|
—more than 80%
of India’s nuclear and missile infrastructure
based in the insurgency-hit areas or extremists’
dominated region
By Makhdoom
Babar in Islamabad & Christina Palmer
in New Delhi
While
the western media and the western governments
keep shouting about vulnerability of Pakistan’s
nuclear arsenal and keep expressing
the fears that these are likely to fall
in the hands of extremists like Taliban,
they have kept their eyes wide shut regarding
the state of affairs of the nuclear weapons
and nuclear capable missiles of neighbouring
India where the situation is highly alarming,
reveal the findings of The Daily Mail’s
investigations into the matter.
According to The Daily Mail’s investigations,
the Indian government, in bid to keep
it maximum possible away from the striking
capabilities of Pakistan that lies across
India’s northern borders, decades back
decided to install all its nuclear and
missile facilities in the Eastern zone
of the country. However, with the passage
of time, the eastern region of India emerged
as the most disturbed, fragile and ungovernable
region of the country with a variety of
insurgency movements including that of
Naxal rebels, emerging in that very part
of the country.
According to a map, graphed by India’s
own security agencies, the eastern region
and some other parts of the country have
been declared as “ The Red Corridor” of
India due to being unstable,ungovernable
and being highly fragile, security wise.
According this “Red Corridor” map, there
are some 51 districts that are very badly
hit by the rebels while the total number
of rebel struck districts remains around
164, ranging from Dehradhun to Kerala.
The Daily Mail’s investigations indicate
that most of India’s top nuclear and missile
facilities are located in the extremely
Nexal terrorists struck districts of India,
located deep down in the “Red Corridor”.
According to The Daily Mail’s investigations,
in the direction of Indian nuclear facilities,
Uranium processing plant by the name of
Uranium Corporation Of India Limited (UCIL)
is located in adversely insurgency and
terror struck region of Jharkhand where
Nexal guerrillas are dominating and are
on the rampage, Talcher Heavy Water Plant
again in the same area, Institute of Physics(IOP)
again in the same area while Atomic Minerals
Directorate for Exploration and Research(AMD),
Ceramatic Fuel Fabrication Facility(CFFF),
Electronics Corporation of India Limited(ECIL),
Mishra Dhalu Nigam Limited(MIDHANI), National
Centre for Compositional Characterization
of Materials(NCCCM), New Zirconium Sponge
Plant(New ZSP), Nuclear Fuel Complex(NFC),
Special Materials Plant, Uranium Fuel
Assembly Plant and Zirconium Fabrication
Plant, Seha Institute of Nuclear Physics
and Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre(VECC)
are located in the most Nexal warriors
hit areas of Orissa, Andhra Pradesh and
West Bengal. Similarly, Fast Breeder Test
Reactor(FBTR), Fast Reactor Fuel Reprocessing
Plant (FRFRP) General Services Organization(GSO),
Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research(IGCAR),
Kalpakkam Atomic Reprocessing Plant(KARP),
Kamini Research Reactor, Madres Atomic
Power Station (MAPS), Prototype Fast Breeder
Reactor(PFBR), Manuguru Heavy Water Plant,
Institute of Mathematical Sciences(MSc),
Southern Petrochemical Industries Corporation
Limited(SPIC), Tuticorin Heavy Water Plant,
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited(BHEL),
HMT Machine Tools Limited(HMT-MTL), Indian
Institutes of Sciences(IISc) and Super
Computer Education and Research Centre(SERC)
are located in the areas, Indian government
has included in the most disturbed Red
Corridor while Apsra Research Reactor,
Bhabha Atomic Research Centre(BARC), Boron
Enrichment Plant(BEP), Central Workshops,
Plutonium Reprocessing Plant, Purnima
1,II & III Research Reactors, Uranium
Conversion Plant, Uranium Enrichment Plant,
CIRUS Research Reactor, Dhruva Research
Reactor, Hazira heavy Water Plant, Larson
and Toubro, Hazira Water Works, Advanced
Fuel Fabrication Facility(AFFF), Tarapur
Atomic Power Station(TAPS), Power Reactor
Fuel Reprocessing Plant(PREFRE), Beryllium
Matching Facility(BMF), Construction Service
and Estate Management Group(CSEMG), Directorate
of Purchase and Stores(DPS), Heavy Water
Board, Tata Institute of Fundamental search(TIFR),
Rshtrya Chemicals & Fertilizers (RCF),
Thal-Vaishet Heavy Water Plant, Centre
for Development of Advanced Computing(C-DAC),
Kiroskar Brothers Limited and Walchandnagar
Industries Limited(WIL) are located in
State of Maharashtra, which, though, is
not included in the Red Corridor map of
India, yet the whole world knows that
Maharashtra is the hub of Extremist Hindu
Militant Groups where Hindutva Brotherhood,
Shiv Sena, Bajrang Dal, Durga Vahini and
Sangh Parivar like terrorist organizations
are on the rampage for past many years,
without any check from authorities and
all these Hindu militant organizations
are very well known for their extreme
anti-Pakistan policies and are full capable
of getting hold of any of the Indian nuclear
facility that exists in their respective
state and region.
