BWRC calls for high-level inquiry into Rs. 189 crore Tapi river sand mining scam

MM Infra Buildcon violated environmental standards and harmed the ecology and marine life by misusing his connections with officials and politicians.

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Surat (Gujarat) : A high-level investigation has been demanded into the Navsari-based company’s alleged Rs 189 crore illegal sand mining in the Tapi river at Dumas, which has caused massive damage to the mangroves, fisheries, environment, and river banks.

Brackish Water Research Centre (BWRC) has written to Gujarat Chief Minister demanding a high-level investigation into the Rs 189 crore sand mining scam perpetrated by Navsari-based M M Infra Buildcon, which has been causing environmental damage for the last eight months without obtaining prior and mandatory environmental clearance from the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), as both mining areas exceed the mine area of 5 hectares as per EIA notification.

MHS Shaikh, president of BWRC, stated in his complaint that MM Infra Buildcon violated environmental standards and harmed the ecology and marine life by misusing his connections with officials and politicians.

M M Infra Buildcon was granted permission in two applications of one lakh tonnes each in the name of sand mining with ghost activity of river dredging with mechanical suction machine on March 8, 2022 for a period of 180 days. The mining leases were granted by the Commissioner of Geology and Mining on the recommendation of the Surat District Collector, along with the NOC granted by the Gandhinagar Irrigation Department and the Commissioner of Fisheries.

Both lease agreements expired on September 8, 2022, but illegal mining  continue in the river bed. According to Shaikh, the company has sold a large quantity of sand in bulk to local builders as well as other private contractors in Gujarat and Maharashtra for cash.

M M Infra Buildcon, according to the complainant, not only mined the shown area without permission, but also dredged the ecological sensitive areas defined as CRZ1A under CRZ Notification 2011/2019 in the Kadiyabet region, which is the Tapi River delta. The mining of mud mixed with sand, which caused bank erosion, damaged the river bank and mangroves for nearly a kilometre, and many trees were destroyed. They dredged the Kadiyabet for sand and returned the mud to the river. The entire mining operation, however, was not to de-silt the river, but rather to harvest the massive sand.

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