In Lakshadweep, a Political Administrator Courts Ecological Mayhem

Since December 2, 2020, when he took charge of the Union Territory, Praful Khoda Patel, a one-time BJP MLA from Gujarat, has issued a series of extraordinary orders.

What are Praful Patel’s plans for Lakshadweep?

For a week now, the administrator of this archipelago of 35 atolls and coral reefs in the Arabian sea has been in the news.

Since December 2, 2020, when he took charge of the Union Territory (UT), the one-time BJP MLA from Gujarat has issued a series of extraordinary orders. Among others, folks with more than two children are now ineligible for panchayat positions. Non-vegetarian items have been struck off school menus. Hundreds of casual workers have been laid off. Some protestors against the Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens (CAA/NRC) have been arrested. Fishermen’s sheds have been demolished. Mandatory quarantine, which kept the UT safe from COVID-19 till January, has been done away with.

That is just the start. Under Patel, the Lakshadweep administration has announced a slew of Bills that have the local community panicking about its future. The draft Lakshadweep Animal Preservation Regulation, 2021, bans beef. The draft Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Regulation, 2021, allows the administrator to unilaterally detain people for up to a year. The draft Lakshadweep Development Authority Regulation, 2021, concentrates planning powers with the administration and empowers it to take any piece of land on the island, irrespective of its ownership, for “development” purposes.

Taken together, these amendments don’t add up. The Goonda Act – Prevention of Anti-Social Activities – could be seen as an attempt to choke protests, especially since Lakshadweep saw anti-CAA/NRC protests. But, if Patel is consolidating planning powers to push economic activity, why is his administration destroying fisherfolks’ sheds?

“Only 10% of the people here are employed by the government. All others live off fishing,” said a teacher in the UT, on the condition of not being named.

To understand these seeming incongruities – and what they mean for the islands – we have to start with Praful Patel.

Lakshadweep administrator Praful Khoda Patel. Photo lakshadweep.gov.in

Apparatchik

Praful Khoda Patel hit the peak of his political career in 2010.

That year, the one-time MLA (2007-2012) from Himatnagar, a municipality in Gujarat’s Sabarkantha district, became the state’s home minister after Amit Shah was arrested in the Sohrabuddin case.

“In the years since, he has been sidelined,” said an IAS officer, on the condition of anonymity. He lost the 2012 elections. In 2016, he was appointed as administrator of Daman and Diu by the Narendra Modi government. “The post of its administrator is normally entrusted to someone at the joint secretary-level,” said the officer. With a population of no more than 2.4 lakh in 2011, the UT is one of the smallest administrative sinecures in India. Four months later, in December 2016, he was given additional charge of Dadra & Nagar Haveli.

In the years that followed, Diu received treatment similar to what Lakshadweep is seeing today. “When Patel reached the UT, he found himself surrounded by multiple power centres – the local MP, the municipality, panchayats,” said the officer. “He took away powers from all of them – be it funds or functionaries.”

The official attributed this response to Patel’s inability to accept opposition. “He doesn’t realise there are second, third and fourth level reactions to decisions. He thinks orders should just be obeyed.”

In Diu too, the local community came under attack. “Anganwadis were told to stop serving eggs,” said the official. Casual workers were fired. “He thinks all of them got their jobs through nepotism. Overnight, he fired 560 members of tribal communities from the public works department.”

Even as development expenditure was slashed, the UT saw an infrastructure push. “The first thing he does on reaching a new place is to ask, ‘What are the pending construction projects?’,” said the bureaucrat. Indeed, in Diu, while a much-delayed ring road was built, the UT also saw demolitions – not only of fisherfolk’ structures but also homes and Portuguese-era buildings. When locals came out to protest, so many were arrested that two government high schools had to be used as temporary prisons. Thomas Isaac, the former Kerala finance minister, alludes to this in a Facebook post.

“The good thing about him (Praful Patel) is that civil construction works get done,” said the official. “But, from a Human Development Index (HDI) perspective, he pushes his values on everything.”

Archipelago

What happened in Diu is now being reprised in Lakshadweep.

The archipelago has a plethora of pending construction projects. NITI Aayog wants the islands to develop into a site for premium tourism. There is also talk of elevating Kavaratti into a smart city. More recently, the UT administration has floated tenders for rebuilding government offices. And there is speculation that, if not a fresh port, the archipelago might invest in berthing facilities for large ships.