The Daily Mail’s investigations further
indicate that like the nuclear facilities,
India’s maximum missile facilities are
also situated in either the Red Corridor
or in the areas, dominated by Hindu extremist
and militant organizations. These Investigations
reveal that out of India’s Missile facilities,
Defence Electronics Applications Laboratories
(DEAL), Metallurgical & Engineering
Consultants Limited, Interim Test Range
(ITR), Bharat Dynamics Limited(BDL), Defence
Research and Development Laboratory(DRDL),
Research Centre Imarat(RCI), Defence Metallurgical
Research Laboratory(DMRL), Defence Electronics
Research Laboratory(DERL), Mishra Dhatu
Nigam Limited(MIDHANI), Electronics Corporation
of India Limited (ECIL), SKM Tools Private
Limited, Pantex Gee Bee Fluid Power Limited,
Sriharikota High Altitude Range(SHAR),
Combat Vehicle Research & Development
Establishment(CVRDE), The KCP Limited,
Microwave Tube Research & Development
Centre(MTRDC), Electronics and Radar Development
Establishment(LRDE), Gas Turbine Research
Establishment(GTRE), Aeronautical Development
Establishment (ADE), Bharat Electronic
Limited(BEL), Bharat Earth Movers Limited
(BEML) and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited(HAL),
all are situated in the highly disturbed
Red Corridor while Terminal Ballistic
Research Laboratory(TBRL) and Semi Conductor
Complex Limited (SCL) are located in Chandigarh
where Six separatists are running the
insurgency movement under the banners
of Babbar Khalsa group and Storage Site
for Pirthvi-1 Ballistic Missile is located
in disputed territory of Jammu where Muslim
separatists are engaging Indian Army and
Air Force for the past many years.
The Daily Mail’s investigations further
disclose that around 90% of the Red Corridor
areas are just a No Go Zone for the Indian
troops and Air Force. In these areas there
is no writ of the Indian government nor
there is any proper implementation of
State laws of India. The nexal rebels
are enjoying full control and keep striking
at will. Just recently they killed over
a dozen officials of Police and even shot
down a chopper of Indian Air Force (IAF).
It is also evident from the record of
IAF that IAF has now started having commandos,
airborne on all IAF chopper sorties in
the Red Corridor to protect the choppers
from a possible Nexal attack. Similarly
the police officials have also advised
the politicians and other VIPs to avoid
flying over the Red Corridor in chopper
and also not to travel in these areas
without appropriate security arrangements.
The Daily Mail’s investigations indicate
that even a couple of days back, the Nexal
rebels set ablaze three trucks and damaged
a bridge in Jharkhand as they began their
two-day Jharkhand-Bihar shutdown to protest
against the Centre's alleged effort to
put down the CPI(Maoists) movement by
force.
The Naxals also bombed railway tracks
between Bokaro thermal-Jarandi station.
About 12 armed Maoists set fire to three
trucks at around !AM in Giridih's Isri
area and cut down trees to block traffic
on the Dumri-Giridih road, Giridih Superintendent
of police Ravi Kant Dhan told The Daily
Mail.
They also partially damaged a road bridge,
which connects Dumri to the Grand Trunk
Road, using explosives, the police officer
said, adding gunshots were also heard
in the area. Maoists also pasted posters
in Giridih's Parasnath area despite verytight
security arrangements.
