The Dongria have boycotted the general elections after their leader's arrest and detention.
© Bikash Khemka/Survival
Source: Survival International
The Dongria
Kondh tribe has boycotted the Indian general elections in protest at growing
police harassment and the arrests of their leaders.
Over 30 cases are currently pending against Dongria and Majhi Kondh people
who were actively involved in resisting
an open-cast mine by British mining giant Vedanta Resources, and a Vedanta
refinery on the tribes’ land.
Jilo Majhi – a prominent member of the Niyamgiri Suraksha Samiti (‘Save
Niyamgiri Organisation’) – was detained in jail by police for over 20 days. He
has since been released on bail and faces a High Court hearing this summer over
a case which dates back several years.
The election boycott demonstrates the Dongria’s courageous stand against
their treatment by the police, as many members of the tribe were reportedly keen
to cast their vote against a local administration that strongly backed Vedanta’s
mine.
The Dongria reportedly said, ‘If the State does not solve our problems, why
would we believe in democracy and electoral politics.’
In August 2013, the Dongria were given the
unprecedented opportunity to choose their own future in what became known as
India’s ‘first environmental referendum’. During village consultations, the
Dongria expressed their unanimous opposition to Vedanta’s mine.
The mine was finally
blocked by the central government in January 2014, after strong and
sustained local resistance by the Dongria and many local supporters, and a
global campaign by organisations such as Survival
International and celebrities Michael Palin and Joanna Lumley.
In an interview,
a Vedanta official expressed a desire for Narendra Modi – the prime ministerial
candidate for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) – to win
the election, in the hope that he might approve the Niyamgiri mine project. The
Congress Party’s Rahul Gandhi has repeatedly expressed his support for the
Dongria Kondh.
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said today, ‘There is a vindictive nature
to these cases against Dongria leaders – it’s hard not to suspect arrests are
retribution for the tribe’s success in the struggle to defend their lands. The
Dongria Kondh resisted the mine that would have destroyed them as a people and
should now be left in peace. There is no public interest in hounding them
further.’