Violence on the Left: Nandigram and the Communists of West Bengal
http://dissentmagazine.org/article/?article=1157
 
By Martha C. Nussbaum
AFTER A PERIOD of relative impotence, the Hindu-supremacist right in India has 
rebounded, with the December reelection of Bharatiya Janata Party candidate 
Narendra Modi as chief minister in Gujarat. Modi’s role in the mass murders of 
Muslims in that state in February 2002 has long been so well documented that he 
has been denied a visa to enter the United States. Recently, moreover, 
extensive corroboration of his role was elicited by a hidden-camera inquiry 
conducted by the news-magazine Tehelka. Despite overwhelming evidence that he 
is a mass murderer extraordinaire—or perhaps, because of it—Modi defied media 
predictions, and even exit polls, to win by a landslide, a victory in which 
fund-raising and politicking by Indians residing in the United States (40 
percent of Indian Americans are Gujarati) played a large role. Because the 
rival Congress Party, which controls the central government in a coalition, 
understands well the intense hatred of
 Muslims that animates many Gujarati Hindus, leading politicians tiptoed around 
the issue of sectarian violence, hoping to defeat the BJP in Gujarat on its 
weak economic record. Only Sonia Gandhi, courageously and repeatedly, denounced 
Modi’s reign of blood. (American Gujaratis responded with an e-mail campaign 
denouncing Gandhi in abusive language.) Hitler is revered as a hero in school 
textbooks in Gujarat. In Modi, those who worship at that shrine seem to have 
found the type of leader they seek. Let’s hope that the nation as a whole does 
not embrace his charismatic call to hate. 

Meanwhile, however, violence has been in the news from a very different part of 
the Indian political spectrum. People connected to the Communist government of 
West Bengal have been guilty of some extremely vile actions, including rape and 
murder, toward dissident peasants, in a struggle over land acquisition, and the 
government has done nothing to prevent these terrible things. This struggle has 
split the Indian left, between those who think that people on the left must 
maintain solidarity in the face of right-wing threats and those who insist on 
calling murder murder no matter who does it. It’s a conflict from which we can 
learn a lot, not only about Indian politics but also about what stance a 
contemporary left movement can reasonably and morally take on rural development 
issues. 

West Bengal’s Communist Regime
Communist parties played a significant role after independence in two Indian 
states, West Bengal and Kerala, but they rose to power only in the late 1960s. 
The Communist Party of India split in 1964 over the Sino-Indian War. The party 
currently dominant in West Bengal, known as the CPI(M) (Communist Party of 
India, Marxist) backed China and initially opposed democratic nationalism. 
Nonetheless, despite grumbling about “bourgeois democracy,” the party gradually 
came to accept a nation-friendly parliamentary role, espousing democracy, if 
with less than wholehearted enthusiasm. Significantly, Stalinism was never 
formally repudiated. Economist Amartya Sen tells of explaining to his daughter, 
around 1975, who that mustached man was on the huge posters in Howrah station, 
Kolkata: “Look at him carefully, Indrani, since you will not see his picture 
anywhere else in the world any more.” In 1977 the CPI(M) gained a majority in 
West Bengal, and it has ruled
 ever since. Jyoti Basu served as chief minister from 1977 until his retirement 
in 2000, when he was succeeded by the current chief minister, Buddhadeb 
Bhattacharjee. 

Although land reform was approved by West Bengal’s precommunist government, it 
was implemented under the communists, and West Bengal and Kerala remain the 
only two Indian states that have had successful land reform. There is wide 
agreement on both left and right that reform of these states’ quasi-feudal 
system of land tenure was essential not only to social equity but also to 
economic development. In other respects, however, the situation of the rural 
poor has not prospered under communist leadership. The great power of labor 
unions has caused a loss of employment in both West Bengal and Kerala, as 
industry seeks more friendly climates in neighboring states. 

