
According to a Human Rights Watch report, government indifference and poor regulation have fuelled lawlessness in India's troubled mining industry and threaten serious harm to mining affected communities.
The report “Out of control mining, regulatory failure and human rights in India” focuses on iron mining in Goa and Karnataka to illustrate a broader pattern of failed regulation, alleged corruption and harm to local communities.
According to HRW, as lurid as some of India's mining related corruption scandals have been, the more widespread problem is government indifference.
The report said that "Even in Karnataka, ineffectual regulation played a key role in allowing criminality to pervade the state's mining sector. And many of the alleged human rights abuses result not from patterns of corruption or criminality but from the government's more mundane failure to effectively monitor, let alone police, the human rights impacts of mining operations."
The report said that the government often leaves companies to regulate themselves, which has proven disastrous in India and around the world. The government, for example, relies on mining companies to commission and produce the "independent" environmental impact assessments that are used to gauge a proposed mining project's likely environmental, social and human rights impacts.
This, says HRW, creates an unnecessary conflict of interest that could be solved by giving regulators a central role in commissioning the studies. The assessments also tend to give short shrift to human rights issues, focusing overwhelmingly on purely environmental concerns.
Worse still, HRW said there is considerable evidence that these EIA reports are often inaccurate or deliberately falsified. In some cases, issues of potential concern the presence of rivers or springs, for example are omitted. In one notorious example, a mine in Maharashtra received clearance to proceed even though its EIA report contained language taken verbatim from a similar report prepared for a bauxite mine in Russia.
Enforcement is an even bigger problem, says HRW, which found regulatory institutions hopelessly overstretched. A few dozen central government officials are responsible for overseeing the environmental and human rights impacts of every mine in India and many other industries as well.
The report further said that "This makes in field monitoring a practical impossibility, forcing the government to rely almost exclusively on information provided by mine operators themselves. Many state government oversight bodies have even less capacity to implement their challenging mandates. As a result, government regulators have no idea how many mining firms are complying with the law or how many communities have been harmed by illegal practices."
HRW acknowledges that the central government has taken some tentative steps toward improving oversight such as requiring companies to choose from a list of accredited firms to carry out EIAs. But the reforms have not gone nearly far enough, says the group, which urges the government to adopt recommendations to narrow some of the most important regulatory gaps.
Ms Meenakshi Ganguly south Asia director at Human Rights Watch said that "Mining is an important part of India's economy, but that does not mean the industry should be allowed to write its own rules. The government can and should empower regulators to do their jobs more effectively than they can today."
Source - www.guardian.co.uk
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