Given that backdrop, the keystone Bill is the draft Lakshadweep Development Authority Regulation, 2021. According to Ahmedabad-based lawyer Anand Yagnik, “The Bill, given the powers it seeks over local lands, is similar to the ones used to acquire land for the Dholera SIR and the Statue of Unity.” In the name of town planning, he said, the state can acquire everything at a low cost.

Similarities between Diu and Lakshadweep do not quite end there. If Diu served eggs at anganwadis, the archipelago serves meat. If Diu protested against demolitions, Lakshadweep has marched against CAA/NRC.

And so, a process of disciplining is underway. This extends beyond arrests of CAA/NRC protestors. “We do not know how long we will be able to speak to you on the phone,” said the teacher quoted at the start of this report.

All this, needless to say, violates the Indian constitution. The people of Lakshadweep are a tribal community. “You cannot impose anything that damages local culture and heritage,” said Yagnik.

A coral reef in Lakshadweep. Photo: M. Rajshekhar

Ecology

What does Patel want to do with the power being accumulated at his office?

In an interview to The Print, he dwelled on tourism. “Why is it that people are waiting to go to Maldives, but are not even willing to come to Lakshadweep? It is to develop tourism and for long term benefits that we are introducing the LDAR (Lakshadweep Development Authority Regulation).”

His response invites multiple questions. The islands of Lakshadweep are much smaller than those of Andaman and Nicobar (ANI). The biggest islands are no more than 4.5 kilometres across. As coral atolls, their highest elevation is no more than 3 metres above sea level. Most of them stand no more than 0.5 metres higher.

Despite heavy rainfall, these islands – like those of ANI – are acutely water-stressed. A tourism push which ignores these realities will damage these islands.

Consider the numbers. The NITI Aayog report proposes 1,092 hotel rooms, spread over six islands. An earlier study, by the Indira Institute for Management, Pune (IIMP), had proposed 610 beds across five islands. Another study, by the Union environment ministry’s National Centre for Sustainable Coastal Management, The Wire was told by an expert who saw the study, pegs the islands’ carrying capacity even higher – at 2,523 beds across ten villages.

For a UT with a population of just 64,000 (2011), these numbers are consequential. According to marine biologist Rohan Arthur, planners have pegged water consumption by tourists and locals at 170 litres/day. “The real numbers are higher. Locals use between 180-200 litres a day. A high-end resort might need as much as 600-700 a day.”

There are other impacts. Given the small size of these islands, NITI Aayog has proposed floating villas. It’s possible, said Arthur, that the solar panels set up to power these, will float as well. This comes with a second set of costs.

Reefs here are bleaching due to warming seas and acidification. “Given repeated climate change events, these reefs are eroding rather than accreting. The only place where corals are recovering is in the lagoons (the shallower stretch between the reefs and the islands),” said Arthur. The lagoons, he went on, also have sea grass meadows. That is where juvenile fish hide and grow – future stocks, in effect, for the local fisherfolks.

Now, between floating villas and panels, the quantum of sunlight into the lagoon might fall as well – apart from other effects like pollution – hurting both the corals and the meadows, further undermining the capacity of the atolls to rebuild themselves.

The Wire sent a questionnaire to Patel, his advisor A. Anbarasu, and collector Asker Ali, asking them, among other things, about the proposed scale of the tourism programme and other construction projects the administration is planning. By the time this article was uploaded, we hadn’t received a response. This report will be updated when they respond.

Both Andamans and Lakshadweep suffer due to local officials’ insistence on importing mainland practices. One instance? The ambassador cars bureaucrats use to get around Kavaratti, all of 3.93 sq km in size. Photo: M. Rajshekhar

Economics

Another question is how these plans will unfold.

Of late, two trajectories in India’s infrastructure sector have been especially striking. In the first, a few corner the market. In the second, we see a large flurry of interest, driven by irrational exuberance often created by consultants and government pronouncements, followed by a quiet dissipation as realism kicks in.

In the case of Lakshadweep, the archipelago produces little that can be used to erect a high-end tourism resort. Everything will have to be shipped in from the mainland. That will drive up costs. For freshwater supplies, resorts will need their own desalination plants. The ones already set up in Lakshadweep for the local community, said a scientist at the National Institute of Ocean Technology, cost anywhere between Rs 6 crore to Rs 11 crore. Installing such a system – and then maintaining it – will add to the costs.

