Kudankulam Nuclear Protest Called Off -- For Now
Monday, 17 October 2011, 15:43 IST
13,000 crore," S.K. Jain, chairman and managing director of NPCIL, told IANS.
Anti-nuclear activists started blocking the entry points to the power plant Oct 13 charging that the central government was not concerned about the life of 106 fasting protesters and demanding the scrapping of the project.
The fasters, including 22 women, started their protest Oct 9.
The Oct 13 blockade began a day after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh wrote to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa stressing that scrapping the nuclear power project would affect the state's industries.
In the process, around 1,000 people, including school students and the elderly, were confined to the Kudankulam plant site since Thursday. Around 50 children have not been able to attend their schools.
Families of hundreds of contract workers and employees of contractors Larsen and Toubro Ltd have resided on the KNPP campus for the past several years.
According to NPCIL officials, contract workers from states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal had begun leaving Kudankulam village after facing social boycott.
Earlier, life for families in the project complex turned a little easy as they got milk for children and fresh essential provisions Sunday morning.
"With the help of police, essential items were sent to families and workers," a NPCIL official told IANS.
"Provisions for the canteen and change of clothes for our employees were also sent in police vans," he said.
Explained Sivasubramanian: "We knew provisions were being sent to people inside the complex but we did not object on humanitarian grounds. However, police or NPCIL officials did not discuss the supplies with us."
Around 2,000 villagers, including women, have maintained vigil day and night since the blockade started to turn back employees trying to get into the project campus.
On Sep 22, the Tamil Nadu government formally asked the central government to halt work on the reactors till local fears over safety were allayed.
More than 100 protesters were on fast during the first phase of the protest in Idinthakari village for 11 days in September.
Source: IANS