Death of Nigamananda

download Death of Nigamananda

of 11

Transcript of Death of Nigamananda

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    1/11

    Lik

    Print Email to Friend | From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 8, Issue 26, Dated 02 July 2011

    CURRENT AFFAIRS COVER STORY

    INVESTIGATION

    Hell in holy land

    In the battle between the sadhus and the mining mafia over the Ganga, the BJP government in Uttarakhand has

    repeatedly and blatantly taken sides with the latter. Ashish Kh etan & Manoj Rawat uncover the murky story that

    led to Swami Nigamanandas death

    THE R

    27 NOVEMBER 2011 SUNDAY TEHELKAHINDI.COM TEHELKAFOU

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    2/11

    Related

    BJ P defensive on Nigamanands deathJ airam declares Bhagirathi zone as eco-sensitiveGodfellas I - A series on gurus and their politics

    The quiet fast Swami Nigamananda rests in the lap of his guru Swami Shivananda

    Photo Courtesy: Matra Sadan

    BABA RAMDEV knew how to catch attention. Infamously, he also knew how to run. Swami Nigamananda didntknow how to do either. While Ramdev was hogging national attention with emotive issues like declaring all blackmoney stashed abroad as national wealth and threatening to hang the corrupt, far away from media glare,Nigamananda, 38, had been fasting for a mind-boggling 68 days for something much more concrete and of evengreater national implication. Nigamananda was fighting to save the Ganga.

    Finally, Nigamananda died on 13 J une, in the same hospital, in the same ward where Ramdev was being treated inthe ICU, after just seven days of fasting. Briefly, the glaring ironies around the stories of the two men created afurore. But soon in death as in life the real and urgent cause Nigamananda had been fighting for was quicklyforgotten.

    It would be a big mistake to leave it asforgotten. The amount of black moneyIndia has lost to offshore accounts is aspeculative figure. Certainly it needsstringent action and needs to bebrought back. But one could also as wellstart with all the black money floatingabout in the country (and a good place

    to begin might be among some ofRamdevs devotees themselves.)

    The Ganga, on the other hand, is not of speculative value. Not only does it have a profound civilisational andspiritual value, it is an incalculable economical force: its water and ecology support millions of Indians, generatelivelihoods, power and money. If the Ganga were to die, some of Indias most populous states would be completelyimpoverished. India would lose much more than all the money that Swiss Banks can hold.

    This then is the explosive and specific story of what the swami was fighting for. This war on corruption does notinvolve other nations or complex treaties. But its scale and brazenness is as staggering.

    Nigamananda (who had studied in Delhi and, poignantly, left a middle-class home in Bihar in 1995 in search of truth)and Matra Sadan, the ashram he belonged to, had been waging a humbling and heroic battle against Haridwarsmining mafia.

    Their biggest adversary was one stone- crushing company called Himalaya Stone Crusher. But it would be a mistaketo dismiss this story as a small local issue because it is a symptomatic story about massive political clout and suchflagrant corruption that it makes one despair.

    It is also a story that lays bare the sheer hypocrisy of the BJ Ps public positions. Here is a party that has not onlybeen trying to position itself as a champion of the anticorruption movement in India, it has always presented itself asthe self-appointed custodian of Hindu pride. Yet, in the battle over Ganga between the Babas and the mining mafia,the party clearly and repeatedly sided with the mafia.

    Himalaya Stone Crushers biggest safety net was its closeness to the BJ P and the RSS. But that is a story onemust come to a little later. To understand the full import of Nigamanandas battle, one has to understand thebackground landscape first.

    ON THE morning of 30 March 2010, as lakhs of pilgrims were having a holy dip in the Ganga at Haridwar, barely 1km from the bathing ghats, forest officials were carrying out a surprise inspection at a stone crushing plant locatedon the banks of the river. The name of the plant was AP Associates Stone Crusher, one of 41 such plants inHaridwar and 124 in Uttarakhand.

    These plants fuel the rampant illegal sand and stone miningbusiness in the state. The gravel and concrete manufactured bythem are in huge demand by the booming construction industryand reap millions of rupees for the mining mafia. The raiding teamthat day found 45,000 tonnes of unaccounted stones at the plantsite. The plant owner had no explanation or documents to proveits source.

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    3/11

    These 45,000 tonnes of stones are just the tip of a massive story. In Uttarakhand, only state-owned corporationscan pick stones from riverside to be sold to private stone crushers. The units are required to pick the stonesmanually; excavation of riverbeds is strictly prohibited.

