What's new

A Million Mutinies Within

BanglaBhoot

RETIRED TTA
Joined
Apr 8, 2007
Messages
8,839
Reaction score
5
Country
France
Location
France
To Kashmir, Chhattisgarh, Manipur and Nagaland, we can now add Lalgarh

ADITYA NIGAM

Academic


NOW THAT the central government’s security forces have entered Lalgarh, we can safely assume that we have one more long-term insurgency on our hands. To the series of Jammu and Kashmir, Manipur, Nagaland, Chhattisgarh, we can now add Lalgarh. Nowhere has a military solution to an insurgency worked and there is no reason why it will now. It was once believed that the Naxalite movement had been crushed and defeated by sheer repression, and just when the powers that be thought it was over, it has appeared with ever greater force.

If past experience is any guide, the attempts to physically eliminate the Maoists will produce more and more Maoists by the day. The ruling CPI(M) in West Bengal should know this better, for it was precisely the indiscriminate state violence that goes with generalised repression which made the defiant youth of yesteryears turn towards the party.

Manoj’s story is a classic example. In another time, it could have been the story of the rise of the CPI(M) itself. This young, 25-year-old Maoist leader of Lalgarh told the Times of India recently about how, during rains, villagers are forced to drag themselves and their cattle through the muck. He spoke of the non-availability of clean drinking water, which forces people to drink “filthy, yellow water”. He spoke of the absence of electricity and of jobs. “We got tired of being treated like rodents,” he says. And so, in 2002, the villagers got together and demanded development. This infuriated the local CPI(M) bosses. The police and Marxists, he says, slapped false cases on them, accusing them of working for the People’s War Group (PWG). “They branded us Maoists. So we began to think we might as well join the Maoists.”

Manoj’s was a family of Congress supporters who shifted loyalty to the Trinamool Congress when the TMC was formed in 1998. Once branded ‘Maoist’ and thrown into jail, there was no way left for him but to become a Maoist. It was in jail that he met a Maoist leader and converted to Maoism.

This is a classic story of a failed democratic process and police repression pushing people towards Maoist politics.

As a matter of fact, Chhatradhar Mahato, a key leader of the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCPA) himself used to be a TMC supporter till about a year ago. Today, he is branded as a Maoist and the PCPA, a Maoist front. This is a story that suits both the ruling CPI(M) and the complexity- shunning mainstream media.

Current media discussions miss out a crucial fact. The PCPA was formed in November 2008 after the police let loose violent reprisals for the bomb blast in Salboni when Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya was on his way from a public meeting to inaugurate a steel plant. The police went berserk and arrested seven people, including three schoolgoing teenagers on ‘suspicion’ of having engineered the blast. For many, fed on stories dished out by the mainstream electronic media, the Lalgarh story begins here. But for the people of Lalgarh, this was the last straw. The tribal people of this area, long subject to neglect, destitution, exploitation by forest contractors and police harassment, rose up in a revolt that recalled the Santhal hools of the 19th century, digging up roads and ensuring that they became inaccessible to the police and the CPI(M).

All this was not Maoist activity, and the fact is that in Lalgarh, till some time ago, it was difficult to tell who is a Maoist. You could be a Congress or TMC supporter and still be with the PCPA – the ostensible ‘Maoist front’. Incidentally, this was what sent sections of the electronic media into a spin as they reported in horror that ‘the Congress and TMC had been playing with fire and had been supporting the PCPA’. Once the PCPA was painted as a Maoist front, every other fact could then be presented in that light.

However, contrary to media representations, Lalgarh was not a Maoist fortress. In fact, it was a place where a new kind of democratic politics was being put into practice. Maoists were certainly present, but they were constrained to go along with the mood inside Lalgarh. Lalgarh ‘Maoists’ were recent converts who had turned towards the CPI(Maoist) for ‘protection’ from the state-turned-predator. Their objectives were not quite those of the Maoist organisation. They were in no mood to form roving guerilla squads. Even senior Maoist leaders of the area like Koteswara Rao (alias Kishanji) only spoke about the non-implementation of central government schemes by the state government.

FOR OVER six months, the PCPA, with popular participation, built reservoirs, dug tanks and tube-wells, revived irrigation canals and built roads in different villages of the area. The Kolkata-based Lalgarh Sanhati Mancha collected money and helped set up a health centre in Katapahari. A committee with five men and five women would take decisions on a daily basis. Compare this with any other place where Maoists are active and the difference is immediately apparent. The Maoists, known for their impatience towards any open public activity and their allergy to any kind of developmental work, had to actually put up with all this.

