Tag: Lakshadweep

  • None can doubt patriotism of Muslim populace in Lakshadweep: Rajnath Singh

    By PTI

    KAVARATTI: Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Saturday said that no one in the world can dare to question or doubt the patriotism of the Muslim populace in Lakshadweep or even the other inhabitants of the islands as they have thwarted attempts of anti-India forces to brew trouble or instigate the people there against the country.

    “No one on Earth can dare to doubt the patriotism of the Muslim people in Lakshadweep. No one can put a question mark on the patriotism of the people of Lakshadweep,” Singh said during his speech on the occasion of the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi.

    He was addressing the people after unveiling a statue of Gandhi.

  • Rajnath Singh to unveil first Gandhi statue in Lakshadweep on Saturday

    By Express News Service

    KOCHI: The first-ever statue of Mahatma Gandhi in Lakshadweep will be unveiled by Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh at Kavaratti at an event organised by the island administration to commemorate the 152nd birth anniversary of the Father of the Nation at 6pm on Saturday. 

    Lakshadweep administrator Praful  Khoda Patel will be the chief guest. The administration has organised a three-day fest which will culminate with the unveiling of the statue. The celebrations started with a sand art display at Kavaratti near Mahatma Gandhi Square on Thursday. 

    On Friday, open water swimming and kayaking competitions were held. A tree plantation drive will be held near the children’s park on Saturday. The Save Lakshadweep Forum has decided to cooperate with the unveiling.

    “Though we have decided to continue our protest against the administrator, we will cooperate with the unveiling of the statue. The Lakshadweep district administration had passed a resolution demanding to install a Gandhi statue years ago and the Congress state unit had presented many representations to administrators. We have sought permission to meet Rajnath and will submit a memorandum of demands to him,” said Save Lakshadweep Forum convenor UCK Thangal.

  • Ocean-energy-powered desal plant coming soon at Lakshadweep

    Express News Service

    CHENNAI: Chennai-based National Institute of Ocean Technology (NIOT) will soon start working to build the world’s first self-powered desalination plant using Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) at Kavaratti Island in Lakshadweep. NIOT officials told Express tenders have been called for and bids will be finalised in two months.

    OTEC is an eco-friendly method to generate power using the difference in temperatures of the surface and the deep sea. As we go deeper and deeper in the sea, the temperature get lower. In tropical countries like India, the temperature gradient is more or less constant throughout the year, thus ensuring constant power generation potential. The process involves vaporising a low-boiling-point fluid like ammonia or water under vacuum using the surface warm sea water and condensing the vapour thus generated using deep-sea cold water. The vapour generated would drive a turbine connected to a generator, thus generating power. This cycle can be continued without breaks, and is fully renewable.

    NIOT head (energy and fresh water group) Purnima Jalihal said that the Kavaratti plant, which has a capacity to produce one lakh litres of fresh portable water, will be the world’s first prototype of a OTEC-powered desalination plant and would pave the way for future large-scale plants.

    “The main advantage of OTEC is that it’s completely environment friendly. NIOT had installed Low Temperature Thermal Desalination (LTTD) plants in Kavaratti in 2005 and subsequently at Agatti and Minicoy Islands. The pumps used in these plants are run using the diesel generator grid on the islands. Transportation of diesel is difficult especially during monsoon. It is also better if we adopt clean and green energy sources for the islands’ delicate ecosystem,” she said. NIOT officials also noted that there are many challenges in this project since it is being carried out for the first time ever. 

    Responding to a query, Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Ministry of Science and Technology and Earth Sciences Jitendra Singh told the Parliament on Friday that NIOT is working towards installing the first-ever OTEC-powered desal plant in Lakshadweep. Also, the Geological Survey of India had mounted six cruises around Andaman and Nicobar Islands and offshore domains off AP and TN coast to find suitable sites for installation of OTEC plants.

    “Based on the preliminary feasibility and assessment of the seabed and the temperature profile across the seawater column, favourable locations were identified in the offshores of Havelock Island, Little Andaman Island and Car Nicobar Island, Krishnapatnam, Andhra Pradesh and also the Puducherry coast,” the minister added.

