Human Rights Commission to investigate Survival complaint

August 12, 2009

Survival banner outside Vedanta’s recent AGM in London. © Survival

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India's National Human Rights Commission has written to the Government of Orissa demanding a full report into its joint venture mining project with British mining giant Vedanta Resources, following a complaint submitted by Survival.

The complaint concerns Vedanta's plan to mine for bauxite in the Niyamgiri Hills, eastern Orissa. The mine site is sacred to the Dongria Kondh tribe, who have been protesting against the mine for many months.

Survival's complaint exposes the ways that the Dongria Kondh's human rights, including their religious freedoms, would be violated if their most sacred site is desecrated by the mine.

The future of the mining project has been thrown into doubt following statements from India's Minister for the Environment that, had current laws to protect tribal peoples’ rights in India been in place when Vedanta applied to mine the Dongrias’ mountain, ‘the chances are that this project would not have been cleared.’ Vedanta is majority-owned by Indian billionaire Anil Agarwal.

The minister stated that the project has not got full approval and that Vedanta would be prosecuted if they tried to start mining without full clearance. Although mining has not begun, Vedanta is trying to build access roads and conveyor belts, but strong resistance from the Dongria Kondh is stalling the company's progress.

Dongria Kondh
Tribe

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