate deals, and the airport if possible, are hiding behind soft facades of hired people. The lands bought dirt cheap were reportedly sold at sky high prices, duping naive investors from Tamilnadu. And they are using their political clout to manipulate the state apparatus. Another gimmick was to push the agenda taking the name of Sabarimala, a forest hill shrine, that it is meant for pilgrims. A pilgrimage where arduous trekking is the gist, what failed to work. They got the state government to get the prime wet lands notified as Industrial Area, made the state offer public money as share in the company, even got the President of India to declare a small time private airport in faraway Kerala as national priority. But each of these steps made the public opinion against them, what is alarming. At the lawns of the famous Parthasarathy temple in Aranmula, Kummanam Rajasekharan, Patron of the Paithruka Grama Karma Samithy, the frontal organization that is spear heading the agitation, sits confidently. ‘We are ready for any eventuality and People’s Committees are formed in all adjoining villages, people to people linkages are also ready’ Kummanam said. ‘Only insane people shall support such projects, saner people shall all support us, its all about ecological sanity, water and food security, beliefs.’  For the well-known Malayalam poet Sugthathakumari, whose birth place is Aranmula, who has taken the state wide leadership of the struggle, it is a war between Dharma and Adharma, as she said, a war of virtue and evil.

Kannangattu Madhom Temple: Long Prayer To Forgive 
The series of temples near by, groves and hill shrines, all linked to the main temple at Aranmula, of Lord Parthasarathy, are part of an ancient temple centred settlement and there are mutual linkages between all these. Where exactly the airport plan was launched. Here for the festivals it is mandatory to have the participation of the smaller network of shrines. And a large number of these are owned and managed by the dalit, a rice people, later in history made farm labor, communities. The priesthood is also with the dalits at places, some of them called Ooralis and highly venerated. The beliefs here are not Vedic as in major Hindu temples but down to earth and Sakteya. Many of these places did not consider meat and drinks as taboo. The Kannangattu Madhom, too close to the proposed run way of the fictional airport, is part of a belief where the upper castes ill treated a dalit woman in the past and even today some of the caste Brahmins do penance to redeem the wrong. The period of corrections is here as it seems. The Kanjiraveli Sastha temple, Gurukkal Kavu, Punnakkadu Krishna temple, Chooral Kavu, are all among the various places of worship coming under the proposed site as told. However no clear picture is given to the people and no one knows the boundaries, plans. That is far too serious a scenario that can be called undue advantage. There are also important ashrams like the Kidanganoor Ashram, which played a crucial role in the past development of the place and its man making.                    

Aringottu Kavu Mahadeva Temple: Deep Inside a Grove
The attack came stealthily, in a peaceful temple community minding their business, when the church based group, Mt. Zion Society, started buying up bits of Puncha wet lands claiming to start fish and paddy cultivation. Later they started filling it and said it is for a small air strip, to start an aeronautical engineering school. There was no objection but then the cat was out, the secret plans were out. The proposed 'aeropolis', a airport complex with star hotels, malls, industrial estates and international business conclaves, shall wipe away the wet lands, with the community that is organically part of the  system. Kerala, a naturally endowed state that saw systemic destruction of its natural bounty and paying a heavy price has not learned any lessons. When the politicians go around begging for drought relief funds, when people go walking so many kilometres to fetch drinking water, when the once perennial rivers are drying out one by one, it is a crime that they are killing the wet lands that replenish ground water. But for those who greed for immediate money, mad- rush to progress, it blinds these callous lobbies to embrace the self-destructive path. 


Google Map of the area with the Aranmula temple and the river Pampa at the top left 
It is also a paradox at Aranmula. For the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), in association with the Government of India, had a decade earlier declared Aranmula as of   global heritage value.  The Aranmula Parthasarathy temple, associated boat race, arts and crafts together was selected, only one site from Kerala, and a development paradigm was evolving. There were series of projects ear marked to evolve a healthy development model for the region, what meant all round growth and international prominence. What those who honor heritage were actively pursuing when the air port project came as a severe blow. The Paithruka Grama Karma Samithy had organized collective farming in the puncha lands, had other place specific ecofriendly plans. 


