Guardians of the Forest

Prafulla Samantara won the 'Green Nobel' in 2017 for his 12-year legal battle to protect Niyamgiri and its people

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Prafulla Samantara won the 'Green Nobel' in 2017 for his 12-year legal battle to protect Niyamgiri and its people

Rumbling drums and roars of protests suddenly shatter the silence of the verdant Niyamgiri, a hill range in southern Odisha. Word has reached the Dongria Kondh tribes--in the hamlets sprawled across the 250 sq km area--that a mining company is coming to take over their hills. The Dongrias, close to 8,000 in number, Adivasis who have the status of particularly vulnerable tribes, are dangerously close to losing the land they have called their home for centuries. Thousands of men and women march through the dense forests to form a 17-kilometre human chain to physically prevent it. The hills and valleys echo with their rallying cry: "We will die, but not leave our home and our God …"

This moving symbol of peaceful resistance in January 2009 by the Dongria Kondh to protect their habitat from the devastation of bauxite mining reverberated globally. The movement was set in motion in 2003 in response to the UK-based Vedanta Resources Plc signing a memorandum of understanding with the Odisha government (see timeline). Steered by the Niyamgiri Suraksha Samiti (NSS), the movement comprised a number of notable local leaders. Standing with them, often physically, but always morally, is Prafulla Samantara, 66, who took the battle to the Supreme Court and fought until the people won.

A lifelong champion of environmental and social justice, he was awarded the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize, often referred to as the Green Nobel, this April, for his role in the "… historic 12-year legal battle that affirmed the indigenous Dongria Kondh's land rights" to protect the Niyamgiri Hills from a massive, open-pit aluminium ore mine.

"This movement is the collective effort and sacrifice of many--Adivasis, activists, lawyers. The prize is not mine alone," says Samantara, sitting in his small office in Bhubaneswar's Lohia Academy, from where he runs Lok Shakti Abhiyan (LSA). His warm smile connects him immediately with strangers, but behind the ...

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