  • No proposal to grant full statehood to Lakshadweep, Parliament told

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: There is no proposal for granting full statehood to the Union Territory of Lakshadweep, the government informed Parliament Wednesday.

    Minister of State for Home Affairs Nityanand Rai said this in a written reply to the Rajya Sabha.

    He was asked if the government has considered granting full statehood to Lakshadweep and what steps was it taking to increase the participation of the people of Lakshadweep in the democratic process.

    “No such proposal for full statehood for the Union Territory of Lakshadweep is under consideration,” the minister stated.

    Adequate institutional arrangements exist for the expression of the democratic aspirations of the people in thinly populated union territories such as Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, he said.

    “People residing in the UTs elect their Members of Parliament to the Lok Sabha,” Rai stated.

    He further added in his reply that the UTs of Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu also have “a robust two-tier panchayati raj system with village and district panchayat bodies, through which people’s participation in the democratic process is ensured”.

    In Lakshadweep, extensive delegation of powers and functions has been made to the local bodies, he said.

  • Group of scientists seeks President’s intervention to withdraw proposed LDAR

    By PTI
    KOCHI: The proposed Lakshadweep Development Authority Regulation of 2021 (LDAR) is highly problematic and will work against existing legal provisions that safeguard the resilience of Lakshadweep’s ecology, livelihood and culture, say a group of scientists from different institutions who have worked on the islands for years.

    In a statement issued on Thursday, the Lakshadweep Research Collectivesaid it along with60 other signatories from the scientific communityhave written to President Ram Nath Kovind seeking his intervention to withdraw the “incautious draft” Lakshadweep Development Authority Regulation of 2021.

    A collective of scientists and citizens, the Lakshadweep Research Collective, said they have done a thorough review of the implications of the LDAR.

    “In enabling take-over of local land, we find this draft regulation is not in consonance with existing laws, such as the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013, the Biological Diversity Act 2002, The Environment (Protection) Act, 1986,” the statement said.

    It is also against the suggestions of the Justice Raveendran Committee recommendations set up by the Supreme Court (as approved and notified by the Ministry of Environment and Forests, in its Notification No.19011/16/91-IA.III dated 23 October 2015, and the Lakshadweep Panchayats Regulation 1994), the collective said.

    “The LDAR does not address India’s commitments towards the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, marine protection goals under the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the Ecotourism Guidelines 2019,” it said.

    Noting that Lakshadweep is a coral atoll, which means the islands are part of a living coral system, the scientists said this island system is facing the impacts of climate change.

    “Lakshadweep has experienced catastrophic climate change-related coral mass mortality events, straining the accretion and buffer capacity of the reefs.

    As just one example, the reefs of the capital, Kavaratti, are already eroding more than they are growing.

    Lakshadweep is not just ecologically fragile but also socially progressive, and it needs a sustainable development framework,” it said.

    They said anyone who has lived or worked in Lakshadweep for any length of time will be aware of its special vulnerability.

    “Surrounded by the ocean, barely a few metres above sea level, and with only the reef to protect it, it is clear that all development on these islands needs to be very carefully managed.

    Over the last two decades we have personally witnessed the reefs being battered by repeated bleaching events and intense storms.

    How long it will take for these ecosystems to recover is anyone’s guess.

    Given how linked land, lagoon and reef are in Lakshadweep, the development envisioned in the draft LDAR would be nothing short of disastrous,” says Rohan Arthur, Senior Scientist, Nature Conservation Foundation.

    In its current form, the LDAR keeps local islanders out of decision-making processes.

    The LDAR embraces a questionable vision of development that is neither sustainable in design nor likely to improve local wellbeing or safeguard the future habitability of the archipelago.

    Dr Naveen Namboothri, Director, Dakshin Foundation said the communities of the Lakshadweep Islands practise forms of social living and collective action that has served them well against external adversity.

    “It is materially evident in their stewardship of the pole-and-line tuna fishing and coconut farming industry that provide livelihood support for more than half the population.