River Pampa near the temple, once full, now under attack, bruised 
When the secret deals of Mt. Zion group began, with their international links and manipulations, the deal slowly becoming menacing. The land was lucrative, they were moneyed, could manage the political system, and were adept in dubious ways of conspiring with the like minded in every other agency. Where the saviors of the land, those who had stakes, were caught in a double bind, an explosive reaction shall mean social turmoil, there are hidden sparks waiting to be ignited, for this is a region that saw land alienation of a large scale in the last few decades where  those with NRI and international capital have bought over most of the lands, farmlands changing to real estate. With ensuing environmental calamities after irresponsible interventions in ecosystem. And the people of Aranmula are demanding stringent action against the law breakers, restoration of the water bodies, compensations, this agitation will not end without that, and it is a consensus opinion. And on the banks of the once majestic river Pampa, now a skeleton of its old self, where once boats went up and down in all seasons, it is literally a struggle to protect the survival system. 

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Aranmula Airport: its potential ecological, social and economic impacts



                              The proposed Aranmula Greenfield Airport:
its potential ecological, social and economic impacts -
a preliminary appraisal

Dr. V. S. Vijayan
Sálim Ali Foundation
Trichur

The report presents the major impacts of the proposed airport on the biodiversity and ecology of the wetlands and paddy lands in Aranmula and its adjoining villages along with an analysis of the tangible and intangible benefits of this significant ecosystem. It further analyses: (1) the EIA conducted by Enviro Care, India Pvt. Ltd for the  KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd, who proposes the airport; (2) the need for an airport at Aranmula and, (3) the inevitable need for restoring the paddy land and resuming paddy cultivation in the area, which was mostly abandoned in the area for a few years for reasons not attributable to the farmers. Economic aspects are not covered in detail; only those aspects related to wetlands and paddy lands are dealt with.

