Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Outrage against delay in pictorial warnings on tobacco products in India

In a detractive decision of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), Government of India (GOI), the implementation of new pictorial health warnings has been deferred to December 1, 2010 from the earlier commitment of introducing them from June 1, 2010. In March 2010, civil society organizations had joined hands to applaud the government's efforts in notifying effective pictorial warning of cancer-stricken mouth on packs of both smoking and smokeless tobacco. However, this delay in implementation of new pictorial warnings by the GOI is worrying civil society organizations, as in the past, this oscillating stand of the Government had led to further weakening and dilutions of warnings. Read more



Fifty-two organizations under the umbrella of the Advocacy Forum for Tobacco Control (AFTC) met in Mumbai from June 23-25 and deliberated on the delay in enforcement of pictorial health warnings on tobacco products. AFTC is a coalition of 63 pan Indian organizations working in the area of advocacy, awareness, promotion and research related to tobacco control in India. Its main goal is to advance policies for control of tobacco, which is a major public health threat that claims close to 1 million victims annually in India.

"In India the pictorial warnings that got implemented from 31 May 2009 were mild, weak and not field tested," said Professor (Dr) Rama Kant, Executive Director of Tobacco Cessation Clinic (TCC) at the Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj Medical University (CSMMU), and a World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General's Awardee (2005). "These pictorial warnings are to be rotated every year as per the Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products Act, 2003. As per an earlier GOI notification, the new pictorial health warnings that were to be implemented from 1 June 2010, were stronger and field-tested, however as a major setback to public health, these warnings have been further delayed till 1 December 2010" informs Prof Rama Kant.

Independent studies assessing the efficacy of pictorial warnings conducted by organizations like Healis-Sekhsaria Institute for Public Health and HRIDAY (Health Related Information Dissemination Amongst Youth) have proven that the existing warnings on the packs of tobacco products do not effectively communicate the lethal consequences of tobacco use. The new pictorial warnings notified to be implemented from June 2010 onwards were field tested for effectiveness by the Government before notifying them.

"This is another example of possible interference in public health policy by either tobacco industry, their allies or supporters of tobacco trade. Because the tobacco industry sells a product that kills one million people in India annually, therefore, industry's interests will always be in conflict with public health. It is high time that national tobacco control policies in India are congruent to what India is obligated to do by ratifying the international global tobacco treaty - WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC). India and other parties to WHO FCTC had adopted the strong guidelines for Article 5.3, to protect health policies from tobacco industry interference" said Bobby Ramakant, from the Indian Society Against Smoking, Asha Parivar, who also represents Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals (NATT).

There has been reported decline in tobacco use in developing countries such as Thailand (ITC project, Thailand), which has been attributed by smokers to effective pictorial warnings on tobacco packs. “Why would not the Indian Government feel the urgent need to implement effective pictorial health warnings to prevent the unnecessary deaths from tobacco use?” questioned the concerned AFTC members.

Also, the coalition collectively highlighted the importance of pictorial warnings in conveying the harmful health effects of tobacco to users, especially in rural areas and those unable to read and write.

During the AFTC conference in Mumbai, tobacco control professionals across India resolved to strongly counteract this Industry pressure and the continuous soft stand of the Government towards pictorial health warnings on tobacco products, and ensure no further delay and dilution of health warnings in India.

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Monday, June 28, 2010

Jha Commission begins inquiry into fake registries at Alirajpur

Justice Shravan Shankar Jha Commission of Inquiry constituted by the Madhya Pradesh (MP) High Court in August 2008 to enquire into the multi-crore scam of fake registries of Sardar Sarovar affected victims started its next phase of proceedings in Alirajpur today. The immensely corrupt nexus of authorities and touts has derailed implementation the rehabilitation of the Sardar Sarovar Project oustees and has denied the affected, their right to agricultural land. This large scale corruption in the whole process has led to a loss worth crores of rupees to the treasury of the Indian State. Read more



Responding to the PIL filed by Narmada Bachao Andolan, Madhya Pradesh High Court constituted a Commission under former High Court Judge, Justice Shravan Shankar Jha to investigate into the matter. The responsibility of the Commission is to enquire into the issue of fake registries and also to identify
the culprits behind the low quality of construction works at the R&R sites.

Today the Jha Commission began the process of listening and recording the statements of people, who were either buyers, sellers or witnesses in the land transactions for Rehabilitation of PAFs in Alirajpur Jila.

The Commission will take statements till 1st of July 2010. This Commission, which has been notified under the Commission of Enquiry Act has the power to issue summons or arrest warrants to any individual. The local authorities did not deliver to many people the information about the hearing issued by the Commission. Some of the affected were prevented from appearing before the Commission. These steps have been taken on the orders of the higher authorities who are completely involved in this scam. Vinay Kumar Dhoka (Deputy Collector) is himself an accused in the Fake Registries case. His involvement in the scam goes back to the time when he was the Land Acquisition Officer of Manavar in
the Sardar Sarovar Project. The Andolan condemns these efforts by the corrupt authorities to interfere with a free and fair enquiry process by the Commission.

From the statements of the people associated with the first two cases itself, heard by the Commission, it was clear that there has been fake registries. It was also clear from the cases that the Adivasi people are incapable of having done these fake registries by themselves, and are mere scapegoats in a corrupt
alliance between middlemen and the authorities. In one case, Surender, a dam affected person from Gram Dharamrai is supposed to have bought land from Shri Jabbar Singh of Gram Mehalgaon for Rs.50,000/- so as to be able to claim his rehabilitation from the Narmada Valley Development Authority. However, after a few days, he sold the same land for Rs15,000/- to the same Jabbar Singh from whom he had bought the land. In the same way, Shri Chamariya from Gram Kulwat first sold his land to SSP affected Bhaisiha for Rs.60,000/- only to buy it back from Chamariya for only Rs.25,000/-. These cases clearly expose the whole process of fake registration, forgery and corruption and is in clear violation of the Narmada Valley Development Authority guidelines, which does not allow for the land bought under the rehabilitation scheme to be sold within the next 5 years.