    Islanders’ historical relations with land and lagoon commons are closely tied to their identity and cultural practises.

    Development on the islands need to see people and these ecological spaces as one unit, rather than severing their fragile ties,” Namboothiri said.

    According toDipani Sutaria, an ecologist studying marine mammals in Lakshadweep with Divya Panicker and a team of islanders, Lakshadweep is a model for people-biodiversity coexistence.

    “In 23 years of my working in the marine landscape, I have made field homes in several places, both in India and abroad.

    But nowhere before have I felt more at home, with food, people, weather, boats and the sea than in Lakshadweep.

    Nowhere before have I thought: “Here is the place where we can actually try to recover coral reefs, seagrass beds and their communities, and yet operate a local commercial fishery,” Sutaria said.

    “My time spent with tuna fishers is full of stories of how tuna & dolphins behave around boats. Listening to the experiences of fishers at sea over numerous cups of tea, is the best way to end our days on the islands.

    “Nowhere before have I felt, “it is not late yet; here is a biodiversity refugia, where people, culture and nature, actually co-exist.

    Any drastic changes proposed for the islands without sensitivity towards the delicate balance between sea-people-land, need to be withdrawn,” Sutaria said.

    Rucha Karkarey, Royal Society Newton International Research Fellow, Lancaster Environment Centre, said the LDAR envisages tourism in uninhabited islands with scant regard for biodiversity.

    “Lakshadweep is home to ecological marvels that are unique to India and the world. It is a global ‘bright spot’ where high biodiversity persists alongside high human population density and well-being. It is a testament to a community that has for generations sustainably managed its atolls. By dismantling customary resource use patterns, especially around uninhabited atolls like Suheli and Cheriyam, now earmarked for tourism development, the LDAR threatens biodiversity and has negative implications for human well- being,” Karkarey said.

    The Collective appealed to the Presidentto restore and reinvigorate the Justice Raveendran Committee recommendations set up by the Supreme Court and ensure that they are robustly implemented and monitored.

    It also appealed to establish a committee of scientists, policy makers and local representatives to re- evaluate the broader development plans and directions of which the LDAR is a part, in the context of Lakshadweep’s unique culture, ecological fragility and climate vulnerability.

  • Lakshadweep filmmaker Aisha Sultana released after 8-hour grilling in sedition case

    By Express News Service
    KOCHI: The Lakshadweep police grilled activist-filmmaker Aisha Sultana for eight hours in connection with the sedition case on Wednesday. 

    Aisha, who arrived at Kavaratti police station at 10.00 am, was taken to Kavaratti government hospital for an antigen test after which the interrogation started. She was released at 6.30 pm and was told to stay back on the island for further questioning. The police did not record her arrest but informed her that she will be summoned for further interrogation after analysing the information shared by her.

    According to sources, the interrogation was focused more on her links and financial dealings. The police quizzed her about her bank details, her travels and links with activists inside the country and abroad.

    The police informed her that she will have to face action for the alleged violation of 7-day quarantinerules. The district collector had issued a caution notice warning of stringent action for violation of quarantine rules on Tuesday. The administration alleged that she had visited the first-line treatment centre and interacted with Covid patients on June 21.

    The police had interrogated Aisha on June 20 in connection with the use of the term ‘bio-weapon’ while speaking about the easing of Covid restrictions in the island during a media discussion on June 7. Aisha had given a written statement to the police that she was referring to the reforms introduced by administrator Praful Khoda Patel and her reference was not against the Union government.

    “Aisha looked very tired after the interrogation and she left for the quarantine facility immediately after release,” said district panchayat member Thaha Malika.

  • Climate change to increase sea level in Lakshadweep, will affect airport, residential areas: Study

    A team of scientists studied the climate projections of sea level rise and associated coastal inundation in atoll islands, a ring-shaped coral reef or island.

