No, the Supreme Court Didn’t Cause the Economic Slowdown

Indeed, our judges shouldn’t surrender their constitutional duty of striking down illegal, arbitrary and environmentally unsound decisions only to stave off their economic implications.

In the last few weeks, while the Supreme Court has been facing criticism for its handling of the migrants issue, two eminent lawyers – one a former attorney general and the other a former solicitor general – came out strongly against the Supreme Court for a completely different reason: they blamed the court for the current economic slowdown.

In a recent lecture, attorney general Mukul Rohatgi said that “in its zeal to uphold the environment, its zeal to correct government orders and inactions, the Supreme Court dealt a serious blow to the economy of the nation.” He cited the example of cancellation of coal mines across the country: “Lakhs and crores of foreign investments, lakhs and crores of equipment, infrastructure and lakhs of jobs were thrown overboard when the court set aside and cancelled all the allocation of coal blocks and coal mines, because the government did not follow the law correctly.”

In an interview to Indira Jaisingh a few months back, Harish Salve expressed similar sentiments, saying the Supreme Court “cancelled coal mines by one stroke of the pen, without examining the merits of every case. Much genuine foreign investment in the coal industry went flat. A few million people are without jobs in India.”

Following this line of thinking, in a recent article, Salve pointed out that the “coal allocation judgment and the Goa mining judgment have generously contributed to bringing down the GDP”. He continued: “Whether it be privatisation or nuclear power generation, creation of new highways, new ports or new airports – the court is asked to step in and prevent the elected executive from implementing its policies.”

Also read: How Malleable Laws, Pliant Panels Helped OIL Secure Clearance to Drill in Biodiverse Area

Given these statements have come from individuals who have occupied the highest legal offices in India, it is important to present the ‘other side’ of the picture and deal with their principal contentions.

‘Millions of people without jobs’

Salve and Rohatgi emphasise job losses due to the apex court’s orders. First, both of them are general statements – ‘millions’ and ‘lakhs’ of jobs. No actual number is given. There is no doubt that jobs have been lost due to restrictions imposed. But then should the courts be silent spectators when companies mined in violation of laws? The state of Goa captured only 0.3% of the mineral depletion – Rs 161 crore of the Rs 48,199 crore, mostly as royalty. The Supreme Court ruled in 2013 that all mining from November 2007 was illegal in Goa.

Also read: Choice of Either/Ore In Karnataka’s Ballari, ‘Everyone’s Hands Are Dirty’

With respect to iron ore mining in Karnataka: the Lokayukta report concluded that mining activities were undertaken in violation of the Mines and Minerals Development and Regulation Act 1957, Forest Conservation Act 1980, Environmental (Protection) Act 1986, Foreign Exchange Management Act 2006 and the Panchayati Raj Act. And like Goa, while mining companies earned Rs 4,000-Rs 5,000 per tonne of iron ore, the state received Rs 16 as royalty.

Even illegal activities provide employment; this is one reason why it’s not wise to examine the issue only through the lens of jobs. The Supreme Court in 1996 prohibited the export of timber from the Northeastern and Andaman and Nicobar island in the case of T.N Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India and Others, where incidentally Salve was the amicus curiae, to protect these biodiversity hotspots. In the process, countless people were left with no incomes. India’s conservation community is indebted to Salve for his passionate argument in favour of the Western Ghats that led to the complete  stoppage of iron-ore mining by the Kudremukh Iron Ore Company, Ltd.

Also read: The Many Absurdities of the Supreme Court Judgment on Goa’s New Airport

To control air pollution, small industries in Delhi were shut, rendering countless people jobless. Here also Salve is the amicus, forcefully arguing the need for the Supreme Court to pass orders to control pollution. Despite having statutory bodies to deal with environmental problems, it is due to Salve’s initiative that two court appointed ‘super-structures’ – the Central Empowered Committee and the Environment Pollution Prevention and Control Authority – have been functioning for nearly two decades, and reporting only to the Supreme Court.

Parliament has even enacted a law based on one of the apex court’s directions: the Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act 2016. Salve as amicus curiae, was instrumental in introducing the concept of ‘net present value’ and compensatory afforestation funds in forest governance – through the Supreme Court, not through elected representatives.

However, both Salve and Rohatgi now focus on jobs instead of health, deforestation and the loss of livelihoods due to mining. Areas where coal has been mined – Korba, Raigarh, Singrauli, North Karanpura, Talcher, Chandrapur, etc. – are today toxic hotspots and have some of the lowest levels of human development.