In another case, 5 acres land of Hira Thuniya from Gram Khandala had been sold to Shri Bhagirath S/o Manu from Village Perkhar (Manavar). This registration was declared authentic in the investigation of the Registrar of Alirazpur and SDO (R) and the land has been transferred to Bhagirath. Hira insists that he has never sold his land. He said – “Area Patwari Shri Deependra Bhulia by hankering with the signatures on the paper sold my land without my knowledge. I am now not eligible for claiming seeds and fertilizers as I do not have the land in my name.” In the registry, Hira’s age has been put as 33 years while he claims that his age is more than 60 years. In the registry, there is also someone else’s photo instead of him as seller. NVDA was unable to make a statement or clarification in any of the cases today.

The hearings shall continue before Justice Jha tomorrow as well. From the side of the Andolan, advocate Kamal Patidar and Anwar Javed were present, along with activists Medha Patkar, Kailash Awasya, Rehmat and others.

Bhagirath Kavche, Devangana Kalita

People's Tribunal led by Justice AP Shah calls for review of Narmada Projects

Tribunal expresses grave concern on severe non-compliance by authorities
A Panel of eminent citizens who came together as an Independent People's Tribunal (IPT) to assess the true scale and impacts of the large dam-projects in the natural-resource rich region of the Narmada Valley, delivered their verdict today on various aspects concerning the massive displacement, rehabilitation, environmental compliance and overall cost-benefits of the Sardar Sarovar and Jobat Projects as also the large canals of Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar. Read more

The Tribunal Report was jointly released today afternoon at Gandhi Bhavan by members; Hon’ble Justice (Retd.) A.P. Shah (Former Chief Justice of Delhi and Madras High Courts) and Shri Devinder Sharma (well-known Researcher and analyst on agriculture Policy issues), amidst the presence of members from the Secretariat, IPT, respectable citizens and activists of Bhopal, media persons and a large number of affected people from the Narmada valley. The Report is an outcome of extensive two-day visit and public hearing in the SSP as well as the canal-affected villages by Justice Shah, Devinder Sharma and Prof. Jaya Sagade, Vice Principal, Indian Law Society, Pune.

Reading out important extracts and recommendations from the Report, both Justice A.P. Shah and Dr. Sharma expressed their shock at the magnitude of planned displacement and unplanned development in the valley and the corresponding violation of law and history of non-compliance. On the basis of its extensive visit, in-depth analysis and assessment the situation, the Tribunal has concluded that “since there been serious non-compliance on the pari passu implementation of rehabilitation and environmental measures, we have appealed to the Prime Minister to constitute a High Level Committee of Ministers, officials, experts and representatives of the people’s movements etc. to undertake a comprehensive review of  all these projects and take a decision not to further fund or carry forward the project-work until this process of review is complete.

Said Justice Shah, “As we moved through the villages full of community life, with agriculture, in Pipri, Chikalda, Nisaprur, Pichhodi and the canal-affected villages such as Mandil and Pandhania, we were shocked to know that the Government states that all these villagers have been rehabilitated and there are ‘0’ families to be rehabilitated. We were appalled at the magnitude and impact of displacement on the communities that are entire dependent on natural resources and feel if there is no effective participation of the concerned people and proper prior planning of these Projects, they can never be implemented in a manner that will either accrue any benefits or do justice to the affected, he said.

Devinder Sharma expressed his shock at the insensitivity of a State that does not respond to the people’s peaceful struggles, be it in Narmada or in Bhopal, where even after 25 years people are still awaiting for justice, while the wrong-doers never face the law. We are deeply moved by the resilience and belief of the Narmada-displaced, particularly the already-affected adivasis in the constitutional scheme and democratic forms of conflict-resolution, and we hope that State, will respond to these people’s grievances in an expeditious and just manner”.

Rights of Sardar Sarovar, Canal affected and Jobat displaced must be ensured:

SSP has already reached the height of 122 mts in violation of the Narmada Tribunal Award, the judgments of the Supreme Court, the Rehabilitation policy and clearances. There cannot be even an inch of submergence without full rehabilitation of all the adivasis and farmers, said the Tribunal members.

Taking serious cognizance of the failure of the State to provide agricultural land to the oustees and the encashment of all rehabilitation entitlements, including land which has only led to crores of corruption and no rehabilitation, the Tribunal has called upon Madhya Pradesh to scrap the Special Rehabilitation Package and instead provide cultivable, irrigable land to all the adivasis and farmers, if necessary by purchasing the same and allotting it to the affected.

The Tribunal also noted the grave consequences of the unplanned canals of the Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar cutting right though the agricultural fields. Denying the canal-affected an equal right to land-based rehabilitation is a grave violation of the right to equal treatment of the oustees and we assert that they have to be provided full rehabilitation, with land.  “We are also deeply concerned at the ‘contractualization’ of the entire project works, particularly canal-work, imposition of the urgency clause and other illegalities. We hope the Government will stick to its own law, while planning and executing projects, said the Tribunal members.

The recommendations by Devender Pandey Committee, both on SSP and canals are clear and scientific that there can be no further work without complete plans that are approved by the concerned Ministry. As per the MoEF, the High Court and the Supreme Court, approval by the Committee is necessary for further canal work and a halt at this stage is only legal and necessary,

Responding to the serious legal and human rights violations of the Jobat-dam affected, the Tribunal re-asserted the right to land-based rehabilitation of all the Jobat - displaced, which is already guaranteed in the State Rehabilitation Policy and the clearances.

Eminent persons insist Government should implement Report recommendations
Speaking on the occasion, former Chief Secretary of Madhya Pradesh, Shri Sharad Chandra Behar, who has been closely observing the implementation of these large water-resource projects on the Narmada for more than two decades, said the findings of the Report raise very serious questions on the ability of the State to execute these projects in accordance with the legally-binding stipulations.

At least, now the State and Centre must realize that the genuine grievance of the people, reflected in the Report must be addressed with all seriousness. Also present was senior activist Shri Lajjashankar Hardenia who conveyed his solidarity with the fully lawful struggle of the people and called upon the
Government to, at least now, accept with humility that its lop-sided model of ‘development’ has deeply deprived and displaced the people, and it will have to address its wrongs by implementing the recommendations in the Report.

