Upper catchment vs command area

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Must a few always suffer for the greater good? And how to deal with displacement when it becomes inevitable?

Let us take a hard look at some numbers. Between 1951 and 1990, some 16.4 million people were displaced by dams and irrigation projects in India. Of these, only 4.1 million were resettled, and even that poorly. Fully 12.3 million people were thrown to the winds. Of the total 16.4 million displaced, 6.4 million were tribals, of whom only 1.6 million were given some kind of resettlement package. The rest, 4.8 million tribals (for comparison´s sake, 0.6 million more than Norway´s 1991 population of 4.2 million, or more than half of Sweden´s population), were rendered homeless and destitute.

Various solutions have been sought to address the problem of displacement caused by dams and reservoirs. Some call for smaller projects, which minimise the number of ´oustees´. Others propose reducing the dam height or relocating dam sites so that fewer people are displaced by the rising waters. These efforts at minimising displacement represent a kind of band-aid treatment.

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Himal Southasian
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