    There are also half-a-dozen state agencies to regulate the stone-picking and crushing industry: the MiningDepartment, the State Pollution Control Board, the Central Environment Assessment Committee, the ForestDepartment and a legion of officers whose job is to prevent illegal mining and protect the river ecology.

    Yet, brazenly, every day, the mining mafia in Haridwar plunders the stones deposited in the riverbed using advanced

    technology excavators. Uttarakhand is a poor state and sand, stone and soapstone are its key resources. Miningthem illegally therefore is a double blow to the exchequer. But this is not all. The rampant mining has also depletedthe groundwater level, deepened the riverbed, made thousands of acres of farmland uncultivable, destroyed theneighbouring forests, polluted the air and forced hundreds of farmers to migrate, having sold their lands to the samemafia for a pittance.

    Making molehills out of mountains

    Rampant illegal mining with the complicity of BJP ministers and MLAs threatens to destroy Uttarakhands

    ecology and river systems

    Bageshwar Dist

    VIOLATION Soapstone mining beyond permissibledepth. No reforestation or refilling of mine pits

    ACTION PROPOSED Officials justify it saying sinceeveryone does it, thats the norm

    RESULT Reckless mining is turning large tracts intougly deserts

    Haridwar Dis t

    VIOLATION Stone quarrying on private lands beyond thepermissible depth of 1.5 metres

    ACTION PROPOSED Divisional forest officer imposed afine of 36 lakh in one case

    RESULT DM revoked the order saying DFO exceededjurisdiction

    Rudraprayag Dist

    VIOLATION A stone-crusher on the banks of

    Madhumaheshwar Ganga

    ACTION PROPOSED Environment laws say crushers haveto be at least 500 metres away from the river

    RESULT No action taken. The crusher is polluting theriver and destroying the adjoining farmlands

    Haridwar Dis t

    VIOLATION No sprinklers or high walls. No equipment to

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    4/11

    Nigamananda and the Matra

    Sadan ashram had been waging

    a lonely battle against the m ining

    mafia, especially Himalaya Stone

    Crusher

    absorb respiratory suspended particle matter

    ACTION PROPOSED Cancellation of the crusher licence

    RESULT No action taken so far

    Haridwar Dist

    VIOLATION AP Associates crusher had a stock of45,000 tonnes of illegally mined stones

    ACTION PROPOSED DFO slapped a fine of Rs 1.15 crore

    RESULT DM revoked the order saying DFO exceededjurisdiction

    Haridwar Dis t

    VIOLATION Himalaya Stone Crusher was operating inviolation of environmental and mining laws

    ACTION PROPOSED Uttarakhand HC ordered its closureon 26 May

    RESULT Has been shut down since

    At AP Associates, it was evident the stones had been illegally excavated from the bed of the Ganga. This was thefirst time in many years that a stone crusher in Haridwar had been raided. There was a new officer in town,

    Divisional Forest Officer RD Pathak, who was trying to resuscitate the comatose Forest Department.

    But while the raiding team was still conducting its inspection, Pathak got a call. The caller was a Cabinet minister,incharge of five powerful portfolios. Anticipating the flurry of calls his raid would trigger, Pathak had handed his phoneto his orderly and instructed him to tell the minister he was away in the forests and had left his phone behind. But theminister persisted, making incessant calls. Finally, a few hours later, Pathak took his call.

    Pathak sahab, please call your officers back. You know that the crusher is run by my people. Your officers areunnecessarily harassing my people, said the minister. By this time, Pathaks team had finished their check andfinalised the report.

    Later, using a time-honoured evasion tactic, when asked to produce documents justifying the mammoth stock ofunaccounted stones at his crusher, the owner J itendra Singh got himself admitted into hospital. Four days later, hesubmitted photocopies of bogus receipts that he claimed as proof for having bought these stones. Pathak rejected

    the receipts on the grounds that there were no corresponding records at the source from where Singh had claimed tohave bought the stock. Pathak slapped a penalty of around Rs 1.15 crore Rs 58 lakh for stealing the naturalresource and Rs 57 lakh for causing damage to the environment under Section 26 of the Indian Forest Act, 1927.

    Two months later, on 9 J une, Haridwar District Magistrate R MeenakshiSundaram revoked Pathaks order and reversed the fine imposed by him. Thesame receipts that Pathak had found fake were amazingly held genuine bySundaram.