Others who were present on the occasion included Principal of the Makhanlal Chaturvedu University of Journalism and Mass Communication and various activists citizens of Bhopal.

Narmada Andolan welcomes Report: Calls for full rehabilitation
Welcoming the findings and recommendations by the Tribunal, Ms. Medha Patkar of Narmada Bachao Andolan stated that the Report re-affirms the seriousness of the issues that the people have been continuously been raising for all these years, with little response and concrete action from authorities, both at the Central and State level. The Report comes at a crucial time when intense political process to push the Dam to its final height and also complete the canal works are underway. We hope, at least now the State takes a rational and legal position to seriously re-consider pursing these projects, without fulfilling all their past obligations, as per law.

The adivasis, farmers, fish workers and landless of Narmada thanked the Panelists for making their voices heard through the Report and also expressed hope that their  findings and recommendations would strengthen their dialogue and struggle with the State agencies.

Significant Conclusions and Recommendations by the Tribunal:
* Governments must immediately purchase private land to rehabilitate all the oustees, particularly adivasis and farmers who have not accepted cash compensation or have been cheated in fake registries.

* Comprehensive survey of all affected families must be undertaken to ensure every project-affected, whether by dam or canal receives all rehabilitation entitlements.

* Surveys and all project-work must be carried out only in consultation with the Gram Sabha, no acquisition and construction can be carried out in violation of the PESA Act, i.e. without consulting the Gram Sabhas

* Decrying the manner in which the State is washing away its constitutional responsibility by doling out a few thousand rupees, the Tribunal recommended that all the potters, boats men, fish workers, landless should be ensured alternative livelihood.

* Monitoring Ministries and agencies like MoEF, Narmada Control Authority and Grievance Redressal Authority have seriously fallen behind in the necessary supervisory role and they must act strongly to ensure compliance with law and norms of the Projects.

Development without people:  Unacceptable and Unjustifiable
Addressing the press persons later, Justice Shah said, “Our visit, hearing and analysis of the situation in Narmada has indeed been an eye-opening experience and we now hope the factual and objective findings in this Report, as already reflected in many other official findings will open the eyes of the State to initiate immediate corrective action and ensure that law and justice is fully rendered to the people.

The human right to inclusive development is totally missing in the manner in which these projects are pushed, felt the Tribunal members.  “It is high time we undertake a DEVELOPMENT AUDIT of what are the true figures of ‘development’ are, said Mr. Sharma. The State should be answerable to its
people. In dam after dam, after the investment of crores and submergence of thousands of hectares of fertile land, there is no real benefits and then the impacts of water logging, destruction of forests and agriculture, displacement, cultural losses etc just go uncounted.

Next Steps:
The Tribunal members said, “We have based our Report on the wide-ranging international conventions and human rights standards and also constitutional and legal principles, which India is bound to follow and hope the Government will take it with all seriousness.  This Report shall be sent to the Prime Minister and all the concerned Ministries for taking appropriate action.  Every individual application, of the hundreds, that we have received during the Hearing will go to the Government, along with our Report and we look forward to the State’s speedy Redressal of all grievances. We have also appealed to the civil-society to engage in a more constructive manner in the development paradigm and continue to raise questions when the lives of so many lakhs of people and the nature are involved”.

The Tribunal was organized by the Independent People’s Tribunal on Environment and Human Rights, which is a national network of over 500 judges, lawyers, human rights activists and people’s organizations that undertakes periodic exercises of investigations by such independent tribunal of prominent citizens to investigate into cases of gross human rights and environmental violations of socio economically marginalized communities.


Adv. Mohsin                             Hariom

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) issues legal notice to MoEF on Narmada Canals issue

A legal notice was issued by the Narmada Bachao Andolan to the Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India, on the issue of continued land acquisition and excavation for the large canals of Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar, which is causing an irreversible damage to the best of agricultural land in the region. Read more

Despite the MoEF-appointed Expert Committee having given its categorical recommendation and Report that the canal work should not continue, since there are no final and approved command area development plans for the two projects, the MoEF has not yet taken a decision on same, despite being directed by the Supreme Court to do so.

"In this context, we appeal to you to write to the Ministry to take a logical and scientific decision, within the framework of law to sop the work, at least until the full command area plans area ready and approved and until comprehensive rehabilitation plans for all the affected families are in place. The Ministry must also take a decision on the issue of excluding the river-bank villages from the canal network to minimize displacement and save the best of land" said Medha Patkar, Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA).

TEXT of LEGAL NOTICE

Date: 17-06-2010

To,
Secretary,
Ministry of Environment and Forests
Paryavaran Bhavan, CGO Complex,
Lodhi Road, New Delhi

Sir,
I, the undersigned, on behalf of and under instructions from Medha Patkar, R/o Narmada Bachao Andolan, 62, Mahatma Gandhi Marg, Badwani, Madhya Pradesh – 451551 and Respondent No. 1 in SLP No. 34065/2009 pertaining to the Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar Canals (hereinafter referred to as my client) do hereby serve you the following legal notice:

1.      That, your Ministry is a party before the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in the aforementioned SLP pertaining to the canals of Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar and as the Secretary of the Ministry, you are well-conversant with the facts and proceedings of the entire case, legal issues involved therein and
the interim orders passed thus far.

2.      That the Hon’ble Supreme Court passed an interim Order on 25-02-2010, of which the relevant part reads as follows:

“In the above circumstances, excavation or construction of the Canal work and acquisition of land may go on for the time being; however, it would be subject to approval of the MoEF of the revised plans submitted on 16th October, 2009. The State would be at liberty to file further details regarding the Command Area Development Plans to   the    MoEF   and   if   such   details   regarding the Command   Area Development Plans are filed, the same may be referred to the Expert Committee for consideration. The Expert Committee to take a decision within a period of six weeks and as soon as the Report is available to MoEF, the MoEF to take decision within a further period of four weeks thereafter”.

3.      That it is clear from the above Order that:

(i)     The excavation or construction of canal work and acquisition of land was allowed to continue for the time being and was subject to the approval of MoEF;
(ii)    The MoEF was to take a decision within four weeks of submission of the Expert Committee’s Report. The said four weeks expired on  23.5.2010. After expiry of four weeks, it was incumbent     upon the MoEF to take a decision concerning excavation /construction of the Canal work and acquisition of the land. If there was any further delay (i.e. beyond 23.5.2010) in deciding on “approval” by the MoEF, the Canal excavation/construction work and land acquisition proceedings should have been stopped.