The tribals of Lalgarh experienced the last six months as months of freedom from police harassment, of new developmental activity, as months of new hope. That is why, when the security forces were advancing, they were resisted not by armed Maoists with their landmines and AK-47s but by ordinary tribals with their conventional bows and arrows forming a ‘human shield’. And it was an entirely peaceful resistance by all accounts.

With the security forces marching in, all this will very soon be in the past. There will be just two forces – armed Maoist gangs and the armed state forces. Maoists themselves had wanted this all along. This is, after all, their preferred mode – the Andhra or Chhattisgarh model. For it is only then that their extortion economy and the cult of the gun can flourish. All possibilities of peaceful democratic politics and all developmental activities will be made impossible. The brief spring of popular democracy will fade from memory.

It is necessary then to put what happened in Lalgarh in perspective. Mass anger against the CPI(M) had burst forth earlier in Khejuri where there were no Maoists in the picture. Khejuri, which preceded Lalgarh by a few days, had been the CPI(M) bastion from where the operation to ‘liberate’ Nandigram had been launched by Lakshman Seth and his brownshirts.

There had been outbreaks of violence in Khejuri earlier in May as well. Once the election results were out, with Lakshman Seth and the CPI(M) defeated, mass anger accumulating over years burst forth. Then came Lalgarh, and the anger also spilled over to neighbouring Bankura. And lest we be carried away by fairy tales spun by sections of the electronic media and the CPI(M) propaganda machinery, we also need to remember that mass anger, directed specifically against the CPI(M), had also burst forth earlier in October 2007 in a number of districts — Bankura, Birbhum, Murshidabad and Burdwan — centred on the widespread corruption and nonavailability of food in ration shops. Then too, the riots had assumed exactly the same form.

The reason is simple. Over three decades, the CPI(M) has set up a machinery of virtually totalitarian power where there is simply no avenue of redress. The police, the administration, the panchayat representatives and above all of them, the ubiquitous party – these together constitute today one of the most frightful instruments of control. In addition, in West and East Midnapore in particular, it is well known that CPI(M) cadres have stockpiled arms in every nook and cranny of these areas. These are seen as a threat, as people fear that these will be used to browbeat them into submission once again. Today the CPI(M) is only reaping what it has sown. It has spawned a political culture of violence which is now spinning out of its control.

As mass anger against the CPI(M) burst forth, the Maoists saw their opportunity and came out in true form. Theirs is a politics that thrives on secrecy and violence and abhors any kind of public, mass activity. The answer to the CPI(M)’s politics of violence and desire for totalitarian control cannot be Maoist politics, which is itself a cult of violence. However, as Mahasweta Devi said on reaching Lalgarh, close on the heels of the security forces, what places like Lalgarh need most of all today are the provision of basic necessities like drinking water, irrigation facilties, schools and solar electricity.

But that is not enough. Lalgarh is also about the failure of the democratic promise. Any solution therefore must be based on energising democratic processes and politics so that armed struggle does not appear as an attractive option to frustrated and marginalised people of the area.

Tehelka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazine
 
.
yeah...we all mutinize when the electricity goes in the afternoon.
dude...there is a communist movement in all the countries.ours is violent because of overpopulation and a huge stress on the resources...and corruption of the bureaucracy.
 
.
Isn't this a copy of a similar thread started by a gent from BD ?
 
.
Isn't this a copy of a similar thread started by a gent from BD ?

Yes. And now we have two million mutinies within.

But seriously, it's not the problems in a country that are really the problem. It's the way the country tackles that problem. Population, poverty and inequity are the greatest challenges to the Indian state going forward. How we tackle these will determine our future.

However, unlike a lot of other countries, we are trying to get there. Very slowly, but surely.
 
. .
I have a question to the Indians on this forum - how would you guys feel if a government decided to try out a one child policy similar to China's but not as harsh? It does seem that overpopulation creates the problems that this thread is related to, so how would you guys respond to such a proposal? Personally, I think it wouldn't be too bad an idea for a one or two child policy in Pakistan. Too small country, too many people.
 
