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In Odisha clashes between police & tribals, bauxite mining in focus


What Happened

  • Violent clashes erupted between tribal villagers and police in Kashipur block of Rayagada district, Odisha, over the construction of a 3-km access road to the Sijimali bauxite mine
  • Over 30 police personnel and more than 25 tribal villagers were injured in the confrontation
  • The Sijimali mine was auctioned to Vedanta Ltd in 2023; tribal communities allege that Gram Sabha consent was forged and that the project threatens their land, forests, and water sources
  • Opposition parties sent fact-finding teams to the region, alleging police excesses against protesters
  • The conflict echoes the earlier Niyamgiri case, where the Dongria Kondh community successfully blocked Vedanta's bauxite mining plans in 2013 through Gram Sabha votes

Static Topic Bridges

PESA Act, 1996 — Tribal Self-Governance and Gram Sabha Rights

The Provisions of the Panchayats (Extension to the Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (PESA) was enacted on 24 December 1996 to extend Part IX of the Constitution to Scheduled Areas defined under the Fifth Schedule, with modifications that preserve tribal customary rights. The Act empowers Gram Sabhas in these areas with significant authority: mandatory prior consultation in land acquisition, control over natural resources, prevention of alienation of tribal land, and power to decide on local development projects. PESA applies to 10 states including Odisha and is intended to ensure that tribal communities govern themselves through their own institutions rather than outside impositions.

  • Applies to areas specified under the Fifth Schedule of the Constitution (Schedule V areas)
  • Gram Sabha must be consulted for all acquisitions, resettlement, and rehabilitation
  • State laws must be in consonance with customary laws, traditions, and social/religious practices of tribal communities
  • Implemented in 10 states: Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, and Rajasthan

Connection to this news: Allegations that Gram Sabha consent was forged for the Sijimali mine directly violate PESA's mandatory consultation requirement; if true, the entire mining clearance process would be legally questionable.


Forest Rights Act, 2006 — Community Rights over Forest Land

The Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 recognises the historical injustice done to forest-dwelling communities and vests in them individual and community rights over forestland they have occupied for generations. Community Forest Rights (CFRs) include the right to protect, regenerate, conserve, and manage any community forest resource that communities have been traditionally managing. The law also mandates that no forest land can be diverted for non-forest purposes without the free, prior, and informed consent of the concerned Gram Sabha.

  • Gram Sabha consent is a prerequisite for any diversion of forest land for mining, dams, or other non-forest uses
  • The Niyamgiri judgment (Orissa Mining Corporation v. Ministry of Environment & Forests, 2013) established that Gram Sabhas have the right to decide whether a mining project affects their religious and cultural rights
  • Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) like Dongria Kondh have additional protections

Connection to this news: The Sijimali hills likely contain forest land over which tribal communities may hold CFRs; any road or mine construction without Gram Sabha consent would violate the Forest Rights Act.


Fifth Schedule — Constitutional Protection of Tribal Areas

The Fifth Schedule of the Indian Constitution (under Article 244) provides for the administration and control of Scheduled Areas and Scheduled Tribes in states other than Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram. It establishes a Tribes Advisory Council (TAC) in each state with Scheduled Areas and requires the Governor to report to the President on the administration of these areas. The Governor can also direct that any Central or State law shall not apply to a Scheduled Area or shall apply with modifications.

  • Article 244(1) applies the Fifth Schedule to Scheduled Areas in most mainland states
  • Governor has special powers — can direct that any law does not apply to Scheduled Areas
  • The Bhuria Committee (1994) recommendations led to the enactment of PESA
  • Scheduled Areas in Odisha include large parts of Rayagada, Koraput, Malkangiri, and other districts

Connection to this news: Rayagada district, where the Sijimali conflict is centred, falls within Odisha's Fifth Schedule Scheduled Areas, meaning all laws including land acquisition and mining clearances must comply with tribal self-governance provisions.


Human-Wildlife-Mining Conflict and Environmental Clearance Process

Bauxite mining in ecologically sensitive hill areas triggers an environmental clearance process under the Environment Protection Act, 1986. Projects in Schedule I of the EIA Notification, 2006 require a prior Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) and public hearing, including tribal communities. Vedanta's Niyamgiri project was stopped because the Supreme Court ruled in 2013 that the Gram Sabhas of 12 villages had the right to decide on the matter, and all 12 voted against mining. This set a landmark precedent for community veto in environmentally sensitive and culturally significant areas.

  • EIA Notification, 2006 mandates public hearings before mining clearances
  • Supreme Court's Niyamgiri judgment (2013): Gram Sabhas have decisional authority over projects affecting religious/cultural rights of tribals
  • Odisha holds approximately 70% of India's bauxite reserves, making it a persistent flashpoint for mining-tribal conflict

Connection to this news: The Sijimali project represents a recurrence of the Niyamgiri pattern — Vedanta, the same company, now facing resistance in an adjacent tribal area with similar concerns about consent, ecology, and cultural rights.

Key Facts & Data

  • Sijimali bauxite mine was auctioned to Vedanta Ltd in 2023
  • Clash location: Kashipur block, Rayagada district, Odisha — a Fifth Schedule area
  • Odisha holds approximately 70% of India's total bauxite reserves
  • In 2013, all 12 Gram Sabhas voted against Vedanta's Niyamgiri bauxite mining project
  • PESA Act applies to Scheduled Areas in 10 states; Odisha is one of them
  • Dongria Kondh tribe (a PVTG) inhabits the Niyamgiri hills adjacent to the Sijimali area
  • Forest Rights Act, 2006: Gram Sabha consent is mandatory for forest land diversion for mining