4.      You may kindly recall that the Dr. Devender Pandey Committee of Experts, to whom the task of scrutinizing the CAD Plans of GoMP was entrusted, both by the Hon’ble High Court of Madhya Pradesh by its final judgment dated 11-11-2009 (in W.P. No. 6056/2009) and again by the Hon’ble Supreme Court by way of its aforementioned interim order, duly submitted its Appraisal Report to the Secretary, MoEF i.e. yourself on 05-04-2010.

5.      That the Report of Dr. Pandey Committee titled ‘Appraisal of the Command Area Development (CAD) Plans of Omkareshwar and Indira Sagar Irrigation Projects in Madhya Pradesh’ categorically concluded that, for the reasons mentioned in its Report, the CAD Plans submitted by the GoMP for the Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar Canals are only an “Expression of Interest” and are not final and complete. To quote from the Committee’s conclusion:

“……The Committee does not consider the draft command area development plans for Omkareshwar and ISP, submitted to the MoEF by  MP in  October 2009, as adequate in terms of the conditions laid down as part of the environment clearance, and the subsequent stipulations by the MoEF and the NCA ESG. These plans detail only some of the engineering aspects of the command area development activity and the environmental safeguard measures essential for sustainable irrigation development has not been dealt with. Similarly the impact of construction of canal is not provided in the plan and therefore the committee could not assess the impacts of construction on environment such as loss of biodiversity, noise, water and air pollution etc. Therefore, these plans are incomplete and cannot be approved”.

6.      That despite such scientific findings and unambiguous conclusion, your Ministry did not take any early decisive action to save the prime agricultural land in the interest of the environment. Instead, you chose to provide a further period of four weeks time to the Madhya Pradesh Government to submit its comments on the Appraisal Report of the Pandey Committee (through your letter dated 23-04-2010).

7.      That, since the date of this Interim Order, acquisition and excavation of the fertile agricultural lands, which is mainly in the Sardar Sarovar and Maheshwar affected areas has been going on in the already irrigated river-bank villages causing irreversible damage to the agriculture and environment.
Adequate and approved CAD Plans, in terms of the MoEF’s and Planning Commission’s clearance and other stipulations are a pre-requisite for any canal work in order to optimize the stated benefits and mitigate permanent impacts such as water logging, salinization, degradation of the soil and loss of bio-diversity. You may also kindly note that the High Court of Madhya Pradesh has already stated that the canal-network must be reviewed so as exclude the already irrigated areas, minimize displacement and save best agricultural land and also the state exchequer. That is role your Ministry is expected and mandated to play under the Environment Protection Act, 1986.

8.      That the said time of four weeks provided by you to the GoMP has also expired on 23-05-2010. You may kindly note that the Interim Order of the Supreme Court dated 25-02-2010 clearly recognizes the role of the Environment Ministry and the Pandey Committee to appraise the Command Area Plans for the ongoing canal works as a pre-requisite and take a decision within the maximum stipulated period of 10 weeks, (six weeks and four weeks as mentioned in the Supreme Court Order dated 25-02-2010) purely on the basis of enviro-scientific considerations. In the light of the Pandey Committee’s well-reasoned Report, it is necessary, reasonable and justifiable that your Ministry immediately issues stop-work orders, halting the land acquisition and canal excavation, invoking your Ministry’s powers under Section 3 & 5 of the Environment Protection Act, 1986.

9.      That the environmental clearance issued by your Ministry to Omkareshwar Project casts a clear responsibility on you to ensure the time-bound and effective compliance with the environmental safeguard measures and even empowers you to revoke the clearance, if such time-bound planning and effective implementation is lacking. The clearance to the Indira Sagar Project by your Ministry also prominently mandates that the command area development studies and planning must necessarily be pari passu with the progress of work on the project.

10.     That this Legal Notice is a final reminder to your Ministry to take an immediate decision on the CAD Plans of GoMP based on the Pandey Committee’s appraisal, considering the various clearances, guidelines and stipulations issued by various authorities, including the Planning Commission and your own Ministry. That such action would be in compliance with the orders of the High Court, as well as the Supreme Court, both.

11.     That since land acquisition and canal excavation work has been progressing on a war-footing in the agro-rich black-cotton soil areas of the Nimad region and your Ministry alone shall be responsible and bear the consequence for any irreversible impacts on or damage to the agriculture, environment and livelihoods and such delay will also be in violation of the Order of the Hon’ble Supreme Court.

12.     You are therefore, requested to take an immediate decision/action in compliance with the Supreme Court Order dated 25-02-10 with regard to approval of the revised plans submitted on 16-10-09 with further details by the State of Madhya Pradesh. The decision, in the circumstances, ought to be taken within a period of one week. Meanwhile, the ongoing work of excavation/ construction of canals and acquisition of land should be stopped. My client has issued this legal notice after making all requests for immediate action and even through this legal notice my client is emphasizing on compliance of the Supreme Court Order and the law in order to avoid any action in the Court which my client will be constrained to take, if non-action at your end continues.

Yours sincerely

Medha Patkar

Friday, June 25, 2010

Think Health, Not Drugs

The International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, which falls on 26th June, is a grim reminder of the detrimental effects of drug abuse which is destroying lives, encouraging crimes and threatening economic development all over the world. The theme for this year's drug campaign is 'Think Health, Not Drugs,' with the aim to to sensitize the people in general and the youth in particular, to the harms of using drugs. Read more
In his message this year, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has rightly emphasized that "We must recognize the major impediment to development posed by drug abuse and illicit trafficking. Drug abuse poses significant health challenges. Injecting drug use is a leading cause of the spread of HIV. Cultivating illicit crops and producing drugs threaten the environment, taking drugs puts the health of users at risk, and the illicit drug trade undermines the rule of law. Drug-related crime deepens vulnerability to instability and poverty. To break this vicious circle, it is essential to promote development in drug-growing regions. Our work to achieve the MDGs and fight drugs must go hand-in-hand. In seeking to eradicate illicit crops, we must also work to wipe out poverty. On this International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, let us reaffirm our commitment to this shared responsibility within our communities, and among the family of nations.”

