How the Sardar Sarovar Dam Displaced Communities
Narrator: On the 28th of August 2002, the Chief Minister and the dignitaries
of the Indian State of Gujurat in Western India gathered together
for a ceremony of the head of the Narmada Main Canal. The
blessings of the gods are invoked and milk offered signifying the
release of water into the canal for the first time.
This is the Narmada main canal. The people came and they are
hundreds to cheerfully celebrate the inauguration. The canal is the
largest in the world, 450 kilometers long. They can move more
than a million liters of water per second. Down at the bottom, it is
73 meters wide and the water will be nearly eight meters deep
when it is full.
It will supply drinking and irrigational water to more than three
and a half thousand villages and 1.9 million hectares of agricultural
land. The water comes from the massive Sardar-Sarovar Dam.
When completed in 2005, it will produce 14, 050 megawatts of
electrical power. The reservoir behind it stretches back more than
200 kilometers. The amount of water it holds is huge, almost a
million hectare in meters. In the process, 245 villages have been
submerged and more than a million people displaced. The plan is
to raise the dam even higher.
The Narmada River is the fifth longest in India. It is already being
dammed in several places but the main dam, the Sardar Sarovar is
closest to the sea. The creation of the reservoir will allow water to
be diverted north through the system of canals creating an
agriculture breadbaskets for 40 million people in three Indian
states.
Nestled close by the Narmada River just a couple of kilometers
from the dam itself is the village of Kevadia gone. The villages,
smallholders live by farming. Although that village was not
flooded by reservoir, the project has dramatically affected their
lives.
Govind Keshu: I have more than 15 acres of land which is with the government
now and the government has used this land in making the project.
My forefathers were told that the prime minister, Jabar Harlal was
in displaced and hence, they have removed all the crops from the
land and for that, the government paid them around 60 rupees per
acre for the crops and then they were not paid anything else.
Jaimini Devta: Sixty rupees means less than a pound and is equal to around one
dollar.
Narrator: For most of the villages, the only work available is only dam and
that is only until it is completed in three years’ time.
Suman Naarsingh: I go as a laborer at the cement factory which makes demand for the
construction of the dam. I own around 300 rupees for 30 days.
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