.
I have a question to the Indians on this forum - how would you guys feel if a government decided to try out a one child policy similar to China's but not as harsh? It does seem that overpopulation creates the problems that this thread is related to, so how would you guys respond to such a proposal? Personally, I think it wouldn't be too bad an idea for a one or two child policy in Pakistan. Too small country, too many people.

india tried 'hum do hamare do'.....but dont know to how much success!
 
.
I have a question to the Indians on this forum - how would you guys feel if a government decided to try out a one child policy similar to China's but not as harsh? It does seem that overpopulation creates the problems that this thread is related to, so how would you guys respond to such a proposal? Personally, I think it wouldn't be too bad an idea for a one or two child policy in Pakistan. Too small country, too many people.

Some context: After independence Nehru was warned about our looming population problem and the need to combat it. He dismissed it, saying that 'our population was our strength' (or something like that).

Fast forward to the mid 70s. Sanjay Gandhi (IG's son) started a massive population control program during the emergency period. The public response after that (officials forced people to have vasectomies to meet quotas) was so vehement that no Indian politician has dared to show any 'aggressive problem solving' attitude to population control for a long time.

However, softer policies - based on education, information etc have been around for long; and we do spend considerable money on these. So a decisive China kind of program is unlikely; even a softer version will take some doing.
 
.
If you have more than two children you are not allowed to file nomination for elections.
This came to effect in 2005-2006. I think.

Anyone married after 2005.
He should have a PAN card, income tax returns, declare assets, must be 12th class pass and a lot more.... lots more stuff.

It is hard finding links from hindi newspaper.

I will give one as soon as i can find one
 
Last edited:
.
Fading Crimson Flaming Anger

The desperate battle for Lalgarh might recapture land for the Left, but the hearts and minds of its denizens are lost to them. SHANTANU GUHA RAY reports from the battle zone

IN THE overheated air of Bengal’s summer, grazing cows in West Midnapore district often halt to share the shade of the banyan trees with their impoverished owners, whose expressionless faces display a sense of alienation and frustration perpetuated by decades of denied development. The tribal land of Lalgarh, whose 44 villages form an integral part of the district, is now caught in the treacherous cross-currents created by heightened tensions between its 12,000- odd residents and members of the state’s ruling Left Front.

The story of the tribals, who live on frugal once-a-day meals in mud huts with corrugated tin roofs, is a stark analogy for oppression deeply internalised. As a result, what is unfolding is no easily slotted confrontation between tyranny and freedom. The troubled tribal, armed with machetes and bows and arrows, who wants to remake the region’s political landscape with support from the Naxalites, is facing columns of soldiers of the paramilitary Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), dressed in battle fatigues and carrying automatic weapons and rocket launchers. The soldiers, backed by members of the beleaguered state police force, want to re-establish state control over an estimated 1,100 square km area that the tribals aided by Naxalites (CPI-Maoists) ‘liberated’, after they pushed out nearly 75 policemen from four stations in the region.

Stuck in the middle of this confrontation is the Trinamool Congress (TMC). It once took help from the Naxalites to establish its supremacy in eastern Midnapore, but now does not want to get entangled in the current standoff, because it is a part of the ruling coalition at the Centre.

The battle for Lalgarh is both emblematic and strategic. Emblematic, in that it represents a classic struggle between the deprived and the power of the state; strategic because Midnapore is the largest district in India, with 35 assembly and five Lok Sabha seats. “The Left Front is worried by the recent Lok Sabha results and is trying hard to regain control over what it claimed was its base: the grassroots,” says Dipankar Dasgupta, former economics professor at the Indian Statistical Institute, adding, “Lalgarh was just waiting to happen because discontent, fuelled by years of deprivation has resulted in the kind of anarchy that we now see prevailing there.”

Like all tribal battles, this one is also a peculiarly complicated tussle of ambitions and grudges, of accusations and denials, and of the closed doors at the Writers Building which shelter Machiavellian conspirators. “Lalgarh is a troubled area – out of bounds for the state police for nearly four months. There is complete lawlessness there,” West Bengal Chief Secretary Asok Mohan Chakraborty told TEHELKA, justifying the presence of more than 1,500 central paramilitary personnel in the region.

But his government is apparently unhappy at the decision of Union Home Minister, P Chidambaram to ban the CPIMaoist (a group formed by the merger of the banned CPI(ML) and the banned Maoist Communist Centre). “This isn’t the right way to handle a crisis. The Maoists need to be brought back to the mainstream,” rued CPI(M) secretary general Prakash Karat, hours after Chidambaram’s announcement.

