The area’s indigenous adivasi communities are deeply dependent on forest produce, including lac, mahua, and sal for food, fuel and livelihood
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
Truck traffic ferrying iron ore dominates the area’s roads, edging out local pedestrians. They only halt on Sundays, after villagers agitated for this weekly break so that they could use the roads to attend church and visit markets
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
After a nine-hour workday in the Orissa Mining Corporation’s iron ore mine, Jaitru Giri and his family return to the shack they live in, at the mine’s outskirts. The Shah Commission criticised mining companies for not paying labourers—overwhelmingly made up of adivasi men and women—a fair wage or benefits, despite making “super normal” profits from illegal mining
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
Trucks jam the road leading up to the mines in the Kurmitar mountain range. The Shah Commission estimated that at current rates of extraction, quality iron ore reserves in this region could run out in 35 years—the government rejects the claim
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
Clouds encircle the 3,000-metre high iron-ore rich Chheliatoka range. Villages around the range, such as Phuljhar pictured here, are opposing South Korean steel giant POSCO’s plans to start a 2,500 ha mine in the area, even as the state government has recently recommended mining. Residents said their primary fear was the mine’s environmental impacts on the area’s network of mountain streams, which currently irrigate their farms, allowing them to grow crops all through the year
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
Prabhu Sahay Toppono, from the indigenous Pauri Bhuiyan community, walks across a dried mountain stream—the only source of water for his hillside hamlet on the edge of a mine. He says residents have seen the stream’s fish population disappear in the past seven years. During the rainy season, waste from the mine flows downhill into the stream, making it impossible to cultivate the kharif crop. “We took the red polluted water in a plastic packet to the officers and complained,” Toppono said. “They said they would act, but nothing happened”
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
North Odisha’s rich deciduous forests and mountain ranges hold a third of India’s haematite iron ore reserves, making it the country’s leading iron ore mining area over the past decade, as well as the site of the state’s largest corruption scam
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
The Chheliatoka range is home to the Khandadhar waterfall – at 800 feet, it is the state’s second highest
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
Remote villages, spread across large distances, ensure that the limited safeguards which adivasi communities have, such as participating in environmental public hearings or consenting to proposals to cut forests for projects, are effortlessly violated by mining companies and government officials
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero
A mining company constructs a road through the forests around the mining town of Bonai. According to official records, iron ore and manganese are being mined over 45,000 hectares (ha) in north Odisha, of which 34,000 ha constitute forested area
Photograph by: Chitrangada Choudhury Aga
Read story: Illegal mining’s ground zero