Friday, May 8, 2015

Draft National Tourism Policy

Limited Vision, Flawed Approach and Craving to Centralise
Places Central Bureaucracy and Corporates at the core

The new draft National Tourism Policy is really a mockery of the policy formulation process. For one the Government must be clear of what policy is and what are structures and process. While a policy needs to be a short statement of the of the intent of the government which follows up with the required legislative and procedural processes, the draft produced by the Ministry is clearly a “consultants” rambling on the basis of some wishful thinking and imagination and reads like a badly drafted project report. Poor understanding of the situation on the ground and the ways in which people and tourism are intertwined is as much an ingredient as is perhaps a vested interest to gain bureaucratic and corporate control.

Limited Vision

The draft document made available for a limited window for response states that the vision is to “Develop and position India as a “Must EXPERIENCE” and “Must REVISIT” destination for global travellers whilst encouraging Indians to explore their own country and realise the potential of tourism as a major engine for economic growth, employment generation and poverty alleviation in a responsible, inclusive framework”. This clearly points out that the Government has a limited vision of Tourism as a commodity to be sold and capitalised. This limited vision percolates down the entire fifty-page narrative. The environmental, social, ecological and tribal concerns as with issues of security and safety at the operational level and experience of travel with education, learning and human transformation has completely been missed or deliberately avoided.

Flawed Approach

Stemming from such a limited vision the policy states that “for effective delivery of the New Tourism Policy 2015, Tourism development has to effectively happen in a way that leverages all critical levers for tourism economy development, including:

·        Ensuring alignment of the States and the Union Territories based on a common agenda and a co-operative, synergized approach.
·        Creating a framework for engaging with local bodies productively.
·        Recognising that Tourism development is also synonymous with the growth of the trade and industry, making it necessary to effectively coordinate efforts for cross-sectoral benefit.
·        Activation of a responsible framework for growth that can be achieved by engaging with the larger civil society.

What translates out of this is a paternalistic and business mission. Further the policy is confused about what is a “mission” and objectives, and repeats a set of, if not contradictory, confusing signals. Most concerns of the community or civil society is more a mere after-thought. This is amply demonstrated by the last of the mission statement, “ensure meaningful, equitable community participation in tourism development “as well as in the avowed objective, “evolve a framework for tourism development, which is Government-led, private sector driven and community welfare oriented.”

Craving to Centralise

Not ever since the Sarkaria Commission reports, in the context of cooperative federalism being spoken about in loud tones, the need today is to accrete policies and programmes from ground-up. The failure of the state-corporate led economic development and its propensity to be virtually job destroying is clear from the current rural context. India’s cultural and natural diversity demands more creative ways of designing a variety of solutions. However the policy wants to usurp even the rights of State Governments as it says “Tourism should also be placed in the concurrent list of the constitution for effective legislation to make tourism into a national agenda. National prioritisation of the sector is critical to ensuring focus, investment, alignment and competitiveness needed as precursors to maximizing the impact of the tourism sector for the benefit of India at large.” It is unfortunate that the States are becoming mute spectators in the rough ride of the economy and the central government. However the policy itself concedes that peoples participation is critical in saying “ It is therefore necessary to build a robust partnership between the Centre, States and UTs, local bodies, Industry and the civil society to achieve sustainable growth in a Public – Private – Peoples Participation (PPPP) framework. “

Complete Relook is Necessary


Mere tinkering or cosmetic changes to the draft document is going to be hugely detrimental to the people involved in tourism and the communities where tourism activities take place. It calls for a wide-spread process of community oriented activities to participate in the design and development of the policy which definitely needs to move away from the current tendency of commodifying everything and controlling each rupee.

Coal Scam and new Legislation: A remedy worse than the disease

In late August last year, millions of poor Indians rejoiced a Supreme Court judgement on the allocation of coal blocks. It was a source of hope for many that the Court’s subsequent order categorically held all allocated coal blocks, except four, to be illegal. For those whose lives hung directly in the balance, it was a reprieve from forced displacement,loss of livelihoods and a life full of pollution and exploitation.

People hoped that the breathing time given by the Court before setting up a new coal allocations framework and a catena of laws passed over the last decade would enable the focus to shift to the gross irregularity of field-level operations in each of these coal blocks. It is an undeniable fact that a huge backlog of legacy issues of compensation, resettlement and rehabilitation still exist, not to mention false cases filed against human rights defenders protesting these illegally allocated coal blocks.