1)      A Chennai based  business group, namely KGS Group, known as KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd is proposed to build a private Greenfield Airport    in an area extended to Aranmula, Kidangannur and Malapuzhaserry villages, Kozhencherry Taluk, Pathanamthitta District, Kerala (Fig. 1, 2a & b). 
2)      The area required for the proposed Airport is 500 acres as given in the EIA report and also the papers submitted to the Government of Kerala. But in their website it is given as 700 acres. ( www.kgsaranmulaairport.com)
3)      The total cost is estimated at Rs 2000/ crores. Reliance group will have 15% stake in the project
4)      The need for the Aranmula Airport, according to the proponents as given in the EIA report are:
a.       “Aranmula is centrally located in between the existing International Airports at Thiruvananthapuram and Cochin at about 138 Km. The proposed Airport will have a direct influence to the central Travancore region”
b.      an airport in Aranmula  would  serve the increasing demands  of air passengers from Pathanamthitta, Kottayam , Idukki and some parts of Alappuzha  districts. “Out of the foreign and domestic tourists’ arrival to Kerala, these four districts together accounts for about 21 per cent of foreign tourists and 14 per cent domestic tourists”
c.         the proposed  Airport will provide infrastructure to Sabarimala pilgrims who wish to travel by air
d.      an airport in Aranmula would serve the travel requirements of non-resident Keralites, foreign and domestic tourism and, 
e.       the airport in Aranmula will be a great facilitator for  the Maramon Convention, one of the biggest conventions of Christians accounting for about 1,00,000 pilgrims
Resources needed for the Aranmula Airport
According to the available information and EIA report of the KGS Airport Ltd, the project would require:
5)      500/700  acres of land, out of the 500 acres, about  400 acres are paddy fields (Aranmula Puncha) and wetlands
6)      12,000 litre/day of water during the first phase, and 58,500 litre/day during the second phase The total requirement of raw water for this airport will be 7.55 KLD,
7)      A 23 m wide four lane approach road from the Aikkara Junction to the terminal building and, from Parumoottumpadi Junction to Aikkara Junction. For both, land has to be acquired. 
8)      The power requirement during the  operational phase in the first phase would be  2 MVA and, in future 4.0 MVA
9)      The major materials required are steel, cement, sand, metal, bricks, flooring tiles/stones, artificial wood, sanitary and hardware items, electrical fittings, water, etc (quantity has not been given anywhere in the EIA report).
10)  Massive quantity of sand  for filling the vast expanse of paddy field, around  400 acres
Impact of the project on the ecology of the area
11)  The rapid assessment carried out by the Sálim Ali Foundation (SAF) brings out the salient features of the ecology of the area; the irreparable damage that the airport will cause to the ecosystem, biodiversity and the people. On the whole four days were spent in the field making direct observations, discussions with local people individually and in groups.  The team comprised four members, one each of a botanist and   fish expert and, two ornithologists/wetland experts.
Biodiversity
12)  Only three aspects of biodiversity; plants, fishes and birds - the major aspects of biodiversity of the area, could be covered within the limited available time.
13)  Plants:  On the whole 212 species of plants were recorded from the area. Of these, 27 are endemic to the Western Ghats and 110 are economically important, mainly for its medicinal properties. Of the 212 species, 88 are wetland species which include those found along the earthen bunds and in wet areas (Annexure 1).
14)  Fishes: In total 60 species, including those reported in the present and earlier studies were recorded from the area (Annexure 2). Out of which 42% of the fishes are endemic to the Western Ghats; 6.6 % endangered and 5% vulnerable. 48% are of commercially high value fetching exorbitant prices in the market. The species such as Wallago attu, Channa marulius, C. striata, Labeo dussumeiri, and Horabagrus brachysoma are highly sought after.  Among these, Labeo dussumeiri is an icon of Pumba fishery resources and it is  endemic to the rivers feeding the Vembanad lake. About 10 % of the total species found are of  ornamental value.  It may be noted that 35 species are migratory; migrating from the river Pumba to the paddy lands and wetlands for breeding.
15)  Birds: The present study recorded 80 species of birds,  while 85 were recorded in 2006 by the Kottayam Nature Society. Both together, 103 species have been located from the area (Annexure 3). Of these,  8 species are migratory and two, namely Oriental Darter and Black- headed Ibis, are in the Near Threatened category of the IUCN.
                                              Ecosystem of the area
16)  The puncha paddy fields and wetlands in Aranmula, Mallappuzhassery, Kidangannur, Elanthur, Mezhuveli and in the adjacent  villages (fig. 3, 4)  form the flood plains of river Pumba  and have become an inseparable part of not only the overall   ecology of the area, but also the   culture and heritage of this area.
17)  As the proposed airport area and the contiguous paddy lands and wetlands are the flood plains of river Pumba, they   serve as natural flood control in the area whenever the river Pumba overflows, reducing the impacts of flood on the local population and their lives considerably.
18)  On the onset of monsoon in June when the water began draining into river Pumba, a large number of fishes migrate upwards against the current to the wetlands and paddy fields   for breeding.  The wetlands act as ground for egg laying, hatchery and nursery. In September when the activities for puncha initiates, they migrate down into river Pumba which act as feeding ground.
19)  For centuries, water from paddy fields and wetlands that spread over Aranmula, Mallapuzhassery, Kidangannur, and the adjacent villages used to be drained into river Pumba through Valiyathodu also known for some distance as  Kozhithodu before it joins river Pumba (Fig. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9).

20)  When an earthen approach road was constructed across Valiyathodu at Nalkalickal to facilitate renovation of Nalkalickal bridge, it acted as a bottle-neck for the flow of water both-wise,  between river Pumba and  paddy fields. 

21)  As a result, water from rain and   overflow from the Valiyathodu, got stagnated in the paddy fields making it impossible for farming.

22)  The deteriorating ecological condition of the Kozhithodu also adversely affected the water flow. Soil erosion and high degree of siltation have made the Kozhithodu almost non-functional (Figs. 5 & 6)

23)  Construction of the air strip has aggravated the gravity of water logging  in most parts. Farming was forced to be abandoned in most areas since 1999.

24)  Purchase of pieces of paddy lands here and there for the airport since the last 10 to 12 years or so has fragmented the padasekharams, making farmer collectives difficult to function.