Compounding matters, added the scientist, vessels do not ply to the islands between the stormy monsoon months, which means the project has to recover its investments running eight months each year. The question is how the cost of such a vacation compares with resorts in the Maldives or elsewhere – especially if their corals have not seen bleaching events yet.

This cannot work, said the scientist, unless the government is willing to give a lot of incentives.

Indeed, in the past, NITI Aayog’s island tourism push has not found many takers. We have to now see what happens in Lakshadweep.

The first of the tenders, for the eco-tourism resort at Bangaram, has already been released. Bids close on May 28. Others will follow.

It will be instructive to see how these fare.

M. Rajshekhar is an independent reporter studying corruption, oligarchy and the political economy of India’s environment.

Nearly 9,000 Flee Homes in Philippines as Molave Intensifies into Typhoon

Some 5,518 people were evacuated to safer grounds, while 3,421 people took shelter with their relatives in areas outside danger zones.

Manila: Nearly 9,000 people fled their homes in the Philippines as Typhoon Molave made landfall while traversing provinces on the southern part of the main Luzon island on Sunday, bringing heavy rain and strong winds, officials said.

The disaster monitoring agency said it had received reports of damaged roads and bridges, flooding and landslide incidents in some areas, but there were no casualties so far.

Packing top sustained winds of 130 kilometres per hour (80 mph) Molave intensified into a typhoon as it moved westward and made landfall over San Miguel Island in Albay province early in the evening.

It made a second landfall on Malinao municipality also in Albay, the weather bureau said.

Some 5,518 people were evacuated to safer grounds, while 3,421 people took shelter with their relatives in areas outside danger zones, the disaster monitoring agency said.

Molave follows Tropical Storm Saudel, which last week caused widespread flooding in Quezon province in the Calabarzon region, southeast of the capital Manila.

The weather bureau warned of storm surges as high as 2 metres (6.5 feet) in coastal areas in northern Samar province, the Bicol region and the central and southern portions of Quezon province.

Tropical cyclone wind alerts were issued for several provinces in the Bicol and Calabarzon regions, and several provinces in the central Philippines, as well as for Metro Manila and Central Luzon provinces of Bulacan, Pampanga, Bataan and Zambales.

Sea travel operations were cancelled in danger zones, with 569 people stranded at ports due to strong winds, according to the disaster monitoring agency.

After crossing the Philippine archipelago, Molave was expected to continue intensifying over the South China Sea, the weather bureau said.

(Reuters)

Coronavirus Pandemic Hits Fast-Dwindling Tribe in Andaman Islands

The Great Andamanese are one of the six tribes of Mongoloid and African origin, who have lived in the Andamans in the Bay of Bengal for thousands of years.

Kolkata: Four members of a dwindling tribe in India’s far off the Andaman Islands have tested positive for coronavirus; officials said on Thursday as the country reported 75,760 new infections, the highest-single-day rise.

The Great Andamanese are one of the six tribes of Mongoloid and African origin, who have lived in the Andamans in the Bay of Bengal for thousands of years.

Only about 50 members survive after thousands were killed by British colonisers in the 19th century or died later due to diseases. Indian officials have since tried to protect their way of life while opening up the islands to the fruits of development such as access to healthcare.

Dr Avijit Roy, who is leading the fight against the outbreak of COVID-19 in the islands, said they had run tests on the Great Andamanese living on one of the coral-reef islands in the archipelago and four of the men had turned out to be positive.

Also read: Explainer: How the Election Commission Plans To Conduct Polls During the Pandemic

“They have been moved to a hospital,” he said. Officials believe the men may have travelled to the main Andaman islands and caught the disease.

The London-based Survival International said authorities must work to prevent the virus from reaching other remote tribes.

“It is extremely alarming that members of the Great Andamanese tribe tested positive for Covid-19. They will be all too aware of the devastating impact of epidemics that have decimated their people,” said Sophie Grig, Senior Researcher.

On the Indian mainland, in the eastern state of Odisha, a member of a hill tribe had also tested positive, a State Official said.

Cases have been rising steadily across India, the total number of cases standing at 3.2 million behind the United States and Brazil.

The world’s second-most populous country has posted the highest single-day caseload in the world every day since August 7, a Reuters tally based on official reporting showed.

(Reuters)

Maldives: India Bids to Overtake China in Funding ‘High Visibility’ Infrastructure

During a meeting between foreign ministers S. Jaishankar and Abdulla Shahid on Thursday, India also extended a financial package to the archipelago nation.

