Introduction
The ₹92,000 crore Great Nicobar Island (GNI) development project—envisaging a transshipment port, airport, power plant, and township—highlights the classic tension between strategic-economic priorities and constitutional safeguards for indigenous communities in ecologically fragile zones.
Strategic and Developmental Imperatives
- Geostrategic location: Proximity to Malacca Strait strengthens India’s maritime security and Indo-Pacific presence.
- Economic gains: Port-led development, tourism, and employment generation.
- Infrastructure push: Enhances connectivity and disaster response capacity in remote islands.
Ecological Concerns
- Biodiversity loss: GNI hosts unique rainforests, coral reefs, and endangered species (e.g., leatherback turtles).
- Deforestation & habitat fragmentation: Large-scale land diversion threatens fragile ecosystems.
- Disaster vulnerability: Area prone to earthquakes and tsunamis (2004 experience).
Rights of Indigenous Communities
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Tribal groups: Shompen (Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group) and Nicobarese depend on forest ecosystems.
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Legal protections:
- Article 21 (Right to life with dignity)
- Fifth/Sixth Schedule principles & Forest Rights Act, 2006 (though limited application in A&N)
- UNDRIP principles (Free, Prior, Informed Consent)
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Concerns: Displacement, cultural erosion, and inadequate consultation processes.
Nature of the Tension
- Security vs. Sustainability: Strategic urgency may bypass environmental scrutiny.
- Development vs. Rights: Top-down planning risks marginalising tribal voices.
- Short-term gains vs. long-term costs: Ecological damage may undermine sustainability.
Way Forward
- Rigorous Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) with independent oversight.
- Inclusive governance ensuring genuine tribal consultation and consent.
- Phased and low-impact development balancing ecology and infrastructure.
- Adherence to constitutional morality prioritising rights alongside national interest.
Conclusion
The GNI project underscores that sustainable development in sensitive regions must reconcile strategic ambitions with ecological prudence and tribal rights, ensuring that national progress does not come at the cost of constitutional justice.