Jaya urges agitators against nuclear plant to call off fast

Stresses her government placed priority on "schemes for people and not people for schemes"

PTI | September 16, 2011



Seeking to allay the fears of the local population, Tamil Nadu chief minister Jayalalithaa on Friday said the Koodankulam Nuclear Power Plant in Tirunelveli district has adequate safety parameters and appealed to agitators to end their indefinite fast against it.

Making a "kind appeal" to the more than 100 protestors who are on an indefinite fast since September 10, Jayalalithaa said in a statement that the plant is safeguarded even from a tsunami and was located in a zone not prone to earthquakes.

She said following her government's interaction with plant officials and nuclear scientists, it was her "duty" to inform the people about the safety measures put in place there.

"The power plant is located in the second zone of the seismic level where earthquakes are not possible... there is a very safe reactor cooling system. Though one cooling system is enough, four different systems are in place".

Jayalalithaa said the plant was located 7.5 metres above sea level, which means that there will be no damage to it even during a natural disaster like tsunami. The plant suffered no damage during the 2004 tsunami too, she said.

Other safety measures were also in place, Jayalalithaa said, adding these were approved by the Indian and Russian scientists, since it is an Indo-Russian joint venture, and relevant government departments.

Tamil Nadu government had on Thursday initiated talks with the protestors sending three ministers to persuade them to call off their fast but it had remained inconclusive.

The local population and fishermen in the coastal village of Koodankulam has been agitating against the project and intensified the protests in recent weeks after the KNPP officials said the hot run (testing with dummy fuel) of the first reactor, has reached the final stage and commercial power production would begin in December.

Recalling that two agreements were signed in 1988 and 1998 between India and Russia for the construction of the plant, Jayalalithaa said that the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) had started the works in 2001.

After completion of works, Tamil Nadu will receive 925 mw of power from KNPP, Jayalalithaa, who heads a power-crunch state, said.

Stressing that her government placed priority on "schemes for people and not people for schemes," the chief minister said there was no need for panic on the KNPP.

She asked the agitating protestors to call off their fast and extend co-operation to the project.

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