Hot as Hell is not close to Charles Urban’s canonical A Day in the Life of a Coal Miner (1910), which is textbook study material today as a milestone in the documentary’s evolution. Nor is it meant to be From the Shadows of Power (1990), produced and directed by Jean Donohue and co-produced by Fred Johnson, an award-winning documentary set in the coalfields of Appalachia,
The Dhanbad collieries have developed into the smoking waste they are over the course of a century; the region’s kismet was foretold when it was discovered that some of the best coking coal in
Clearly, much hasn’t, except for Jharia township, which – going by the camera’s oft-repeated street-level night shots, has some blindingly glitzy multinational attire shops today, and even a glass-and-brass stacked-elevator mall – seems to have plenty of disposable capital. But this busy township, only differentiated from other convenience-occupancy hardscrabble townships across the nation by deep cracks on its roads leaking feathery smoke and heat from the slow-burn of the underground methane fires, feeds workers to the coalmines, is home to the bureaucrats and the mafia that run them, and sits so stolidly atop whole square kilometres of greed-making surface coal that the government and the BCCL have plans to relocate the township’s 400,000 (current figure) inhabitants to regions whose location the film intriguingly did not seek to ascertain.
How the authorities will transport what will most certainly swell to an army of one million people by the cutoff date of 2017 from one of the country’s most densely inhabited regions (Dhanbad district already has 1,167 persons per sq km) remains a mystery. If only to keep mining going at its current pace – even with the number of miners constantly decimated by new-fangled machinery – the government will have to allow thousands of miner 'wannabes' (a description tragic in this context) to pour into Dhanbad, negating the entire relocation exercise. The mafia, which has a near-monopoly over Dhanbad’s coal economy because of its chokehold on these tens of thousands of indigents, will seek to scuttle the relocation, too: people here, who’ve already been beaten under, serve its will better than the newly-arrived would.
As the film shows, Dhanbad is home to people who have land ownership records going back to 1932, and each one of them is loath to leave a land that might have lost everything to the rapacious dynamics of fossil fuel extraction but is still their land, with their generational seal on it. What is being called the “world’s biggest peacetime relocation programme” (as if it would be any different if it were a “wartime relocation programme”) is probably among the worst follies of the modern Indian developmental model – as one of the retired coal officials admitted in the film – and it might just go the way of the Narmada dam displace-deport-and-damn fiasco.
Coupled with this is the fact, which every journalist knows and a very senior one, in particular, was quoted as confirming in the film, an almost unbreakable politician-mafia-bureaucrat nexus exists to undo all law in Dhanbad. And, as a deadpan interview in the film with a senior police officer in Dhanbad shows, the klutzes in khaki posted there are seriously compromised - a cop pays other, more senior, cops lakhs of rupees for a posting in the "Coal Capital" of India. Everyone except the miners and the tribals makes a little money. “A former CMD of BCCL was nicknamed as the golden deer. He set up two multi-crore industries near
The film doesn’t go as far as naming names – except for those that are dead or have providentially become politically insignificant – but, as always with independent-minded filmmakers who have to work with the deterrents (usually financial) of establishmentarian oversight, Guha Thakurta manages to express by implication that which words might have jeopardised their being articulated at all: shots of the “palatial mansion”…“where Surya Deo Singh [the late mafia boss] used to live”; a long interview take of his son dressed in a spotless, starched white mul-mul kurta while his grimy hangers-on lounge around in an antechamber as gloomy as that of any mofussil GP's; a humongous, gleaming black-and-chrome Ford Endeavour SUV parked outside; a retired coal bureaucrat, now settled in Kolkata, mouthing himself silly absenting the mafia from any of Dhanbad’s many sicknesses; the BCCL chief lathering the camera with smoothtalk claiming that much of everything is hunky-dory, and much of that which is not is, well, just smoke and ash; convoys of bicycles loaded with jute panniers, each packed with “hundreds of kilos of [stolen] coal” and pushed by straining, sweaty, stringy men for tens of kilometres to the “collection centre” run by the mafia; a bedridden miner breathing wrenchingly through lungs shot with coal miners pneumoconiosis.
This is Dhanbad today. “Prolonged exposure to coal dust causes coal miners pneumoconiosis (CMP),” wrote Stirling Smith (‘Mining: blood on coal’, Frontline, Volume 18 - Issue 13, Jun. 23-Jul. 06, 2001). “It is a very unpleasant disease. The lungs lose their natural flexibility and it becomes increasingly difficult to breathe. Simple tasks like walking up stairs become impossible. It is a slow and painful death from suffocation. There is no cure. The only steps are to remove the patient from exposure to dust in the early stages to prevent more severe damage.
“Official statistics reveal an average of 72 new cases of the disease a year between 1980 and 1994. This figure is simply not credible. Coal dust in
There is also a very short interview with the Tata Steel rep who, in his own words, has been in Dhanbad “for the past 30 years” and has neither seen nor heard of “corruption” or physical vulnerability beyond the usual. He says that Dhanbad is safer than “
The rep’s tact is hardly surprising. Tata Steel plans to acquire more mining leases from the government. The company currently owns six collieries in the Jharia division, split into the Jamadoba Group and the Sijua group. The former has a lease area of 5,508 acres and a production capacity of 1.5 million tonnes of prime coking coal.