Loss of foreign investment in coal

Both Salve and Rohatgi have said the loss of foreign investment in coal is due to the Supreme Court’s order. This statement reflects confusion about the global scenario with regard to coal, coal-financing and climate change. BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, announced in January 2020 that it was divesting coal as part of steps to reduce global emissions and climate risk in its portfolio. According to the Institute of Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, since 2013, over 100 significant financial institutions have divested thermal coal, including 40% of the top-40 international banks and 20 major insurers. Banks that have restricted funding to coal include Morgan Stanley, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, ABN Amro, HSBC, ING, RBS, Standard Chartered and Barclays Bank.

In October 2018, the World Bank decided to cease its plans to fund a 500-MW coal-fired power plant in Kosovo because wind and solar power were cheaper. As of 2019, 20 important insurers with more than $6 trillion in assets and representing 20% of the world’s insurance assets have adopted coal divestment policies. The noted investor Jeremy Grantham even said thermal coal is “dead meat”,  and pointed out the failures of oil and coal companies to deal with the “inevitable reality that these forms of energy will be phased out”.

Also read | Dehing Patkai: Land Claimed by NBWL as ‘Unbroken’ Has Already Been Mined or Cleared, Reveals RTI

It’s clear that investments in coal have declined remarkably over the years, so it’s wrong to think that the decline in foreign investment in coal or economic slowdown is because of PILs in the Supreme Court. It’s only a coincidence that the court delivered the coal deallocation judgment in 2014 – around the time investments in coal began to dwindle. So with or without the Supreme Court’s judgment, there is just little money available for coal to expand, together with stiff competition from solar- and wind-energy generation.

Rule of law, not rule of policy

India needs to think beyond the primitive way of digging the earth to become ‘developed’. The standard of living in the West world didn’t improve because it invested in resource extraction. Instead, it invested in knowledge building, innovation and human wellbeing, and exported the dirty work to countries in the global south, including India, Bangladesh and Pakistan.

By diluting environmental and labour laws and weakening courts to facilitate this foreign investment, we indirectly help clean the air, supply water and provide a higher standard of living for many western countries. It’s wrong to assume foreign mining and power companies come to India only because they wish to make money. They come to invest in India because such dirty, polluting activities are not permissible in their countries of origin.

In this situation, the judiciary has an important role: to ensure India doesn’t become a dumping ground for obsolete and polluting technology. Our judges shouldn’t surrender their constitutional duty of striking down illegal, arbitrary and wrong decisions only to stave off their economic implications. Courts are not expected to give primacy to government policy over constitutional and statutory provisions. If this were so, we would be able to create a society that prioritises ‘rule of policy’ over ‘rule of law’ – a sad state indeed for the world’s largest democracy.

In The Anarchy: The East India Company, Corporate Violence and the Pillage of an Empire (2019), William Dalrymple observes that one of the first Indian words to enter the English language was ‘loot’. It had never been used outside North India but became a common term across Great Britain in the late 18th century. The British looted India for nearly two centuries, of its natural resources. Today, the state-sponsored corporate plunder of India’s natural resources, and the resultant impoverishment of its people, is not ‘loot’. It’s being called ‘sustainable development’.

Ritwick Dutta is an environmental lawyer.

Assam: Widespread Anger Against Company, Govt After Two Die in Oil Field Fire

Local activists say the same outrage should have been triggered by the deaths of five villagers allegedly because of the leak at the Baghjan gas well site.

Guwahati: The death of two Oil India Limited (OIL) employees as a result of a blowout at the Baghjan gas well site on June 9 (Tuesday) has sparked outrage across Assam. Most of the anger is aimed at OIL, for its alleged failure to curb a 14-day leak, resulting in the uncontrollable gush of natural gas. Local activists here say the same attention and outrage should have been expressed when five villagers near the site allegedly lost their lives on account of the gas leak in the first week of June.

Two OIL employees, working as assistant operators at the company’s fire service department, died at blazing gas well site located in Tinsukia district. The Baghjan gas well has been wrapped in flames for more than 24 hours now, since the blowout on June 9. Durlov Gogoi, a former footballer, and Tikheswar Gohain had both been missing since the blowout and their bodies were discovered on Wednesday.

Bodies of the two OIL employees being recovered in Tinsukia, as the fire rages in the background. Photo: PTI

According to a report published by the Assamese daily Asomiya Pratidin, on June 5 five people from a village named Natun Gaon, near the gas well site, allegedly succumbed to the toxic gas-induced poison. The report said that the local public blamed the gas leak for the deaths. The report said that according to the locals, Petu Kishan died on June 1, Bumoni Dutta and Janmoni Sonowal on June 3, and Asom Gohain and Prabin Dutta on June 4.

