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Greens
protest Indian Ocean wargames
PORT BLAIR (India)—Environment groups in this Indian Ocean archipelago
on Thursday strongly condemned massive wargames in the region, saying
the exercise would shatter its fragile ecology.
The protests came as manoeuvres involving more than 30 warships from the
US, Australia, Japan, Singapore and India shifted into high gear, moving
from the Bay of Bengal towards the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago.
The exercise was centred 300 kilometres (180 miles) from the Andamanese
capital of Port Blair, where activists said the proximity of the
nuclear-powered vessels could damage the archipelago’s fragile ecology.
“Our very own Indian navy is constantly infringing into the fragile zone
for exercises,” said Samir Acharya, who heads the Society of Andaman and
Nicobar Ecology.
“This time the only difference is that five countries are involved,” he
said as Vice Admiral Doug Crowder, commander of the US Navy’s Seventh
Fleet, flew into Port Blair on Thursday to oversee the wargames.
Thirty-eight of the palm-fringed archipelago’s 321 islands are inhabited
and its pristine waters contain some of the world’s most breathtaking
coral reefs and marine life — including hundreds of endangered species.
“We, the tribals of the Nicobar group of islands, strongly oppose the
event as it’s going to disturb our ecology,” said Rashid Yusuf of the
Nicobar Youth Association environmental group. “It’s our experience that
after each naval manoeuvre, marine life is deeply affected, with fish
dying in huge numbers,” Yusuf said by telephone from Nancowrie island. A
number of the more remote southern Andamanese islands are kept
off-limits to visitors in a bid to protect the tribes who inhabit them.
India, hosting the six-day exercise that began Tuesday, says no live
ammunition will be used and results of mid-sea mock battles will be
computer-simulated. But a spokesman for the Island Solidarity Front, an
activist group, said in the archipelago’s capital Port Blair that “these
vast machines are enough to create havoc with the coral reefs, many of
which were partially dislodged by the tsunami” in 2004.
The joint exercises, one of the biggest ever peacetime military events,
involve super-carriers USS Nimitz and USS Kitty Hawk, the
nuclear-powered submarine USS Chicago and Indian aircraft carrier the
INS Viraat. Some 160 fighter planes are in the air over the Bay of
Bengal, separated from the Andaman Sea by the archipelago, which is part
of India.
Indian officials declined to comment on the exercises. The archipelago
is India’s most strategic military base in the busy Indian Ocean with
Car Nicobar island near Indonesia armed with long-range fighter jets.
The exercises are also facing opposition from anti-US communist allies
of India’s ruling Congress party, who denounced them as proof of
“India’s growing subservience to the United States”.—Agencies
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