Dear Reader,

We wish you a joyous holiday season and want to thank you for all your support over the year.

It’s easy to ignore injustices being committed against disenfranchised populations, but our Community Correspondents view it as an opportunity – and a challenge. An opportunity because through our grassroots reporting efforts, we’re successfully able to help these populations achieve change; and a challenge because corporate media actively ignores their pleas for help, and tries to remove the megaphone of social justice we actively place in our Correspondent’s hands. See some of the latest stories in our “Let’s Go Journalism” campaign:

DATA POINT:
70% of Indians live in villages, yet only 2% of content in the media relates to rural issues.

FEATURED CHANGE MAKER: NITU CHAKHIA

FEATURED CHANGE MAKER: NITU CHAKHIA

When Padmakesaripur village lost virtually all of its water access due to government negligence, Community Correspondent Nitu Chakhia took action. Empowered by her reporting, the community succeeded in pressuring local officials to fix seven wells.

“I, a single woman with a tiny camera had managed to bring so much happiness and peace to a village of 2,500 people,” says Nitu. “It makes me very proud when communities [are] inspired to stand by me.”

Watch Nitu’s success story

Living Near Hell; How Coking Coal is Choking Jharia

VIDEO BY COMMUNITY CORRESPONDENT
Living Near Hell; How Coking Coal is Choking Jharia

26th March | Madra Panchayat, Jharia Block, Dhanbad District, Jharkhand | Bharti Kumari

The operations of Bharat Coking Coal Limited, in Jharia Block, have destroyed most signs of a once normal life. Everything is now shrouded under a sick smoke emitting from the coal fires burning in mines underground and overground. Through her many reports community correspondent Bharti is putting together the pieces of a puzzle which reflects the dangers of such operations on the lives of local communities.

The land in Jairamdih was acquired with land from two other villages, Daultadih, Benidih in the 1990s with a promise that residents would be compensated, rehabilitated and also be given jobs at the mines. It was at this time that BCCL started dumping coal on the land near Jairamdih spreading the coal fire that had till then been contained to the neighbouring area of Madhuvan. The original inhabitants of the area were then forced to move as life got more and more difficult.

Despite this, the rehabilitation process was never completed as the land that was meant to be given to the displaced farmers has been since bought off by people who work at BCCL and other private owners. While around 200 people have gotten jobs, others are yet to receive these.

The Coking coal that comes out of these mines plays a huge role in running the steel industry; BCCL provides about 50% of India’s total supply. It is estimated that over half of the coal has been lost to the fires burning underground for at least a 100 years. In the meantime, BCCL and the Indian government have done little to contain these fires and next to nothing for the lives destroyed to feed the steel industry.

For more videos and information about the organisation go to: http://www.videovolunteers.org/category/videos/