Wednesday, December 01, 2021

“Happiness is a beautiful sentence”: Arundhati Roy discusses the pandemic, activism and writing

Posted on : Dec.1,2021 

The lauded author sat down with Park Hye-young, a professor of English literature at Inha University, while Roy was in Korea to collect her Lee Hochul Literary Prize for Peace


Writer Arundhati Roy (left) and Park Hye-young (right), a professor at Inha University, pose for a photo at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village on Nov. 24. (Kim Tae-hyeong/The Hankyoreh)

Arundhati Roy, the Indian writer who rose to global fame when her 1997 debut novel “The God of Small Things” was awarded the Booker Prize — one of the top literary honors in the Anglophone world — recently paid her first-ever visit to Korea.

The Hankyoreh sat down for an exclusive conversation with Roy, who was in Korea to receive the Lee Hochul Literary Prize for Peace, for which she became the fourth Grand Prize Laureate.

Speaking to Roy was Park Hye-young, an Inha University professor and scholar of English literature who previously translated Roy’s essay “Come September.” The conversation took place on Wednesday afternoon at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village, a complex of traditional Korean homes in Seoul where Roy was staying for the duration of her trip.

Park: It’s an honor to have Arundhati Roy, a leading writer and activist and the winner of last year’s Lee Hochul Literary Prize for Peace. And she has earned numerous honors so far, including the Booker Prize, the Lannan Cultural Freedom Prize, the Sydney Peace Prize, the Norman Mailer Prize, and last year she finally received the Lee Hochul Literary Prize for Peace.

She has also published two important novels, the first being Booker Prize-winner “The God of Small Things,” published in 1997. After 20 years, she finally published her second novel, “The Ministry of the Utmost Happiness” in 2017. In between, she has published many essays with themes on politics, global politics, globalization, displacement, the push to privatize public goods and more. Her novels are very touching and intelligent, and at the same time, humorous and revolutionary; not to mention her political essays and nonfiction. It's amazing that those two seemingly different genres have a very strong connection in terms of the topic and subject.

I'd like to start our interview with a question regarding the COVID-19 pandemic in India. As you know, India is a kind of a special country for many Korean people because some Koreans choose India as their final destination for a spiritual journey in search of their own identity. At the same time, you come across different sides of India in the news, such as the gang rape of a college-aged woman in front of her boyfriend on a bus. In this way, I think that India is a very big mixture of bright and dark sides.

In terms of the COVID-19 pandemic in India, a lot of people have lost their jobs, family members and loved ones. A lot of working people in India, in particular, had to migrate from cosmopolitan cities like New Delhi to their own rural countryside homes because they were sacked from their jobs and could not afford to stay in the city. This was because of Modi’s very abrupt and unexpected policy of lockdown, for which he didn't give people enough time to prepare. So, it seems there are a lot of problems in India. What do you think of the situation then and now in India?

Roy: The idea of people go to India to seek spiritual enlightenment or peace — not just from Korea, but all over the world — you know, it's a cliche. This is interesting, because I think what brings people peace somehow is the chaos of India and the fact that it seems to be not regulated in a way Western worlds or Korean societies are. Actually, what brought tears to your eyes in “The God of Small Things” is very much a part of what is supposed to be Indian spirituality. The caste system is a part of Hinduism and it is a most brutal form of social hierarchy practice. So the inside is the spirituality that outsiders seek — for insiders it's a very strict social hierarchy. India has always been a very violent place. Some of us say that the reason that people talk so much about Gandhi and nonviolence is because it's such a violent society. To keep the caste system in place, even today, requires a lot of violence. The threat of violence as well as the application of violence — to keep women in their place requires a lot of violence. The feudal traditional culture contains within it violence against women while the women that are modernizing are also being punished. Anyway, it's a very contradictory society. But today the very spiritualism that you are talking about has been politically harnessed to create Hindu nationalism.

When we use the word India, sometimes I want to ask: “What do you mean? What is the India you know?” India is like, let's say, the Soviet Union used to be — it has so many sub-nationalities, 28 official languages, 30 languages that want to be called official, and 3000 dialects. Hinduism is not a word that Hindus used to use to describe themselves. It was a word that first the Moguls and then the British used to describe people who lived east of the Indus River. But Hindus would always describe themselves according to their caste: “I'm a Brahmin,” “I'm a Dalit,” “I'm an ‘untouchable.’” So today you have a country that has thousands of different castes, thousands of languages, hundreds of religions, sub ethnicities and the Hindu nationalist government. He [Modi] is saying one language, one religion, one country — that is like trying to create a nuclear explosion in a very complex society. It's like taking an ocean and turning it into a glass of water. It's a very violent churning that's happening. So that's the background. Now to talk about the pandemic.


