Activist nun who fought Indian mining companies brutally murdered
source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/asia-pacific/activist-nun-who-fought-indian-mining...
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- JanforGore
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They did kill her. In the early hours of Wednesday morning, a mob of 25 or 30 men carrying spears, clubs and axes burst into her house in Pachuwara, a remote village in the eastern Indian state of Jharkhand. They beat and hacked her to death, a week after she went home.
The “they” Sister Valsa feared were “goons” hired by the mining companies she had helped the community of Pachuwara fight. The “coal mafia” told her on more than one occasion to get out of Pachuwara or they would kill her. She had repeatedly appealed to police for protection after threats on her life.
Sister Valsa, 52, was from Kerala in south India, and 24 years ago took her vows as a member of the Sisters of Charity of Jesus and Mary. She was one of the remarkable breed of Indian religious figures who are grassroots social activists, who immerse themselves in the most marginalized and impoverished communities and work on literacy, basic health care and human rights. Sister Valsa said she did Jesus’s work by teaching the aboriginal people – known in India as adivasi or “tribals” – about their rights to their land.
The Santhal community with whom she lived for nearly two decades were pushed off their land seven years ago by a private coal company. It was a familiar story here. Across the tribal heartland of India there are hundreds of these battles being waged, between communities with little education and even fewer resources, and huge mining and industrial corporations whose investments are eagerly sought by India’s state and central governments for the jobs they create, the taxes they pay – and the opportunities for graft they offer.
Sister Valsa helped organize the Santhal to demand compensation for their land; she was arrested at a protest in 2007. The company, Panem Coal Ltd., was eventually forced into a compensation agreement, and began to dig an open-cast coal mine, but didn’t meet all the terms of the deal. So when it moved to expand on to new Santhal land this year, Sister Valsa and her Santhal supporters dug in to stop them – and that is when the threats turned really ugly.
This past summer, Sister Valsa reluctantly left Pachuwara and took refuge with a friend, a fellow activist nun, at a school for low-caste girls in Bihar where I have been spending time on a project for the Globe. She fit easily into life there, gently shepherding the girls through their day, but she spent hours talking to me about “my people” and the war for land and resources going on in the tribal belt.
A few of these stories have attracted considerable attention, in India and beyond its borders, such as efforts by Vedanta Resources to build a bauxite mine on a mountain considered a god by the Dongri tribal people in the state of Orissa. But most of these fights go on, as Sister Valsa’s did, almost entirely unremarked.
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Inspector R. K. Mallick, the senior police official in the region, told The Globe and Mail it was too soon to discuss the investigation, but that police would soon have “the clear picture.” No arrests had yet been made. He would not entertain the question of whether police could have done more to protect Sister Valsa while she was alive. Three years ago, she filed a formal notice with police about the death threats.
Sister Sudha, who attended the funeral Thursday, said most who knew Sister Valsa believe it was people from the Santhal community, in the pay of the mining company, who killed her. “This is what the companies do: they divide people. When people are this poor, when someone gives them a little money, they can do anything,” she said. “Valsa knew it, and so many times we asked her to leave. But she said, ‘These are my people and I cannot leave them.’ ”
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- Green, Culture, Sustainable Agriculture, Earth Care, 4 more
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- Environment, India, Coal, Corporate Greed, 4 more
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David_Cervantes
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Thank you for sharing JanforGore :(
- 6 months ago
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David_Cervantes
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VoyagerFilms
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Very sad and common in 3rd world countries - atrocities committed by 1st world corporations, some American, some international, some European, etc. Who will be held accountable? Not the people ultimately responsible, not the CEOs, not the upper management, not the Rupert Murdock's of the corrupt, crime ridden world because they can and do bribe too many people from politicians, Judges on down. Any one wonder why we have a 99% - Occupy movement in this country?
- 6 months ago
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VoyagerFilms
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JanforGore
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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ranchi/Seven-held-in-Jharkhand-nun-murde...
Update on this story: Seven have been arrested and it appears Sister Valsa John's associate had also been raped a couple of days before she was killed and the Sister had reported it.
- 6 months ago
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JanforGore
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artemis6
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This is horrific ....
- 6 months ago
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artemis6
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snanders
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The poor woman. And the irony is she spent her life fighting coal companies to protect her own people and with just a little bit of money, the coal companies convinced her fellow tribesmen to slaughter her. It shows how money truly is the root of all evil. Terribly sad, I hope her efforts were not in vain, this world needs more people like her
- 6 months ago
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snanders
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VoyagerFilms
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snanders:
Her efforts were not in vain, in fact, her death unfortunately, will do more than anything to raise awareness as it is now and to affect change in the world. She knew that.
- 6 months ago
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VoyagerFilms
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GavinTheMother
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She is one of many. So many people all over the world have suffered similar fates who we don't know by name. Sad. What excuse do we have to allow tyranny when we consider her sacrifice?
- 6 months ago
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GavinTheMother
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JanforGore
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In all honesty, I am very upset in reading this. I simply cannot understand how this greed drives a mob to do such a horrible thing to another human being, a GOOD human being regardless of how poor they may be. There is no excuse! The horror she must have felt... well, she is now home. May her work continue.
- 6 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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People like Sister Valsa John are the unsung heroes and heroines of our world standing up to preserve it. Her senseless brutal death all to dig another coal pit for greed shows the true evil and ugliness of what it brings. May she rest in peace and her killers be brought to justice.
- 6 months ago
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JanforGore
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artemis6
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JanforGore:
It is very upsetting . Those men , may have gotten paid well , but their future is tarnished ....
- 6 months ago
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artemis6