To gauge the capabilities of Indian government
to safeguard its nuclear and missile arsenal
and research and development facilities
as well as production infrastructure,
The Daily Mail constituted a team of freelance
reporters and photographers, based in
different parts of India and embarked
them on the investigative mission under
the command of our Delhi Bureau Chief
Christina Palmer. The team was given the
test task of exploring the state of affairs
at Jharkand which is considered to be
hub of India’s nuclear energy programme.
See what we discovered.
EAST Singhbhum district in Jharkhand,
bordering West Bengal and Orissa, is the
capital of India’s nuclear energy programme.
It is rich in uranium that is mined by
the Uranium Corporation of India Limited
(UCIL) and converted later into nuclear
fuel for the reactors. East Singhbhum
is also rich in Naxalites who are active
in the area and well aware of the mines
that produce uranium. Little to no security
separates the uranium ore or the processed
yellowcake from the Naxalites, who are
currently extending their control, with
the local administration officials admitting
that it is just a matter of time before
they strike the mines.
According to Superintendent of police
Navin Kumar Singh, “This district is on
the list of Naxalite-affected areas. They
are making full efforts to gain control
over the Jadugoda region. They already
have a very strong presence in the adjoining
areas of Potka, Dumaria, Dalbhumgarh and
Ghatshila.”
The raw uranium from the mines is processed
by the UCIL in Jadugoda, a small town
located at a distance of 30 km from district
headquarters Jamshedpur. This entire region
is India’s only source of natural uranium
to feed the country’s heavy-water nuclear
reactors. According to local officials,
of India’s annual requirement of 300 tonnes
of yellowcake, at present, UCIL in East
Singhbhum produces 220 tonnes. Massive
expansion is underway in the area to increase
the production to the required 300 tonnes.
East Singhbhum has seven uranium mines
and two processing mills that function
under the UCIL. The UCIL campus serves
as the headquarters for the mines, and
itself has a processing unit and the oldest
mines in the region. The Bhatin and Narwapahar
mines are 2 km and 10 km respectively
from Jadugoda. Turamdih, which has a mine
as well as a processing mill, is 20 km
from Jadugoda. The Mohuldih and Banduhurang
mines are 5 km away from Turamdih. Bagjata
is around 30 km from Jadugoda.
In the words of India’s widely circulated
fortnightly magazine The Covert’s correspondent
Appu Esthose Suresh “This correspondent
travelled on the same route used to ferry
uranium ore from the mines to the processing
plants in Jadugoda and Turamdih. The absence
of policemen along the entire route was
striking. There was not a single police
picket or post. In Jharia, on the way
from Narwapahar to Jadugoda, a large warehouse
that is used to store explosives had no
guard worth the name. This so-called restricted
area located on a small hilltop and surrounded
by mountains and dense forests, is guarded
by just four policemen in two bunkers.
The sole watchtower at the warehouse did
not have a single guard on duty. This
scribe visited the sport several times
on different days, but the watchtower
remained vacant, always. This road is
routinely used by the trucks that transport
uranium ore mined at Narwapahar and Bhatin
to the UCIL mill at Jadugoda, and is therefore
a vital link to the mines”.
Appu further writes that On 1 August,
2009, Jadugoda was preparing itself for
a strike called by the Naxalites. News
came in of heavy gunfire and the torching
of a few trucks near Jamshedpur. A policeman
at the Jadugoda police station said, on
condition of anonymity, “Naxalism was
always a problem in the district. But
they have never succeeded in gaining ground
near this town. But things have changed:
the panic that you see among the people
is a case in point. We all know that if
they want to put up a bloody show they
can. They are cowards, they hit and run
into the mountains, but blood spills nevertheless.”
IT TAKES a 30 km bone-rattling drive to
reach Bagjata mine from Jadugoda. The
narrow and dusty road running through
a hill-locked valley is marked with potholes
and numerous bends. Bagjata is less than
10 km from Dumaria by road, and surrounded
by mountain ranges that are reportedly
under Naxalite control. SP Navin Kumar
Singh said, “Last year, we busted a Naxalite
central office in Dumaria, Eight of them
were killed and a large quantity of arms,
including AK-47s, and ammunition were
recovered.” Bagjata is under the jurisdiction
of the Mosabani police station, and as
Ramesh Kumar Singh, who is in charge of
the police station, pointed out, “The
forest areas surrounding Bagjata are the
nerve centres of Naxalite activities.