Writer Arundhati Roy speaks with Inha University professor Park Hye-young on Nov. 24 at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village.
(Kim Tae-hyeong/The Hankyoreh)

When the pandemic first broke out in Europe and then in the US, the Indian government pretended that it didn’t have anything to do with us. The World Health Organization had already declared it [a pandemic on March 11, 2020], but the Indian government was not interested. There were two things happening at the time: one was that they had just passed a new citizenship law — a new anti-Muslim citizenship law. With this new citizenship law, the government asked citizens to produce a certain set of documents, but none of us have those documents. I think the last time somebody tried to do this was Nazi Germany's Nuremberg Laws, by which the state would decide, according to a set of documents, and approve whether you are a citizen or not. In the state of Assam, in northeastern India, that's already happened and some 2 million people have been made stateless. There were huge protests which started late in 2019 and 2020. While other countries are dealing with refugees, India is trying to manufacture refugees — it's trying to take away citizenship from millions of people. Then, in February, Donald Trump visited India, during which time there was a massacre of Muslims in Delhi. And then he left, and the COVID cases started building, the protesters were in the streets. In March, Modi, overnight — like an ambush — called a lockdown with four hours’ notice. I was in Delhi the next day and saw millions of people in the streets of the city. It was like an ambush, like the people of the country were the prime minister's enemies — we were shocked and surprised. 1.38 billion people under lockdown with just four hours’ notice. It's like the prime minister had no idea what country he’s the prime minister of. There are millions of non-formal workers working in cities in unbelievable conditions, and suddenly, because of this lockdown, they appeared on the streets. They had no money, they had no jobs, they had no shelter — so they began to walk thousands of kilometers home to their villages. It was like a biblical exodus. On the way, they were beaten, they were sprayed with insecticides. They ordered a lockdown to enforce social distancing in India. But in India, lockdown is a social physical compression: everyone is locked into their buses, locked into trains.



Writer Arundhati Roy speaks with Inha University professor Park Hye-young on Nov. 24 at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village
(Kim Tae-hyeong/The Hankyoreh)

Park: In that sense, do you think social distancing in India has a different meaning and significance in comparison with Western countries?

Roy: Because India is a country that practices caste, when you say social distancing, it has a very terrible connotation, you know.

After the first wave, Modi came out saying, “India is fine, we are an example to the rest of the world,” then the second wave hit, in which 400,000 people died in Delhi. That’s the official number, but the unofficial figure is supposed to be 10 times more. People were dying on the streets, people were dying in parking lots and hospitals. There was no firewood to burn in the crematoriums, there was no place to bury them. Bodies were floating down the river. Everyone was desperate. And the minute that wave ended, there were posters all over Delhi saying “Thank you, Modi, for free vaccination” — which were not free. During all this, the media — which is very pro-Modi and very pro-corporate — started demonizing Muslims, saying, “Muslims are causing COVID-19. Muslims are deliberately spreading COVID-19.” Again, it was like the Nazi propaganda about Jews that said they were spreading typhus. The pandemic, and Hindu nationalism — which we should call Hindu fascism or Hindu nationalist fascism — became, again, something used to demonize minorities.

Park: In your essay, “The Pandemic is a Portal,” you say that which way we go is entirely up to us — we can choose this way or we can choose to leave something behind for a better society and humanity. So I wonder what kind of lessons we can learn, or whether we can take away anything positive from the catastrophic situation of a pandemic.

Roy: Well, there was this moment when the whole world was locked down and although it was a very terrifying display of discipline, you saw even powerful states coming to their knees. You saw how states that have some kind of community or medical welfare for their citizens, unlike the US, were doing much better. You saw how this kind of modern world and its lines of injustice were amplified in the pandemic. It was an X-ray, so I thought if you can see through the X-ray you can come up with a proper diagnosis. A sudden shock like that can make human beings and the people who run human society think. Like how if you have a near-death experience, you live your life differently.

