Early
in 1970's decade, I used to work in the fort area of Mumbai. There
were a large number of commercial banks head offices in that area.
Almost on every afternoon, during lunch hour, I would witness a
common sight. A group of about 40 or 50 men, would be standing near
entrance to one of the bank head offices with banners, placards and
would be giving slogans damning the managements. The every day show
used to be strikingly similar, except that it was held at different
venues; different bank HO's. Once a friend told me that actually the
protestors are all same people, because they are hired; they just go
around from one bank to another. They are actually paid for the job
by bank worker's unions. We would jokingly call these people as
protest brigades.
Since
last 10 or 20 years, a new and much more developed form of protest
brigades has appeared in India. They no longer protest for bank
employees, They now oppose new projects that are coming up using all
kinds of means; PIL ( Public interest litigations) cases in courts,
on line petitions, blockades. Many of them are funded from abroad.
For example, take the case of atomic power station project at
Kudankulam, on east coast of India. The project was initiated long
back, when an Inter-Governmental Agreement was signed in 1988 by then
Prime Minister of India Rajiv Gandhi and Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev, for the construction of two atomic reactors at this site.
Due to
international political difficulties, the project was much delayed
and construction work finally began only in September 2001. As the
project neared completion, the protest brigades got into action. A
fear was systematically created in the minds of nearby villagers for
their safety, which resulted in intense protests by fishermen and
other river folk against the power project. Even a Public Interest
Litigation (PIL) was also filed against the government’s civil
nuclear programme at the Supreme Court.
The
apex court took a long time to decide on the matter and only on May
6th 2013, in a landmark judgment, gave its green signal to the
commissioning of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu.
Dismissing a host of PILs challenging the Madras High Court’s
earlier order in favour of the plant, the apex court termed the
operationalisation of Kudankulam nuclear power plant as necessary for
the country’s growth. It took another year for the first reactor at
Kudankulan to start delivering its rated 1000 MW electrical power.
I had
always thought that these so called bands of protest brigades,
donning different names, but all mainly funded by some or other
foreign based organizations, are only active in India, to try and
block, whenever any new development project is thought off. The
latest news from US has however proved that I am all in the wrong,
A
question comes to mind as to what all these protests and PIL's
achieve except for delaying the projects and increasing its cost
overlays. One might give some weightage to the protestors point of
view (if there is one!) in the Kudankulan case, because ever since
the Fukushima disaster in Japan, many environmentalists have been
questioning about over all long term impact of Nuclear power. But
how does one justify protests against an astronomical telescope being
set up on a remote mountain because the site offers ideal conditions
for astronomical observations and that too in USA?
The
highest point in the U.S. state of Hawaii; Mauna Kea is a dormant
volcano located on the island of Hawaii. It stands tall at 13,803 ft
(4,207 m) above sea level. Because of extremely favourable observing
conditions, Mauna Kea's summit is considered as one of the best sites
in the world for astronomical observations. The atmosphere here is
extremely dry. Since the water vapor in the atmosphere absorbs
radiation in submillimeter and infrared region of the electromagnetic
spectrum, Mauna Kea is an ideal spot for submillimeter and infrared
astronomy. The cloud cover always remains below the summit and keeps
the air above the summit free of atmospheric pollution, stable and
without any turbulence. The night skies are very dark as it is far
away from any city lights. All these factors make Mauna Kea an ideal
place to set up astronomical observatories.
The
University of California system, the California Institute of
Technology and the Association of Canadian Universities for Research
in Astronomy with China, India and Japan are partnering to construct
a 18-storey, $1.4 Billion, 30 meter diameter telescope on the summit
that should help scientists see some 13 billion light years away for
a glimpse into the early years of the universe. This telescope would
be so powerful as to identify an object as small as a coin from a
distance equivalent to 500 Km.
No way
concerned about the scientific progress that can be achieved by this
new telescope, the protest brigades, who have also roped in some
celebrities, have got into action and have started their campaigns
here too. The argument is that the telescope structure desecrates
sacred land. If that is not enough, this is also supposed to be a
conservation area.
An
online petition has been launched to halt construction and has
managed to collect about 30,000 signatures. The star of a popular TV
serial in US, Game of Thrones; Jason Momoa and San Francisco based
base ball team's pitcher Madison Bumgarner and few other known names
have joined the protests. The organizers of protests are using
social media as well are holding a worldwide sign waving with
participants from Hawaii, Alaska, New York City, Las Vegas, Kentucky,
Arizona, Tahiti and Tonga. There is direct action too. Protestors
have been camped out on the top of the mountain creating a human
blockades for two weeks and over 30 people had been arrested.
Funny
part is that Mauna Kea summit already has number of telescopes
built within that conservation zone. In the early 1970s, a 2.2 meter
diameter telescope built by University of Hawaii, UH 88 came up here.
It was the seventh largest optical/infrared telescope in the world at
that time. Today, there are 13 observation facilities at Mauna Kea
Science Reserve, funded by as many as 11 countries. The largest
facility, commissioned in 1999, has been built by Japan and is known
as the Subaru Telescope, considered as one of the world’s biggest,
it has a single main mirror that measures 8.2 meters in diameter. The
Hawaii Island Chamber of Commerce has been encouraging astronomical
development of Mauna Kea ever since early 1960s.
This
week, the governor of Hawaii temporarily halted construction on the
telescope, saying it was "a time out" and a chance for both
sides to talk. I find the entire endeavour of protests, bordering on
being ridiculous. When there are already 12 other telescopes
functioning on site, developing another plot of about five acres of
land for the Thirty-Meter Telescope is not going to make any major
difference. It seems that Mauna Kea 30 meter telescope project is
going in the Kudankulam nuclear power plant way, which is indeed bad
news for the science.
15th
April 2015
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