But in the heat and dust of the actual battleground, Lalgarh’s death toll has already crossed 11 as the soldiers take on both villagers and Maoists in their effort to liberate the area. The security forces are baying for blood and continue to sanitise the area while preparing for the second round of assaults in this nameless operation. However, Maoist leader Sagar told TEHELKA, “If the intelligentsia takes the initiative and operations are withdrawn, we are ready to talk,” referring to the recent Lalgarh visit of a group of anti-Left Front intellectuals led by filmmaker Aparna Sen and theatre exponent Shaoli Mitra.

HOWEVER, THE state government wants Lalgarh back at any cost. West Bengal Inspector General of Police Kuldip Singh has been ordered to clear roads of landmines and gain access to the area, which has been on the boil since last November, when a landmine exploded on the route of the convoy of Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and then central ministers Ram Vilas Paswan and Jitin Prasada.

Since then, complaining of police atrocities after the blast, angry tribals backed by Maoists launched an agitation, virtually cutting off the area from the rest of West Midnapore district and establishing a 1,000-sq-km ‘liberated zone,’ comprising 1,100 villages - the second area to be given the name in the last eight months after Dantewada in Chhattisgarh.

But, unlike anti-Maoist operations elsewhere, the Lalgarh face-off is complicated by several factors. On one side is the state government, which abdicated its responsibilities by leaving Lalgarh in the hands of its opponents for more than six months. On the other side is the TMC, which is ready to sup with the devil — or, in this case the Maoists — in order to harass and humiliate the Left. What has queered the pitch for the Left Front government is the fact that the vacuum in Lalgarh has been filled not only by the Maoists, but also by a “People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities,” set up after the state police bungled, as in Nandigram, in its high-handedness after the landmine blast.

The Maoists have also given an embarrassing reminder to TMC leader Mamata Banerjee to reciprocate the support they gave her in Singur and Nandigram. “If Chidambaram’s advice to politicians to stay away from Lalgarh has evoked little response, the reason is that neither the CPI(M) nor the TMC wants the police action to tilt the scales against its rivals. Yet, given the dismal record of police operations in disturbed areas, giving a free hand to the paramilitary forces can harm the political fortunes of both the Left and the TMC,” says Congress legislator Nirbed Ray, adding, “In such a situation, the only gainer will be the Maoists, who have no stakes other than fomenting disaffection among the people, many of whom are tribals with a long history of deprivation. This is a big mess for the Left Front and a tricky one for Banerjee.”

It’s equally tricky on the ground. Ten kilometres outside Lalgarh, a spot where columns of marching state policemen and paramilitary soldiers are turning the area into a veritable war zone, curious journalists beat the heat and hunger with tubewell water, loads of puffed rice and locally-produced biscuits. At a distance, a knot of reporters crouches behind vehicles and deserted school buildings, listening to the shouts of soldiers taking positions in the near-dry grasslands. They resemble a group of helpless villagers herding cows but those commanding the operations insist that the Maoists are close by.

Political observers say that in the last one-and-a-half years, two virtual states have sprung up in the adjacent districts of East and West Midnapore. East Midnapore, where Nandigram and Khejuri are located, is virtually ruled by the TMC, while a large chunk of West Midnapore is controlled by Maoists. Where does this leave the Left?

Soon after the crackdown began in Lalgarh, Left Front legislators knocked on the doors of state Governor Gopalkrishna Gandhi, seeking his approval for the offensive. Interestingly, in the 32 years of Left rule, never before have the ruling MLAs walked up the stairs of Raj Bhavan to plead for their safety. But this time, the CPM, the dominant party of the coalition, is bloodied, battered and bruised in places like Nandigram, Khejuri and now Lalgarh. CPM chief whip Syed Mohammad Mosi says 53 CPI(M) leaders and workers have been killed in the state over the last eight months. “We have been hit and our blood spilled,” Mosi told TEHELKA. “The TMC is behind all of this,” remarked party state secretary Biman Bose.

But for decades, the mandarins at Writers’ Buildings and Alimuddin Street, the headquarters of the CPM, have either been blissfully unaware of or have not bothered to find out the conditions in which people live in Lalgarh. There have been numerous reports in the media of how crucial funds offered by the Centre under the Indira Vikas Yojana eventually ended up in the pockets of party cadres. “Otherwise, how do you see doublestoried buildings owned by CPI(M) leaders in an area where there are virtually no basic facilities? The Left is now paying the price for its arrogance and complacency. I would simply say this is nothing but a natural corollary of staying in power for so long,” says Kolkata’s celebrated painter and thinker, Suvaprasanna, the man who coined the slogan Pariborton chai (We want a change!).