25)  Aged and experienced farmers who have been farming for generations in the area claim that the yield of paddy used to be around five tonnes per hectare in the area which was corroborated by the officials of the local Agricultural Department.
            Intangible values of the Wetlands and Paddy fields that would be lost
26)  The most significant loss, due to the proposed airport in Aranmula, will be   the disappearance of a large extent of wetlands and paddy fields, that too in a State that produces hardly 11% of the total requirement of rice.
27)  The total area of wetlands that would be reclaimed is not clear. The area that the KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd.  require is about 500 – 700 acres. The area notified as Industrial Area by the Industrial Department is 500 “acres”. Whether it is 500 acres or hactares is not clear. Using the survey numbers included in the Notification, a map was prepared by Mr. Sreeranganathan, Retd, Sr. Artist/Photographer of the Rubber Board who is a resident of Aranmula  (Fig 2b.). The total area, according to this, is about 500 ha, out of which the wetland is about 214 ha. Since the KGS group has asked 500 acres (202 ha) in the first phase, all analyses are based on the 500 acres.

28)  One of the most significant values of these paddy lands and wetlands, not yet measured but experienced, is the contribution that they make in maintaining the water level in the wells and ponds in the villages around.

29)   These wetlands and paddy lands serve as reservoirs, maintaining the water and drain it into river Pumba during the lean period, thus functioning as a natural irrigation system. 

30)  Even if no cultivation is made, and if the paddy fields are left as such, their ecological services go unhindered.  The water levels in the wells and ponds in the neighbouring villages continue to be maintained.

31)  Local residents of the area, especially farmers are quite aware of these and, hence are their strong protests against the destruction of wetlands and paddy fields in the name of an airport.

32)  These services of the wetlands are called “intangible services” or “indirect services”. There are many more such services, significantly at least 14 of them, such as climate control, soil erosion,  carbon storage, waste treatment, nutrient cycling, raw material, food production, genetic resources, recreation  and cultural.

33)  The global average ecosystem services of the wetlands are estimated at Rs. 7, 39,250/ha. Since our wetlands are much more complex, this value will be 3-4 times more. Accordingly the annual ecosystem service values of the wetlands that would be lost for the sake of airport will be between Rs. 35.48 crores and 47.31 crores. In other words the people living in the area get ecosystem services worth Rs. 35.48 to 47.31 crore annually.
34)  It is to be necessarily considered , that the  impact of filling and raising the wetland area for the airport does not confine only to the earmarked 400 acres but goes  beyond, affecting all the wetlands and paddy fields over 3500 acres, as it completely bloc the water movement.

35)  Therefore, the total loss of ecosystem services  should be calculated for the entire area, i.e.;  for  3500 acres (1417 ha) which would come to Rs. 314 to 419 crores

36)  To provide these ecosystem services, even if they are just impossible, the cost would be unimaginably high. And, quite impracticable

Tangible benefits of the wetlands in Aranmula and its adjoining villages

37)  Tangible or direct benefits from a wetland include among other things, production of fish and paddy.

38)  In the present area of 1457 ha, if converted back into a cultivable state, the farmers claim that they could produce nothing less than 5 tons per ha puncha, amounting to 7085 tonnes annually.  If the procurement price is fixed at Rs.15/kg, it would be worth Rs.  10.63 crores. And, if it is organically produced, it can be at least  just the double, i.e.; around Rs 21 crores

39)  Since the puncha cultivation requires only four months, middle of December to end of April, there is sufficient time left for fish culture. Dr. Padmakumar, Fish Expert from Kerala Agricultural University, advises that a minimum of two tones of fish per ha could be produced annually. At the rate of a minimum Rs.40/kg, in the 1417 ha, the fish production would be worth for Rs. 11.34 crore.

40)  Accordingly, in the area earmarked for airport, (400 acres) the rice and fish production, would be 800 tonnes of pucha and 320 tonnes of fish; worth Rs. 1.2 crores and 1.28 crores respectively.

41)  Therefore the total benefits from the paddy fields and wetlands from the proposed airport area (160 ha) would be Rs. 37.96 to 49.79 and, from the total wetlands and paddy fields that would be affected by the airport (1417 ha) would be Rs 335 to 440 crores per year.

42)  Please note that these figures are tentative, but minimum. The figures on paddy lands are collected from various sources, including the Agricultural Department, maps prepared by the Kerala State Biodiversity Board, Google maps, and the map prepared by Shri. Sreeranganathan of Aranmula.