They oppose uranium mining. Recently,
they confirmed their presence through
posters pasted inside Bagjata mine and
in the areas surrounding it.”
Mosabani police station is located nearly
10 km from the mine in Bagjata and functions
from a derelict building. It has a total
strength of 55 policemen. Ramesh Kumar
Singh added, “The mountain range stretches
into West Bengal and Orissa, and encompasses
and other mines. We are aware of the movement,
but constant surveillance is literally
impossible considering the terrain.” While
the UCIL and the district police admit
that Bagjata mine faces a major security
threat from the Naxalites, the journalists’
team could not find a single policeman
in the area to prove that the threat has
been taken seriously. This correspondent
just walked into the mine complex from
the forest and was not stopped even once
by any policeman or anyone else.
Walking a few miles through the paddy
fields near Bagjata took our team to the
Dalboonkand block. The villagers there
appeared terrified. One of the villagers,
Mangal Murmu had been killed, allegedly
by the rebels. Mangal was vocal about
the rights of the labourers employed at
Bagjata, and one day, he was found dead.
The police insist that the Naxalites were
responsible for his death. Ramesh Kumar
Singh said, “His murder created further
tensions between the UCIL management and
the labour. The Naxalites must have factored
this in.” The fear is palpable and we
were chased away by the villagers when
we tried to get a response from Murmu’s
family and his neighbours about his murder.
The Daily Mail’s investigation team learnt
that the radiation was a big problem in
the area, yet it was unaddressed by the
government. According to The Daily Mail’s
findings,on Aug. 16, 2008, a new tailings
pipeline burst near Jaduguda caused a
uranium mill tailings spill that reached
nearby homes.
The management of the Uranium Corporation
of India Limited (UCIL) agreed to rehabilitate
the 26 families affected by the radioactive
waste that spewed in Dungridih Jadugoda.
The UCIL also proposed a modern village
in its leasehold area, besides providing
the villagers with other facilities but
nothing such happened later on. These
investigations further reveal that During
flash floods in June 2008, radioactive
uranium waste dumped into a tailing pond
of Uranium Corporation of India Ltd (UCIL)
in Jadugoda of Jamshedpur spilled over
into nearby village ponds, wells and fields,
and destroyed crops as well.
While UCIL authorities admitted that radioactive
waste had spilled into villages, they
maintained that it would not pose any
health threats to villagers. "We
are monitoring the situation. Our scientists
are taking samples from villages,"
P.V. Dubey, UCIL spokesperson told media
in June 2008. "There will be no negative
impact on human beings. The waste has
been neutralised by the large amount of
water," he added.
Residents of nearby villages have stopped
using water from their ponds and wells,
fearing health problems. Villagers have
also complained that the nuclear waste
had destroyed a large amount of crops.
"The waste that spilled from the
tailing pond has destroyed our crops.
If this continues, there might not be
any crops in the coming years," said
Kannhu Murmu of Tilaitand village. Some
experts also feel that the radioactive
waste would also have a harmful impact
on the soil for years. "The waste
will get mixed with soil and in the long
run would pose health-related problems
to both human beings and animals,"
said Nitish Priyadarshi, a local geologist.
The Daily Mail’s investigations further
disclose that in a shocking revelation,
a team of the Indian Doctors for Peace
and Development (IDPD) had come out with
some bare truths regarding health hazards
faced by miners working in the Uranium
Corporation of India Limited (UCIL) in
the form of a detailed survey report.
The survey was undertaken by the organisation
affiliated to Germany-based International
Physicians for Prevention of Nuclear War
(IPPNW) in association with Jharkhandi
Organisation Against Radiation (JOAR).
"The study was conducted between
May and August 2007," said Shakeel
Ur Rahman, the secretary of the national
council of the association. Conducted
in two different phases, while one survey
concentrates on villages within the radius
of 2.5 km from the mines, a similar one
was undertaken in villages about 30 km
from the mining areas. A total of 2,118
households in the first category, while
another 1,956 households were studied
in the second category.
According to the survey, more children
- about 9.5 per cent of the newborns -
are dying each year due to extreme physical
deformity, primary sterility is becoming
common with 9.6 per cent of women not
being able to conceive even three years
after marriage. Cancer deaths in nearby
villages are about 2.87 per cent and 68.33
per cent people are dying before the age
of 62.
