What Happened
- On February 5, 2026, a dynamite explosion at an illegal coal mine in Mynsyngat village, Thangkso area (East Jaintia Hills, Meghalaya) killed 34 labourers — exposing the continued operation of rat-hole mines more than a decade after a formal ban.
- Despite a National Green Tribunal (NGT) ban issued on April 17, 2014, and subsequent Supreme Court upholding in July 2019, illegal coal extraction continues across Meghalaya's coalfields, with an estimated 22,000 illegal mines operating openly.
- Enforcement failures are systemic: coal trucks move illegally along highways "after paying a fee" to local officials; a Sub-Inspector was killed in 2015 for detaining illegal coal trucks, illustrating the dangers of enforcement.
- Environmental devastation is severe — run-off from mines has turned water sources acidic; farmland is subsiding over hollowed-out hills; residents purchase water from mine operators who themselves polluted it.
- The Justice BP Katakey Committee — appointed by the NGT/Meghalaya High Court — has filed over 36 reports documenting rampant violations, recommending drone surveillance across all districts.
- Mapping failure compounds the crisis: regulations require only 2D maps for mining licences, failing to capture the three-dimensional underground excavation footprint.
- Official permitted coal mining only began in mid-2025, when two coal blocks were formally approved — years after the ban theoretically ended all extraction.
Static Topic Bridges
NGT's Role and the 2014 Rat-Hole Mining Ban
The National Green Tribunal (NGT), established under the National Green Tribunal Act, 2010, is a specialised quasi-judicial body for environmental disputes. It exercises original jurisdiction over matters relating to environmental protection and disputes arising from the implementation of environmental laws.
- NGT established: 2010; Principal Bench in New Delhi; Regional Benches in Bhopal, Pune, Kolkata, Chennai
- The NGT ban on rat-hole mining in Meghalaya was issued on April 17, 2014, following an urgent PIL filed by the All Dimasa Students' Union from Assam; the ban was based on the severe environmental and safety violations documented
- The Supreme Court upheld the NGT ban by its order dated July 3, 2019, in the "Threat to Life Arising out of Coal Mining in Meghalaya" case — making the ban legally absolute under both NGT and Supreme Court authority
- Rat-hole mining was classified as illegal under both the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 (MMDR Act) and environmental laws; yet enforcement remained the responsibility of state authorities who failed to act
- The Justice BP Katakey Committee (retired Gauhati High Court judge) was constituted to monitor compliance and restoration
Connection to this news: The 2026 blast killing 34 workers demonstrates that over a decade after the NGT ban and seven years after Supreme Court affirmation, the judicial order has not translated into ground-level enforcement — a governance failure that the article directly exposes.
Meghalaya's Sixth Schedule Constitutional Status and Land Ownership
Meghalaya is a Sixth Schedule state under the Indian Constitution. The Sixth Schedule (Articles 244(2) and 275(1)) applies to tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram, creating Autonomous District Councils (ADCs) with legislative and judicial powers over specified subjects including land management and forests.
- In Meghalaya, coal-bearing land is largely privately or community-owned under customary Khasi, Jaintia, and Garo tenure systems — not government-owned
- This is constitutionally distinct from most Indian states where sub-soil resources belong to the state under the MMDR Act
- The private land ownership of coal-rich hills in Meghalaya means the state government has limited ability to assert ownership over the mineral beneath; landowners argue they have an inherent right to mine their own land
- This constitutional anomaly is why the MMDR Act (which vests minerals in the state/centre) has been difficult to enforce uniformly in Meghalaya
- The three Autonomous District Councils in Meghalaya (Khasi Hills, Jaintia Hills, Garo Hills) retain authority over land and forest under Schedule VI — complicating state-level enforcement
Connection to this news: The "mapping problem" described in the article — inability to capture underground impacts — is compounded by the political complexity of enforcing mining bans on private/community land in a Sixth Schedule state where landowners historically had customary rights to surface and subsurface resources.
Rat-Hole Mining — Environmental and Safety Dimensions
Rat-hole mining is a form of coal extraction involving narrow horizontal tunnels (rat-holes) dug by hand by workers who enter on all fours. Two variants exist: "side-cutting" (on hillsides) and "box-cutting" (open pits with deep vertical shafts into horizontal seams). The practice is entirely manual and violates all safety norms under the Mines Act, 1952.
- Mines Act, 1952: Governs safety, health, and working conditions in mines; mandates ventilation, shoring, emergency exits, and minimum worker age (18 years); rat-hole mining violates virtually every provision
- Environmental impacts: (a) Acid mine drainage — water reacting with coal creates sulphuric acid that contaminates rivers; the Kopili, Lukha, and Myntdu rivers in Meghalaya have recorded severe acidification; (b) Subsidence — hollow hills collapse, destroying farmland above; (c) Methane gas accumulation — explosion risk (the 2026 blast was dynamite in an unventilated tunnel)
- Worker exploitation: Predominantly migrant labourers from Assam, Bihar, and West Bengal; no safety equipment, no contracts, no insurance; workers avoid healthcare facilities fearing arrest
- The 2018 Meghalaya mining accident (13 miners trapped for weeks in a flooded mine in Ksan, East Jaintia Hills) drew national attention and led to subsequent tightening of judicial monitoring
Connection to this news: The February 2026 blast is a direct continuation of the pattern established by the 2018 tragedy — deaths in illegal mines that have no ventilation, no safety equipment, and no emergency response protocols.
MMDR Act 1957 — Minerals Governance Framework
The Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 is India's primary legislation governing mineral rights and mining operations. It was significantly amended in 2015 and 2021 to improve transparency and auction mechanisms.
- MMDR Act 1957: Vests ownership of minerals in the government (state government for minor minerals, central government for specified major minerals); private entities mine through lease granted by the state
- The 2015 Amendment replaced discretionary lease grants with mandatory competitive auctions, and introduced the District Mineral Foundation (DMF) to benefit communities in mining-affected areas
- The 2021 Amendment further reformed captive mine allocations and permitted commercial mining of coal
- Pradhan Mantri Khanij Kshetra Kalyan Yojana (PMKKKY): Scheme under DMF to use mining revenues for local community welfare (health, education, livelihood) in mining-affected districts
- Meghalaya's situation is complicated because the MMDR framework assumes state ownership of sub-soil resources — an assumption the Sixth Schedule disrupts for privately-owned land
Connection to this news: All rat-hole mining operations are illegal under MMDR Act (operating without lease), Mines Act (violating all safety norms), and NGT/Supreme Court orders — yet the layered legal and constitutional complexity of Meghalaya's land tenure makes enforcement genuinely difficult, beyond mere political will.
Key Facts & Data
- NGT rat-hole mining ban: April 17, 2014
- Supreme Court upheld the ban: July 3, 2019
- 2026 blast: February 5, 2026; 34 workers killed; location: Mynsyngat, East Jaintia Hills
- 2018 Meghalaya mining accident: 13 miners trapped in flooded mine, Ksan, East Jaintia Hills
- Estimated illegal mines operating: ~22,000 (ThePrint ground report)
- Justice BP Katakey Committee reports filed: over 36
- Official coal mining began in Meghalaya: mid-2025 (two permitted blocks)
- NGT Act: 2010; Principal Bench: New Delhi
- MMDR Act: 1957; major amendments: 2015 and 2021
- Meghalaya constitutional status: Sixth Schedule (Articles 244(2) and 275(1))
- Mines Act: 1952 — governs safety, health, working conditions; minimum worker age: 18 years