Arunachal Activist airport detention
Bhanu Tatak

Guwahati: The detention of environmental activist Bhanu Tatak says there is “something wrong” going in the valley of first sunrise.

In a move widely condemned as a blatant attempt to muzzle environmental activism, Tatak, a prominent Arunachal Pradesh activist, was detained at Delhiโ€™s Indira Gandhi International Airport on Sunday and barred from flying to Ireland.

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 Immigration officials cited a lookout circular (LOC) issued by the state police, igniting outrage and fears that Northeast voices are being deliberately silenced to prevent them from reaching global forums.

Tatak, an Adi indigenous woman and legal advisor to the Siang Indigenous Farmersโ€™ Forum (SIFF), was scheduled to begin a three-month academic programme at Dublin City University on September 9.

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She has been at the forefront of opposition to the proposed 11,500 MW Siang Upper Multipurpose Project (SUMP), a mega-dam on the Siang River that activists warn could devastate ecosystems, displace indigenous communities, and erode cultural heritage in one of Indiaโ€™s most biodiverse regions.

Confirming the LOC, Inspector General of Police (Law & Order) Chukhu Apa said Tatak faces 10โ€“12 cases linked to anti-dam protests, including allegations of inciting violence and leading mobs against a cabinet minister. He declined to provide further details.

The sudden detention, imposed without prior notice, has drawn fierce criticism. Youth Congress general secretary Tai David termed the action โ€œarbitrary and condemnable,โ€ asserting: โ€œWe live in a democracy where individual rights must be upheld.

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Attempts to silence dissent will not prevail.โ€ On X, human rights lawyer Ebo Mili questioned the legality of the move, asking: โ€œHow could the SP or IGP authorize an LOC against Bhanu Tatak? The Arunachal Police must be held accountable.โ€

Rights groups, including Fridays For Future India, accused authorities of weaponizing โ€œfalse complaintsโ€ to target young defenders of the environment, calling for immediate intervention.

Many argue Tatakโ€™s Ireland trip could have amplified SIFFโ€™s warnings internationally, placing the controversial project under sharper global scrutiny.

As work on the SUMP inches forward, Tatakโ€™s detention underscores a troubling pattern: the criminalization of activism in the name of development.

Critics fear this signals a deliberate attempt to insulate major projects from dissent, effectively isolating Northeast Indiaโ€™s environmental concerns from international discourse.

However, the incident is ready to get international attention as the global warming and climate change is a share disaster on the planet Earth for one and all.

Manoj Kumar Ojha is a journalist based in Dumduma, Upper Assam, with over 10 years of experience reporting on politics, culture, health, and the environment. He specializes in Assam's cultural and social...