New Delhi: Two years after China completed the Maldives’ biggest infrastructure project till date, India is attempting to overshadow Beijing by financing a multi-island connectivity proposal envisaged to be longer than the Sinamalé Bridge.

India’s decision to finance the Greater Malé Connectivity Project (GMCP), along with new budgetary support and an air travel bubble, was announced by external affairs minister S. Jaishankar during a meeting with his Maldivian counterpart Abdulla Shahid on Thursday.

While the Maldivian government highlighted the $250 million financial package, the Indian side gave top billing to the investment in GMCP.

The Maldives China Friendship project, a 1.39-kilometre bridge linking the capital city Malé to Hulhule island, was opened in April 2018. Then Maldives president Abdulla Yameen, whose term witnessed strained ties with India and stronger alignment with China, had described the $200 million project as the “biggest achievement in our diplomatic history”.

After the opposition MDP candidate Ibrahim Solih defeated Yameen, India has been trying to leverage its friendlier disposition to expand its presence in the strategically located Indian Ocean archipelago.

‘Largest civilian infrastructure project’

Announcing the decision to support the GMCP, Jaishankar noted, according to a Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) press release, that it will be the “largest civilian infrastructure project in the Maldives”. The financial package will have a grant component of $100 million and a new Line of Credit of $400 million.

An electoral promise of President Solih, the project will connect Malé with three neighbouring islands through a bridge and causeway link that will be 6.7 kilometres long. “Once completed, this landmark project will streamline connectivity between the four islands, thereby boosting economic activity, generating employment and promoting holistic urban development in the Malé region,” said the Indian foreign ministry.

It is said that the Maldivian president had reportedly sought India’s aid for the project during Jaishankar’s visit to the country in September 2019.

According to government sources, the “high visibility” GMCP will render the Maldives China Friendship bridge ‘insignificant in comparison’. “It will help in demonstrating India’s overarching presence in the Maldives through a high-visibility project in the Greater Malé region and showcase India’s expertise in conceptualising and implementing a complex infrastructural project of this scale,” they said.

India had previously extended an $800 million line of credit, which is being used to implement seven projects ranging from a water supply and sewerage system to a port project.

An aerial view of the Maldives China friendship bridge. Photo: Wikimedia Commons/Panda 51 CC BY SA 4.0

Extension of financial assistance

For the Maldives, the key assurance received during the meeting was the extension of financial assistance.

The Maldives foreign ministry headlined the readout of the video conference – “extends financial support of 250 million US Dollars to the Maldives”. The Indian press release stated that the “exact modalities of the loan arrangement are being finalised by the two sides”.

“Given the financial challenges faced by the Maldives due to the COVID-19 situation and India’s commitment to assist the Maldives in its economic recovery, EAM announced that the Government of India has decided to extend in-principle urgent financial assistance to the Government of Maldives, by way of a soft loan arrangement,” said the MEA press note.

Indian sources pointed out that India had earlier signed a $400 million bilateral currency swap agreement with the Maldives, out of which $150 million had already been withdrawn.

“The Government of Maldives can draw the remaining $250 million anytime till July 2021 to increase forex liquidity and exchange rate management. On the GoM’s request, the currency swap agreement has been further extended for a period of one year,” the sources said.

Tourism and travel

The restrictions on travel and lockdown have badly impacted the Maldives due to its dependence on tourism, with the government projecting a GDP contraction of 11% this year.

Last month, the Maldives opened its international airport to foreign tourists after a gap of nearly three months.

Jaishankar announced that India will create an air travel bubble with the country, with the first flight expected to commence on August 18. Until now, India has largely negotiated air travel bubbles with western countries, so this is the first in the neighbourhood.

“He (the Maldivian foreign minister) emphasised the importance of easing travel, especially for Maldivians seeking to visit India for urgently required medical treatment, as well as Indian tourists wishing to visit the Maldives,” said the Maldivian statement.

A resort island in the Maldives. Photo: Reuters

Besides, India and Maldives agreed that a direct cargo ferry service, announced during the Indian PM’s visit last year, will “commence shortly”.

“A direct cargo ferry service presents an opportunity for India to replace other countries and become the top trade partner of Maldives. In this context and with many bilateral projects slated to commence in the next few months, it is the right time to start a cargo ferry service with the Maldives,” explained government sources.

India has also offered a larger annual quota for this year of supply of essential commodities as defined by the 1981 bilateral trade agreement.

The MEA also added that President Solih is likely to visit India this year “subject to the COVID-19 related conditions”