Saturday, July 29, 2006

The genesis of the dam

I should not go away without telling you of the genesis of Tipaimukh dam as seen from Imphal.

It must be 7/8 years ago. There was a 2-day open discussion on Tipaimukh in Manipur University. To my mind, it was the first organized selling of Tipaimukh dam to the general public of Manipur. It was bankrolled by Brahmaputra Board. It was efficiently organized with all the paperworks, backgrounders and the actual technical feasibility reports etc duly made available to all the people who happened to come to attend the discussion. It was also a well attended discussion session.

Only during those two days I came to have an inkling of the structure of the Government of India for organizing electrical resources. At the top is CEC ie, Central Electricity Commission, a statutory entity created by an act of Parliament. For the North East there is this Brahmaputra Board, also an entity created by an act of parliament. The Board seems to be created for keeping a focus on the electrical resources for the NE and it reports to CEC.

A team of high level officials from the Brahmaputra Board was in attendance. They had seen with their own eyes how there was no taker for the proposed dam at Tipaimukh. The handful of attendees who had spoken in favor of the dam were the Kuki-chin-mizo people of around Tipaimukh, who were going so because they were going to get largesse from the Board as the compensation of lands likely to be acquired for the dam.

There were no takers for the dam.

We thought that the dam was as good as dead from the perspectives of the people of Manipur because there was such an overwhelming opposition to it.

It was only after several years down the line that reports on newspapers surfaced stating that NEEPCO was lobbying hard the MLAs and ministers for finalizing a MOU for the construction of the dam. There were protests against the proposed MOU. The government said that they were shelving the process that lead to the signing of the MOU.

NEEPCO is another of those entity created by an act of parliament but unlike the Brahmaputra Board, they are mandated to carry out the commercial facet for mobilizing electrical resources from the NE.

After some months they signed the MOU on the sly and came to the press saying they had done that for the future of the State!

There were only sporadic protests.

It was only some ago when those disparate protesting groups could coalesce into a State-wide apex body. The move was spearheaded by the people from Tamenglong district because they will be heaviest losers if the dam is constructed.

They are facing the prospect of losing all their heritage sites under the water of the dam. Inside Tamenglong district the water level of the
lake formed by the proposed dam would rise so high that a substantial portions of the present NH 53 would be inundated. NEEPCO proposed to lay brand new highway on the higher reaches of the Tamenglong hills!

Needless to say, the water from the proposed dam will inundate parts of Noney which is barely 45 kms from Imphal.

The proposed dam is a disaster not only for Tamenglong district but also of the whole of Manipur. A real DISASTER in the making.

1 comment:

echaandam said...

I tried.

But can't find out where you are blogging from.

Hey, I'm back to reading your blog.