The picture is indeed grim if the world statistics on the drugs scenario is taken into account. It is slated to be the third largest business in the world, next to petroleum and arms trade. Today, there is no part of the world that is free from the curse of drug trafficking and drug addiction. Millions of drug addicts, all over the world, are leading miserable lives, between life and death. Drug abuse not only saps physical energy, it also plays havoc with the mental health of the abuser. Drug addiction has caused immense human distress and the illegal production and distribution of drugs have spawned crime and violence worldwide.Demand begets supply and vice versa, creating an unending vicious spiral cutting into our moral and social fabric with a frightening pace.

India too is caught in this scary web of drug abuse, and the numbers of drug addicts are increasing day by day. According to a UN report, one million heroin addicts are registered in India, and unofficially the number could be five times more. Cannabis products (like charas, bhang, ganja), heroin, and Indian-produced pharmaceutical products containing narcotic drugs (like intravenous injections of dextropropoxphene and codeine based cough syrups) are the most frequently abused drugs in India.
The menace has permeated to all sections of our society—rich and poor, urban and rural. It is not uncommon to find these addicts at traffic signals, wiping your car and asking for money in return, or simply begging on streets to pay for their daily dose. The scenario could be worse in the upper strata of society, where parents and spouses first struggle to accept the grim reality and then grope in the dark to find a solution.

In India we face another problem of overuse of pharmaceutical drugs/medicines. We seem to be having a penchant for 'popping up pills' at the slightest pretext, be they analgesics, antibiotics or the seemingly harmless vitamin pills. As most of these and other drugs (even some which are banned in other countries), are sold over the counter, there is rampant misuse of them, dictated by our whims and fancies. Even doctors advise to be cautious and refrain from eating medicines without medical consultation. It would be in the interest of our health if we consume healthy food, rather than resort to dietary supplements, which may cause more harm than good, or at the best have a placebo effect. Addiction to medicines can also play havoc with our health in the long run.

According to Ms. Aruna Joshi, a district prohibition officer of UP, ‘the disintegration of the old joint family system, absence of parental love and care in modern families where both parents are working, decline of old moral values are leading to a rise in the number of young drug addicts who take drugs to escape harsh realities of life.’ She feels that 'government intervention alone cannot control this menace, unless society itself stands up to say no to drugs. Doctors, parents and teachers need to collaborate and work together to prevent new entrants from entering this deathly trap, and also to wean away those who are already addicted.'

To support the demand for drugs, the nexus of farmers, global drug cartels and middlemen ‘sow the seeds’, leaving no stone unturned to perpetuate their nefarious trade. The drug racket needs to be busted, which is what the anti-drug campaigns are constantly striving to do – yet it is basically society and individuals who can help meet these objectives. Despite Asia being the region with the largest number of people using injecting drugs in the world, it has the lowest coverage/access of harm reduction services across the globe. The lack of affordable HIV and hepatitis C prevention, treatment, care and support services is largely driven by the stigma and discrimination associated with drug use.

People, who use drugs, are stigmatized, criminalized and abused everywhere, more so in Asia. It is important to “clean up” drug treatment and introduce evidence based services in consultation with persons who use drugs.. Most of the people with high risk behaviours in their lives have been craving for compassion and deprived of access to information and services as well. It is vital for counselors to establish a rapport with individuals before trying to redress their problems. Nothing is more therapeutic than a compassionate shoulder.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime exhorts and supports all nations to address drug use and drug addiction as any other health disorder: i.e. by implementing drug use prevention interventions and providing drug dependence treatment and care services, which are based on scientific evidence and on ethical standards.

According to Mrs. Jagjit Navadia, Narcotics Commissioner, “We, as a nation, need to make concerted efforts to reduce our vulnerability to drugs. There is a need to channelize the energies of the younger generation to engage in sports as well as focus to work on socially relevant causes, and rededicate ourselves to the cause and strive to build a drug free, healthier and safer India”.



Shobha Shukla
(The author is the CNS Editor, has worked earlier with State Planning Institute, UP, and teaches Physics at India's prestigious Loreto Convent. Email: shobha@citizen-news.org, website: www.citizen-news.org)

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Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Caregivers come with a cost

While community home based care is the preferred means of providing care for people living with HIV in many parts of Southern Africa, it comes with massive costs especially to caregivers in terms of time, effort and commitment, according to a study published recently in the Journal of the International AIDS Society. Read more

According to the study which focused on Botswana, providing caregivers with financial and material support is an urgently required public health imperative. The study revealed that providing caregivers of people living with HIV and AIDS with financial and material support will ensure that caregivers are not demoralized in rendering care services to their clients as well as attract more people into caregiving.

Though the Botswana government provides caregivers with financial support amounting to US15,26 this far lower than what caregivers spend to look after clients, says the study. Results from the study showed that the cost of providing care per client per month to caregivers was approximately US 184,17. Yet, in spite of this gigantic gap between what they obtain from government and what they expend, caregivers soldier to provide care to people living with HIV and AIDS, relying on their own meager resources.

“Providing incentives, such as mealie-meal and food baskets and loans for income-generating activities, and lending a sympathetic ear to their plight will help boost the morale of caregivers and attract others to caregiving,” states the report.

In Botswana, as in many southern African countries, community home based care (CHBC) has emerged as a critical vanguard in the provision of care to people living with HIV and AIDS but at a serious cost to the lives and livelihoods of caregivers, mainly poor and marginalized women and girls. The offloading of patients to the community in many parts of the region has been necessitated by public health systems facing a myriad of challenges, including limited financial and logistical support, ongoing brain drain, competing national priorities and diseases such as AIDS, TB and malaria.

“While CHBC may be seen as a cheap alternative mode of health care delivery, it is certainly not affordable for families and caregivers,” says the study. “It is important for government to consider how best costs of providing care can be shared between them and those who provide care.”

According to the study, the overall costs of increasing monthly allowances to caregivers and support provided for the families of clients would be quite low for the government of Botswana compared with the huge sum of money budgeted each year for healthcare and for HIV and AIDS.

