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Ayodhya's Solar Power Plant Displaces Powerless Villagers

Many longtime residents of Rampur Halwara village, mostly Dalits, have lost their homes to the development juggernaut in Ayodhya. The rest are living in fear

Tusshar Yadav, Jay Ganatra
Ayodhya solar power plant project expands to villagers' thresholds Photo: Tusshar Yadav, Jay Ganatra
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For residents of Rampur Halwara, fear looms large. The worry about having their generational homes razed to the ground is growing as Ayodhya바카라™s 바카라œambitious바카라 solar power plant project expands to their thresholds.

In August last year, Rampur Halwara village in Ayodhya district was declared as the site for a 40 megawatt solar power plant project to accommodate Ayodhya바카라™s growing power demand. The project, which is a collaboration between the state government and NTPC Renewable Energy Limited is spread across 165 acres with over one lakh solar panels being installed.

About 30 to 35 families, mostly Dalits, reside in the area designated for the project. Many of them are now displaced due to their homes being torn down. The last lot of about a dozen houses remains.

Today, Rampur Halwara village has thousands of solar panels spread across acres of land with a select few chappars and pakka houses on the edge of the expanding solar project. Amid mounds of sand and gravel sits a faded yellow board which reads, 바카라œ40MW Solar Power Project Ayodhya UP바카라. According to residents, hundreds of decades-old trees that once lined the road have been felled in the past few months leaving the region devoid of greenery. When the wind blows, it scatters the loose soil creating mini dust-storms.

Solar power plant in Rampur Halwara
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Rampur Halwara resident Prakashini Kumari says that since the project began about six months ago, she바카라™s witnessed many chappars being demolished without any notice or compensation. The displaced residents, she says, have either moved to their relatives바카라™ houses in other villages or are setting up camp in a new location daily, after their pleas to not bulldoze their homes fell on deaf ears.

바카라œThey had no notice or written order to show to the people whose houses they tore down. The same will happen with us soon,바카라 she says. 바카라œWe have all the papers for our land but we don't know if that바카라™ll save our house from being bulldozed.바카라

Prakashini's father-in-law, who was born in Rampur Halwara and had lived here for 85 years, passed away about a month ago due to the stress of losing his house, which contributed to his declining health. 바카라œWe are always living in fear. We don't have any money or savings to be able to relocate. We barely make Rs 250 a day. With that, do we buy food, fund our children바카라™s education or pay for other living expenses?바카라 the mother of three said. "When we ask them if we will be given any compensation or allocated another piece of land, they say nothing. We are even ready to build a house in the khalia (ditch) but they don't say anything clearly,바카라 she added.

Vineetha in front of her house
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Two houses down, Vineetha, a frail-looking woman in her forties, sits on a charpoy in front of her pakka house which she says she built about six years ago. 바카라œI received about Rs 3.5 lakh from the government under the Lohia Awas Yojana six years ago and now they want to take it away from us?바카라 she asks. 바카라œThey say we will get some compensation but people who바카라™ve had their houses torn down haven바카라™t received anything so I'll believe it when I get it.바카라

Vineetha says it had taken a lifetime to be able to 바카라œfulfill her dream바카라 and build a pakka house with the help of the scheme, and if her house is demolished, it would not be possible for her to do it again.

Govind Majhi
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About two months ago, 18-year-old Govind Majhi바카라™s chappar was demolished. He and his family didn바카라™t receive any notice or prior intimation and were given just a couple of hours to remove their belongings before their chappar was razed to the ground. Govind바카라™s father Om Prakash Majhi had lived in the house for over 35 years but he couldn바카라™t produce papers to plead his case before the authorities. 바카라œNo one was listening to us because we didn바카라™t have papers, so we have just accepted it,바카라 he says. Govind바카라™s farm lands have also been allegedly occupied by National Thermal Power Corporation Ltd (NTPC) for the project. 바카라œWe used to get about Rs 30 to 35 thousand annually from wheat and Rs 1.5 lakh from sugarcane farming on those lands but now even that is gone.바카라

Govind바카라™s father passed away a month ago and he now lives with his relatives in the city.

Ram Sabad Majhi, another resident and owner of the few pakka houses in the locality, has also lost about 12 bigha (roughly 8 acres) of farm land to the solar power plant project. 바카라œWe had documents for the property but it was still taken,바카라 Ram says. 바카라œThey바카라™ve told us that the land has been declared unfit for cultivation on account of being submerged.바카라

The same 바카라œsubmerged바카라 land, however, is being used to mount solar panels. 바카라œAnd we didn바카라™t even get any compensation for it,바카라 he said. 바카라œIn 1998, when a road was built cutting across our farm lands, we were all paid a compensatory amount. Now, when the entire property has been seized, why no compensation?바카라

When Majhi heard that his house was in the way of the project and would have to be demolished, he paid a visit to the DM Nitish Kumar바카라™s office. 바카라œI visited the DM바카라™s office about two months ago and was told no houses would be demolished before a survey is conducted,바카라 he says. 바카라œSince then, no one has said anything about demolition but now the project has advanced to our boundary, very soon, it바카라™ll be time for us to leave our house.바카라

residents of Rampur Halwara Photo: Zaina Azhar Sayeda
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Ayodhya DM Nitish Kumar told Outlook that compensation would be paid to all those affected바카라”those who lost their property or their home. 바카라œWe have written to NTPC saying that they need to compensate those with houses on government land before they demolish them. A survey is also ongoing to see how many people reside in the village and who will be affected. The villagers probably don바카라™t know about this so they are worried,바카라 he said.

Outlook sent a questionnaire to NTPC regarding the displacement and compensation to the villagers but did not receive any response.

This project is a part of Uttar Pradesh's ambitious Solar Energy Policy 2022 in which the plan was to develop 16 municipal corporations and Noida as solar cities. Ayodhya was supposed to be the model for other cities.

The remaining houses in Rampur Halwara
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Since the consecration of the Ram temple earlier this year, Ayodhya has become a tourist hotspot, with several new hotels popping up and real-estate projects being sanctioned. The temple town has emerged as a new investment destination, attracting interest from a wide range of stakeholders, including hoteliers, airlines, and corporations. Due to this economic boom and development, there is an increasing demand for energy in Ayodhya, hence the solar power plant project.

Dalit activist and writer Bhanwar Meghwanshi says the poor, dalits, tribals, and minorities have always been displaced in the name of development, but now, these instances are increasing in the name of nation, development, and religion. 바카라œI believe that if those who talk about building Ram's house have no hesitation in destroying the houses of Dalits and the poor, then it proves where Dalits stand in this nation,바카라 he points out. 바카라œFor us, we have rights only as long as democracy and the Constitution are alive, otherwise we will be forced to live as homeless and destitute people. We have no place in such a nation.바카라

(with inputs from Jay Ganatra and Tusshar Yadav)

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