    A month later, on 8 J uly, Pathak, only 11 months into this assignment, wastransferred. Sundaram still continues to be Haridwar DM. The new HaridwarDFO, Gopalsingh Rana, who replaced Pathak, has not carried out even a single raid on the mining mafia since hetook charge.

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    5/11

    Jagdish Kalakoti

    ROLE Member of the BJ P stateexecutive committee, owns asoapstone mine in Bageshwardistrict

    Gyanesh Agarwal

    ROLE Owner of the Himalaya StoneCrusher, against which SwamiNigamananda went on an indefinite fast

    Madan Kaushik

    ROLE Urban Development Minister;was allegedly protecting theHimalaya Stone Crusher company

    Diwakar Bhatt

    ROLE Revenue Minister who owns astone crusher in Haridwar district

    Under the Indian Forest Act, a district magistrate whose primary job is to collect revenue does not have any powersto review or revoke an order passed by a DFO. The appellate authority is the Forest Conservator. But Sundaram notonly heard the appeal, he also passed an order in favour of the stone crushing plant.

    The Forest Department can conduct raids only on reserve forest land. Its the Revenue Department, IndustriesDepartment, Pollution Control Board or the mining inspector who can check a stone crusher. Still, when the DFOsreport came, we did not ignore it, Sundaram told TEHELKA. We formed a committee involving Revenue, Mining andIndustries Department people. But the report that we got from the joint committee suggested otherwise. Pathakrefused to comment on Sundarams assertion. I did my job and thats all I have to say, he remarks.

    THE PROBLEM is, even if Sundaram was right, the series of departments that according to him are authorised tocheck illegal mining are doing precious nothing to check the menace. TEHELKA visited three stone crushers inHaridwar. Each of them was being run in violation of the most essential pollution control norms. Locals said that thesuspended air particles released by these plants were causing tuberculosis and respiratory diseases among thelocals and making their fields uncultivable.

    The dust envelops our fields and causes damage to the crops, says Kishansingh, 55, a farmer in Sajjanpur-Pillivillage, who has 7 bighas on which he harvests rice and wheat. Those whose fields are adjacent to the crushercannot harvest at all. If there is an inspection, the crusher owner starts the water sprinklers. The moment theinspection is over, its back to square one. His wife Bhagwati adds, These crushers use J CB machines toexcavate the Ganga. We heard some mahatma had died, so for the past one week, this has stopped.

    The mine lords o f Uttarakhand

    State politicians are involved in illegal mining along with local businessmen

    Dr Vijendra Singh, 54, who practices medicine in J agjitpur, says trees in his village dont bear fruits. The noise andair pollution arising out of the two crushers operating here is unbearable. Asthma, respiratory diseases, TB andstomach ailments are common among the villagers, he says.

    Yet, the Uttarakhand Environment Protection and Pollution Control Board the statutory body mandated to enforceenvironmental norms has given each of these crushers a no-objection certificate. When TEHELKA askedPollution Control Board chief Dr Ajay Gairula for the list of crushers that have an NOC from his department and thosethat have been penalised for violating norms, all we drew was a blank.

    If the inaction of the Pollution Control Board is shocking enough, consider this: the whole of Haridwar and Pauridistricts has just one mining inspector. The man presently posted at this job is Shailendra Singh. He says he hasnobody else, not even a peon, to assist him. He admits he has not carried out a single inspection on crushers in thepast two years of his tenure.

    He tells TEHELKA that, on 11 May, the last time he tried to stop a cavalcade of trucks ferrying illegally mined stones,he was arrested by the UP Police on charges of robbery and criminal assault and released only after the SDM andAdditional SP of Roorkee reached the spot and intervened. The mining mafia, however, still managed to get an FIRregistered against him at Biharigarh Police Station (Saharanpur). The case against him is still pending.

    Every way you turn, the system has become despairingly rotten. If you join the loot, there are rich dividends. If you

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    6/11

    enforce the law, the odds are heavily stacked against you. Haridwar SDM Hardev Singh says that on threeoccasions when his team raided the mining mafia and caught them red-handed, digging the riverbank with J CBs, theywere assaulted. We registered FIRs. In one case, an accused was arrested. But then nothing happened, he says.

    A member of the raiding party who was assaulted says on condition of anonymity as he feared reprisal from themafia that he was now under pressure to strike a compromise with the mining mafia and drop the case. If weeven catch so much as a pony carrying illegally mined stones, we immediately get a call from the powersthat- be torelease the goods, he says.

