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Bankrolling India’s dirty dozen
In late 2016, several hundred farmers gathered for a protest in Barkagaon, a town in the eastern Indian state of Jharkhand. For 10 years, indigenous people in the area had been resisting efforts by NTPC Limited, a state-controlled electricity company, to forcibly evict them from their ancestral land and establish a coal mine. On Saturday, October 1, things came to a head. In the pre-dawn hours, the police moved in and tried to disperse the protesters, who were unarmed.
Additional Information
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Last updated | 17 ພຶດສະພາ 2017 |
Created | 17 ພຶດສະພາ 2017 |
ຮູບແບບເອກະສານ | |
ການອະນຸຍາດ | CC-BY-3.0-IGO |
ຊື່ | Bankrolling India’s dirty dozen |
ລາຍລະອຽດ |
In late 2016, several hundred farmers gathered for a protest in Barkagaon, a town in the eastern Indian state of Jharkhand. For 10 years, indigenous people in the area had been resisting efforts by NTPC Limited, a state-controlled electricity company, to forcibly evict them from their ancestral land and establish a coal mine. On Saturday, October 1, things came to a head. In the pre-dawn hours, the police moved in and tried to disperse the protesters, who were unarmed. |
ພາສາຂອງແຫຼ່ງຂໍ້ມູນ |
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