Park: I found that in your political essays around 2010, you had very critical stances on topics such as American imperialism and the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan. Nowadays I find that your concerns have moved more domestic. You very strongly criticize the Modi government. You do this because you find that Modi’s power is growing, and you are, as far as I know, always on the side of the “small,” the grassroots people. However, when it comes to India’s Muslim population, in a demographic sense, isn’t it important in order to win elections? By implementing the citizenship amendment act, most Muslims would become disenfranchised. Are Muslim votes not important for winning elections?

Roy
: If you look at the way representative democracy works in India, you don't need to have a huge majority of people voting for you in order to win a huge majority of seats. Let's say you have five or 10 different parties and it's not a two-party system — even if you win 20 percent of the vote in so many constituencies, you may win 80 percent of the seats in the parliament, by winning 20 percent of the vote. In 2014 and 2019, Modi’s ruling party demonstrated that you do not need the Muslim vote.

The divide in India is unlike European fascism, unlike German Nazism where Hitler, when he came to power in Germany, first, resurrected the post-war German economy then the war came and smashed it. Whereas Modi has just smashed the economy without any resurrection. Now the big debate is between whether the people who have supported him are also supporting their own economic destruction. I have an example: Just outside my house, there's a little tea shop. There's a man who used to be a big supporter of Modi and he would not listen to anybody criticizing him. When the demonetization came [in 2016] he lost his money and his job, when the lockdown happened he lost everything. Then, one afternoon, he went and hung himself, never having criticized the person who destroyed his life.


Writer Arundhati Roy speaks with Inha University professor Park Hye-young on Nov. 24 at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village. (Kim Tae-hyeong/The Hankyoreh)

Park: You are continuously on the side of small and protest against bigger entities like institutions, legislation, courts, the media, corporations and so on. I was wondering, is it okay for you in terms of your security? Have you ever received any threats of arrest or detainment?

Roy: Well, I spent time in jail in 2002. The thing is, it's a very fluid situation. So people who are being put into jail, perhaps they are not as well known internationally as I am. So I'm protected a little because of being well known, but also I'm attacked because I’m well known. It doesn't matter if you've done something or you haven't done something — they decide to put you in jail because they don't want you out there. They make the story. Sometimes they’ll say, “She’s not in jail, so we must be a democracy.” It’s a dance. I don’t know how long it’ll be like this. Everything is a calculation.

Park: You’ve said there is a lot of oppression of the press in India. But still, you are one of the strongest critics of the Modi government. Could this be evidence that still your country has freedom of speech?

Roy
: But if you look at it in the other way, I don't write and I don't speak on Indian TV. I don't write in Indian mainstream media, you know. Whatever I write, it's online or it's outside of India [such as in The Guardian].

Park: Let's go back to “The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.” I was wondering whether is there a special meaning or idea behind the character of Saddam Hussein. He’s born a Dalit, a kind of “untouchable,” and after his father dies, he converts to Islam. Can you explain what kind of ideas you had when you described such a direct grassroots, oppressed person, who converts to Islam by his own will, and how he found his own paradise in Anjum’s guest house?

Roy: Let's say that caste in India is the political engine that drives politics, as well as society, as well as it affects every single social interaction today. Less than one percent of Indians will marry outside their caste. Caste is everything there now. For centuries, Dalit — a newer word for those populations of people who were known as “untouchables” — converted to escape from caste. They converted to Islam, they converted to Sikhism, they converted to Christianity. In “The Ministry of Utmost Happiness,” it's a militant declaration by the Dalit man who converts to Islam.

There are two kinds of graveyards in the book. One is a Muslim graveyard outside of the old city of Delhi. Obviously, in India, most graveyards are Muslim graveyards because Hindus cremate their dead. So in that graveyard where Anjum lives, she slowly builds a guest house encircling the tombs of her family. And Saddam comes and then Tilottama comes, so and then they build the Jannat Guest House — meaning “paradise guest house.” Then the other part of the story, you have Kashmir which is in postcards known as Jannat, paradise. So you have in Delhi a graveyard covered with the paradise guest house and in Kashmir you have a paradise covered with graveyards from the war. If you look at the stories of the people who live in Anjum’s guest house, what happened to them, how they live, who has died, who says the prayers, you see that it's actually a revolution. Everybody there is from India, people who refuse this political notion of turning this ocean into a test tube of water.