Soneswar Narah of the Jeepal Krishak Sramik Samiti, a Golaghat-based peasants’ rights body who has been raising his voice against a seismic survey conducted by OIL in some pockets in upper Assam for a few years now, told The Wire that the five from the village near Baghjan were poor, and had no way to express their suffering. This is why, he said, there was no widespread outrage against their deaths.

“It is quite unfortunate that the two OIL employees had to lose their lives just because of a complete failure from the government and OIL. But at the same time, we the people and the media should not overlook the deaths of the five people from the village. These were poor people who lived in hardship. Now there is outrage and attention is being given because two OIL employees died in the gas leak. Equal importance should be given to all and not just OIL employees. Will families of the villagers who died receive any compensation?” asked Narah.

Mukut Deka of the Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS) told The Wire that his organisation will raise the issue in the next few days.

“It is important that the five people who died aren’t forgotten. There should be collective outrage against the five deaths. KMSS members will try to meet their families, and we will create awareness on what could be done for them. Failure and negligence led to the death of the two OIL employees, and to environmental destruction and homelessness for close to 2,000 people.”

On Wednesday (June 10), Time8, an Assam-based news portal, reported that the Petroleum and Gas Workers’ Federation of India alleged that the Centre’s introduction of the Open Acreage Licensing Policy (OALP) will lead to more accidents like the Baghjan oil well blowout in the days to come.

Federation general secretary Nagen Chutia said, “The most defective clause of this policy is that bidders need not have any prior experience in oil exploration activities. Hence, it (OALP) opens the path for incompetent enterprises to execute oil exploration that causes incidents like the Baghjan blowout.”

A press release by OIL on Wednesday said, “Immediate compensation is being disbursed to the families of two OIL employees, who sacrificed their lives. CMD had a detailed discussion with Shri Chandra Mohan Patowary Minister of Industries & Commerce, Assam at Tinsukia in the presence of Shri Bhaskar Pegu, Deputy Commissioner, Tinsukia, and appraised the Hon’ble Minister of the status of the blowout and actions initiated by OIL.”

How Five People in Assam Were Killed During Anti-Citizenship Amendment Protests

As thousands defied the curfew on December 12, Guwahati and the areas around it witnessed widespread police shooting.

Guwahati: Ramesh Talukdar, the superintendent at the Guwahati Medical College, responds only in numbers when asked about the casualties during the spontaneous street protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act that broke out in several parts of Assam. On Sunday morning, he sent the number “four”, indicating that the death toll has gone up by four.

Across the state, five people have been killed during the protests and several others injured.

On early December 12 morning, two young people died on the spot when a mix of army, paramilitary and local police personnel fired at unarmed protestors around Lalung Chowk, at the outskirts of the city. Thousands were out to defy the first day of curfew imposed in Guwahati and other parts of the Assam. Parliament had passed the controversial Act on Wednesday.

Sam Stafford (17), a musician, would have sat for his high-school-leaving exams this year. On December 11, as the Rajya Sabha passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, like thousands of others he read about the final call for protest in the heart of the city, at Latasil Field, before mobile internet was shut down across the state. While the protests were breaking out, a curfew was imposed.

On Thursday morning, Sam began to walk towards Latasil Field, about nine km from his house in Hatigaon, a predominantly Muslim area. “Since it was a protest call for artists too, he went there,” said Sam’s uncle Bishop Stafford, also a musician himself. By noon, more than 2,000 people had gathered at Latasil Field. After fiery speeches by president of the All Assam Students Union Samujjal Bhattacharya, well-known Assamese pop singer Zubin Garg and film actor Jatin Bora, who resigned from the Bharatiya Janata Party a day earlier, the gathering dispersed. However, most street corners across the city saw continuing demonstrations. Stafford walked back towards his house.

Also read: Students Across the Country Protest Police Violence in Jamia Millia

By the time Stafford was in Hatigaon, senior Indian Police Service official and National Investigative Agency sleuth G.P. Singh, who had been put in charge of law and order in Assam, began to make rounds of the city. Singh’s appointment has angered everyone in the state, as his earlier stint in Assam was mired with controversies surrounding his alleged involvement in the fake encounters of the 1990s.

As Singh went around the city, protesters pelted stones at the official’s convoy. At G.S. Road, protestors shouted slogans against Singh, while paramilitary forces and police lobbed tear gas shells and fired some rounds in the air to disperse the crowds Later, on Friday, medical staff discovered that the bullets pierced the glass facade of Apollo Hospital, DY365 channel reported.