    Before his transfer, Pathak had prepared a report listing 18 crusher companies involved in illegal mining. To prove

    his case, he had annexed pictures of J CBs used by the owners to dig the Ganga.

    When TEHELKA asked Sundaram about this report, he said, Yes there was one such report. Some of it was foundto be true, some were not proven. But he failed to enumerate any action that was taken.

    UNDER THE present BJ P government, headed by Chief Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank, illegal mining in thestate has reached catastrophic proportions. Every year, the mining mafia illegally excavates millions of cubic metresof stones from the riverbeds of the Ganga, Yamuna, Gaula and Sharda rivers, and soapstone from the hills.

    This mafia is actively supported by ministers. Such is their sense of impunity, in some cases, the mines and stonecrushers are owned by BJ P netas in their own name.

    Take Minister Diwakar Bhatt for instance. He is in-charge of three portfolios revenue, food and civil supplies andsoldiers welfare. His son Lalit owns a stone crusher named Om Sri Kailapeer in Sajjanpur- Pilli. When TEHELKA

    confronted Bhatt about allegations of illegal mining by his crusher, he tossed it aside. I dont deny there is illegalmining in the state. But why dont people talk about those who illegally excavate thousands of tonnes of stonesevery day? I dont do anything wrong, he says.

    J agdish Kalakoti, another BJ P politician, owns a soapstone mine spread over 2.9 acres in Chatikhet village inBageshwar. He is presently a member of the BJ Ps state executive committee. He bagged the mining licence in2002 when the BJ P government was in power. Kalakoti told TEHELKA his mine contributes Rs 25- Rs 30 lakh tostate revenues every year, while he himself makes a profit of around Rs 1 crore.

    Health and Education Minister Balwant Singh Bhauryal also owns a soapstone mine named Vaishnavi Soap StonePvt Ltd, in Visa village in Bageshwar district. (He admitted to the mine, but denied the illegal mining). District BJ Pleaders Thakur Singh Gadiya and Vikran Singh Shahi also own soapstone mines. There are 45 soapstone mines inBageshwar and 15 in Pittoragarh.

    Nanda Vallabh Bhatt, the state vicepresident of Peoples Union for Civil Liberties, alleges that illegal and recklessstone mining in the Pittoragarh and Bageshwar districts has turned scores of villages into desert. In most of thesecases, the land is owned by local farmers but the mining licence has been procured by the BJ P politicians afterobtaining a no-objection certificate from the actual land owner.

    Its a misperception that soapstone mining is damaging the environment, says Kalakoti. Its beneficial to thelicenceholder, the government and the farmers who own the land.

    This pattern of denial and paralysis dominates the land. As per the rules, excavation only up to an average of 7 to 8feet is permissible, but the licencees dig up to 65 to 80 feet (See the pictures).

    Dinesh Kumar, District Mining Officer in charge of Bageshwar, Almora and Pittoragarh districts, admits that thelicencees mine way beyond permissible limits and almost never act on the mandatory need to fill the pits and planttrees on the mined land. Despite this, by his own admission, he has not issued any notice or levied a fine of a single

    rupee in the past two years.

    Another BJ P minister who has often been accused of sheltering the mining mafia is Madan Kaushik, presently incharge of five powerful portfolios urban development, excise, tourism, sugarcane development and sugarcaneindustry. Kaushik is an MLA from Haridwar. Before he joined the BJ P in 1998, he was district convener of theBajrang Dals Haridwar unit. BJ P insiders will tell you that he draws his clout from BJ P stalwart Sushma Swaraj,whom he considers his political mentor.

    Himalaya Stone Crusher, the plant Nigamananda died fighting, was reportedly patronised by Kaushik. Kaushik toldTEHELKA, I have been elected from Haridwar and Im friends with many local residents, including the owner ofHimalaya. But that doesnt mean Im sheltering anyone. I dont have a single stake in Himalaya or any other crusherin the area.

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    7/11

    This m afi a i s backed by

    ministers. Such is their sense of

    impunity, in some cases, the

    mines and stone crushers are

    owned by BJP leaders in their

    own name

    Clearly though, the owner has had a long history of such friendships.

