HomeNewsOpinionHow deep is the coal mining scam in Assam?

How deep is the coal mining scam in Assam?

The BJP-led state government must not only realise the ecological fragility of the Dehing-Patkai Elephant Reserve but also swiftly act to stop any further degradation

June 04, 2020 / 15:26 IST
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Representative Image
Representative Image

Rajeev Bhattacharyya

Things could be heating up in Assam, with COVID-19 seeming to have prevented the people from hitting the streets. The issue this time around is not illegal immigrants but the government’s approval of coal mining in a proposed reserve forest in Dehing-Patkai Elephant Reserve along the state’s border with Arunachal Pradesh. The Assam Environmental NGO Forum, consisting of 20 groups, has demanded a complete ban on coal mining as the reserve has already suffered substantial damage.

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After an outburst on the episode from different sections of people, Assam Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal tweeted that Minister of Environment and Forest Parimal Suklabaidya had been instructed to visit the region for “taking stock of the condition”, and that the government was committed to protect the environment. The assurance has hardly helped lessen fears, which have been compounded with new evidence emerging on the state government’s dreadful role in the incident.

With the assembly polls only 10 months away and its list of successes not many, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led Assam government would not want to link its name with the mining in the reserve forest. Consider these developments:

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