Suffice to state, caregivers are largely invisible in the global AIDS infrastructure despite the fact that they are at the frontline of the response to the epidemic in many countries across the world. They have to make do with little to no resources, face poverty, and incur huge costs in the provision of care to clients. Often, they are also unable to adequately voice their needs, to seek redress against injustice and influence policies that ultimately will shape their lives.

The findings from the study in Botswana showed that caregivers are compelled to provide their clients with supplies, such as food and washing soap, transport them to hospitals or clinics to collect their drugs, and cover costs of caring for clients. According to the study, community home based care is not a cheap endeavour and the cost of caregiving has shifted from the government to families and caregivers, who now incur enormous expenditure in care giving activities.

There is no doubt that, in Botswana, as in many parts of sub Saharan Africa, an over-reliance on caregivers to support people living with HIV is not only unsustainable but also promotes poverty and inequality. For women and girls, the burden of caregiving constitutes an additional layer that promotes gender inequality.

In view of this, governments in the region need to put in place policy and legal frameworks as well as budgetary mechanisms that protect the lives and livelihoods of caregivers. International donors also need to seriously consider increasing the financial support targeted directly at caregivers.

Indeed, in Botswana, as in many parts of Southern Africa, the absence of financial incentives constitutes a serious drawback to the effectiveness of care programmes for people living with HIV and AIDS. It is critical for governments in the region to develop policy and legal frameworks as well as budgetary mechanisms that empower caregivers to properly cater for clients. International donors also need to seriously consider increasing the financial support targeted directly at making caregivers do their work better and not at the expense of their own lives.

Chief K Masimba Biriwasha
(The author, born in Zimbabwe, is a children's writer, poet, playwright, journalist, social activitist and publisher. He has extensively written on health, worked till recently with UNESCO in France and is presently in South Africa. His first published book, The Dream Of Stones, was awarded the Zimbabwe National Award for Outstanding Children's Book for 2004)

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Sunday, June 20, 2010

Time for pronouncement of award: People's Tribunal on Narmada

Pronouncement of Award on Sardar Sarovar, Indira Sagar, Omkareshwar and Jobat
You must be aware of the Sardar Sarovar Project embroiled in the controversy over last 25 years. The project has now reached a critical juncture with 2 lakh (200,000) people still in the submergence area while the authorities who are monitoring social and environmental measures have been reporting non-compliance. The cost and benefits are being questioned by various authorities and organizations, while the Planning Commission has recently given a revised investment clearance of Rs. 39,000 crores. Read more

The people in the Narmada Valley questioning the various aspects of the project were to be urgently heard and the ground level situation reviewed with various official and non official documents, since the political demand for raising the dam height to completion, erecting 17 mts. high gates is being made with enormous pursuance at the highest echelons. The canals of Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar that are being excavated in the Sardar Sarovar affected region have also been under scrutiny and become a matter of debate both in the court and outside.

It is in this context that the Independent People’s Tribunal brought together a panel of eminent persons led by Former Chief of Delhi High Court, Justice A.P. Shah, Shri. Devindra Sharma, prominent agriculture policy analyst and Prof. Jaya Sagade, Faculty at the Indian Law Society, Pune. The Panel visited the various villages in the dam and canal affected areas on 2nd June and heard hundreds of people in the presence of thousands of people in Badwani on 3rd June. A large number of documents and memoranda submitted and available to the panelists were used/ analyzed for further investigation.

The Award of this People’s Tribunal on Sardar Sarovar, ISP, OSP canals and another major dam Jobat will be pronounced and read out by Justice A.P. Shah and other panelists, in the presence of representatives of various organizations and eminent persons from Bhopal, including Shri. S.C. Behar (Former Chief Secretary, Madhya Pradesh), Shri. Bharat Chapparwal (former Vice chancellor Rani Durgavati University) and hri L.S Hardenia (National Secular Forum) on 24th June at Gandhi Bhavan, Bhopal.

Adv. Shubhra (Ph: 9009106297)
Adv.Colin Gonsalves
Adv. Mohsin Khan
Medha Patkar

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Saturday, June 19, 2010

CNS coverage from "Research and development of new TB vaccines" Symposium, Zaragoza, Spain

Babs Verblackt wrote on issues around the tuberculosis (TB) vaccines, on-site from the "Research and development of new TB vaccines" Symposium, Zaragoza, Spain (3-4 June 2010). Babs is freelance journalist, a Fellow of CNS Writers' Bureau and Associate Communications at TuBerculosis Vaccine InitiativeTBVI). Read more



These CNS articles were published in a diverse range of media outlets of many countries including: India, Pakistan, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Brunei Darussalam, Ghana, United Arab Emirates (UAE), USA, New Zealand, Bangladesh, South Korea, among others. CNS also used social media extensively to disseminate articles through Twitter (3000+), Facebook (2600+), younews, reddit, Google Buzz, Digg, newstrust, HealthDev.net, AIDSspace, nowpublic and others. These articles were also disseminated via electronic discussion forums on specific issues like SEA-AIDS, Stop-TB, Lung Health, to name a few. Synopsis of these articles was translated in Thai language and broadcasted through FM 102.5 in Thailand.

Three CNS articles written by Babs Verblackt, from the "Research and development of new TB vaccines" Symposium, Zaragoza, Spain, are as follows:

Thanks

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Mumbai slum dwellers gherao MPCC President: Struggle continues

As the indefinite Satyagraha of thousands of Mumbai’s anguished, albeit resilient poor completed one whole week today, a group of slum dwellers from Anna Bhau Sathe Nagar gheraoed Shri. Kripa Shankar Singh, President of the Mumbai Congress Committee at Kurla, where he had come to inspect the progress of Mithi River cleaning. The slum dwellers challenged the indefensible silence of the Congress Party over the gross violation of their legal and human rights. Read more

When Mr. Singh was questioned as to why, till date, none of the representatives of the Congress Party had visited the slum area, he assured that he would personally visit the demolition site tomorrow. Tougher questions await Mr. Singh tomorrow from all the people.