With that level of neglect, the emergence of ultra-Left groups was natural. The TMC used the Maoists to its benefit in Nandigram and Khejuri. Those Maoists have always harboured ambitions of carving out their own pockets of influence wherever there is mass discontent. “Lalgarh provides them the perfect opportunity. Development does not seem to have even touched the area,” says Debabrata Banerjee, a former state bureaucrat who has worked closely with the state on its much-hyped land reform programmes.

Nirbed Ray, however, refers to an opinion piece he read recently by Lieutenant General AS Kalkat, commander of the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka, on the defeat of the LTTE by the Sri Lankan armed forces. Kalkat had said the LTTE committed the mistake of forgetting that it was basically a guerrilla force and tried to take on a regular army in a traditional war. The Maoists would be committing a grave blunder if they confront soldiers in a conventional war. The troops will not go soft on the Maoists. Now that the Centre has banned the Maoists, the Left has started panicking because a large number of those who have infiltrated the villages are their own men, says Ray.

He is surprised that the Left is keen to take on the Maoists politically. “For those dismissive of the Indian Constitution, for people who only believe that power flows from the barrel of a gun, their guns must be silenced before bringing them to the table,” says Ray, adding, “The chief minister should realize that once he takes away reasons for complaint, these very Lalgarh residents will drive out the Maoists. Lalgarh residents don’t need doles. What they crave is economic empowerment so that they are equipped to address their own problems. They need roads, health centres, schools, electricity and water.”

But the work of decades cannot be done in a few weeks. Worse, the mandarins at the Writers Building do not even have a roadmap or timeline for implementation of such programmes. Banerjee, who is personally uncomfortable because she is now a part of the ruling UPA, is, for a change reserved in her comment: “The Left Front is too arrogant to admit its mistakes in the state.”

A PART FROM Nandigram, Khejuri, Singur and the nightmare Lalgarh is turning out to be, there is more bad news from Bengal. A census of the urban rich conducted by a mainstream newspaper found that Kolkata, with a population of 1.5 crore, had less than half the number of affluent people that Chandigarh could boast of. Of course, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and his comrades- in-arms will dismiss with false pride the proposition that Kolkata isn’t rich enough but the truth is that let alone wealth and investment opportunities, the state is not even creating employment for its people. “Anyone watching Bengal’s decline will lay the blame squarely on the politics the state has come to understand and the ideology it has grown to adopt; a brand of politics that fosters sloth, decay and, if truth be told, degeneration,” said Aman Soondas, a writer.

After detailed research, Professor Amartya Lahiri of the University of British Columbia and economist Kei-Mu Yi found a direct link between economic prosperity and the openness of the political environment. No wonder then, that the per capita income (2007-08 figures) of West Bengal after 30 years of Marxist rule stands at just Rs 21,050, much below even states like Sikkim.

It is high time that Kolkata’s red brigade realises that Lalgarh, Khejuri, Singur and Nandigram and the census of the urban rich are two ends of life’s spectrum. Travel across the state and you will realise that large parts of Bengal are decades away from anything like an economic boom, let alone an IT revolution. Often, regional writers have drawn parallels between the people in the state and the extras filmmaker Yash Chopra picked to shoot the 1979’s Kaala Patthar: faceless, hungry, shorn of comforts. The Left’s battle cry for decades, ‘Cholbe Na, Lorte Hobe!’ (This cannot be, we have to fight!) is now a trigger to the poor man’s wrath. No wonder then, that the Frankenstein’s monster that Lalgarh is has sprung to life to haunt the red brigade – a group more than happy to keep the state and its people perennially bound in poverty. It has blithely obstructed progress — from banning English in junior school to banning MNCs in the state — because a well-off population would start to yearn for the comforts that only a more capitalist outlook can provide.Perhaps that’s why industrialisation is investment are welcome in any other state of India but are taboo and sinful in Bengal. After all, it’s far too easy to call for and wreak crippling strikes and block people from reaching offices, schools and factories.

Lalgarh is a visible metaphor for a failed experiment, a failed enterprise. Until that changes, the tragedy of West Bengal will continue to play on.

Tehelka - India's Independent Weekly News Magazine
 
.

Military Forum Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom