A  subsidiary of the Vedanta mining group in India has been accused of  clearing forest land allegedly in violation of Supreme Court orders which is believed to be in 
Niyamgiri hills.According  to the BBC, Sterlite Industries has been accused of cutting down trees  while constructing a new power plant in Chhattisgarh. However, the  company has denied that they have cleared forests unlawfully and claimed  of cutting down trees only on privately owned land.Sterlite  controls 51 percent of shares in the Bharat Aluminium Company (Balco) in  Chhattisgarh and also possesses 1,751 acres of forestland there which is 
Niyamgiri hills believed to be.
Balco  insists that it was granted permission by district officials on private  land only and added that the Supreme Court had not placed any  restraints on such action.
However, according to two government  reports dated October 2010, trees were cut down in an area owned by the  state government, which is officially designated as forestland in  government records. The documents also contain satellite-mapping  technology, which reveals that a large number of trees were felled in  about 90 acres of forestland, the report said.
An inquiry to  establish whether Balco has violated the Supreme Court's orders, which  banned the felling of trees at the site in 2008, is now being carried  out based on the allegations made by a Congress party leader in  Chhattisgarh.The leader has named senior Balco officials as being in contempt of court.The  Vedanta group had been in headlines recently after the Indian  government denied it permission to mine bauxite in the 
Niyamgiri hills  in the state of Orissa.
Read more: