Tension prevailed in the Vizhinjam port area as hundreds
of fisher-folk mainly women from the nearby coastal hamlets pushed their way
into the under construction port site demanding the authorities to address
their long-pending demands regarding livelihood issues.
A large number of coastal people have been staging an
intense protest outside the main entrance of the multi-purpose seaport, located
at nearby Mulloor, for the last four days pressing their seven-point charter of
demands including to stop the construction work and to conduct a coastal impact
study in connection with the multi-crore project.
Intensifying their
agitation, the protesters took out a march this morning and pushed their way inside the project site and raised
slogans against the government and the port authorities alleging that the
unscientific construction activities were the cause of increasing coastal
erosion in the region.
A group of protesters knocked down the barricades and
entered the port site but the police and the priests of the Latin Archdiocese,
who led the protest, tried to calm them down and brought them back to the
protest venue at the entrance.
Coastal community members from four nearby hamlets
including Adimalathura and Pallam were the ones who staged the protest on
Friday.
The fisher-folk intensified their agitation even as talks
between the government and representatives of the Latin Archdiocese were
scheduled to happen later in the day.
Kerala government, in an attempt to placate the
protestors, had said that steps are being taken to allocate land for
construction of flats to rehabilitate those fisherfolk who lost homes to the
sea.
The government had also expressed its willingness to hold
talks with the fishermen to discuss their demands. However, these conciliatory
efforts have not proved sufficient to convince the fishermen to withdraw the
protests outside the port’s main entrance.
The protesters have been alleging that the unscientific
construction of groynes, the artificial sea walls as part of the upcoming
Vizhinjam port was one of the reasons for the increasing coastal erosion in the
district.