We head over to a tailing pond on Arjun’s motorbike. A tailing pond is where the tailings i.e. uranium mining waste, in the form of a slurry, are stored in an artificially constructed pond. The pond may be lined at the bottom, or not. In this case, the pond isn’t lined, as informed by Arjun. “This is a 64-acre tailing pond and takes the waste of uranium ore processing from the nearby plant. . “This radioactive slurry is being stored in the open, doesn’t this pose any health and environmental hazards?”, I ask. Arjun smiles at me and says, “You understand this basic fact, but somehow the DAE (Department of Atomic Energy) and BARC (Bhabha Atomic Research Centre) officials don’t acknowledge this.” “Has the pond ever overflown?” I shudder at that thought. “Yes, in 2003, it rained a lot, continuously. The tailing pond overflowed into the neighboring farms. It killed all the crops that year. Not only that but some small animals too, died by drinking that water. The groundwater has been polluted, and the company won’t admit it. However, they have asked the nearby villages to stop using ground water and are instead being told to take water from the multiple water points installed by the company. During summers, the slurry dries up and gets carried by the wind all around the pond, to neighboring villages.” . My mind is buzzing with questions and emotions. The thought of utter disregard for environmental and health safety laws while handling something as sensitive as the radioactive Uranium ore makes me sick to my stomach. I visit a small habitation merely few meters from the wall that UCIL has built around the tailing point on one side. The village is deserted as most of the people have gone to earn their daily wage. In one corner, a toddler is kicking his pet cat while lying down on a charpai. Hen are pecking at the ground for leftover grains after the child's mother is done washing rice for their afternoon meal. These are scenes from any village, except that the toddler may be inhaling radioactive dust while his mother might be washing and cooking with water that has radioactive remnants from the Uranium sludge nearby. (at Ucil Complex Turamdih)










