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The political sociology of golf in South Asia (6) -- posting: msg#00127culture.india.sarai.reader
The Political Sociology of Golf in South Asia (6) Last month, I had drawn attention to the excesses and illegalities that had marked golf development in South-East and East Asia, and also the struggles against golf and lifestyle projects in these regions. These have been mimicked almost in toto in India, forcing golf-course opponents to often take the legal route, sometimes successfully. Now, for a just few examples nationwide: * Last October, a two-judge bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court comprising Chief Justice B K Roy and Justice Surya Kant acted in response to a PIL, and ordered the demolition of the Forest Hill Golf and Country Club at Karoran village off Chandigarh. They directed the CBI to probe its construction and the nexus between its promoters and top public servants, because the project had come up in blatant violation of the Forest Act and other land laws. The club had shot into the news when 25 judges of the high court went on a strike a few months earlier, after Roy had pulled up two of them for accepting free membership of the FHGCC. It further emerged that Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh and other ministers, top bureaucrats, police officials and other individuals in positions of power and influence had likewise accepted honorary membership of the 380-acre club floated by NRI Colonel B S Sandhu, who ran an immigration consultancy to Canada. In an ironic development, Roy was subsequently transferred out of the state. * In January 2004, a division bench of the Supreme Court stayed the further development of an 18-hole golf course in the Goregaon West suburb of Mumbai, when environmental activists alleged that hundreds of acres of eco-sensitive mangrove protected by Coastal Regulation Zone regulations had been destroyed for the purpose. The stay was granted on a special leave petition filed by the Bombay Environmental Action Group. The Rs 200 crore-plus project being developed by the Usha Madhu Development Cooperative Housing Society would have covered from 170-550 acres of land owned by the Behramji Jejeebhoy group. * Last July, the Bombay High Court stayed the development of a 9-hole golf course plus seven-star hotel, convention centre and service apartments on a portion of the Royal Western India Turf Club-administered 226-acre Mahalaxmi Race Course, acting on a PIL filed by the Public Concern for Governance Trust. The petitioners claimed that the project was a blatant attempt to commercially exploit public land by the RWITC and the developer, Pegasus Clubs and Resorts. RWITC allegedly entered into a deal with Pegasus for a minimum of 30 years, the PIL claimed, although its lease on the land was valid only till 2013. It also signed the deal with Pegasus without any consent from the Bombay Municipal Corporation or the state government from whom the land was leased ? for racing only. Pegasus had paid RWITC an advance of Rs 10 crore and took all responsibility to secure all permissions for the project. * Sahara India Parivar?s plans to build a casino, golf course and five-star hotels on four islands on the Sunderbans, the world?s biggest mangrove swamp, has drawn protests from opponents who claim it would result in the ?total destruction? of the pristine delta system. Sahara has already acquired 2250 hectares of land for this purpose. UNESCO designated the Sundarbans a World Heritage site in 1987. The project has been opposed by many including environmentalist Bittu Sahgal, editor of the green magazine, Sanctuary, and writer Amitav Ghosh. Sahara India?s Amby Valley lifestyle project near Lonavla, a hill station in Maharashtra, is another controversial project which had to wade through legal challenges, but has now forged ahead. A Professional Golf Association of India-sanctioned tournament was even staged on its golf course recently. Incidentally, Amby Valley were the title sponsors of the just concluded PGAI Tour for 2004-05. * Over 4,000 trees were allegedly cut down in the old forest area to pave the way for Royal Springs Golf Course in Srinagar, a project for which the then Jammu & Kashmir Chief Minister Dr Farooq Abdullah, leader of the National Conference (NC), drew a lot of flak in the media. The course, designed by Robert Trent Jones at a cost of Rs 25-32 crore, has been rated as the best and the most beautiful in India, but has been flayed as ?nothing but a symbol of obscenely warped priorities in public spending, and a monument to malgovernance?? by critics. Ironically, the People?s Democratic Party (PDP) opposed the development when it was in the opposition as a folly imposed on the state by the NC; but once in power, the PDP Chief Minister, Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, has become an enthusiastic promoter of golf to lure tourists to the embattled state. * A couple of years ago, activists scuttled a move to build golf courses in each drought-affected district of Rajasthan as part of the ?food-for-work? programme envisaged by the previous Congress regime. This decision, taken by the then state government, to build golf courses as part of drought relief works was indeed strange ? considering that golf courses themselves consume a lot of water and Rajasthan is a chronically drought-affected state. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com |
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