Expressing solidarity with the struggle, Ulka Mahajan from Anti-SEZ Movement, Raigad visited the dharna site today and lamented the fact that farmers and labourers from villages are being displaced and forced to migrate to urban areas, where they are being further bulldozed and evicted. It is in this context a moot question arises as to “Where should these lakhs of working class people, who contribute to the nation’s progress go?”

It is notable that Member of Parliament, Shri. Sanjay Dina Patil, again visited the dharna site today and reiterated his support to the demand and struggle of slum dwellers. The Andolan has also received support from Major General (Retd.) Shri S.G. Vombatkere (NAPM-Karnataka) who wrote strong letters to the Prime Minister, Sonia Gandhi and the Chief Minister asserting that human rights and social justice must always be a non-negotiable part of the political processes of governance. Vombatkereji’s statement that that ‘the timing is especially cruel and devilish because it is the height of the summer and these people, especially children and the aged, are out in the open, while we watch cricket matches on TV in our comfortable homes”, should make ‘Urban India’ think and re-think on how much it contributes to the plight of the toiling masses and how honestly it stands by the poor when in such times of distress.

Branding the ruthless demolition and burning of the hutments in Sathenagar as “assault on the Constitution and human life”, veteran lawyer and human rights activist from Dhule Shri Nirmalkumar Suryavanshi assert that ‘every citizen has right to stay on 'Indian Soil’ and no government or political party can date violate this right. Senior labour and women’s rights activist D. Gabriele from Tamil Nadu also conveyed the message of solidarity from the thousands of slum-dwellers in Chennai whose are facing the brunt of evictions as their Mumbai counter-parts in the name of ‘urban renewal’, but are also
posing a major challenge to the State through their organized strength. News has also come that a solidarity dharna, morcha and public meeting was organized in the cities of Pune and Aurangabad today, support of the slum dwellers.

Shramdaan began at Sathenagar today with all the people coming together in a spirit of camaraderie to re-build their ravaged houses. For the last 3 days, medical services are being provided by the medical staff of Apnalaya and Tath organisations. Further, the issue to loss of educational material of the school
going children is also being taken up by the Andolan.

Siraj Ahmed, Sumit Wajale, Sushila Patel, Medha Patkar

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Narmada Ghati salutes Ashishbhai's life-long struggle for displaced


साथी तेरे सपनों को, मंजिल तक पहुंचाएंगे
We, the adivasis, farmers, fish workers, potters, labourers, women, men, and children from the Narmada valley and the activists of Narmada Bachao Andolan are deeply shocked and shattered by the sudden and most undeserving demise of our dear colleague Shri Ashish Mandloi at his ancestral village Chhota Barda in Badwani district due to a cardiac arrest. Read more



Lovingly called by all the villagers as Ashishbhai and by his family members as Babloo, Ashish has immortalized the spirit of a true activist by literally living the slogan Sangharsh hee jeevan hai, until the last moment of his breath. His mortal remains were consigned to flames today afternoon, in the presence of hundreds of the displaced from the plains and hills of Narmada and activist-supporters from Badwani, Dhadgaon, Bangalore, Pune, New Delhi, Indore, Bhopal, Khandwa amidst slogans of “Shaheed Ashishbhai Amar rahe,“ and Jab Taka Suraj-Chaand rahegaa – Ashish tera naam rahega”.

Born and raised in a farmer’s family in the fertile plains of Nimad, after education and graduation, Ashish spent the early years of his youth volunteering for the Andolan, when the struggle against the gigantic Sardar Sarovar Project was at its peak and later contributed his time and energy; full-time to NBA as a key activist in the Nimad and Pahad (hilly adivasis areas). Virtually every family in the affected villages knew him by name and he won over people’s hearts by his unique way of relating to people’s every day issues and problems. His innate sensitivity, coupled with his extensive networking with the villagers and passion to go into the depth of every single issue at hand – be it exposing the inaccuracies in government surveys and data or unearthing crores of corruption in the rehabilitation of the project affected families, through fake registries or bogus claims of alternative rehabilitation made him challenge many illegalities and injustices.

His investigative efforts, with the help of other farmer-activists, has saved thousands of dam-affected families from being misguided and cheated by the nexus of corrupt officials and their agents. He continued his struggle despite having to face threats from the corrupt agents and touts. It was due to his relentless investigative campaign, that the massive public interest case against corruption could be filed and argued for two-full years before the High
Court of Madhya Pradesh and a Judicial Commission of Inquiry under (Retd) Justice S.S. Jha instituted to inquire into the various aspects of corruption and illegalities. His team of farmers was also awarded the NDTV-PCRF National RTI Award for using the RTI as a weapon to expose corruption. He struggled continuously to keep the Commission working and even in the past few weeks camped in Indore to over-see the entire evidence-recording process.  

Ashishbhai also played a prominent and leading role in the recent fortnight-long Jeevan Adhikar Yatra of the thousands of Sardar Sarovar and Jobat oustees, through which, the people issued an ultimatum to the Narmada valley authorities to ensure land-based rehabilitation to the oustees.

Having risen from a context of learning in rural areas and then proceeding to attain the best quality of his work over years with extra-ordinary selflessness, commitment and perseverance, Ashish is and will be an inspiration to thousands of youth across the nation. We deeply thank all of you for standing by us in this monumental moment of crisis, by attending his last rites from far and wide, sending messages of strength and condolence and by spreading the word of his demise and his valiant crusade against corruption in the rehabilitation process of the Narmada dam oustees.

Over the past one year, Ashish was also fully involved in the construction of NBA’s own office - which is being built fully on Jan Sahyog – with wood from the adivasis, bricks from the potters, land received in donation. We plan to dedicate the new office of the Narmada Bachao Andolan to his memory and struggle….