The Daily Mail’s investigation team found
that the UCIL’s lethargic approach and
inability handle such a sensitive programme
of handling Uranium can be judged that
the UCIL’s pipelines, carrying Uraniumand
that are always lying in open, have a
history of leakages and bursts. According
to these investigations ,on April 10,
2007, a new tailings pipeline burst near
Jaduguda caused a uranium mill tailings
spill. According to UCIL, the spill was
caused from damage to the rubber lining
of the tailings pipeline "by a wooden
log left inside the pipe during replacement",
and comprised 1.5 tons of solids and 20
cubic metres of liquid; the spilled material
was contained within the earthen bund
constructed beside the channel and did
not reach any water body or public domain.
Similarly, earlier on December 25, 2006,
the tailings pipeline carrying uranium
mill tailings from the Jaduguda uranium
mill to tailings dam No. 3 broke, spreading
tailings into a tributary of river Subranarekha.
UCIL then started cleaning up the tailings
spill. The findings into the matter further
indicate that on Feb. 17, 2007, two NGOs
- Friends of South Asia (FOSA) and Association
for India's Development (AID) - submitted
a petition to the UCIL and the Department
of Atomic Energy demanding an investigation
into the accident and seeking full remediation.
The petition was signed by hundreds of
individuals from around the world.
According to UCIL, the spill was caused
from damage of the rubber lining and metal
of the tailings pipeline "due to
prolonged use", and comprised 6-8
tons of solids and 60 cubic metres of
liquid.
The Daily Mail’s investigations reveal
further that in 2001 and 2002, Hiroaki
Koide from the Research Reactor Institute
at Kyoto University performed field trips
to monitor environmental impacts of the
Jadugoda uranium mine. He monitored external
gamma dose rate, radionuclide concentrations
in soil, and radon concentration in air.
His results are compiled in a report available
for download. The main conclusions are:
• The contamination from the uranium mine
has spread in Jadugoda:
o The external gamma dose rate exceeds
1 mSv/y in the villages, and reaches 10
mSv/y around the tailing ponds.
o The soil surrounding the tailings ponds
is contaminated by uranium. Particularly
high contamination levels were found in
the village of Dungridih that borders
tailings pond No.1. In other villages,
no serious contamination was found.
o Radon emanated from tailings ponds etc
spreads contamination.
o Waste rock from the mine used for construction
material spreads contamination.
• Other findings include:
o The No.1 tailings pond shows contamination
by cesium. This fact shows that radioactivity
was brought in from a source other than
an uranium mine.
o Product uranium concentrate is dealt
with carelessly and was found dispersed
at Rakha Mine railway station.
The Daily Mail’s investigations reveal
further that The River Subarnarekha literally
translates into "streak of gold".
But the only streaks in this river are
untreated sewage, industrial and mineral
wastes and unbelievably, radioactive wastes,
affecting human health.
Radioactive wastes in Indian rivers is
an undocumented environmental tragedy
in India
This once-pleasing river originates in
the Chotanagpur plateau of Jharkhand in
eastern India and finally enters the Bay
of Bengal after a 452 km journey. Along
the way, it courses a picturesque countryside,
plunging 74 metres at Hundrugargh.
Though
there are 15 water quality monitoring
stations, the Subarnarrekha is a receptacle
of wastewater (urban as well as industrial)
from three major townships - Jamshedpur,
Ranchi and Ghatsila. Organic pollution
loads from the countryside pollute equally.
Uranium
ore tailings from the Jaduguda mines operated
by Uranium Corporation of India Ltd (UCIL),
causes various degrees of radioactivity
along a 100 km stretch. This has resulted
in documented cases of deformities among
human beings, but, the Indian scenario
being what it is, precious little has
been done for them.
"UCIL
alleges that the deformities are not unusual
to the Indian rural scenario," says
Manish Tewari, a journalist who had traveled
to Jaduguda from Delhi. "It alleges
that the uranium and deformity link is
a creation of the media," he says,
unbelieving.
Curiously,
no studies have been commissioned to check
on the veracity of these reports and possible
linkage with uranium. It's all conveniently
swept under the carpet. Reports would
always remain confidential in any event,
because uranium ore is strategic to national
security. Anything related to nuclear
science is treated as a holy cow that
cannot be questioned.