    Though Himalaya Crusher was located close to human habitations and had been accused of blatant illegalities, itprospered for 14 years. It was finally shut down only after the Uttarakhand High Court ordered its closure on 26 May,25 days after Swami Nigamananda had slipped into a coma and 16 days before he passed away.

    The order by the two-judge high court Bench headed by Uttarakhand Chief J ustice Barin Ghosh is full of censure andtells its own strong story. The Bench wrote: The crusher owners got their licence renewed from time to time by theexecutive authority concerned despite the resistance raised by several social activists representatives of the

    surrounding villages. One of the most prominent resistances was manifested by the saints of Matra Sadan ashramwhose location, as it appears, is not far from this crusher. But their voice proved to be a wild-goose chase againstthe influence of the crusher owners, gen was perhaps an outcome of this high profiteering calling. It added, Underthe garb of lifting boulders, the crusher owners started to dig the floor and banks of national river Ganga, causingdeleterious affect not only upon the entire surrounding society but also upon humanity at large.

    An important indictment. Unfortunately, Swami Nigamananda was no longer there to hear it.

    THE STORY of the two Babas and their anticorruption drive one a parody, the other purer; one full of hot noise,the other marked by stoic action is told at a glance by the nature of their ashrams.

    If you visit Haridwar, a zig-zag road lined with giant hoardings of a beaming Ramdev and his key associate AcharyaBalkrishna, leads you to Ramdevs sprawling ashram Patanjali Yogpeeth Phase 1. (Besides Patanjali YogpeethPhase 1, Ramdev has two more ashrams Patanjali Yogpeeth Phase 2, a sprawl of 30 acres, and Yoga Gram, a

    naturopathy and Ayurvedic treatment centre, as expensive as any private hospital, spread over 125 acres inAurangabad village, Haridwar.)

    Ashram is a misnomer; business empire would be a more appropriate way todescribe the scale of Ramdevs operations. Patanjali Yogpeeth Phase 1, whichsprawls behind a majestic iron gate, houses an Ayurveda medical college, anAyurveda university, air-conditioned administration and residential blocks and aseparate block where Ramdev himself lives. There are also three auditoriums(one of which is the largest in Asia), the office of Bharat Swabhiman, a trustformed by Ramdev to kickstart his supposedly anti-black money campaign, SantRavi Das langar, and a Maharishi Valmiki Dharamshala, which houses and feeds the poor free for the first threedays, after which money is charged. (There has never been an independent verification of Ramdevs claims offeeding and housing the poor free for the first three days. Like his other land and financial dealings, Ramdevscharity too remains a mystery.)

    There is another road in Haridwar, narrow, broken and potholed, which leads to an ashram in J agjitpur village, namedMatra Sadan. Situated on the banks of the Ganga, the ashram was set up in 1997 by Swami Shivananda, an asceticwho is now 64 and weighs less than 50 kg. The objective of the ashram was to promote Vedic traditions and strivefor preservation of nature, especially the holy Ganga. Shivananda purchased four acres for Rs 10 lakh to set up theashram along with his seven disciples. One among them was Nigamananda, who was 24 at the time.

    Anyone can walk into this ashram. There is no boundary wall, only a broken fence of wild bushes; no ironed gate,just a makeshift barrier of bamboo. Unlike Patanjali Yogpeeth that charges 10 as entry fee per vehicle, entry toMatra Sadan is free. But then, there is nothing inside Matra Sadan that warrants an entry fee. J ust a couple ofshabbily constructed quarters, a cowshed and a yagashala (a small enclosure for performing yagas). If a visitorhappens to be present during meal time, the swami and his disciples insist he stay and eat. (Of course, thehospitality at Matra Sadan is free; Ramdevs restaurant is the most expensive in Haridwar).

    Like the ashrams, the nature of the two anti-corruption protests were radically different. Ramdev erected huge tentsin Ramlila Maidan and floated astronomical figures to get people all roused up and indignant (how Rs 50,000 crorewould be given to every district if the government was forced to bring back the black money.) Nigamanandas protestwas much more pragmatic. And rooted in reality.

    Meeting Ramdevs demands might have meant legislating Byzantine laws, changing the basic framework ofConstitution, perhaps even changing our status from being a constitutional and democratic republic to an autocracyof holy and righteous men. But to meet Matra Sadans demands, all the Uttarakhand government needed to do wasto enforce the law.