Ashishbhai, you are for us a dear brother and an indomitable fellow-traveler in our collective struggle for equity and justice. We shall continue in the path of struggle that you have tread all your life …

Medha Patkar on behalf of all villagers and activists of Narmada

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Spare The Ruler But Do Not Spoil The Child

The nation is abuzz with the news of Rouvanjit Rawla, a class VIII student of Kolkata’s prestigious La Martiniere School for boys, who hanged himself four months ago, reportedly unable to bear the humiliation after he was caned by his school principal Sunirmal Chakroborty, and allegedly by some other teachers as well. What was his crime? Read more

His class mates said that he was naughty and did not do his home work on time. Perhaps due to the alert of the media, the police complaint of the boy’s father, lodged after an interminably long 4 months period, did not rot in a forgotten file. The school principal has confessed to ‘caning’ the boy and has no regrets about the incident which, perhaps according to him was merely a part of the character building process of the students. Surprisingly no teacher from the school had thought it necessary to alert the parents about their son’s indiscipline—it seemed easier to thrash the boy. Also, more surprisingly, the boy thought it better to end his life rather than take, at least, his parents in confidence.

The problem is symptomatic of an archaic mindset within the education system that sees physical abuse as a means to discipline students. In reality it promotes a culture of violence. Such incidences, despite a decade old Supreme Court ban on corporal punishment, keep on surfacing in the media at regular intervals. We read them and forget them. But this time the eyebrows of the highbrows have been raised, as the victim and the perpetrator, both belong to the upper crust of society. Till now we felt smug in our gilded cages, thinking that such aberrant acts can only happen to ‘them’ and not ‘us’—them being students of low/middle income backgrounds, studying in government/ run of the mill/village schools, managed by dissatisfied / sadistic and lowly paid teachers. But now a premier college of a so called cultured city, manned by the ‘creme a la creme’ of teachers, is in the docks for an unpardonable misdemeanour. It has forced the bhadralok (civilized people) to wake up from their hallucinating stupor and look at the grime under their expensive carpets.

While school teachers cannot absolve them from such heinous crimes, parents are to be blamed equally. I still find it hard to believe that not only the ritual of caning persists in temples of learning, but also that there seems to a complete breakdown of parent-children relationships. That teenagers find suicide an easier option than confiding in their parents, is a telling commentary on the present times where we parents want to showcase our offspring as shining trophies and not as fallible human beings. The family is as much to blame as the school.

Shobha De in her column in The Times Of India ( 14 June 2010) while rightly condemning this barbaric act, talks of her own school days in a Scottish missionary school where ‘rebellious and disobedient’ children like her were frequently caned. But she thought it wiser to hide the swollen, angry red welts on her upper arms from her parents and said not a word about the frequent torture. It is now, and that is too late already, (and she is honest enough to admit it) that she has come out in the open with this ‘dreadful part of her youth’—to retell and relive those hellish minutes when “I’d be summoned to the principal’s office after standing on the yellow bench for hours, often without food and water.”

I was luckier, perhaps, having studied under Irish nuns at Loreto Convent, Lucknow. I have very fond memories of my school days during the 60’s. Corporal punishment was not banned by law and we did get the occasional rap on the knuckles by some teachers, (but never from the nuns) and we took it all in our stride. There was no question of complaining at home, as that would have elicited tighter slaps from our parents, for daring to complain about our ‘guru’. Caning was quite commonplace in boys’ schools. I remember my younger brother regaling us with the novel methods of his peers for reducing the ferocity of the lash (which was ceremoniously given on their buttocks) – one of them being padding themselves with towels. All this was taken in good spirit as a necessary part of character building. We never questioned the morality of it all, because perhaps, we were brought up that way. And also because never ever was a life at stake. Suicides were not fashionable, as they seem to have become now. We were fed a heady mixture of strictness tempered with pure undiluted love in those days. But then times change and God fulfils Himself in other ways. We have gifted our children with ‘psychological stress’ and academic pressures’ bringing their tolerance levels to naught. I fondly remember my Physics teacher, Mr Zutshi (God rest his soul in peace), who was an excellent teacher and a very hard task master. His scoldings hit us more than any ruler or cane. But none of us nurtured any grievance against him. He loved us and shouted at us. But we knew that he corrected us because he cared for us. I came to know later that he resigned from his post during the late 70’s, as parents started complaining about him causing mental anguish to their daughters. Whatever little knowledge of Physics I have today (as well as moral values) I unashamedly owe them to the likes of Mr Zutshi.

Times change and so do perceptions. Corporal punishment has been rightly banned in schools. But the fragile tolerance level of our kids and elders needs a serious make over. We elders are robbing the children of a carefree and innocent childhood. Parental pressure, which starts rather too early in life (around age 2 years of the child) is the real killer. We are worse than tyrants, wanting our children to excel in all spheres, to keep one up in society. The result of this mindless upbringing, where winning competitions and earning prizes is the sole purpose of life, is breeding an uncaring, aggressive and senseless population of brats, irrespective of their economic status. Deep in their heart they do not believe that they can overcome their loneliness and craving for love/friendship without any strings attached to it. Their rudderless existence is making them not only ready to kill their peers (there are far too many newspaper reports of school children firing at each other), but also unmindful of taking their own lives. Ragging, instead of breaking barriers between seniors and the newcomers, has taken the vicious form of physical and mental torture. And we are happy to be mute spectators, as long as our child is not a victim—and then it is too late anyway.

It is easy to blame the system. But all of us are inadvertently nurturing a system which is indifferent and callous towards others. Love and compassion have been bartered with money and power. The reality shows on television are furthering this deterioration. We not only want instant coffee, but instant fame, name and money. Nobody has the time to brew humane qualities. Life is no longer sacred or precious—wealth and unbridled power is. Teachers and parents are equally to be blamed for this sorry state of affairs. The former are now considered to be merely paid employees, whose wages come from the pockets of the latter.

If only death can stir our consciousness, so be it. Let more people of the likes of Shobha De come out of their closets to form self help groups that stand up against corporal punishment, mental/physical ragging, cheating in examinations, disrespect for the law, and other underhand dealings. Let us stop treating our children as mere tools for enhancing our status in society. It is alright to spare the ruler, but do not spoil the child with excessive mollycoddling or with excessive strictness. Let us rear caring, loving and tolerant children, who are mindful not only of their rights, but their duties as well. Parents and teachers will have to temper love with firmness to become role models for this generation which seems to have lost its way.


Shobha Shukla
(The author is the CNS Editor, has worked earlier with State Planning Institute, UP, and teaches Physics at India's prestigious Loreto Convent. Email: shobha@citizen-news.org, website: www.citizen-news.org)

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