Back on Safari to explore Uranium affairs
in Jharkhand out team narrates, THE ROAD
that connects Turamdih and Jadugoda is
once again without any security presence.
The processing mill at Turamdih was commissioned
in 2006 to process the uranium ore obtained
from the open cast mine of Banduhurang
and the underground mines of Mohuldih
and Turamdih.
Once the uranium ore is processed at the
mill and converted to yellowcake, these
it is sent to the Nuclear Fuel Complex
in Hyderabad, Yellowcake is 80% rich in
uranium oxide and is used to make fuel
road for nuclear reactors. The UCIL plant
in Jadugoda and Turamdih send the packed
yellowcakes to Hyderabad by trucks guarded
by the Central Industrial Security Force.
Sources confirmed that the trucks travel
via NH 33 till the Jharkand-Orissa border
and then use the NH 6 for a few kilometres
before taking the NH 5 to Vijaywada, and
from there to Hyderabad by NH 9. SP Navin
Kumar Singh had earlier told Covert, “Ghatshila,
Dalbhumgarh and Dumaria are the Naxalite
hot belts in East Singhbhum.” And NH 33
goes through this same “hot belt”.
According to UCIL spokesperson P.B. Dubey,
“They UCIL has been functioning here for
more than 40 years and so far there has
not been any incident. Moreover, we have
security arrangements, the details of
which cannot be disclosed.” When the question
of the safety of UCIL trucks was put to
SP Navin singh, he expressed similar views:
“This has been going on for years. There
is no report of any imminent threat from
the Naxalites.”
In 2008 Bihar police arrested two persons
carrying uranium ore reportedly worth
Rs 23 crores. According to Shyam Kumar,
the then superintendent of police in Bihar’s
Saupal district, “The uranium was on its
way to Nepal. The origin of the uranium
is unknown.” Security experts, however,
have little doubt that the uranium is
from East Singhbhum, while it remains
a fact that the area is the only source
of uranium in India.
Ajit Doval, a former Director of India’s
Intelligence Bureau (IB) says “The Naxalites
can easily turn their attention to illegal
uranium trade for their funding. This
is a real possibility.” He further added,
“The end user of this uranium can be a
threat to the country. Hence, it should
not be treated merely as a case of theft.
Rather, the Government must conduct a
serious investigation and identify the
buyers.” The case has not made any headway
even after a year.
THE LOCAKADAISICAL attitude of the Indian
Government is all the more evident from
the lack of safety precautions at the
sites. Just last year, 2008, the pipe
that carries radioactive waste from the
processing mill to the tailing pond at
Jadugoda, burst near Dugridi village.
Massang Soren, the village sarpanch, told
the investigating journalists, “No UCIL
official turned up until we started protesting.
Our fields were flooded with uranium waste
and we could see the danger we faced.
The paddy field turned yellow and then
red but no one came,” said a local adding,
“For at least three months the entire
village reported various kinds of health
problems. Everyone in the village developed
blisters on the soles of their feet and
these could not be cured easily.” The
villagers complained that the UCIL did
not give them any assistance to clean
the water and the fields polluted by the
spillage.
At the Bagjata mine, tonnes of uranium
ore lie in the open. Local activists allege
that by using uncovered trucks to transport
the ore, and by keeping the ore for days
and weeks in the open the UCIL has exposed
the entire region to radiation. Confirming
their fears Dr S.P. Aggarwal, who heads
the Radiological Safety Division at the
Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB),
says, “Uranium ore is naturally radioactive.”
At the same time, officials at AERB refused
to comment on the radiation level in East
Singhbhum.
The Investigations indicate that in 2008,
Andhra Pradesh had a near brush with radioactive
poisoning. The trucks carrying the yellowcakes
from Jadugoda met with an accident and
overturned on the NH 5 near Narsannapeta
in Andhra Pradesh. Luckily, there was
no leakage of radioactive material. But
UCIL officials dismissed that as a “one
off incident” and continued to use the
same mode of transportation.
UCIL spokesperson Dubey is on the record
to confirm that there were plans to open
a nuclear power plant near Jadugoda. He
says, “The proposal is under serious consideration.
But it is a lengthy process, so it can
take a while.”