Park: So maybe in that sense, that their gender identity — Anjum, she is a hijra, a kind of a non-binary person, did you maybe want to describe a kind of border identity? For those who are excluded from not only this world but also the other world?

Roy:
For me, Anjum is Anjum. For me she's like Tilottama, anybody else, you know. Nobody in “The Ministry of Utmost Happiness” really has a single identity, you know? Every character changes their name or changes into somebody else at some point. Anjum, of course, but also Tilottama, Saddam — everybody has all kinds of borderline identities. Anjum is interesting because she actually gets caught up in the violence of the Gujarat massacre. Because she is a Muslim, and she has gone to Gujarat for something, and she gets caught up with along with Zakir Mian in the massacre. He gets killed but she escapes because she's a hijra. Which is her more dangerous identity? In fact, the Muslim identity is a more dangerous identity for her than the identity of being a hijra — which, a place is made for traditionally in Indian society, but still a lot of violence takes place because of that identity. But in this story, in her case, her Muslim identity almost gets her killed. The fact that she is a hijra meant she was saved, because people believe that it's bad luck to kill the hijra.


Writer Arundhati Roy speaks with Inha University professor Park Hye-young on Nov. 24 at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village
. (Kim Tae-hyeong/The Hankyoreh)

Park: In your previous work, “The God of Small Things,” you pulled your major characters from the private and rather personal experiences of your family, your relatives, your own home and places of work. Where did you get such amazingly wonderful and different ideas for borderline identities, such as a trans character?

Roy: Some people think “The God of Small Things” is a personal story, while some think it’s an imaginary story. The characters are not people I know, but they are people who are inspired by people and things that are known and walked to it and breathed and eaten and smoked. I always say that “Utmost Happiness” is like a city. You can drive through a city on highways and think you know it. But to really know it, you have to walk through it, to get a bit lost. To me, it is important to sit down and have a cigarette with all the minor characters. People in India, especially because of the caste system, are not named, but known as their class — a cobbler, a tailor, so on. But in “Utmost Happiness,” even the minor characters all have names and stories, and sometimes it's confusing. But after a time, you understand the pattern of what it is.

Park: So what do you think happiness is exactly? Since you've finished your work, “The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.” What kind of happiness do you want in your life?

Roy:
While ”The God of Small Things” is about a traditional family with a broken heart at its middle, “The Ministry of Utmost Happiness” starts out with the smashed heart and then makes a non-conventional mended heart in a graveyard.

I think for writers, happiness is a beautiful sentence. Happiness is just thinking about some new novel coming over the mountains over there and saying, “Hello, I'm coming.” [Laugh.] One does not think about happiness or hope as some kind of thing you can find on Google Maps. It comes and goes, like sun and shade.





Inha University professor Park Hye-young speaks with writer Arundhati Roy on Nov. 24 at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village. (Kim Tae-hyeong/The Hankyoreh)

Park: Korea fought dictatorship and authoritarianism to achieve its democracy. At the present, even after democratization, we are finding that we are very unhappy. There is a huge gap between the rich and the poor, and many people have been evicted from their own farmlands or homes for the sake of development.

Roy: A democracy combined with the free market can't remain a democracy. There used to be a joke in India, that to create a good business climate one must kill people, push them off their lands. Therefore, at some point, a democracy has to become a police state in this guise. But it continues to have the elections and all that, meanwhile having laws that you cannot possibly call yourself a democracy while upholding.

Park: Despite Korea’s economic achievement, young generations still feel totally completely alienated from such affluence. They feel themselves to be poor, comparatively, and refuse to get married and have children or start families. Meanwhile, the suicide rate and poverty rate among older people are increasing.

Roy: If you don't actually address the problem of free-market capitalism, that's the natural consequence.

Park: Can you find any kind of hope while capitalism continues to grow stronger?

Roy
: I think it's getting stronger, but I think, like you're saying, young people everywhere are beginning to understand the issue. In the US, I remember around 15 years ago you couldn't use the words “capitalism” or “class.” I wrote an essay called “Capitalism: A Ghost Story” about how these corporations have even taken over the pedagogy and certain kinds of imagination.

Writer Arundhati Roy (left) and Park Hye-young (right), a professor at Inha University, pose for a photo at a guest house in Eunpyeong Hanok Village on Nov. 24.
(Kim Tae-hyeong/The Hankyoreh)

Park: To shift topics, I was a bit surprised at your comments on Mahatma Gandhi.