It was also redemption for a number of people who have been pointing out that the entire direction of development being pursued in the last decade has been undermining the basic tenets of the Constitution. The process of allocation of natural resources to companies has been under the scrutiny of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India and the Supreme Court. In the coal scam alone, CAG’s estimates varied between nearly two lakhs to over ten lakh crores of undue gain to companies.

The Coal Mines Ordinance promulgated on 24th October, exactly a month after the Supreme Court’s judgment so completely undermines the Constitution by legitimising all illegal players.  The Government’s persistence and political jugglery of different kinds through two rounds of the ordinance- finally finding form in an Act-has reinforced the general belief that political parties professing good governance are not aiming at human development but “keeping conflicts to manageable limits”.

In doing so, they have persisted with furthering a dependencyon oligarchs with track records of violations, not unlike the British and the land-owning zamindar class. The State in India is in a terrible bind. The fallout of the scam was a huge debt given by state institutions to profligate corporates. The State Bank of India claimed close to Rs 70,000 crore exposure to miners and downstream power projects. The RBI Governor indicated that the top companies were to repay debts of nearly Rs 2,36,000 crores in the last five years and have so far deposited only  Rs 31,000 crores. So to save itself, the State has given the same corporate responsible for this vulnerable financial situation more resources and perhaps more debts, forget the people who would be uprooted.

However, aside from the mind-boggling numbers of what some quarters called ‘notional loss’, justice in India, as all over the modern judicial systems, hinges on the questions raised by a petitioner. In the coal scam case, since the Article 14- that talks of equality before the law and Article 39 A- on equal justice and free legal aid- were invoked at some stage, stewardship demanded that the questions of equity, environmental soundness and self-reliance were also addressed by the court.

The tribal and particularly the poor are to face the greatest inequity of these en masse allocations.

The massive number of people who will be displaced for this climate-unfriendly ambition is stupendous. In Odisha’s district of Angul alone, over  lakhs of people will be displaced. These are the original inhabitants and perhaps the first stakeholders. In Jharkhand, the fresh proposals add to a whopping 70,000 families to be displaced for coal mining and related projects. The ordinance which was brought under the guise of the court order and new Act want this process of alienation of land to continue and do not have even a single line about the fate of these communities.

Making it easier for the defrauders, the Act says that the new bidder will have all rights and no liabilities. This must be the law in the country where the defrauders are bestowed with rights and the right holders of the local area are being pushed into a corner with no recourse to justice. Even the past sins of these companies are absolved and only those who have a conviction and have been imprisoned for three years will be ineligible, which means all the people who indulged in malpractices are being accommodated by a so-called clean government.

The Supreme Court, in a historic judgment (Criminal Appeal No/ 11/2011), observed how many Indians treat the Scheduled Tribes, or Adivasis, stakeholders of a large number of these blocks that just went under the hammer.

“Since India is a country of great diversity, it is absolutely essential if we wish to keep our country united to have tolerance and equal respect for all communities and sects. It was due to the wisdom of our founding fathers that we have a Constitution which is secular in character, and which caters to the tremendous diversity in our country.Thus it is the Constitution of India which is keeping us together despite all our tremendous diversity, because the Constitution gives equal respect to all communities, sects, lingual and ethnic groups etc. in the country.The Constitution guarantees to all citizens freedom of speech (Article 19), freedom of religion (Article 25), equality (Article 14 to 17),liberty(Article 21) etc.”

The Act and the rules,provide no space for affected communities, even those who live in Constitutionally-protected areas, to raise their concerns. The outcome of this legislation and recently concluded auctions will no doubt, be a cause for restlessness and conflict amongst communities in already troubled and marginalised regions..

As the bidding process has unfolded, it is becoming clearer that crony capitalists can also collude. The oft-hailed ideal of transparency that was supposed to have been ushered in by the new Act is limited to the state and the bidders but not to the community at large who will bear the consequences.

Further, the transfer of environmental and forest clearances without even ensuring that the companies were complying is a mockery of the governance systems.

While the CAG is globally spearheading bold initiatives on environmental audits, it would be a great service if the CAG also conducts a concurrent audit of the ecological damages and social equity issues associated with the coal block allocations,and look at the current Coal Mines (Special Provisions) Act from the larger prism of sustainability.

As Gandhiji once said, “An unjust law is itself a species of violence.”