AJIT DOVAL spoke of the possibility of
the Naxalites posing a grave security
threat to the region because of “poor
security and the Naxalites’ increasing
influence”. A senior police official,
on condition of anonymity, said “There
is a lack of political will to fight the
Naxalites. We all know that if this region
goes to the Naxalites, the nation can
be held to ransom.” He added: “If they
just erect road blocks on the route which
ferries the uranium ore they can stop
the functioning of the UNIL complex in
Jadugoda.” But SP Navin Kumar arrested,
“This is an exaggerated view. As I said
earlier, there is no such case so far.”
He went on to add, “This sort of cynicism
only boosts their confidence.” However,
while he spoke, it was evident from his
voice and body language that he didn’t
mean at all what he was saying in his
official capacity.
The statistics available from the district
police headquarters reveal that in 2008
there were 35 incidents related to Naxalite
violence; 15 landmines, 500 kg of explosives
and 109 pieces of ammunition were seized.
In 2003, at Peddagattu in Andhra Pradesh’s
Nalgonda district, the Naxalites kidnapped
25 officials of Atomic Mineral Directorate
for Exploration and Research before setting
their equipment and machines on fire.
Yet, the police superintendent and UCIL
are hopeful that the Naxalites will not
try to disrupt mining related activities,
even though they publicly oppose all such
activities.
Former Jharkhand Governor Ved Marwah says,
“I think increasing investment is the
right thing to do, especially in mining.
If the Government steps back from initiating
development projects in a particular region,
it is only natural that the area will
come under Naxalite influence.” When asked
about the security threats that the Naxalites
pose tot eh strategic nuclear programme
in East Singhbhum he said, “If the Government
is serious about fighting the Naxalites
it can easily fight them:” He added, “When
I was the Jharkhand Governor there were
regions that had not been visited by the
administration. I happened to be the first
person going there. The police should
be reorganised. With constant surveillance
the problem can be tackled. Why should
we refrain from starting development projects
fearing Naxal attacks? That will give
the wrong impression.”
Interestingly, the Union Home Minister
Mr P Chidambaram continues to deny the
existence of “liberated zones” and the
“Naxalite corridor”. In one of the recently
concluded sessions of Indian parliament,
Minister of State for Home Affairs, Ajay
Maken, in a written reply rubbished the
claims of liberated zones and the Naxaline
corridor as “baseless propaganda”. However,
the officers in the field insist that
“There are areas where we don’t dare to
go.” As Ved Marwah pointed out, “To fight
Naxalism we need a realistic plan.”
The
Daily Mail’s investigations also disclose
that there are certain Nexal sympathisers
in the ranks of Indian nuclear scientists
who are secretly helping the nexal rebels
to learn to utilize and transport Uranium.
These investigations reveal that N Mahalingam
an Indian nuclear scientist from Kaiga
Nuclear Power Plant in Karnataka was one
of those Nexal facilitators. Mahalingam
went mysteriously missing in June this
year. After a few days, his dead body
was found from a lake and it was presumed
that he had committed suicide. Indian
Minister for Home Affairs P Chidumbaram,
who recent showed his muscles to The Daily
Mail regarding one of its investigative
reports about Indian army, on the eve
of the discovery of the dead body of Mahalingam,
assured the public and the media that
he will soon reveal the causes and reasons
of the death of the nuclear scientist
but as usual he has never come up with
a single word over the issue since then.
The Daily Mail’s investigations reveal
that Mahalingam was actually picked up
by Indian Intelligence Agency RAW for
doubts about his links with Nexal rebels
but was killed due to a severe third degree
torture during the interrogation. Later
RAW people threw his dead body in a pond
and informed police through an unknown
call. The bruises on the dead body Mahalingam
proved that he was tortured to death.
Happening
of such incidents and the absence of a
plan and even security on the ground,
a red question mark hangs over the future
of India’s ambitious nuclear projects.
At the same time it raises a big, big
question mark that how could the United
States government sign a civilian nuclear
deal with a country, having such state
of affairs in the direction capabilities
to handle nuclear related matters.
This also gives a shut-up call to all
those Western journalists and Western
governments that keeping expressing fears
that neighbouring Muslim State Pakistan’s
nuclear arsenal was prone to fall in the
hands of religious extremists. This state
of affairs in the direction india’s naked
nukes clearly proves that Indian N
uclear
arsenal and the entire nuclear infrastructure
is much, much more fragile and vulnerable
to fall in the hands of militants and
etreemists than that of Pakistan’s.
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