Occupy Coke plant: rallying cry in Kerala
Angry over government inaction, activists took over the plant in Plachimada village
View Image Gallery
Activists, arrested for gate-crashing into Coca Cola plant at Kerala's Plachimada village, have gone on fast inside the jail.
"All 21 activists who were arrested on December 17 are fasting inside the jail premises and will continue their agitation against government's indifference in dealing with the damages caused by the Coca Cola factory,"Jeo Jose, of Plachimada action forum told Governance Now over phone from Kerala.
Also read: Occupy Coke plant: Activists' rallying cry in Kerala
Protesting against the damages caused to the groundwater in Plachimada village by the Coca Cola plant , local activists had marched to the factory on Saturday and declared it 'occupied' in the name of the affected people.
“Fed up of the inaction on part of the central and state government, we decided to take action on our own,” said Jose.
The protest against the factory began in 2002, after the villages in the vicinity of the factory found that the toxic waste dumped by the factory was contaminating their ground water.
While the factory was closed in 2004, after the village panchayat cancelled its license, no compensation was awarded to villages affected by the toxic waste generated by the factory.
“The forcible takeover of the factory is the culmination of the failure of the government to take action against the multinational company,” said Jose.
He said the struggle will continue till four demands of the agitator -- official closure of the factory and compensation to the victims, prosecution of the company for their human rights violations and crimes, empowering the local authorities, that is Gram Panchayats, to take the final call on how to use their natural resources and amending the Pollution Control Acts and Panchayati Raj Acts towards meeting this requirement—were met.
Meanwhile, the Medha Patkar-led National Alliance of People’s Movement (NAPM) has hailed the ‘direct action’ of the activists at the factory. “NAPM hails the action of these activists and salutes their courage for choosing to do this to bring home the dire need for quick passage of the ‘Plachimada Coca-Cola Victims’ Relief and Compensation Claims Special Tribunal Bill, 2011,” read a statement from NAPM.
Also of interest:
Kerala CM slams bureaucrat backing Coke
Jaipur Literature Festival: Hostage to unethical firms?
Decision on Coca Cola report soon: Kerala CM


-AndrewYule.jpg)

Post new comment