Dislocation of families

43)  Total houses that fall within the area declared as industrial area are not yet physically counted.  Nor is there any mention of this in the EIA report of the KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd. The houses that could be counted from the satellite map show 780 houses (Shri. Sreeranganathan, personal communication). Many of the houses would not have been captured in the satellite as they are under tree cover. There would be at least around 1000 houses.  If we consider an average three members in a house, the total number would be around 3000. How many of them have to be evicted are not clear. The EIA Report (page 119) categorically records that the existing population in the area has to be evacuated. But yet it fails to mention the number of people to be evacuated.


44)   Apart from this,  since  a 23 m wide four lane approach road    from the Aikkara Junction to the terminal building and,  from Parumoottumpadi Junction to Aikkara Junction have to be laid as per the  EIA report,  all the houses within this area on either side also have to be  evicted and, the  land acquired. This is not mentioned in the EIA report.

                                             
Water requirement of the project
45)  Water requirement of the project would be 7.55 KLD which the EIA report says (page34) would be met both from its own bore wells supplemented by the Municipal supply.
46)    Exploitation of the ground water will make the situation further worse, as the wetlands, the source for charging the water table, will be reclaimed for the airport.
Loss and damage to the cultural heritage of the area

47)  The Airport will further destroy the cultural heritage of the area as several age old historic temples and sacred groves are situated within the Industrial Area declared by the Government

48)  The famous Aranmula temple, about 1500 years old, is just within 200 meters from the borders of the Industrial Area notified.

49)  An airport in Aranmula would completely change the serenity and peaceful life of the people. There are, it appears, proposals for techno-park, smart City, info-park, Textile Park, food park multi-speciality hospitals and what not after the declaration of setting up the Air port.

Booming prices for land

50)  All these have helped only the land mafia.  Ever since the proposed airport was declared, we were told, the land cost in the area has gone up several folds. A cent costing just Rs. 5000 a year ago in this famous temple town currently demands Rs. 50,000/ to 1, 00,000/. The land mafia is up.  As a result, a small piece of land for a common man in the village for construction of a house has become near to impossible
Environment Impact Assessment of the KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd.
51)  As per the Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification 2006, the KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd.  got an EIA done through a private agency, namely Enviro Care, India Private Limited, based in Madurai.
52)  The EIA is quite forthcoming when it deals with the  structure and design of the airport building, the number of passengers expected to be using it in the first and final phase; the facilities for car parking, the number of  cars expected to be parking and taking off; the physical features of the area, such as maximum – minimum temperature, rainfall, humidity, wind rose diagrams, wind speed, air quality, noise environment; the physico-chemical properties of the soil and water;  and a sewage treatment plan.
53)  However, when it comes to the biological scenario, the report is appallingly bereft of facts and figures. And it appears the EIA team has not taken even the  minimum required efforts to document the biodiversity
54)  Still worse is when it talks of the ecology; nothing is given on the ecological impact. This cannot be considered as a shortcoming or in-deliberate omission, as the EIA was done for a project that would completely devastate the paddy lands and wetlands amounting to an eco-catastrophe in the area.
55)  The statement on vegetation (page 87), supposed to have been based on a survey of 10 km radius of the airport, claims the dominance of species of which except one (Euphorbia hirta) are neither present nor expected to be present in the area.  The unedited list of plants as presented in the Report is given below:
prosopis Juliflora, Cassia auriculata, Morinda coreia, Borassus flabellifer, Cissus, Prosopis Juliaflora, Acacia niolotica, A.planifrons, A.auriculiformes, A.ferruginea, Zizipus Jujuba, Z.mauritiana, Z.xylophyrus, Morinda coreia, E.Corrigiologides, opuntia dilleii, Agave angustiofolia, Aloe vera, cassia auriculata, Euphorbia tortilis, E.hirta and few species of grasses. ” 
56)  These species could be found only in dry lands. It is surprising that although large part of the area is covered with wetlands and paddy lands, the EIA could not find  any wetland species
57)   In spite of the phenomenal data deficiency, the EIA appears to have been very particular to state thatThere are no endangered species in the study area.”
58)  On the contrary, we could locate 212 species of plants in the area with 27 endemics
59)  Similarly the EIA report is an apology to the faunistic wealth of the area, especially of the wetlands.
60)  The EIA claims that “study includes survey of the animal communities such as insects, molluscs, fishes, reptiles, birds and mammals (page 88 of the report)
61)  However, it does not specify the method followed for studying each group.  Certainly the method followed for birds cannot be used for studying the insects or snails.
62)  Although the EIA claims to have studied the fishes, reptiles and mammals, nowhere in the report does it list out these faunistic elements.
63)  For any attempt to document the flora and fauna, the study has to be year round or at least seasonal. In the present case the EIA report says: “majority of data on water quality, vegetation, air and noise quality was collected during field studies in August – October 2010”. Even if they have collected the data during this period, that too apparently they have not, the three months data alone are grossly inadequate to assess both the faunal and floral richness of the area; especially for the purpose of impact assessment of a project which threatens total destruction  of  the ecology of the   area
64)  Interestingly, the report says: “Information on eco-system within study area was collected from the State Agricultural and Forest departments. The important flora species native to the area is enumerated.  tests check survey was also under taken to judge the correctness of the data collected” (page 18). Whether this was done so is doubtful, as it is quite sure that no forest or agricultural department official would ever give a list of plants which are not present in their area. On the contrary, if EIA team had consulted the Agricultural department, it would have got valuable information related to the ecology of the area.
65)  Although the EIA claims to have identified 52 insect species representing 14 orders, the non-inclusion of the list of species, the method followed and, names of the experts who identified the insect species makes the entire claim unacceptable.  However, as though the EIA has not  committed  an omission  it says “there are  no rare or endangered species”[of insects}
66)  Again, the EIA appears to have either neglected or paid no serious attention to the avifauna (bird fauna) of the area. It has not given the methodology, not even the time spent in the field, but states that    34 species were recorded. But no list is provided.  It may be noted that within about five hours, one afternoon and one forenoon, two of us could locate 80 species (list attached). And, the Kottayam Natural History has recorded 87 species; totally the bird list of the area goes to 103 species with two Near threatened species of the IUCN and five migratory species. Needless to say the area will have a large number of ducks and other migratory species during the migratory season.