  • Lakshadweep filmmaker faces sedition case for ‘bio weapon’ comment over spread of COVID-19

    By PTI
    KOCHI: Lakshadweep Police on Thursday booked filmmaker Ayesha Sulthana on sedition charges following a complaint by a BJP leader that she spread false news about the spread of COVID-19 in the union territory during a TV debate.

    The complaint was filed by the BJP’s Lakshadweep unit president Abdul Khader.

    Sulthana hails from Chetiath island in Lakshadweep.

    According to the FIR lodged by the Kavaratti police, a case under sections 124 A (sedition) and 153 B (hate speech) of the Indian Penal code has been registered against the filmmaker.

    Aiysha Sultana, budding filmmaker, booked under sedition charges. Crime: Dared to describe admin policy a bio-weapon . Reason: Laccadives did not have a single case of Covid for a year until admin removed mandatory quarantine for travellers. Now Covid rages. Some sedition indeed! pic.twitter.com/oZU9m7hBGX
    — Thomas Isaac (@drthomasisaac) June 11, 2021

    In his complaint filed with the Kavaratti police on Wednesday, Khader said Sulthana, during a debate in a Malayalam TV channel, had alleged that the Central government used biological weapons for the spread of COVID-19 in Lakshadweep.

    The BJP leader, in his complaint, has alleged that Sulthana’s was an anti-national act, which tarnished the ‘patriotic image’ of the central government.

    He sought action against her.

    Earlier in the day, the BJP staged a protest in the islands seeking action against the filmmaker.

    The Lakshadweep-based model and actor Sulthana has worked with several Malayalam filmmakers.

    Lakshadweep has been witnessing protests by various political parties since the administration started implementing reform measures in the islands.

  • Lakshadweep administration issues new order to deploy government officials in fishing boats

    By PTI
    KOCHI: Amid protests by islanders against its “reform” measures, the Lakshadweep island administration has taken a set of decisions, including deputing government officials onboard local fishing boats for intelligence gathering.

    The administration also issued a new order on managing cleanliness and hygiene, on June 4, directing the people of the islands to scientifically dispose of the tender coconut shell, tree leaves, coconut husk, coconut shell, trunk etc in and around dwelling and public places.

    Lakshadweep MP Mohammed Faizal attacked the administration for its new directives, terming them as a “mockery” and urged the authorities to withdraw them immediately.

    It was on May 28, a meeting chaired by Principal Secretary cum Advisor to the Administrator decided to depute responsible government servants onboard local fishing boats for intelligence gathering.

    The meeting also decided to strengthen the security measures to monitor the local fishing boats and crews, intensify checking of passenger boats and vessels reaching the islands and strengthen the ship berthing points and helibase by installing CCTV cameras.

    The administration later gave direction to officials concerned to initiate action as per decisions taken on the meeting.

    He questioned the practicality of implementing the order, saying there are hundreds of fishing boats operating from the islands and how many officials are going to be deployed in such vessels.

    Noting that a well established system of surveillance by the Navy and the Coast Guard was already in place in all the islands, the MP said the Coast Guard headquarter in islands have an effective radar system which can cover activities of any vessels operating in 30 nautical mile areas.

    Faizal said every month or once in three months Coast Guard is having regular interaction with the local fishermen to train them on how to report the movement of suspected objects in the seas.

    “All this training is given to the fishermen. They are very cooperative with the security agencies. By introducing such a law, what are they (administration) trying to establish?” he asked.

    Faizal alleged that the administration’s actions showed that they donot believe the innocent fishermen community of Lakshadweep.

    “The recent order, which has come in the way of surveillance on the coastal areas of Lakshadweep, is really a mockery. I feel”, he told PTI.

    Alleging discrimination, he asked why such surveillance using officials onboard fishing vessels were not happening in coastal states like Gujarat, Kerala and Tamil Nadu.

    Issuing the order on hygiene and cleanliness, the administration said whoever violates or contravenes any of the directions shall be liable for punishment with fine as per Schedule I of the Lakshadweep Solid Waste Management Bye-Law, 2018 and also be liable to criminal proceedings for offence punishable under Section 188 of IPC.