When Singh’s convoy reached Hatigaon, protestors greeted him with burning tyres. Most residents who witnessed the police firing said that street lights were turned off before the police fired on protestors. “One couldn’t differentiate if it was a protester, a bystander or someone just out to buy groceries,” said one of the witnesses from Hatigaon, not willing to be named.

At this point, Sam was still on his way home. “Some of Sam’s friends were already on the street protesting. It was at this moment that police reached the spot and started firing indiscriminately from point blank. A bullet hit Sam’s face and he died on the spot,” said his uncle.

Sam Stafford’s funeral. Photo: Anupam Chakravartty

At the same time as the Latasil Field protest, people were also gathering at the outskirts of Guwahati at different spots. During one such protest, 23-year-old Abdul Amin joined his friends at Lalung Chowk, about one km from the Inter State Bus Terminus (ISBT). Ramzan Ali, a local shopkeeper was also there.

“Someone from the crowd told the police that they will not be doing anything except burning tyres to lodge their protest, and that’s what we were doing. At one point, a vehicle from Meghalaya was passing through the protest. The protesters let it pass, but saw the armed security forces chasing everyone who had gathered at Lalung Chowk by firing at them. One bullet hit Amin’s abdomen,” he said.

Ali and others rushed Amin to the Guwahati Medical College. An undergraduate from Halbari College in Barpeta, Amin had recently come to the city. Ibrahim Khalil, Amin’s uncle who came to pick up his body from Guwahati Medical College, said that Amin was an AASU member, just like most college students in the state.

Later that evening, as security forces swept south Guwahati for street protests, a large crowd had gathered near Rukminigaon, burning tyres. Ishwar Nayak (25) was returning from Latasil Field, like thousands of others. By 6 pm, he was near his rented room, along with his roommate Kameshwar Boro.

Boro and Nayak worked at an apparel store owned by FBB. “We wanted to buy some vegetables and also go to the ATM. Nayak saw a spontaneous protest happening in front of Downtown Hospital,” said Boro. The police came chasing the crowd from the Rukminigaon side as everyone rushed inside a by-lane, recalled Boro. “He said that he was hit by a bullet on his waist. I thought like he was joking, because he was a funny guy. But then I saw the blood,” he added.

Boro called his team leader, Nayan Thakuria, and they took Nayak to Guwahati Medical Hospital. “He was one of the most punctual and disciplined colleagues. Like many of us, he joined the protests at Latasil. It was supposed to be peaceful. We never saw this coming,” Thakuria said, while waiting for his colleague’s body to be taken to his village in Udalguri. It has been over a year since Nayak left his father and two sisters at Majuli Tea Garden near Udalguri.

Also read: Why the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill Is Unconstitutional

Deepanjal Das (19), from Chaygaon, succumbed to bullet wounds at Lachit Nagar. A canteen cook at the District Sainik Welfare Board, a government body that works for soldiers employed by the Indian Army, Dipanjal was on his way home when a police bullet hit his abdomen. He died on the way to Guwahati Medical College. On Friday morning, Assamese daily Amar Asom declared Das to be the “first martyr” of the movement against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act. So did the Asom Jatiotababdi Yuva Chattra Parishad (AJYCP).

During the violent spree, apparently to control ‘street violence’, by the police, paramilitary and army, 26 others were injured, some grievously. Among those who sustained injuries was Rajen Medhi from Hatigaon, an auto driver who had gone to buy groceries and medicines. Nazneen Begum (51) and Nazma Afroz (45) were also injured by bullets. Nazma is a tenant at Nazneen’s house, and both were going to buy milk when they were shot by in Hatigaon.

Forty-five-year-old Azizul Hoque, a resident of Muslim Ghota in Sipajhar, also succumbed to his injuries. However, this was not due to police violence. “Azizul was warned by his relatives not to venture out with a fuel truck, as the protests were peaking in Mangaldoi and Darrang district. Azizul, however, stepped out and some miscreants burning tyres for a roadblock burnt his truck near Orang while he was inside it,” said Saddam Hussain, a local student leader.

According to G.P. Singh, the protestors were given fair warning about the curfew. Thousands, though, continued to defy the curfew to protest.

While the curfew was partially lifted in parts of the state on Sunday, people are yet to come to terms with the Centre’s brazenness in passing the Bill and the action against protesters. “What is alarming here is how one set of people can defy curfew and peacefully gather in a field without any repercussions, while in our neighbourhood they just openly fire on people,” said Shamimul Haque, a businessmen in Hatigaon.