Villefranche-sur-Mer

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Hydro Plans in India

Arundhati Roy, the prize-winning Indian novelist, was jailed Wednesday
(March 6, 2002) after the Supreme Court in India convicted her of criminal
contempt for suggesting it was trying to “silence criticism”
of its approval of a hydroelectric project. As about 250 supporters stood
outside with banners reading “Free speech is not contempt,”
the court sentenced Roy to one day in prison and a $42 fine. If she does
not pay, she will spend three months in prison, the court said. The court
said that in sentencing her to one day, it was “showing magnanimity
of law by keeping in mind that the respondent is a woman.” Roy won
the prestigious Booker Prize in 1997 for her novel “The God of Small
Things.” She has written articles criticizing India's nuclear
program and is a prominent campaigner against the Narmada Dam, the nation's
biggest hydroelectric project.

Source: by Nirmala George / Associated Press (via Common Dreams News
Center) If you want to take action, visit Amnesty International’s
web site.



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