    On a bitterly cold morning on 19 February, Shivanandas disciple Nigamananda sat under a mango tree in theashram compound and started an indefinite fast. He was protesting the stay order by the high court Bench that hadallowed Himalaya Stone Crusher to continue its activities. Matra Sadans allegation was that the stone crusher was

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    8/11

    functioning in the Kumbh Mela area, which, according to state government regulations, should be free of any stonequarrying or crushing activity.

    This was Matra Sadans 30th satyagraha against illegal sand and stone mining over the past 14 years.Nigamananda had previously participated in five of them fasting for extended periods, which on occasionstretched into a couple of months.

    Besides Matra Sadan, no other organisation or political outfit had resisted the rampant illegal mining along theGanga. Over the past 10 years, the state government had sent Shivananda and his disciples to jail thrice for stagingagitations. On all three occasions, the ruling party was the BJ P. So much for protecting the river that is the fount of

    Hindu civilisation.

    Matra Sadan launched its first agitation on 3 March 1998, in the midst of the Kumbh Mela. (Haridwar hosts theKumbh once every 12 years). Nigamananda, along with another swami, Gokulananda, sat on an indefinite fast,demanding a complete ban on stone and sand mining and crushing activities in the entire Mela area. At the time,there were five ghats in the area that were affected by this. The fast was broken after one week, when the officer-in-charge of the Kumbh gave a written assurance that their demands would be met. The mining and crushing washalted while the mela was on. But once the mela ended, it resumed. So did Matra Sadans agitation.

    Nigamananda, along with a swami named Gudanand Saraswati, resumed their fast on 27 May 1998. On the 12thday of the fast, the district administration gave a written assurance that mining and crushing within the Mela areawould be completely stopped. The administration kept its promise in the case of three ghats Chandi Ghat, DhobhiGhat and Jagjitpur Ghat.

    But illegal mining continued in the remaining two ghats Misarpur and Ajitpur. The government kept issuingconflicting and scandalous notifications to keep these ghats outside the notified Mela area so that the illegal miningand crushing could continue operating there. The biggest beneficiary of the governments deceit was HimalayaStone Crusher.

    The story of the governments blatant and dogged efforts to protect Himalaya Stone Crusher boggles the mind.Reportedly patronised by BJ P minister Madan Kaushik, the crusher is owned by a Haridwar resident namedGyanesh Agarwal. The Agrawal family is closely linked to the RSS. In 2009, when the then RSS Sarsanghchalak KSSudarshan came to Haridwar, of all the places, he chose to stay at Agarwals house a massive mansion in theheart of the city. Agarwals father Hazari Lal Agarwal is a member of the Bharat Vikas Parishad, a saffron outfit withclose links to the RSS and VHP. Gyanesh and his brother are often invited as chief guests at RSS andVHPorganised functions in Haridwar.

    Agarwal admitted that not only Sudarshan but current RSS supremo Mohan Bhagwat have stayed many times at his

    house. But that doesnt mean we are RSS members. As a businessman I keep close relations with all kinds ofoutfits, he says.

    Agarwal had set up a huge crushing plant in Ajitpur village in 1998. This fell under the Mela area. Matra Sadan hadbeen agitating against this. When TEHELKA visited Ajitpur on 19 J une, the villagers said the plant used to openlyexcavate stones from both sides of the river banks.

    On 20 J anuary 2008, Matra Sadan again started its satyagraha. Through various notifications, the government hadplaced Ajitpur outside the demarcated Mela area. Swami Shivananda produced government maps prepared duringthe Kumbh Mela of 1998, which showed the boundary of the mela extended up to Ajitpur.

    Nigamananda fasted for 73 days. Finally, the BJ P government announced the formation of a high-poweredcommittee to streamline the notified Kumbh Mela area. The committee recommended the inclusion of Ajitpur village inthe notified Kumbh Mela area. The government failed to implement its own committee report.

    On 6 February 2009, Matra Sadan resumed the agitation. This time another sadhu named Brahmachari Dayanandasat unamfor an indefinite fast. On 7 March, the government finally relented and the Garhwal Division Commissionermade the announcement that stone picking at two more ghats Misarpur and Ajitpur would be temporarilysuspended. But there was no stay on Himalaya Stone Crusher. After a few weeks, the stone picking at these twoghats resumed again.

    Between 15 October 2009 and 25 March 2010, four more swamis of Matra Sadan sat on indefinite fasts. Theagitation lasted for 173 days.

