Call Out for Action: Kick Vedanta Out of London! 1pm, 11th Jan 2013

Guardian Front Page August 2012

Guardian Front Page August 2012

From our friends at Foil Vedan­ta.

Declare sol­i­dar­i­ty with grass­roots move­ments fight­ing Vedan­ta in India, Africa and else­where!

Kick Vedan­ta out of Lon­don for it’s cor­po­rate crimes, mur­der and destruc­tion. Noise demon­stra­tion and pick­et at Vedan­ta head­quar­ters, 16 Berke­ley Street.

May­fair, W1J 8DZ . Green Park tube.
1 – 3pm. Fri­day 11th Jan­u­ary.

On Fri­day 11th Janu ary the Supreme Court will final­ly announce its his­tor­i­cal deci­sion on whether to allow the min­ing of the threat­ened Niyam­giri moun­tain in Odisha, India1. Simul­ta­ne­ous­ly trib­als and farm­ers from a num­ber of grass­roots organ­i­sa­tions2 will hold a ral­ly of defi­ance in Bhawa­ni­pat­na, nea r the moun­tain. They will call for clo­sure of the sink­ing Lan­ji­garh refin­ery and an absolute ban on the so-far-unsuc­cess­ful attempt to mine baux­ite on their sacred hills3.

On 10th of Jan­u­ary activists in New York will ral­ly out­side the Unit­ed Nations Head­quar­ters point­ing out Vedanta’s clear vio­la­tions of the UN Dec­la­ra­tion on the Rights of Indige­nous Peo­ples, includ­ing right to par­tic­i­pate in deci­sion mak­ing, right to water and cul­tur­al and reli­gious rights. They will call for the Indi­an Gov­ern­ment to put a final stop to this con­test­ed project, and for the state owned Oris­sa Min­ing Cor­po­ra­tion to be pulled out of dodgy deals it has made with Vedan­ta in an attempt to force the mine through the courts on Vedanta’s behalf (see their face­book event).

 Here in Lon­don we will draw atten­tion to Vedanta’s nom­i­nal May­fair head­quar­ters from which they gain a cloak of respectabil­i­ty and easy access to cap­i­tal. We will call for Vedan­ta to be de-list­ed from the Lon­don Stock Exchange and thrown out of its cosy posi­tion in the Lon­don cor­po­rate elite for proven human rights and envi­ron­men­tal abus­es, cor­rup­tion and poor cor­po­rate gov­er­nance4.

Please join us and bring drums, pots and pans and any­thing that makes noise!

Our sol­i­dar­i­ty demo on 6th Dec was cov­ered in all the Indi­an papers and our sol­i­dar­i­ty was felt direct­ly. Let us do it again!

See you there! More infor­ma­tion below.

(1) The Supreme Court is due to make a final deci­sion on the chal­lenge posed to the Envi­ron­ment Ministry’s stop to the Niyam­giri mine on 11th Jan­u­ary. In its Decem­ber 6th hear­ing the Supreme Court con­clud­ed that the case rest­ed on whether the rights of the indige­nous Don­gia Kond’s – who live exclu­sive­ly on that moun­tain – could be con­sid­ered ‘inalien­able or com­pen­sato­ry’. The pre­vi­ous rul­ing by Envi­ron­ment and Forests min­is­ter Jairam Ramesh in August 2010 pre­vent­ed Vedan­ta from min­ing the moun­tain due to vio­la­tions of envi­ron­ment and forestry acts. The chal­lenge to this rul­ing has been mount­ed by the Oris­sa Min­ing Cor­po­ra­tion, a state owned com­pa­ny with 24% shares in the joint ven­ture to mine Niyam­giri with Vedan­ta, beg­ging ques­tions about why a state com­pa­ny is lob­by­ing so hard for a British min­ing com­pa­ny in whom it has only minor­i­ty shares in this small project (see Niyam­giri: A tem­po­rary reprieve).

On 6th Decem­ber, in antic­i­pa­tion of a final Supreme Court rul­ing, more than 5000 trib­als and farm­ers ral­lied on the Niyam­giri moun­tain and around the Lan­ji­garh refin­ery send­ing a mes­sage that they would not tol­er­ate the mine or the refin­ery. In Lon­don Foil Vedan­ta held a noise demo out­side the Indi­an High Com­mis­sion in which a pile of mud was dumped in the entrance. This news was car­ried all over India by major papers and TV and had a sig­nif­i­cant impact (see Lon­don pro­test­ers join 5000 in India to stop mine).

(2) Niyam­giri Surakhya Sami­ti, Sachetana Nagari­ka Man­cha, Loka San­gram Man­cha, Com­mu­nist Par­ty of India and Sama­jwa­di Jan Parishad will coor­di­nate the ral­ly in Odisha on the 11th Jan.

(3) The Lan­ji­gargh refin­ery was built at the base of Niyam­giri and assessed for envi­ron­men­tal and social impact with­out tak­ing into account the inten­tion to mine the hill above for baux­ite to run the plant. How­ev­er, obtain­ing per­mis­sion to mine the moun­tain has been much more dif­fi­cult than Vedan­ta sup­posed and has left them run­ning Lan­ji­garh at a loss, leav­ing Vedan­ta Alu­mini­um with accu­mu­lat­ed debt of $3.65 bil­lion.  http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012–11-27…)

(4) Vedan­ta was described in Par­lia­ment by Labour MP Lisa Nandy as ‘one of the com­pa­nies that have been found guilty of gross vio­la­tions of human rights’ . Ms Nandy in her speech quot­ed Richard Lam­bert the for­mer Direc­tor Gen­er­al of the CBI: ‘It nev­er occurred to those of us who helped to launch the FTSE 100 index 27 years ago that one day it would be pro­vid­ing a cloak of respectabil­i­ty and lots of pas­sive investors for com­pa­nies that chal­lenge the canons of cor­po­rate gov­er­nance such as Vedan­ta…’. Sim­i­lar­ly City of Lon­don researchers from ‘Trust­ed Sources’ have not­ed Vedanta’s rea­sons for reg­is­ter­ing in Lon­don:

“A Lon­don list­ing allows access to an enor­mous pool of cap­i­tal. If you are in the FTSE Index, track­er funds have got to own you and oth­ers will fol­low.” Both Vedan­ta Resources and Essar Ener­gy are mem­bers of the FTSE 100. London’s rep­u­ta­tion as a mar­ket with high stan­dards of trans­paren­cy and cor­po­rate gov­er­nance is anoth­er draw for Indi­an com­pa­nies. Both Vedan­ta and Essar have faced crit­i­cism on cor­po­rate gov­er­nance grounds in India, and a for­eign list­ing is seen as one way to sig­nal to investors that the com­pa­ny does main­tain high stan­dards.

We are join­ing the calls of par­lia­men­tar­i­ans and financiers in point­ing out how the Lon­don list­ing is used for legal immu­ni­ty and to hide Vedanta’s cor­po­rate crimes. We are call­ing for Vedan­ta to be de-list­ed from the Lon­don Stock Exchange and tak­en to court for Human Rights abus­es here in Lon­don.