67)  Therefore, the statement in the ESA report that  ”It was found during study period that the location is devoid of any endangered flora and fauna in 10 km radius” is  not qualified even to describe as  erroneous!  In this context, it may be noted that during our visits, we could cover only in around the wetlands which are under the threat of reclamation, and not   10 km radius which the EIA claimed to have covered. Yet, we could locate more than double the number of species of birds.
68)  The enormity of the shallowness in the biological/ecological assessment of the area is abundantly obvious from the following statements given in page 87:  “The environmental interactions of these insects reveal that, they are interrelated and majority of them are useful insects”, and page 88: “The presence of birds at different study sites reveals that there is good relationship between the birds and its habitat along with the vegetation. The maintenance of ecological balance could be seen among study area”. Indeed, a typical desk EIA.

69)  Land in the area has been recorded as   “unclassified” land in page 29 of the EIA report. At no stretch of imagination, could the land in the area be classified so. Mostly the area is wetlands/paddy fields.

70)  The report in page 28 says that there are no archeological and cultural monuments within 10 km radius. There cannot be a more erroneous statement than this, as the area is dotted with a large number of temples of historical eminence; the famous Aranmula temple is only around 200 from the border of the proposed airport.

71)  The impact statements in the ESI, especially on the biological components do not deserve any attention. There cannot be a more callous approach than this.

The EIA is silent on major environmental issues

72)  The EIA is silent on the major impacts of reclaiming wetlands and paddy fields that extends approximately 400 acres. Worst still, the report does not even acknowledge that it is a wetland.

73)  As the entire area is the flood plain of river Pumba, whenever water level rises, the entire area gets inundated. Therefore, the wetland areas now marked for the airport has to be raised at least 3-4 feet from the rest of the area. This would amount to filling the wetlands about 10-12 feet high.

74)  The EIA should have quantified the sand required for this and, also mentioned the source of sand for the same.
75)  A preliminary assessment made by us shows that it would require a minimum of 96 lakhs tonnes of sand.

76)  Since the source of material for the already filled up area was a hill close-by, called Karimarathu mala, which was bulldozed (Fig. 10),   the source for filling rest of the wetlands cannot expected to be different.  It could be some hills   which the KGS Group has already purchased. The isolated pieces of land included under the Industrial Area fortify this inference.

One major question: Do we really require an Airport in Aranmula?