Roy: That’s in part because there is so much dishonesty attached to how that story has been built and it has been told. If you read, “The Doctor and the Saint,” it's about Gandhi and caste and race. That does not mean that everything about Gandhi is terrible, but his views on caste, on race, and on women were terrible. We are allowed to walk and chew gum at the same time — you can talk about views of his which we found visionary, but also call what was terrible, terrible. We can complicate him. We don't have to put a halo on his head. Doing so has caused a lot of damage in India.


Park: Whenever I read your essays or novel, I find that the way you use the English language amazing. It's not only excellent in using the language but also very rhythmic. Sometimes you use rhyme schemes like those found in poetry. I understand that you learned English at school. But some view English is a kind of legacy of British imperialism.

Roy: In India, you have this goddess called Kali who has many arms, and I say my Kali has fewer arms but many tongues. It’s not their English, it’s my English. I think it is a very Indian language. In India, it's the only language that binds the whole country. One imperial historian said to me, “The fact that your novel is written in English is a compliment to the British Empire.” Then, is jazz a compliment to slavery?

Park: You published your second novel after twenty years. Did you feel stressed during that time?

Roy: If I were a person who was expecting approval from people, I would not be writing these political essays I know everyone's going to attack me for. Writing is such an internal process to me.

Introduced and edited for clarity by Choi Jae-bong, senior staff writer

Transcribed by Chae Jin
“They’re taking us for idiots”: in coal mine’s shadow, quarrelling Czechs and Poles fear for their futures


NOV 16, 2021
By André Kapsas

Turów, Poland – While the Czech and Polish governments negotiate a settlement to their dispute over the Turów mine, residents on both sides of the border remain stuck between a rock and a hard place, facing the environmental fallout of coal mining and the potentially painful social and economic impact of a green transition.
All-too-different fears around a rare Czech-Polish border dispute

After ordering a temporary halt to mining activities in May and ordering Poland to pay a half-million euro daily fine for failing to do so in September, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) last week held its opening session on the case opposing the two neighbouring countries.

According to the Czech government, Poland did not respect EU rules on environmental impact assessment before prolonging the open-pit lignite mine’s exploitation permit in 2020 despite the threat it poses to underground water supplies on the Czech side.

At the border, the international dispute has sparked tensions between inhabitants, with Poles fearing for their jobs and livelihood and Czechs worried about their water and public health. While most of the people interviewed understand the need to move away from coal, they starkly differ on the speed and scope of the transition.

“Ecology, yes. But people are more important. They need to work. If not, where will they go?” asks Danuta in the streets of Trzciniec, located in the shadow of the electric power plant’s enormous smoking chimneys. The pensioner, who worked 30 years in the power plant, struggles to envision a future for the region without the mine.

Marek Dołkowski in his office, with his yellow jacket reading “Hands off Turow”. 
Photo: Roman Koziel

“In some families, the husband works at the mine and the wife at the power plant; losing their jobs would be catastrophic for them,” comments the vice-president of the Solidarity miners’ union, Marek Dołkowski. He explains that most of the factories in the region collapsed after the fall of communism, making the mine, which is run by state-owned power company PGE, one of the only remaining stable employers.

In the union’s office, Dołkowski, seated in front of a banner of Poland’s white eagle and a picture of Pope John Paul II, rails against the “madness of the EU’s Green Deal”, and questions the possibility of transforming the local economy, quoting colleagues from a nearby private mine which recently shut down.

“People were supposed to find work in solar energy infrastructure, but only several of them did. Once you install the solar panels, just a few people stay to maintain them. So long for the others!” he says.

The mayor of Bogatynia, the main town adjacent to the mine, Wojciech Dobrołowicz, does not mince his words about the European court’s decision, calling it “inhumane”, “an attack on us inhabitants, condemning us to destruction and death.” The politician, a member of the nationally ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, claims the mine and power plant employ directly or indirectly 5,500 people (the true figure is probably slightly lower), and that each of these workers sustains four additional jobs in the region.
“We’re all for clean air”

Highlighting the town’s current dire social problems – from alcohol and drug abuse to crime and insecurity – Dobrołowicz fears a domino effect if the mine closes: “The most resourceful people will leave while the other ones will fall even lower, and the region will die out.”