Wherever Guha Thakurta comes up short, it is because he sometimes carries an excess baggage of butterflies. “In particular, documentary, because of its claim to objectivity, seems especially susceptible to the illusion that its practice is transparent,” wrote Jane M Gaines (‘Appalshop documentaries: Inventing and preserving
Then, again, Guha Thakurta’s trepidation is understandable: Dhanbad’s dons have never been amenable to outsider curiosity. The number of journalists who have emerged bruised from incursions into Dhanbad’s dark side constructs a tale of overeager folly. Another friend of mine who had gone to Dhanbad expressly to investigate its mafia takeover had had to flee in the dead of night when word got to him that various footsoldiers were scouring the city for him, guns out.
Perhaps Guha Thakurta was constrained by the fact that, this time round, he spent only five days in Dhanbad, talking up a whole range of people from journalists to politicians to BCCL authorities to a former labour contractor to – frustratingly few of these – the people most affected. He spoke to no miner and just a few locals, some of them reticent. (As a roundabout apology, perhaps, he let Manjira Dutta, who had produced Babulal Bhuiya ki Qurbani [1987], a disturbing, revelatory 70-minute short on a mine worker who was shot dead by the Central Industrial Security Force, speak for him when she said that she really had no idea of what might have befallen those who had chosen to speak in front of her camera, implying that this sort of candour could be perilous.)
Nor does Guha Thakurta adequately explain in the film the reason for the subterranean fires in the Dhanbad mines, some of which have been guttering for well over a century. The film does imply that the fires were caused by “unscientific mining” (meaning open-cast mining), but such a premise is scientifically debatable. Ideally, a geologist ought to have been spoken to, Landsat images of fires used (they are freely available), the rate of land subsidence calculated to determine how much of the region is vulnerable to subsidence and at what rate.
“Fires in coal seams of Jharia coalfield have been originated basically from spontaneous combustion [italics mine] occurring either underground or along the outcrops, and are restricted in Barakar formations with shallow depth of less than 40 m. Mainly top seams which are thick and therefore more prone to spontaneous heating fires have also been caused due to burning of bantulsi, dumping of hot ash in goafed [sic] out areas, illicit distillation in abandoned working, etc.” (‘Application of Landsat-TM Thermal Band and IRS-1A LISS II Imagery in Delineation of Coal Mine Fire in Jharia Coal Field’, V K Srivastava, Remote Sensing Unit, Department of Applied Geophysics, Indian School of Mines, Dhanbad)
The film does mention that the fires are of methane gas origin, but goes no further than that cursory explanation. If methane were that incendiary, the country’s cattle should be combusting every time they become flatulent, which is all the time. The explanation came from another source. On the deaths of 50 miners during underground explosions on September 6, 2006 at the Nagda mine of the Bhatdih colliery in
While there were shots of cupric miners walking bent through caverns, of mines that the BCCL had ostensibly “abandoned” but that were still being scoped by “illegal” miners (read: mostly tribals made destitute by the mafia and the authorities) for leftovers, of mines where workers had drowned, asphyxiated, been buried or incinerated – what was missing were statistics to buttress the narrative. Stats can lie in the hands of those who have something to hide; but in the proper hands, they can help rip the curtain apart.
The irony about Dhanbad is that it should have been the centre of mining-related safety regulations and R&D in the country. After all, as a Government of India Website says, “For administering the provisions of the Indian Mines Act, the mine Inspectorate was first created as Bureau of Mines Inspection on June 7, 1902 forming a part of the GSI (Geological Survey of India) in
There are today more than 594 coal mines in
This appalling lack of "appreciable reduction" is why it is so important that this film be seen. That it was the government that admitted its laxity and has supported the documentary could be either a sign of its acceptance of some culpability - or of its realisation that swallowing some criticism gamely can cushion the really hard bits yet to come.
For bookings to see Hot as Hell: A Profile of Dhanbad, please contact Paranjoy Guha-Thakurta at paranjoy@gmail.com or at 09810170435
2 comments:
Wow I too would have loved to see the film. I hail from Dhanbad and it irks when the natural resource is pilfered in such manner. Only that i am too late in dropping a comment here. Tell me is there some way I can get that movie. You can leave a message at ujjual.aditya@gmail.com. Hoping to listen from you soon.
Mr. Basu, You should not associate the word Mafia with Mr. BP Sinha. He was a labour leader of highest repute.Had he been a mafia, or godfather of mafia, why there was not a single criminal case pending against him in any court of India. Had he been a mafia don, he could have maintained an army of bodygaurds to protect him. You should also get your facts right, he was not assasinated in a palatial house but in a rented house, all alone while he was playing his grandson. He was a victim of poltical-mafia conspiracy, during the reign of Janta Party in 1977-78. Even Mrs. Indira Gandhi, the former prime minister of India, personally expressed shock and grief on his assasination.
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