    Questioning the provision in the order directing scientific disposal of biodegradable materials like coconut leaves, Faizal said the land of Lakshadweep became fertile because the forefathers who lived in the islands buried them in the soil.

    He also said it is the responsibility of the administration to provide technology for scientifically managing the waste.

    Asked whether he had taken up the matter with the Union Government, Faizal said, “I feel really ashamed of taking up such matters with them”.

    Meanwhile, the Congress has decided to step up its agitation against the administration for its “anti-people” reform measures in the islands.

    According to party sources, the MPs from the Congress- led UDF in Kerala will organise a ‘dharna’ in front of the territorial administration office in Kochi on Monday.

    Expressing solidarity with the people of Lakshadweep, the Kerala Legislative Assembly has unanimously passed a resolution demanding the recall of island administrator Praful Khoda Patel and requesting the Centres immediate intervention to protect the lives and livelihood of the islanders.

    An archipelago located in the Arabian Sea, Lakshadweep has been witnessing protests by locals for over the recent actions and administrative reforms being implemented by Patel.

    Defending its action, the Lakshadweep administration has said it was laying the foundation for the future of islands in a planned way and to develop it on the lines of Maldives in two decades.

  • Lakshadweep starts exporting tuna fish to Japan

    By Express News Service
    KOCHI: In a first of its kind intervention to sustain the livelihood of local fishermen the Lakshadweep administration has roped in a private partner for export of premium quality tuna fish to Japan.

    The first trial consignment of chilled tuna was transported from Agatti airport to Bengaluru on Saturday. With this successful daily trial run, the company is planning to expand the trade with more quantities chartering exclusive cargo flight with 5 tonne capacity daily from Agatti to Bengaluru for subsequent transport to Tokyo in Japan. This chartered flight will bring essential commodities from Bengaluru to Agatti and return with tuna fish, said Lakshadweep collector S Askar Ali.      

    With more than 20,000 sq. km territorial water, Lakshadweep has the highest potential for tuna fishing. More than 60 per cent of the population is completely dependent on fishing for livelihood. Of the 12,500 households in the islands, there are around 7,197 registered fishermen operating 2158 mechanised and motorised fishing boats. As per the data available with the Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI),  Lakshadweep has the potential to export 1 lakh tonnes of tuna.         

    Lakshadweep is a completely organic territory devoid of any polluting industries and the marine resources are free from harmful contaminants.  The Lakshadweep tunas are known to have the least histamine content mainly due to the traditional hook and line fishing methods and short fishing durations.            

    The Lakshadweep does not have basic infrastructure facilities including an ice plant and cold storage to process fish. The administration had recently initiated steps to create basic infrastructure to promote fish export. Three major containerised ice plants with German Technology were installed in Minicoy, Agatti and Amini Islands. Around 20-tonne cold storage facilities were provided on various Islands.     

    The Lakshadweep administration had recently conducted a mega Lakshadweep Tuna Exporters and Stakeholders meet in Kochi in which around 50 exporters from Kerala, Karnataka, Tamilnadu and Goa participated. Sashmi  Food Private Ltd, a Bengaluru based with a European Union approved export plant expressed its willingness to export fresh tuna directly to Japan as Air cargo. The company has experience in exporting fish products to Japan, said the Collector.

    The company’s marketing head and his team had arrived in Agatti during the third week of May and imparted training to fishermen and their Cooperative Society on hygienic fish handling practices and transportation of packaging materials to Agatti. The administration had deputed a team of senior officers of the Fisheries department to facilitate the entire process at Agatti Island.     

     The Company held negotiations with air carriers for a subsidised rate for transportation of fish from Agatti airport to Bengaluru during monsoon as the number of passengers travelling will be minimal due to the closure of tourism.  The administration is planning to facilitate full-fledged tuna export both by air cargo and through vessels directly operated by selected export companies after September 15. For this, an agreement will be signed involving the fishermen cooperative societies and the exporters. These initiatives will provide better price and open new markets for the premium Lakshadweep tunas creating better employment and livelihood opportunities, said collector Askar Ali.