Indian state will proceed 'no matter what' with protest-hit Adani
port-minister
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[December 03, 2022]
By Munsif Vengattil
KOZHIKODE, India (Reuters) - India's Kerala state will proceed "no
matter what" with a $900 million port project and is open to deploying
federal police if needed to protect it from protesters blocking
construction, a government minister told Reuters on Saturday.
The local fishing community, led by Catholic priests, has blocked
construction of Vizhinjam port by Adani Group for almost four months,
erecting a makeshift shelter at the port's entrance. The protesters say
the huge project causes coastal erosion that has undermined their
livelihoods, calling for a complete halt on the construction.
Adani Group, led by Asia's richest man Gautam Adani, and the Kerala
government, which is shouldering two-thirds of the project cost with the
federal government, have denied such accusations. Clashes between police
and protesters last weekend injured more than 100 people, including 64
police.
Although the protesters have refused to budge, Kerala's minister of
ports, Ahammed Devarkovil, said the government of the southern state was
hopeful of resolving the deadlock but there was no chance it would halt
construction.
"We want to complete the port project no matter what. No compromise can
be made on that," he said in an interview. "Because these are civilians
protesting, the government's position is to take this forward without
inflicting any harm" on protesters.
Asked for comment on Devarkovil's remarks, a protest leader, Fredy
Solomon, said protests would continue as "houses and livelihoods of
thousands of fishermen are at stake."
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Police officers stand guard near the
barricades during a protest rally by the supporters of the proposed
Vizhinjam port project in the southern state of Kerala, India,
November 30, 2022. REUTERS/Munsif Vengattil/File Photo
Adani Group did not immediately respond to an email request for
comment. The conglomerate has repeatedly urged a state court to
authorise having the federal police guard the project so work may
resume, saying local police were "mute spectators".
Minister Devarkovil said Kerala remains open to the idea of
deploying the federal Central Reserve Police Force.
Adani wants to complete the first phase of construction by December
2024, but Devarkovil said his government was hopeful of getting the
first vessel to the port by September next year, even as
construction continues. It wants to make up for lost time by
deploying workers to work extra hours and putting more industrial
equipment to use.
"Adani Group is willing to do that," Devarkovil said.
Gautam Adani, whose empire spans gas and power projects as well as a
ports and logistics business valued at some $23.5 billion, has
described Vizhinjam as an "unmatched location" on the critical
east-west shipping route.
"The possibilities being opened up by Vizhinjam port are unmatched
by any other in India," Devarkovil said. "We will be set to grab
business from Sri Lanka port."
(Reporting by Munsif Vengattil in Kozhikode; Editing by Aditya Kalra
and William Mallard)
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