
THE residents of 122 villages straddling Chilika lake in Orissa have been fishing in troubled waters for the past two decades. Ironically, the draft Bill - cleared by the state cabinet in December 2001 - to provide succour to them has sent their hackles rising. The legislation, when enacted, will seek to restore the ecology of Asia's largest brackish-water lake by imposing a blanket ban on
scientific prawn culture inside it.
The bumper prawn harvest in the early eighties attracted several powerful non-traditional fish workers and the mafia. Even the business house, Tatas, had set up shop in the area. But it was forced to withdraw by the fishing community.
The fisherfolk formed 38 cooperative societies and demanded land rights. When they were offered only a lease agreement, they moved the High Court. An unfavourable verdict saw them filing an appeal in the Supreme Court (SC). The SC laid down guidelines for eviction of illegal gheris from the lake and upheld the claim of the fisherfolk over Chilika. But official inaction led the fisherfolk
to demolish gheris themselves. A flashpoint was reached in May 1999 when four fisherfolk died in police firing.
The yet-to-be-passed Bill is merely a cosmetic exercise by the state government so that it is seen to be implementing the SC directive, says Jali and adds that the very provision of leasing out 30 per cent of the area to non-traditional fisherfolk smacks of subterfuge. In fact, this would give the prawn mafia an ideal alibi to consolidate their holdings here, he contends.
Another loophole in the proposed law is the continuance of the three-star system of cooperatives borrowed from neighbouring states. "Earlier, we used to get the lease from our central cooperative society. Now the Orissa State Fishermen's Cooperative Federation has sprung up as a bottleneck," alleges Sadasiba Jena, chief advisor, Purbanchala Matsyajibi Mahasangha.
However, Ajit Pattnaik, chief executive officer of the Chilika Development Authority, is confident that the regulation will help weed out criminal
elements. "Now that we are armed with more powers and there is a provision for penalties, we will get tough," he says. "The identification of ecosensitive zones and the tabling of the environmental impact assessment report in the state assembly are welcome measures," adds Pattnaik.
When the state cabinet gave the
go-ahead to the Bill, fisherfolk took to the streets in Bhubaneswar and submitted a memorandum to Orissa chief minister Naveen Patnaik. Unfortunately, the safeguard that was supposed to curb the shrunk and shrivelled lake's unregulated exploitation had a ripple effect of a different kind: it sparked a series of protests that are likely to snowball into a major agitation. In the process, the
bitter rivalry to grab a slice of the Chilika pie is set to intensify - at the cost of the ecology of the region.