“We’re all for clean air and good living conditions, but it has to take place through respect for people,” he pleads, arguing that Poland’s historical woes justify giving the country until 2049 to transition away from coal.

While he acknowledges that Bogatynia has to date done little to prepare any future after coal mining, he adds that he only took office in September 2020. He lauds his party’s achievements in the energy transition since coming to power in 2015, citing record investments in renewable energy. Lacking a clear vision for his town’s future, he nevertheless mentions plans to use municipal land to attract investors in new sectors, such as electric cars or solar panels. “We have a huge human potential in Turów’s workers, they could be re-qualified,” he argues.

Wojciech Dobrołowicz in his office at the Bogatynia municipal hall. 
Photo: Roman Koziel

Driving us to the nearby Czech border, the taxi driver evidently holds no illusion about the town’s future. “I bet the mine will close in 2030 because it makes no sense financially and technologically,” he says. Having worked 15 years there, he does not believe in a smooth transition, and nor does he see any future for the region without coal. “Young people are already leaving,” he notes.

The Czech side is only a few metres away from the road running alongside the mine, and the small village of Uhelná perched on a hill offers a direct view on the pit and power plant. From his garden, Daniel Gabryš complains that the mine is creeping towards the Czech border, bringing more noise, dust, and light pollution from night-time works.

But the worst remains the threat to water reserves. “The water is gone from all the small wells and now we all depend on one single common well for Uhelná and some neighbouring villages,” says Gabryš. He dismisses Polish arguments denying that the mine is affecting water supplies on the Czech side, citing hydrogeological measurements and common sense.

“They are taking us for idiots; they have to pump a lot of water from the mine every day and the mine is almost entirely surrounded by two neighbouring countries, so where is that water coming from?” he asks rhetorically. On the other hand, the Polish side has no problem with water, since the water pumped out of the mine is treated and distributed across its territory.

In the neighbouring village of Václavice, Michal Kopecký also blames the mine for drying up his well over the past summers. “Of course, this loss of water is caused by the mine, and not only by climate change, to which the electric power plant, by the way, is also contributing”, he says. Like other locals, he is sceptical of the underground wall being built by PGE to protect underground water, noting that its design and position seem faulty.

The Turow mine is located close to the Polish-German-Czech border. 
Photo: Roman Koziel

Water and jobs: Two equally rare commodities?

Kopecký understands Poles who fear for their jobs and agrees that the transition cannot take place overnight, but he believes it is not right to accuse Czechs of wanting to get people fired or of being in it just for the money. He thinks that the transition could provide many jobs and blames the Polish government for its inaction: “It’s a cheap shot by PiS, which knows that the mine cannot last forever, but doesn’t prepare people for that, and neither does PGE”.

Along the road running through Václavice, Jan Štverák takes a break from working in his garden to comment on the situation. He is bitter about the violent reactions from the Polish side and how some Poles, last May, blocked the border crossing, while some Bogatynia businesses warned they would not serve Czech clients following the preliminary court ruling.

Štverák also shows understanding for Polish fears, but thinks that water problems should trump employment concerns. “If you lose water, you have a much more fundamental problem than if you lose your job. It’s also a problem, but it can be solved, right? You can find another job or start your own business.”

He believes Poles should look toward the future and take matters into their own hands: “Coal is not a renewable resource so it will run out anyway. Now or in fifty years, it doesn’t matter. You’ll have to settle this issue.”

Michal Kopecký pictured next to his well’s pump. 
Photo: Roman Koziel

While the two governments seem close to an agreement that will put an end to the EU court’s proceedings, it will not settle the local conundrum. Anna Kšírová, a green activist from the neighbouring city of Liberec, supports locals from the border regions, but insists the problem is wider. “It’s not just about the mine; the electric power plant has negative health impacts on the whole Liberec region,” she explains.

Citing a recent study by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), she enumerates the yearly casualties caused by the power plant: 120 premature deaths, thousands of asthma attacks, and several cases of chronic bronchitis. Most of those cases affect German and Czech citizens who live in the regions next to the power plant, meaning Turów could continue poisoning international relations for years and decades to come.

For the Polish state, a deal with Prague on Turów would probably be celebrated as a victory, but the dire perspectives for coal mining and burning remain unchanged. The Polish energy mix heavily reliant on coal (producing about 70% of electricity) cannot survive unchanged in a time of fight against climate change and rising CO2 emission permit prices.