    On 29 December 2009, the Uttarakhand government issued a fresh notification demarcating the Kumbh Mela areafor the impending 2010 fair. But the boundaries were again demarcated in a way that the area where HimalayaStone Crusher was situated fell outside the notified area and could continue to operate.

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    9/11

    Inviting proofAn invitation card showing mining donGyanesh Agarwal as chief guest at an RSS event

    Ram devs dem ands m ean t

    legislating Byzantine laws. But t o

    meet Nigamanandas d emands,

    all that the state needed to do

    was to enforce the law

    During the agitation, Union Environment Minister J airam Ramesh visited the ashram and sent an inspection team toverify the Matra Sadans claims of illegal mining along the banks of the Ganga. The Centres team found evidence oframpant illegal mining and submitted a report validating Matra Sadans claims.

    In J anuary 2010, Ramesh even wrote a letter to the Uttarakhand CM saying, I would urge you to kindly have thematter looked into so that necessary instructions are issued to the officers concerned to take immediate action tostop illegal mining going on in your state, including at Missarpur and Ajitpur in Haridwar, before the situation takes anugly turn.

    Eventually the government stopped the stone-picking atMissarpur and Ajitpur ghats. But yet again, Himalaya StoneCrusher was exempt. Matra Sadan continued to protest.

    Shivananda himself sat on a fast from 20 J anuary. On 5February, for the first time in 12 years, the government finallyissued a notification that extended the boundary of Kumbh Melaarea to include the location of Himalaya Stone Crusher.

    On 6 February, Shivananda broke his fast. But little did he knowthat while the government had issued the notification, it had notframed the corresponding rules to execute the order.

    The crusher owner approached the high court and sought a stay

    on the governments order. In April, the court struck down theorder and ruled in favour of Himalaya Stone Crusher on theground that no rules had been framed to regulate the stone-crushing activity. Shockingly, the government didnt contest in court. It didnt even file an affidavit.

    On 18 November 2010, Shivananda resumed his fast, demanding that the government should frame clear andunambiguous orders and rules. On 10 December, the government did issue a fresh unambiguous notification. It alsoframed the corresponding rules. The swami broke his fast on 11 December.

    On 14 December 2010, for the first time, Himalaya Crushers activity was stalled, but only briefly. On the very sameday, it filed a writ petition in the high court. The court gave the government six weeks to reply. In the meantime, itstayed the government order.

    To fight this flagrant injustice, Swami Shivananda also filed an SLP opposing the stay on the government order.

    Simultaneously, another sadhu, Swami Yajnanda, sat on an indefinite fast against the high courts order. He fastedtill 19 February 2011. Fatefully, on that day, Nigamananda took Yajnandas position.

    BY 27 APRIL, 68 days into his heroic fast, Nigamanadas health started slipping.The ashram sent an SMS to the chief secretary. The district administrationlanded up at the ashram and shifted Nigamananda to the Haridwar DistrictHospital. Until that day, neither any government official or minister had gone tosee Nigamananda or persuade him to break his fast. We did go a couple oftimes even before 27 April but made the mistake of not making any entry. So wedont have any evidence to prove that, claims Sundaram.

    Shivananda claims that on 30 April, a nurse came to the ward, injected Nigamananda and took the syringe away withher. On the same night, his health started deteriorating again. On 2 May, he slipped into a coma. Briefly, he wasshifted around to several hospitals, eventually being sent to the Himalayan Super Speciality Hospital in Dehradun.

    From 2 May to 13 J une the day Nigamananda died no minister or bureaucrat went to see him.

    Three days earlier, on 10 J une, Ramdev was admitted to the same ward of the same hospital. The ICU wasimmediately converted into a VIP room for Ramdev. Chief Minister Nishank went to see him the very next day.Emerging from the hospital, the CM told the waiting media jamboree, Ramdevs life is important for the country and Iam praying to God for his early recovery. The state government will do whatever it takes to save his life. In thesame breath, he lambasted the Central government for forcibly removing Ramdev from the Ramlila Maidan and calledthe UPA regime thoroughly corrupt.

    On 12 J une, the CMwent to see Ramdev again. The same afternoon, Ramdev broke his fast in the midst of a fullmedia spectacle, flanked by other super rich, jet-setting gurus Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, Morari Bapu and Ramdevaide Balkrishna. As Ramdev sipped a glass of juice, TV channels broke the news: Baba Ramdev ends his fast.

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    10/11

    For 14 years, as the sadhus

    struggled against f lagran t

    corruption, forget the national

    media, even the local media

    J ust a few doors away, Nigamananda was breathing his last.

