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| | IMC India publication closed | 9 12 | Because - IMC India has been through several ups and downs of temporary collectives over the past few years and has functioned more as an electronic collaboration rather than as a real local collective - see http://docs.indymedia.org/view/Local/ImcIndia
- during the periods of inactivity, there have been quite a few spam and hate posts
- the people with editorial access are too busy to quickly respond to attempts at contact on the imc-india mailing list
- there are about 150 non-bouncing subscribers to imc-india - among those living in India it should be possible to organise a real collective,
the present volunteers of IMC India and supporters (i.e. people on the imc-india mailing list) decided by consensus [1] [2] to: - temporarily suspend open publishing on the existing web site
- put a notice (which you are reading) on the existing web site announcing the need to reorganise a new collective
- in the notice, express the hope to try to organise a new collective (possibly many city based collectives rather than a single "national" one) which will go through the new-imc organising process: http://docs.indymedia.org/view/Global/NewImcHowTo
If you want to reorganise a local city collective or an "India" IMC, then please get organised! Electronic methods of communication are not enough, but they include: Read More | 3rd anniversary of Plachimada struggle | 4 27 | Coca-Cola sucking communities dry The people of Plachimada, in Kerala , rallied together on Friday April 22nd, for the third aniversary of the Plachimada Coca Cola plant, and an accompanying 3 year, 24hrs day 7days a week, protest vigil outside it's gates, to publicly show it's opposition to the corporation's existing and planned environmental degredation in the area.
This has been the most recent of ongoing opposition to Coca-Cola's inethical conduct in India, where they have been alleged to have caused severe water shortages, water and land pollution, the distribution of toxic waste as fertilizer, and for the sale drinks containing high levels of pesticides | 1 | 2. Coca-Cola is further negligent as it has not reported any of the damages it has made, continuing operations. Tens of thousands of community members, have been participating in and International Campaign to Hold Coca-Cola Accountable for it's conduct, with plants in Mehdiganj, Uttar Pradesh, Sivaganga, Tamil Nadu Kaladera, Rajastan, facing increasing resistance to their operations as community members demand they are shut-down.
[ India Resource Centre | Take Action | Coca-Cola in India [PDF] | killercoke | Stolen Generation ] Read More | GM watch | 3 24 | GM seeds burnt by more than 3000 tribal women Bhubaneshwar (Orissa): Demanding Orissa be declared an Organic State, more than 3000 tribal women today made a bonfire of hybrid and genetically modified seeds of cotton and other crops -- calling it the launch of a seed satyagrah... The New Seed Bill in the offing, they said, runs counter to the Plant Varieties Protection and Farmers' Right Act (PVPFA), 2001Farmer's rights are now being taken away through the Seed Bill. This clearly demonstrates that the government is being run by the multinational seed companies. Orissa Nari Samaj (ONS), the tribal women's organisation with a membership of close to 200,000 demanded the scrapping of the proposed Seed Bill, and wanted to government to recognise the rights of the people in respect of indigenous seeds. Read More | Swati Gola | 3 22 | The Patent Bill 2005: Impact on Agriculture The Patents (Amendment) Ordinance amends the Indian Patents Act, 1970 for the third time to introduce product patent protection for drugs, food and chemicals. However, it equally affects the interests of the farmers by granting patent protection to GMOs especially the seeds of Genetically Modified crops.
[ IMC Biotech | Article - Sowing The Seeds Of Dictatorship | Vandana Shiva | Gene Campaign ] Read More | IMC | 2 06 | Martial Law Declared in Nepal Nepal: All communication links were cut after the King Gyanendra's announcement of suspending parliament and fundamental rights, on Tuesday, 1st of february. Airlinks have been closed, roads blocked, other transport links delayed. Armed security forces in riot gear are deployed. Leaders of major political parties, trade unions and student organisations are under house arrest or detained. Army is stationed in the editorial offices of all national dailies in order to censor. Outside of Kathmandu, the Maoist strike is apparently observed.
A student demonstration at Prithvi Narayan Campus in Pokhara was fired on by a military helicopter gunship leaving several protestors badly injured if not dead; all FM radio broadcasts outside of Kathmandu are blocked and those broadcasting in Kathmandu play only entertainment-oriented programmes; the BBC FM station recently established in Kathmandu is forbidden from broadcasting the news in Nepali; news stands outside of the Valley have been closed; and a 72-hour blockade on long-distance public bus travel in and out of Kathmandu is in place.
[ full report][ International Nepal Solidarity Network ] [ report updates ] [ Nepal Blog ] [ Zmag Coverage 1 | 2 ] [Reporters without borders ] [ Amnesty international Statement ] Read More | IMC India | 1 31 | Kashipur: Industrialisation through the barrel of Gun "No one, I repeat no one will be allowed to stand in the way of Orissa's industrialisation and the people's progress". - Naveen Patnaik(Chief Minister of Orisa)
The Police in the East Indian state of Orissa have laid siege to a group of dalit and adivasi (tribal) villages around Kashipur that have successfully kept the Utkal Alumina Industries Ltd (UAIL) from mining Baphlimali – a mountain held sacred by local adivasis -- for 12 years now. Since December 1, 2004, a witchhunt has been on for indigenous and dalit leaders and their key supporters, and a massive police operation has been launched to terrorise people into allowing the bauxite mining and alumina refining project to come up. The Aditya Birla group and Canadian mining multinational Alcan are the major shareholders in the project. Norsk Hydro (a Norwegian company that had a stake in UAIL in 2000 withdrew from the project following criticism in Norway for its complicity in human rights abuses in Kashipur, Orissa.
Related Articles:- [Updates | Take Action] Read More | Vic | 8 10 | Dammed natural problems A gigantic landslide in the Himalayas has created a potentially disastrous flood situation in the upper reaches of the Sutlej. Read More | Gopal Krishna | 8 04 | White Asbestos Kills Now thatched roofing is being replaced with asbestos in haste, following the fire tragedy in a school in Kumbakonan, 350 km from Chennai. The replacement found for a thatched roof in the state is one with asbestos sheets, which is a cancer causing material, and it is going to have disastrous consequences for health. Read More | Anivar Aravind | 5 21 | Silent Valley : No more dams Silent Valley National Park Twenty years of constant efforts towards conservation of the Silent Valley National Park and its buffer areas by the Government of Kerala and the Ministry of Environment and Forests, the Silent Valley HEP has been revived in the form of proposed Pathrakadavu HEP... Read More | IMC | 1 22 | Narmada Bachao Andolan Three days ago the Narmada Bachao Andolan began an occupation of the back entrance to the State Building of Maharashtra in Mumbai, India. Their demands are over 20 years old and include an end to big dam construction on the Narmada River and satisfactory compensation, rehabilitation, and resettlement of Adivasis (tribal peoples) who have been displaced by flooding of their villages. The current protest is in response to the recent Narmada Control Authority decision to allow the construction of the Sardar Sarovar dam to continue to a height of 110 meters. At least 12,000 families in Madhya Pradesh will face submergence and displacement without any resettlement, while at least 3000 tribal families in Maharashtra are in their villages and 2000 oustees are yet to be declared as oustees and resettled. Since the beginning of big dam construction after Independence, around 55 million people have been flooded out of their villages. Most of these people have never received any substantive or just compensation or resettlement assistance from the Indian government. Read:The Greater Common Good by Arundhati Roy Watch:Video of Narmada Submergence [Background | Take Action] Read More | | | Feature archive | | | |