Moreover, the transition risks are particularly painful for local communities if Warsaw continues to postpone taking tough but necessary decisions, potentially losing billions of euros earmarked in the EU’s Just Transition Fund.

Underlining that she does not wish to see the emergence of a desolated region on the Polish side of the border, Kšírová laments the illusions entertained by the government and the energy company. “People are not being told that coal burning has no future, that it is not going to be profitable. I fear the mine and power plant will crash overnight, just like in the Ostrava region [north-eastern Czech Republic], and people will be thrown under the bus.”

“The workers are the most endangered ones here. Their future is being taken away, not just because of public health risks, but because they are being lied to about the perspectives of mining until 2044”.

The article is published in cooperation with Kafkadesk.

Main image credit: Roman Koziel
André Kapsas is a Prague-based correspondent, a Central Europe and former Eastern bloc specialist, who studied political science and European affairs at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies in London, at Charles University in Prague and the College of Europe in Warsaw.

NOONE IS ILLEGAL

Poland passes law to allow continued ban on journalists and NGOs at Belarus border

Shortly before a state of emergency on Poland’s border with Belarus was due to expire, President Andrzej Duda has signed into law a bill that authorises the government to effectively extend the measures, which include a ban on the media and NGOs entering the area.

The legislation was rushed through parliament today, with the lower-house Sejm, where the government has a majority, overturning all amendments suggested by the opposition-controlled Senate. Senators had, among other things, called for journalists to be exempted from the ban.

Soon after the bill was signed by Duda this evening, the interior ministry announced that it would move immediately to extend for a further three months restrictions on all parts of the border where they are currently in place.

Since early September, the area along the border has been under a state of emergency, implemented in response to attempts by tens of thousands of people – mostly from the Middle East – to cross into Poland from Belarus. The crisis has been engineered by the Belarusian regime, which helps the migrants reach and cross the border.

Under the Polish constitution, the initial 30-day state of emergency can only be renewed once, for a further 60 days. That extension took place on 1 October, meaning that the measures would expire at the start of December.

Unable to implement a new state of emergency, the government has instead moved to introduce similar powers into the existing law on protection of the state border.

Those measures, approved by the Sejm and now signed into force by Duda, allow the interior minister, after consultation with the head of the border guard, to issue a temporary ban on entry to areas on the border deemed to be “particularly vulnerable”, reports TVP Info.

Those exempted from the ban include people who live and work in the area, emergency services, police officers and soldiers on duty, as well as anyone “dealing with official matters or taking part in religious worship”.

Anyone else is only allowed to enter if they receive special permission from the commander of the border guard. The Senate had proposed exempting representatives of the media and NGOs dealing with humanitarian, medical or legal aid from the ban.

However, that amendment was rejected by the Sejm, along with seven others. Those included a requirement for the interior minister to report to parliament on border bans every 30 days and another amendment requiring that the provisions enabling a ban expire three months after entering force.

The banning of media and NGOs from the border amid an unprecedented humanitarian and security crisis has led to widespread criticism. The government, however, has argued that it was a necessary measure to allow the armed forces to respond to the threat at the border.

The new measures signed into law this evening will in theory allow journalists to return, but only with the permission of – and under conditions stipulated by – the authorities.

“One of the objectives of the law is the possibility of journalists entering this zone, but in an orderly manner, in a manner specified by the border guard,” said deputy interior minister Maciej Wąsik, quoted by TVN24.

“We want for journalists to be safe and for their work not to interfere in any way with the work of the border guard, the army and the police,” he added.

But the opposition has argued that the restrictions on the media are not only a violation of press freedom, but also counterproductive. It says that they help Belarus – which has allowed many international outlets access to its side of the border – to influence the media narrative.

“We will not win the propaganda war with Lukashenko and Putin if Polish journalists do not operate in the border zone,” warned Robert Tyszkiewicz, an MP from Civic Platform (PO), the largest opposition party.

“We are in favour of the border being protected, absolutely, but this law changes little when it comes to border protection,” said Arkadiusz Iwaniak, an MP from The Left, who suggested it was just a means for the government to “circumvent” the constitutional limit on how long a state of emergency can last.

The most severe pressures at the border have now eased. Many of the migrants in Belarus have opted to take repatriation flights to the Middle East and EU pressure has led major airlines to stop flights bringing new migrants to Minsk.

