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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Protests mount against Indian nuclear plant

Turks oppose government nuclear drive
Ankara (AFP) April 29, 2011 - Most Turks oppose their government's drive to develop nuclear power, with 64 percent saying the country is not ready for the technology, according to a poll published Friday.

The poll released in the Hurriyet newspaper also showed that fewer than seven percent of respondents believe nuclear power would be of benefit to the country.

The survey of 2,469 adults conducted by pollsters A&G in early April for ecology group Greenpeace also revealed that opposition to nuclear power stood at more than 70 percent in areas in northern and southern Turkey where the first two nuclear reactors are to be built.

The Islamic-based Turkish government has vowed to push ahead with its plan to build three reactors within five years despite renewed controversy over the technology following the recent nuclear disaster in Japan triggered in March by an earthquake and tsunami.

by Staff Writers
Sakhri Nate, India (AFP) April 29, 2011
In the busy Indian fishing village of Sakhri Nate, it's obvious what the locals think of the plan to build the world's biggest nuclear power plant just across the creek.

"Say No To Nuclear Power. We Don't Want To Get Sick," reads one slogan in Hindi on the side of a tarpaulin-covered shack selling sweet tea and sugary snacks.

Chalked on a wall around the corner is a message for the French company that has signed a $9.3-billion deal to supply the plant's first state-of-the-art pressurised water reactors.

"Areva Go Back," it says simply in English.

Opposition to the Jaitapur Nuclear Power Project runs deep in this part of the Konkan region of western India, whose people have earned a living from fishing and farming for generations.

As with many in the hard-to-reach coastal area 400 kilometres (250 miles) from Mumbai, 45-year-old fisherman Abdul Majid Goalkar's argument is well-rehearsed.

At least 5,000 people work on about 600 boats, bringing in 50 tonnes of fresh fish, prawns and squid every day, he says. If the plant is built, he warns, all those jobs are under threat.

"Once they put the (water) pipeline in, we won't be able to go out and fish," he added, gesturing out to sea. "Warm water from the plant will affect the fish stocks, there'll be pollution... It's completely out of the question."

Others want to protect the village's most famous export -- the creamy, Alphonso variety of mango known locally as "the king of fruits" -- grown on rocky, clifftop land earmarked for the 2,318-acre (938-hectare) plant.

"The main business here is fish and mangoes," said Mahesh Karankar, 32, who runs a shop in Jaitapur village. "If that disappears, what will we sell? How will we earn any money?"

Over the last four years, the grassroots campaign against Jaitapur has built up a steady momentum and become increasingly vocal.

But resistance has hardened since the Japanese earthquake and tsunami that crippled the Fukushima plant, forcing a rethink on nuclear safety around the world and calls in India for a halt to atomic expansion.

Pravin Gaonkar, a fisherman and mango farmer spearheading the anti-nuclear campaign, said the Japanese nuclear crisis was all the more relevant, as the Konkan coast is prone to regular seismic activity.

"Before the incident in Japan we were told how technologically advanced it was, how it was an earthquake-prone zone and yet they had nuclear plants. What's happened has completely changed the scenario," the 57-year-old added.

Another development is that the so-far largely peaceful anti-nuclear campaign has turned violent.

On Monday, the police opened fire on a crowd of protesters, killing one and injuring several others.

The victim, Tavrez Sejkar, was buried in the red earth of the steep hillside cemetery in mainly Muslim Sakhri Nate on Wednesday.

At his funeral, attended by thousands of local people still angry at what they say was heavy-handed police tactics, the local imam called him "shahid" -- a martyr to the cause.

Politics has been blamed for the change in atmosphere around the protests, with fingers pointed at the local hardline Hindu nationalist party the Shiv Sena, which has a lengthy track record of violence and agitation.

On Tuesday, tyres were burnt on the main Mumbai to Goa highway and stones thrown at buses, as Sena members tried to enforce a shut-down protest in the area.

The local Sena lawmaker in the Maharashtra state assembly was arrested on suspicion of rioting.

Comparisons have been drawn with Singur in West Bengal state, where Tata Motors abandoned its plans for a new factory to build its Nano car after violent protests from farmers backed by local political parties.

Fast-growing, energy-hungry India, which wants to increase the share of nuclear in its energy mix from three percent to 13 percent by 2030, could pay a high price if Areva followed Tata's example.

At full capacity, the six-reactor Jaitapur plant would provide 9,900 megawatts of electricity -- more than double the current energy deficit in all of Maharashtra, home to commercial capital Mumbai.

Supporters say it could provide power to a chunk of the 500 million homes across the country that are currently off the grid and is vital to India's economic progress.

India's environment minister Jairam Ramesh has angered opponents by insisting that the project will go ahead, even as he conceded that additional safety measures may be required because of Fukushima.

"India cannot afford to abandon the route of nuclear power," he said on April 18. "From a greenhouse gas point of view, nuclear power is the best option."

Professor Surendra Jondhale, head of political science at the University of Mumbai, doesn't think the project will be be abandoned, although a delay is likely while the government reviews safety.

Instead he sees it as classic Sena tactics: allying itself with native Maharashtrians who risk losing their traditional way of life and cherished land to "outsiders".

Others suggest the party's real aim is to discredit state industry minister Narayan Rane, a former Sena member who defected to the ruling Congress party and is one of the Jaitapur project's most prominent supporters.

"The Shiv Sena is trying to retain and regain its political stronghold in the Konkan," said Jondhale, who compared the situation to the party's opposition to a power plant backed by US energy giant Enron in the 1990s.

That helped bring the Sena to power in Maharashtra, although they ultimately supported the project.

"Local elections are coming up and next year there are municipal elections in Mumbai, where there is a strong connection to the Konkan. It helps them politically," added Jondhale.

"We are now seeing the real issue being very much politicised. It's overshadowed the real, genuine protests."

Back in Jaitapur, where a giant poster of Shiv Sena leader Bal Thackeray and local leaders has been put up on the main street, locals Mahesh Karankar and Chetan Narkar say the impact of the violence has already been felt.

Police have locked down the area, fearful of further unrest. As a result, three days' worth of fish is rotting in warehouses.

"Whether the Shiv Sena is with us or against us we don't care," said 23-year-old Narkar. "We don't need anyone to help us carry on our protest."

Another demonstration is planned for Sunday. Pravin Gaonkar says there will be no let up after that.

"If the government does nothing, at least 5,000 fishermen and farmers will go to Delhi and protest," he added.



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