    IN 2007, a pungent satiric song by famous folk-song writer Narendra Singh Negi brought ND Tiwaris governmentdown. The BJ P had used Negis song about Tiwaris sexual misadventures with great relish then. Now ominouslyfor the BJ P Negi has written a song about Chief Minister Nishank. Skewering the CM for his corruptions, the lyricsof the song ask: Ab kathagya kholo tu? (How much more will you eat now?) a euphemism for asking how muchmore money he wants to make before he hangs up his boots. The song lists all the alleged scams and scandals theCM has been involved with in his two year tenure.

    Final journey Sadhus of Matra Sadan ashram carry the body of Swami Nigamananda for burialPhoto Courtesy: Matra Sadan

    (Apart from illegal mining, Nishank has been embroiled in several high-profile controversies on corruption related toland and power projects. However, at the height of the furore around him, BJ P President Nitin Gadkari flew down andgave him a clean chit.)

    The epic story of Nigamananda and Matra Sadans struggle against corruption puts all of this and much of thecurrent frenzied lip service against corruption to shame. It is proof that, like in the film Peepli Live, we are allinterested in the circus, not in the tragedy. For 14 years, as the swamis struggled relentlessly against a visible andflagrant corruption, forget the national media, even the local media gave them absolutely no attention.

    In a country that constantly and willingly genuflects before spiritual charlatans and tinsel men of god who drive

    Lexuses and travel in limousines and charge their devotees Rs 50,000 to sit in the first row and Rs 20,000 to sit inthe back row, it is a searing blot on our conscience that no one paid any heed to the real Babas and their 14- yearnon-violent war against corruption.

    Therefore, perhaps, the only glimmer of hope in this cautionary tale is that while the blustering, low-on-facts,high-onemotion black money crusade lies shrouded in ambiguity, the Matra Sadan Babas struggle has finally yieldeda real triumph.

    On 26 May, while Nigamananda lay in a coma in the hospital, Uttarakhand ChiefJ ustice Barin Ghosh and his colleague J ustice Sarvesh Kumar Gupta orderedthe closure of Himalaya Stone Crusher. Everything the court said upheld theallegations Matra Sadan had levelled for more than a decade.

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C

    11 27-11-20

  • 7/28/2019 Death of Nigamananda

    11/11

    gave them no attentionThis is what the order said: Due to consistent digging and mining in the Gangaby Himalaya Stone Crusher and others, the river has become deepened and asa result the groundwater level has depleted in the thousands of acres of surrounding land. Even hand pumps in thevillages in the area have been without drinking water in their borings.

    Because of dust emanating from the crushers, the agricultural production in many villages has been reduced tonullity. So is the case in surrounding orchards, especially of mangoes, forcing the farmers to sell their lands tocrusher owners. The illegal mining has also caused soil erosion in large swathes along the Ganga.

    The Himalayan Stone Crusher was being run in violation of the Mining Policy 2001, which mandated that crushersshould be at least 5 km from any human habitation. The suspended particles released by the crushers are causingdiseases like tuberculosis, asthma and other respiratory diseases to local villagers.

    The crusher, located in the agricultural green belt and also ecologically fragile zone, was never granted the NOC byHaridwar Development Authority.

    Baba Nigamananda is dead. But Himalaya Stone Crusher is shut down.

    At least, for the moment.

    Ashish Khetan is Editor, Investigations with Tehelka.

    [email protected]

    Manoj Rawat is a Principal Correspondent with Tehelka Hindi, Dehradun.

    [email protected]

    Print Email to Friend | From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 8, Issue 26, Dated 02 July 2011

    About Us | Advertise With Us | Print Subscriptions | Syndication | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Contact Us | Bo

    Tehelka.com is a part of Anant Media Pvt. Ltd. 2000 - 2011 All rights reserved

    Yoga Anfnger Seminare Yoga Anfnger Seminar NRW. NEU: Yoga Wochenend Seminar ab 90 www.Yoga-

    NEU: Yoga in Kirchrode Yoga zu Weihnachten verschenken? Nchster Kurs ab 18. J anuar! www.my-yoga-point

    Rare Earth Stocks Interested in Rare Earth Stocks? Check out our Diverse Portfolio. www.pinetreecapital.com

    ka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazin http://www.tehelka.com/story_main50.asp?filename=Ne020711C