77)  Kerala State, hardly 600 km in length and average 150 km in width, has already got three airports, namely Trivandrum International Airport, Cochin International Private Airport, Calicut International Airport and a 4th one, a green field airport,   at Kannur is being taken up. That means on an average, there is one airport for every 150 Km.

78)  Incidentally, the Government of India’s guidelines for the Greenfield Airport specify that it should be normally 150 km from any existing airport. The distance to Aranmula from both the Trivandrum International Airport and the Cochin international Airport is just 96 km air distance. And, by road from Trivandrum to Aranmula is 122 km and Cochin Airport even less – 104 km.

79)  It is understood from the press that even now some of the flights from and to the Cochin Airport are being cancelled or adjusted with other air lines because of the lack of passengers.

80)  The Aranmula Airport, it is claimed, is to cater the needs of mainly the NRIs from four surrounding districts, namely Pathanamthitta, Kottayam, Alappuzha and Idukki. It may be noted that if the air passengers from these districts move to the Aranmula Airport, the Cochin Airport and even the Trivandrum Airport will certainly become not only non-profitable but may have to run at a loss.

A note on the background of the proposed Aranmula Airport

It may be necessary to give a brief background of the proposed airport to get a clear picture

81)  Since the last few years, paddy fields in Aranmula area have been bought in the name of a Trust, namely Mount Zion Educational Trust purportedly to fulfil the statutory obligation of having an air strip to commence an Aeronautical Engineering course at its college.

82)  The local people, we understand, did not raise any objection thinking that it was only for enhancing the educational facilities of the children. However, no sooner than later it was realised that the purpose for which the land was bought was for setting up an airport.

83)  The Chairman of the Mount Zion Educational Trust, namely Shri. Abraham Kalamannil even told the local people that since there has been no cultivation for the last couple of years, he would begin fish culture.

84)  The Educational Trust appears to have purchased about 350 acres of land.  It was not only bought, but was filled in some parts (Fig. 11, 12) . The vital portion of the Valiayathod was filled disrupting the flow of water between Pumba and the paddy lands and wetlands

85)  However, on protests of people, a diversion was made through which some amount of flow could be restored to the east and south of the filled area. The portion that ran toward east was completely reclaimed.

86)  Even some of the revenue land was also filled along with this which the RDO had ordered the Thasildar to recover (Annexure 4 ; copy of RDO’s order).

87)  The material for filling was taken by bulldozing a hill near-by (Fig. 10).

88)  The farmers got agitated and filed a writ petition in the High Court of Kerala against filling the paddy land and the construction activities. The Court in its judgement dated 24 February 2005 ordered that no construction in the paddy field shall be done unless statutory clearances are obtained (Annexure 5: High Court of Kerala: W. P. No. 3917 of 2005; dated 24 February 2005).

89)  A business group from Chennai, namely KGS Group came into the picture and they bought 350 acres of land from the Trust/ Abraham Kalamannil, its Chairman and floated a company called KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd.

90)  The Industrial Department of the Government of Kerala on 8 September 2010, had given approval in principle for the Greenfield airport with a condition that the company should obtain necessary land without violating the existing rules and regulations (Annexure 6; copy of the order).

91)  However, the KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd could not get the land registered in their name, as the district Collector rejected its application since there was a case pending against Shri. Abraham Kalamannil for reclamation of wetland.

92)  Unfortunately, again, the Industrial Department   in a tearing   hurry declared the 500 acres required by the KGS Aranmula Airport Ltd. as an Industrial Area, that too just less than a week before the elections to the State Assembly was announced. Industrial Area was declared on 24 February 2011.

93)  It may be noted that while doing so, the Government had not sought the approval or even opinion of the local Panchayaths thereby violating the Constitutional provisions as per the 73rd and 74th Amendments to the Constitution bestowing the sole right to the Gram Sabha for plan development in the area.

94)  The local people, raised protests against the Greenfield Airport at the cost of their paddy fields and wetlands.  

