Fisherfolk Say the Harbour Has “Sunk Before It Was Born”
Maritime News, Uran, Raigad, Maharashtra, India : How a flagship fishing harbour turned into a silted graveyard of taxpayer money — and why fisherfolk are demanding a criminal probe into bureaucrats, contractors, and cooperative societies.
15 Years. ₹256 Crore Spent. And What Do We Have? A Harbour Stuck in Mud.
The story of the Karanja Fishing Harbour in Uran, Raigad is no longer a tale of development — it is now a textbook case of systemic corruption, bureaucratic incompetence, and government apathy.
Started in 2012 with a vision of accommodating 1,000 fishing boats, the port today remains half-constructed, unusable, dangerously silted, and financially bloated beyond recognition.
A fresh proposal for ₹183 crore more for dredging has triggered outrage.
“Why should taxpayers fund dredging when we don’t even know where the first ₹256 crore went?”
Fisher groups are demanding answers — and so far, there are none.
The Government’s Claims vs. The Ground Reality
Government Claims:
- Modern fishing harbour
- 1,000 boat capacity
- E-shaped jetty near completion
- Advanced facilities — cold storage, WWTP, auction hall, fuel station
- Work nearing final phase
Ground Reality:
The harbour basin is filled with silt
- Boats cannot berth
- No functional deep-water access
- Structural works incomplete
- Costs inflated repeatedly
- Work has dragged on over 15 years
- Fresh dredging demanded before inauguration
This raises a serious question:
How does a harbour get choked with silt before fishermen even get to use it once?
THE MONEY TRAIL — A BLACK HOLE OF EXPENDITURE
Here’s how costs skyrocketed:
| Stage | Approved Cost | Reality |
|---|---|---|
| 2012 Initial Budget | ₹64 crore | Work starts, hits rock, halts |
| Revised Estimate | ₹149.8 crore | Government fails to fund; 8-year delay |
| 2018 Revival Package | ₹150 crore (Nitin Gadkari + Devendra Fadnavis) | Work resumes |
| Total Spent So Far | ₹256 crore | Still not functional |
| New Proposal for Dredging | ₹183 crore | Fishermen furious |
Total Present Financial Burden: ₹439 crore.
For a harbour that is still stuck in mud.
One fisherman told Maritime News:
“This is not a port project. This is a washing machine that keeps laundering public money.”
WHO BENEFITED? CERTAIN OFFICIALS AND LOCAL SOCIETIES UNDER THE SCANNER
Fishermen allege deep complicity between:
- Corrupt port department officials
- Certain contractors
- Select cooperative societies
- Political middlemen
These groups allegedly ensured:
- Contracts were extended
- Delays were tolerated
- Cost escalation was sanctioned
- Accountability was avoided
The behaviour of some fishing cooperatives has been questioned too — accused of “protecting corrupt officers” while fisherfolk continue to suffer.
Fisher groups say:
“Those who were supposed to protect our interests helped bury this harbour under silt.”
THE ORIGINAL SIN — ZERO TRANSPARENCY, ZERO ACCOUNTABILITY
Not a single year of this project saw:
- A public audit
- A cost-benefit evaluation
- Third-party engineering review
- Environmental accountability
- Local community oversight
Instead, decisions were taken behind closed doors, with no public explanation on why:
- Work paused for 8 years
- Estimates kept inflating
- Engineering failures weren’t corrected
- Siltation was ignored for years
What should have been Maharashtra’s most modern fishing harbour has become one of its most expensive administrative disasters.
WHY FISHERFOLK ARE FURIOUS
1. Sassoon Dock is overloaded
With hundreds more boats than capacity, fishermen desperately need an alternative port.
2. Karanja was supposed to be the solution — but is now a burden
Fishermen say they’ve waited 15 years, only to be told:
“We need another ₹183 crore before you can use the harbour.”
3. Repeated failures indicate something worse than incompetence
Many believe this project has become a cash cow for vested interests.
THE QUESTIONS THE GOVERNMENT MUST ANSWER
- Where did the ₹256 crore already spent actually go?
- Why was the harbour allowed to silt up during construction?
- Why was there no preventive dredging or engineering intervention?
- Who approved the new ₹183 crore dredging proposal — and based on what analysis?
- Why have no officers been held responsible for 15 years of failure?
- Which cooperative bodies were complicit in hiding irregularities?
- Why were fishermen — the primary stakeholders — kept out of decision-making?
THE FISHERFOLK’S DEMAND: A FULL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION
Leading voices from the Koli community have issued a united call:
A high-level inquiry must be conducted by state and central agencies.
Officials, contractors, and societies involved in corruption must be punished.”**
They want:
- CAG audit
- Anti-Corruption Bureau inquiry
- Technical review committee
- Accountability of all approving authorities
CONCLUSION: A PORT THAT NEVER SAILED
Karanja Fishing Harbour should have been a model for India’s coastal infrastructure.
Instead, it exposes:
- The absence of engineering oversight
- The decay of public accountability
- The exploitation of fishing communities
- The misuse of taxpayer funds
Unless a transparent investigation is launched, Karanja will become a national example of how maritime projects fail when corruption is allowed to anchor itself deeper than the foundations.
Maritime News India | Karanja Port Scam | Fishermen | Fishing Harbour | Uran | Raigad | Sassoon Dock | Corruption | Bureaucratic incompetence | Government Apathy
