Panaji Port was illegal mineral export gateway: Official
September 18th, 2011 - 2:26 pm ICT by IANSPanaji, Sep 18 (IANS) The Panaji Port in Goa could have served as a gateway for the export of nearly five million tonnes of illegally extracted iron ore, a top official has said.
P. Mara Pandiyan, chairman of the Mormugao Port Trust, Goa’s only major port, has written this in a Sep 15 letter - a copy of which is with IANS - to the state Chief Secretary Sanjiv Srivastava.
Pandiyan’s letter clearly holds the state government responsible for allowing five million tonnes of illegally extracted ore to be exported out of Goa.
“As far as the Panaji Port is concerned, the whole operation is falling within the administrative ambit of the state government from the point of licensing mines, movement of iron ore by trucks to the loading point, loading of iron ore into the barges, movement of barges through the rivers and thereafter loading into the ship,” Pandiyan, an Indian Administrative Service official said.
“It is estimated about five million tonnes have been exported through the Panaji Port as unaccounted iron ore,” Pandiyan stated.
Urging the chief secretary to suspend the operations of the Panaji minor port in “national interest”, Pandiyan said the port did not have any surveillance mechanism to monitor the quantity of ore exported.
The movement of ships has to be monitored by Vessel Traffic Management System, a sea surveillance method, but “Panaji Port does not have this surveillance system”, Pandiyan said.
“The barges carrying unaccounted illegal ore have access to the ships at Panaji Port. Some of the exporters seem to have taken advantage of the lack of bare minimum facilities at Panaji Port,” the letter further states.
“Mormugao Port Trust has been examining the operational requirement of Panaji Port for quite some time. Panaji Port exists only for namesake on record. It does not have any berth. It operates as an ‘outer anchorage port’ wherein any exporter can load anything to the ship, and does not follow the security norms,” he added.
Goa’s illegal mining scam has been pegged at Rs.10,000 crore by ruling Congress legislator Dayanand Narvekar during his deposition to the Justice M.B. Shah commission appointed by the Supreme Court to probe illegal iron and manganese ore in the country.
Goa extracted nearly 54 million tonnes during the last financial year according to official data. The opposition claims 20 percent of the exported ore was illegally extracted.
- Goa illegal mining scam: Panaji port to be made accountable - Apr 08, 2012
- Goa port to tackle dubious iron ore shipments - Oct 17, 2011
- Exporters association not responsible for unlisted firms - Sep 21, 2011
- Iron ore barge owners want cap on vessels - Nov 11, 2011
- Goa port blames Kamat's ministry for illegal ore export - Oct 11, 2011
- Goa mining lobby flexes muscle, blocks river traffic - Oct 12, 2011
- Illegal mining forces drop in ore export figures - Apr 05, 2012
- 'Goa waterways cannot handle more iron ore traffic' - Apr 03, 2010
- 40 mining companies in Goa issued notice - Apr 06, 2012
- Goa government caps mining truck permits - Apr 04, 2012
- Fishermen block Goa port, Coast Guard help sought - Apr 16, 2011
- Iron ore export eating away resources: Justice Shah - Sep 17, 2011
- Goa cancels 450 iron ore trading licenses - Apr 04, 2012
- 'No mechanism to keep tab on illegal mining in Goa' - Apr 03, 2010
- Nearly 50 percent of Goa mines working illegally: Mines ministry - Oct 28, 2011
Tags: barges, chief secretary, export gateway, indian administrative service, iron ore, loading point, mormugao port trust, operational requirement, outer anchorage, panaji, point loading, quite some time, sanjiv srivastava, sea surveillance, secur, state chief, surveillance method, surveillance system, traffic management system, vessel traffic management