ken betwa river linking project tribal communities gandhian protest satyagraha

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betwa river linking


Mahatma Gandhi is making a comeback of sorts in Madhya Pradesh’s Chhatarpur.

Hunger strikes, andolans, and satyagrahas – from the ‘aamran anshan‘ (‘fast unto death’) and ‘chita andolan‘ (funeral pyre protest) to ‘mitti‘ and ‘jalsatyagrahas(protests of the soil and water) – are some of the Gandhian weapons of choice for tribal communities that have been protesting for more than nine days now against the Ken-Betwa river-linking project.

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The project, they have cried, has cost them homes and livelihoods, and there has been no compensation. They have also argued that promises made in April have been ignored, while they face wrongful police cases and forced evictions.

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One set of protesters – gathered under the bridge across the Barana River – built funeral beds on which men lay and floated on the river, warning the state government of their deaths. Another set – also at the Barana site – hung nooses around their necks to signify a ‘hanging satyagraha’. And activist-leader Amit Bhatnagar is on an indefinite hunger strike.

The local administration, meanwhile, has insisted assurances have been met. “The state enhanced relief and rehabilitation… now they want more,” District Collector Parth Jaiswal said.

Welcome to Bundelkhand

To those who know it, it is a vast expanse of land – around 70,000 sq km – in central India that lies between the Indo-Gangetic Plain and the Vindhya Mountains.

Spread across 13 districts divided between Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, including Chhatarpur, it is a rocky and rugged land, rising from deep ravines to imposing plateaus and clothed in forests and no small amount of heritage hotspots, including the world-famous Khajuraho temple complex – a UNESCO World Heritage site – and the Panna National Park.

<img alt="The Bundlekhand region in central India (om/2026-07/hdp6achs_bundelkhand-google-maps_625x300_17_July_26.jpg?im=FaceCrop,algorithm=dnn,width=1280,height=720" class="laazy" title="The Bundlekhand region in central India (

The Bundlekhand region in central India (

But it is also a semi-arid landscape in which blisteringly hot summers – when temperatures routinely cross 45 degrees Celsius – are paired with inconsistent and often low monsoons.

The searing heat and rocky terrain, which causes what rain does fall to flash flood out of the region rather than replenish underground aquifers, underline the harsh realities of life here, which also include deforestation, fractured agricultural output, and out-migration in search of jobs.

That is why Bundelkhand is often linked to issues like drought and starvation. In this context, the linking of the two biggest water resources – the Ken and Betwa rivers -is a significant initiative for Bundelkhand’s development and irrigation needs.

Why the protests

However, as with any large-scale development project – particularly one requiring machine-intensive engineering to actively alter geography – there are concerns over how it might affect the tens of thousands of families who call the area home.

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Protesters carry out a ‘chita andolan‘, a funeral pyre protest.

And for nearly two dozen villages in Madhya Pradesh’s Chhatarpur district, those concerns are now sitting on their doorsteps.

Over 50,000 people from this region will be impacted, directly or indirectly, by the Ken-Betwa project. Some will be forced from their homes, while others could see their livelihoods – frugal and fragile as they are – wiped out.

The wildlife will suffer too. The Panna forests are home to at least 80 tigers.

Environment and civil society activists working with these families have said the worry is not about the project itself, for no initiative that brings water to Bundelkhand can be ignored. But water at the cost of their economic futures and the environment is a deal that doesn’t make sense, particularly when protesters’ forest-based livelihoods are under threat.

tribal women protest against ken betwa river link project

Women from tribal communites protest the KBLP.

Their argument is simple.

If they must leave, then the government must ensure dignified and sustainable rehabilitation, i.e., permanent alternative sources of income and housing, as well as access to basic infrastructure, including that guaranteed under the Constitution.

This includes education and healthcare, drinking water and sanitation, and electricity.

The protesters are steadfast in their demands. “We want to tell the administration… if our demands aren’t met this time, we will hang ourselves under this bridge…” one man said.

What is the Ken-Betwa project?

The Ken-Betwa Link Project (KBLP) is India’s first major river interlinking initiative. The idea is to transfer water from one river basin – the Ken – to the other

The estimated cost of doing so is a staggering Rs 44,605 crore.

But, the government has said, when it is completed the KBLP will irrigate 10.62 lakh hectares of agricultural land, provide drinking water to 62 lakh people, and generate 130 MW of power.

These are not insignificant development milestones.

But for the tens of thousands of men, women, and children who will be affected by this project, necessary though it is, their struggle to survive afterwards must be taken into account. And that struggle will continue, in public till the news cycle ends and away from the spotlight thereafter. But it will continue, as they have made it clear, till the government helps them.

Politics too

Meanwhile, where there are protests and civil society issues at play, politics is too.

Congress MLA Umang Singhar, the Leader of the Opposition in the BJP-ruled state, met some displaced families and protesters and listened to their grievances. He told them their worries would be raised – forcefully – in the next Assembly session and Chief Minister Mohan Yadav’s administration would be pushed to ensure rehabilitation and compensation.

The next session begins in three days, i.e., July 20.

Just what the state will do when presented with this issue by the opposition is unclear. Will they acknowledge and answer the people whom they serve, and will displaced families receive rehabilitation and livelihood guarantees? Or will it all just turn into a political squabble, with the lives of the affected people in Chhatarpur district relegated to the backburner?

WIth inputs from Arvind Kumar Tiwari

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