June.19 : The "liberation" of Lalgarh by Maoists is a logical upshot of the
politics of violence and savagery that the Communist Party of India-Marxist
(CPI-M) successfully practised against its political opponents in West
Bengal for over three decades. The state, in the not too distant past, was
known for its high intellectual content in public discourse. Today, violence
is intrinsic to its politics.

While a part of West Bengal burns, two key actors in state politics, the
Congress and the CPI(M), are busy playing the blame game. The ruling
Marxists and their fellow travellers (in the media and numerous NGOs) are
paralysed in this crisis because of ideological confusion. The rebel Maoists
are doing in Lalgarh what the Marxists have been preaching and selectively
practising while dealing with dissent in West Bengal and Kerala — the Left’s
two stronghold states.

Of course, the Congress is living up to its record of hunting with the hound
and running with the hare for short-term political gain, but this will cost
the nation dearly.

The CPI(M)-Maoist nexus snapped when the chief minister of West Bengal,
Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, was sought to be assassinated by Maoists weeks
before the recent Lok Sabha polls.

According to the latest news reports, the Maoists have dug up roads at
several places and blocked others with tree trunks in Lalgarh. The houses
and offices of CPI(M) leaders are being vandalised. Fresh violence has
killed one CPI(M) leader and two party activists and left several others
injured. There is a complete breakdown of law and order in the area.

Last week, people surrounded Marxist leader Subrata Kar’s house in Khejuri,
in West Bengal’s East Midnapore district, asking the police to search the
house for evidence of corruption in several state and Central government
schemes. The police did not arrive so the people themselves ransacked the
house and recovered some 20 National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme
(NREGS) work cards meant for below-poverty-line families.

The CPI(M) branch office at Gholabari was burnt and in the debris many
half-burnt government documents were found. In another party office in
Kalaghachia there was an entire file regarding the appointment of 350
Integrated Child Development Scheme workers in Khejuri. A few months ago,
fair price shops became the target of public ire as the foodgrain
distribution system broke down and several leads linking shopowners with the
CPI(M) were exposed. The CPI(M) domination that went on for over three
decades survived and thrived mainly because people were afraid of revolting
against their tyranny.

Newspapers reported that it was the discovery of government appointment
files, NREGS cards and other benefit cards for the poor in the houses of
prominent CPI(M) panchayat leaders that fuelled villagers’ fury against
them. When the police was compelled to search these houses, it was found
that most of them had also concealed illegal firearms and ammunitions. For
instance, in Haludbari, panchayat chief Pranabesh Pradhan had to flee from
his house as angry villagers surrounded it. His house, according to news
reports, is the best in the village. Villagers said they knew that he was a
corrupt man, but did not protest earlier for "fear of being booked by the
police in false cases". The police recovered two guns and two pistols from
his house.

There is a definite link between the Maoists in West Bengal with the ones in
neighbouring Orissa, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. Several well-planned
attacks against police outposts have taken place in these three states
recently. The administration seems to be unable to trace the supply of arms
and ammunition to these Maoist groups. The heightened activity of these
groups, read with the discovery of arms and ammunition at village level in
CPI(M)-governed West Bengal, may provide leads in this dead-end
investigation.

Nepal seems to be the transit point for these supplies. The Delhi police
recently nabbed an Indian national who was a conduit for money, counterfeit
notes, arms and recruiting agents for Pakistan-based militants operating
from Nepal. Despite the election victory of the Naveen Patnaik-led Biju
Janata Dal (BJD) in Orissa, the increasing strength of Naxalites and Maoists
in his state cannot be overlooked. It seems the whole of east India,
extending as far as eastern Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra, is being run by
parallel administrations of various Marxist and Maoist groups.

In West Bengal, the Congress-Trinamul Congress combine has successfully
beaten the Marxists in their own game. So far only the Marxists had stoked
violence against either "class enemies" or "deviationists" exploiting
occasionally genuine but mostly imaginary grievances of the masses. While
fighting a relentless battle against the Marxists, Mamata Banerjee has
internalised many of these traits and in the process the Marxists are
getting a taste of their own medicine.

Incidentally, what has happened to all the NGOs who had screamed hoarse
following the roughing up of some young men and women at the hands of some
ruffians styling themselves as activists of Ram Sene in a Mangalore pub?
None of these rent-a-cause activists were seen when human rights and the
rule of the law are being trampled upon in Lalgarh so brazenly. Their
silence speaks loudly about their hypocrisy.

The occasional clashes between Maoists and Marxists, however, do not mean
that there’s any real difference between the two. Both believe in
dictatorship and snuffing out of dissent. They may differ on strategy, but
not about goals. Also, at times, Marxists and Maoists kill each other, not
because of sharp differences on fundamentals but because violence is central
to their creed.

While the Congress in New Delhi celebrates its return to power, the ground
situation is not improving in the violence-affected eastern parts of the
country. In fact, the only state government that has succeeded in building
up a counter-force to Naxalites is of Chhattisgarh, which is under pressure
from Left intellectuals and the Centre to disband this counter-terror force.
But now that the West Bengal ruling party’s secret storage of arms and
ammunition at village level has been exposed, it would be worth watching how
the Centre will act.

Balbir K. Punj

 
http://jharkhandforum.wordpress.com/2009/06/19/jharkhand-forum-adivasi-and-naxal-violent-protest-movement-in-lalgarh-west-bengal/

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