95)  The District Collector called a meeting of all concerned parties during the end of December 2011, and as per the news paper report (Hindu December 31, 2011): the meeting “decided to recommend to the Government to de-notify the 500 acres of land declared as industrial area in Aranmula, Mallappuzhassery and Kidangannur villages.” “ The meeting has also decided to stop all further proceedings with regard to the proposed private airport till the notification declaring 500 acres of land spread across the three villages was withdrawn”

96)   It may be noted that the Ministry for Civil Aviation, according to its then Minister’s (Shri. Vayalar Ravi) statement in the Lok Sabha, no permission was granted to the KGS Aranmula Airport Project (Annexure 7 ; copy of the statement made in the parliament)

97)   The Defence Ministry has also not given permission till the last week of January 2011 (Annexure  8; copy of a letter from the Defence Minister to a Member of Parliament)

Recommendations

98)  The Government must seriously examine whether Kerala requires a 5th Airport, the one proposed in Aranmula. As it is today, the State will have one airport at an interval of 150 km when the Kannore airport is built and commissioned.

99)  The analysis should consider the data of flight frequency, the airlines which are operating, whether the seats are full, if so, whether additional flights could meet those requirements,  the number of national and international passengers from Pathanamthitta, Idukki, Kottayam and Alappuzha,

100)     If it is convincingly found that an airport is required, that means even with additional services the requirement could not   be met, a suitable place other than wetlands, paddy lands and forests may be located.

101)     Under no circumstances, shall the paddy lands and wetlands be converted, nullifying the Kerala Paddy land and Wetlands Conservation Act, 2008. It may be noted that Kerala was the first in the country to bring out such an act to save its dwindling wetlands and paddy fields. The sagacity and wisdom behind the Act shall not be allowed to become a laughing stock.

102)     When the State is expected to take concerted efforts to bring every inch of land under cultivation to fill the huge gap between production and demand for paddy; 5 lakh tones and 45 lakhs tonnes respectively, it cannot even think of giving away 400 acres of wetland and paddy lands for an airport. Whether it is run by the Government or a private party is immaterial.

103)     The Government should immediately bring out a programme to restore  agriculture in the area along with fish culture and duck rearing.
104)     The local people are crying for such a start which would, in a sense, apart from all the economic returns, help restore the cultural legacy of the area.
105)     It would, certainly, not be a mean task to de-silt the Kozhithodu, restore the Valiayathodu, and removing the litre from the paddy lands to begin agriculture. Whatever may be the mighty task, the Government inevitably owes that to the farmers of that area, as they had discontinued farming for no fault of them, but solely of the Government.
106)     The Zion Educational Trust (Shri. Abraham Kalamannil) should be persuaded to use the paddy lands already bought by them for paddy cultivation.
107)     Under no circumstances shall exception be given for converting the paddy lands and wetlands under the Kerala State Paddy lands and Wetland Conservation Act, 2008. The provision for “exception for public purpose” will not be applicable here.
108)     In all practical purpose, the term “public” in the present context means national/ international passengers who are currently using the airport at Cochin or Trivandrum. The airport is used only for a handful of such selected class of people.  Will it then be correct to distinguish this as ‘public purpose’?
109)     On the other hand, although the wetlands and paddy fields are in private hands, they serve a huge public purpose by controlling floods, nourishing the ponds and wells and serve as breeding ground for a large number of commercially important fishes. This would undoubtedly serve more “public purpose”.
110)     In short, the airport is for a selected few, whereas the wetlands and paddy lands are for the public. The Government’s choice lies between the two.
111)     Since the wetlands are a common property, as they serve public purpose, no government can sacrifice the very common property for the benefit of a few.

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The team who made the study comprised Dr. Sujanapal (Botanist), Dr. C. P. Shaji (Fish Expert),           Dr. Lalitha Vijayan and Dr.  V. S. Vijayan (Ornithology and wetland ecology).
Acknowledgement
The discussions with the Agricultural Officers of Aranmula, Mallappuzhassery and, Assistant Director and Deputy Director of Agriculture covering these areas were quite useful. We are grateful to them.
We are grateful to Shri. Sreeranganathan, (Retd. Artist,  Rubber Board) and the native of Aranmula, who has been of great help to us during our various field trips and also help organise various group and individual discussions
Many farmers, including Shri. Uthaman shared their experience in farming which helped us to understand the system well.
My special thanks are due to Dr. T. V. Sajeev of Kerala Forest Research Institute for all the efforts he took to bring out the report in a presentable form.