Women
shout slogans during a protest against the government and police forces
after at 13 people were killed when police fired at protesters calling
for the closure of a Vedanta Resources-controlled copper smelter in
Thootukudi, in southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, in Chennai, India,
May 22, 2018. Source: Reuters/P.Ravikumar
THE power has been switched off to a large copper smelter in southern
India after police shot and killed 13 people protesting against the
pollution generated by the plant.
Police used live ammunition to disperse protesters in Tuticorin city in
Tamil Nadu state this week, provoking international outrage and demands
for an immediate investigation.
The protests were the culmination of months of concern the copper
smelting plant, owned by British mining giant Vedanta Resources, was
polluting the water and air in the city. The owners deny this claim and
have been seeking to renew the license of the temporarily
non-operational plant with hopes to double its production capacity.
Cars and buildings were set ablaze and rocks hurled at police during
Tuesday’s protests. The police responded with live fire, killing 11
demonstrators and injuring many others, including 20 police.
Another protester died Wednesday when he was struck by rubber bullets in
a second day of protests. The thirteenth victim died on Thursday, two
days after being injured.
Indian actor-turned-politician Kamal Haasan speaks to family members of a
man who was injured while protesting against the construction of a
copper smelter by Vedanta Resources from the road, in Thoothukudi, Tamil
Nadu, India in this still image from May 23, 2018 video footage.
Source: ANI via Reuters
The chief minister of Tamil Nadu has ordered an inquiry into the
heavy-handed approach but defended the actions of police, which the
state’s opposition leader called “mass murder.”
“The police have a duty during protests to maintain law and order, but
lethal force can only be used if there is an imminent threat to life,”
Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said.
“Tamil Nadu authorities need to carry out a prompt and credible investigation to determine if police used excessive force.”
On Thursday, the pollution control board of Tamil Nadu put an end to any
hopes of reopening the plant after finding the plant to be carrying out
activity to resume production without permission.
“The issue of renewal of consent for the year 2018-2023 has been
rejected … due to non-compliance of certain conditions,” the Tamil Nadu
Pollution Control Board said in an order dated Wednesday.
It did not elaborate on the conditions the smelter had not met but said
it “shall be disconnected with power supply and closed with immediate
effect.”
The agency told Vedanta it could not resume operations without permission.