Indian community moves against

Indian community moves against

UK’s Vedanta Hundreds of members of the Dongria Kondh community danced and sang through the capital of the Indian state of Orissa earlier this week, armed with traditional weapons, to mark their opposition to British company Vedanta’s plans to mine their sacred mountain.

A huge procession snaked through the Orissan capital, Bhubaneswar. The FTSE 100 British company Vedanta, majority owned by London-based billionaire Anil Agarwal, has received the go-ahead from India’s Supreme Court to mine aluminium ore on the Dongria’s land.The mine would destroy the forests and streams the Dongria depend on, and would turn their sacred mountain into an industrial wasteland.Jitu Jakesika said at the demonstration: “We will carry on our struggle to save Niyamgiri at any cost.”Survival’s director Stephen Corry said: “If further proof were needed that the Dongria Kondh are determined to stop Vedanta, this would be it.The Dongria know that the mine would destroy them.Vedanta must heed their voices and pull out of this project.”Last week Survival submitted a report to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Issues, saying, “Mining will devastate what the Dongria Kondh hold sacred and the natural resources from which they draw their specific identity as a people.”Many British banks and pension funds invest in Vedanta, including the Universities Pension Fund, F&C, Standard Life, Barclays Bank, Abbey National and HSBC, as well as Middlesbrough and Wolverhampton Councils.Survival International is campaigning for investors to pull out of Vedanta.Survival InternationalThe FTSE 100 British company Vedanta, majority owned by London-based billionaire Anil Agarwal, has received the go-ahead from India’s Supreme Court to mine aluminium ore on the Dongria’s land.The mine would destroy the forests and streams the Dongria depend on, and would turn their sacred mountain into an industrial wasteland.Jitu Jakesika said at the demonstration: “We will carry on our struggle to save Niyamgiri at any cost.”Survival’s director Stephen Corry said: “If further proof were needed that the Dongria Kondh are determined to stop Vedanta, this would be it.The Dongria know that the mine would destroy them.Vedanta must heed their voices and pull out of this project.”Last week Survival submitted a report to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Issues, saying, “Mining will devastate what the Dongria Kondh hold sacred and the natural resources from which they draw their specific identity as a people.”Many British banks and pension funds invest in Vedanta, including the Universities Pension Fund, F&C, Standard Life, Barclays Bank, Abbey National and HSBC, as well as Middlesbrough and Wolverhampton Councils.Survival International is campaigning for investors to pull out of Vedanta.Survival International

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