But there continue to be efforts every day by people to cross the border illegally. On Saturday, the Polish border guard reported that a group of over 100 people had forced their way over the frontier with the help of Belarusian forces, leaving two Polish soldiers with minor injuries.

Main image credit: Irek Dorozanski / DWOT (under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

NOONE IS ILLEGAL

Human Rights Watch blames Belarus and Poland for “abuse” and “instrumentalisation” of migrants

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has accused Poland and Belarus of “shared responsibility for abuse” of migrants at their border. It also says that authorities in both countries have “cynically instrumentalised the migration issue”.

The NGO’s report, which is based on interviews and testimony gathered by its researchers during visits to both sides of the border, reveals accounts of migrants being beaten and abused by Belarusian officials. It also notes pushbacks by Polish border guards, as well as the separation of families.

HRW calls on the European Union to ensure that all migrants and asylum seekers are treated with dignity. It also wants Brussels – which has so far backed Warsaw over its response to the crisis – to pressure Poland to stop pushbacks and to end its ban on aid organisations and media at the border.

“I crossed many times to Poland but was pushed back to Belarus every time,” a 20-year-old Syrian, Abdul, told HRW. “I was in the forest for eight days…I didn’t have food or water.”

He spoke of the brutality of Belarusian forces, who have been orchestrating the border crossings. They “hit us with batons, kicked us, stepped on our necks to the point that we cried…They told us: ‘You have a choice. You either die here or you go to Poland’”, said Abdul.

HRW also spoke to a man who witnessed his companion drowning after being forced by Belarusian guards to cross the Bug river on the border in a rubber raft: “The boat turned over. None of us could swim…Ahmed was thrown into the middle of the river and I could see him go under. He cried and pleaded for help.”

The report notes that Polish border guards routinely push migrants back across the border to Belarus “without due process”, a practice that many argue violates international law.

Pointing out that Belarus is not a safe country, the report calls on the Polish authorities to “immediately halt all summary returns and collective expulsions to Belarus”. It also wants Warsaw to lift the state of emergency that bans journalists and aid workers from visiting the border area.

HRW appealed to the EU to not only to press Poland on those issues but also to consider a temporary relocation mechanism that would enable migrants arriving in Poland to be transferred to other EU states, where “their needs” can be “fairly assessed”.

HRW notes that “the injured or sick” are taken by Polish border guards for medical treatment and receive a temporary six-month stay on humanitarian grounds. But this can result in families being separated, it adds.

A 40-year-old Kurdish woman from Syria, referred to as Awira, told WRH her 14-year-old daughter collapsed after spending a week in the forest and was taken to a Polish hospital.

The Polish border guard said that only one person can stay with her,” she said. “The guards put my son and the rest in a military van and drove off. I don’t know where. Since then, I haven’t been able to reach my son.”

HRW blames both countries for the way the crisis is presented. “Polish and Belarusian authorities have cynically instrumentalised the migration issue,” reads the reports, whose authors point out that both countries disseminate recordings and photos in an effort to prove the wrongdoing of the other side.

This week, in response to the army’s detention of three reporters near the border, Reporters Without Borders (RSF), another NGO, accused Poland of “treating journalists as if it were a military dictatorship”.

“Although it is legitimate for the Polish state to address security risks in the border area, the media must be able to cover police and military operations and migration, which is a public interest issue,” noted Pavol Szalai, the head of RSF’s European Union and Balkans desk.

The Polish government argues that it is taking necessary steps to tackle a “hybrid attack” on its borders orchestrated by Belarus with Russian backing. It says it has an obligation to prevent illegal crossings onto its territory.

“Poland grants international protection to people whose life and health are at risk, as exemplified by the assistance provided to Belarusians persecuted by the Lukashenko regime and the evacuation of around 1,300 refugees from Afghanistan,” Poland’s interior minister, Mariusz Kamiński, said last month.

Warsaw has received support for its efforts from a number of allies, including Germany, the European Commission, and NATO. There has also been widespread condemnation of Belarus’s actions, including by the US State Department.

Main image credit: Irek Dorozanski / DWOT (under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)



Agnieszka Wądołowska is managing editor of Notes from Poland.
She has previously worked for Gazeta.pl and Tokfm.pl and contributed to Gazeta Wyborcza,Wysokie Obcasy, Duży Format, Midraszand Kultura Liberalna