ON THE CRUCIAL issues of health and education, Kerala’s Communists have 
performed far better than those in West Bengal, making the state, in some 
respects, a model of successful state-led development. Kerala provides 
universal health care and has achieved universal literacy among adolescents, 
through an aggressive and well-managed program of public education that 
includes the clever idea (pioneered in neighboring Tamil Nadu) of a nutritious 
midday meal, as a carrot to lead parents of working children to allow them to 
go to school. The Supreme Court of India has now said that all states must 
offer this meal, even specifying the number of calories it must contain (at 
least three hundred) and the number of grams of protein (eight to twelve). West 
Bengal, by contrast, has shown little creativity in either health or education. 
Infant mortality, it is true, is lower than in most Indian states, but 
distinctly higher than in Kerala. Maternal mortality figures
 are distressingly high, and a major cause is lack of access to decent health 
care in the rural areas. (A recent UNICEF report documents the alarming 
frequency with which women giving birth die because they simply cannot reach a 
hospital in time.) 

In education, the Pratichi Trust (established by Sen with his Nobel Prize 
money) has found that the education of the rural poor is in a very bad way, 
owing to lack of facilities, teacher absenteeism (around 20 percent), and the 
disgraceful practice of “private tuition” (teaching for money in rich pupils’ 
homes after school, which gives incentives to teachers not to teach in school, 
a practice protected by the corrupt teachers’ union). So, the record of the 
CPI(M) is mixed at best. One might also mention the CPI(M)’s neglect of the 
once-superb university system: Kolkata was the intellectual capital of the 
nation, and is no longer.

Rural self-government through the panchayat system exists in West Bengal, and, 
indeed, the state took a leading role in pioneering that system. It would be 
wrong to think that the Communists are distinctive in their support for this 
system, which now exists throughout the nation, has enjoyed constitutional 
protection since 1992, and has different, Gandhian roots. Although some 
panchayats operate well, what too often characterizes the panchayat system in 
West Bengal is the dictatorial way it operates: one hears of CPI(M) officials 
marching illiterate voters to the polls en masse: “turning out the vote” has an 
all too literal meaning. Nor could one reasonably say that communism has made 
much progress in eradicating class and caste in government. Indeed, as those 
familiar with Bengali nomenclature can recognize from names alone, the ruling 
elites are all firmly upper-caste Hindu, from elite backgrounds. This is true 
in all the major political parties,
 but one might have hoped it would have been less true in the CPI(M). (Muslims 
in West Bengal, as in most other Indian states, are disproportionately poor and 
ill-educated.) 

In Jyoti Basu, the CPI(M) had one of India’s most savvy politicians.. Whatever 
his failures on health and education, Basu combined a deep commitment to social 
equality with a canny awareness of the ways in which communism, to work for 
people, must be tempered by economic realism. He argued that communism’s 
fundamental commitment was to human welfare, and that in the present-day world, 
Bengal could achieve this only by allying itself, for certain purposes, with 
capitalist investment. For some time, the state has sought to attract both 
domestic and foreign capital, trying to convince industrialists that doing 
business in the state needn’t make them hostage to endless labor difficulties. 
Basu was (and still is, at the age of ninety-three) a consummate persuader and 
a pragmatist, and he had, and has, a superb ability to convince people to 
depart from ideology for the sake of a perceived common good. One of the 
state’s current problems is that
 Bhattacharjee is a much less able man, a dogmatic, unmoving hedgehog to Basu’s 
wily fox. 

The heart of the state’s current problems is the condition of rural 
agriculture. Although the state has done much to enhance the quality of rural 
agriculture, it cannot remain as heavily dependent upon agriculture as it has 
been, although there are those on the left who romanticize agriculture and 
resist industrialization as an evil. (This, too, was a Gandhian tradition.) If 
jobs are to be generated and incomes raised, industrial development is 
necessary. Effecting this shift will mean devoting less land to agriculture. 
The rural poor, however, are not eager to give up their land and their way of 
life. Why should they? The government that wants to effect such a transition 
peacefully will need to do more than offer fair value for land: it will need a 
long-term, well-established program of educational development and skills 
training, so that the people who are thrown off the land have employment 
opportunities in the firms that will open on that land. It
 does no good to tell people that industrialization creates jobs, if these are 
jobs that they themselves can’t possibly fill. The Bhattacharjee government 
appears not to understand any of this; it seems to think that when it decides 
on an industrial strategy, everyone should simply go along. 

UNFORTUNATELY for public debate, the CPI(M) has no credible opposition. The 
primary opposition party, the so-called “Trinamool Congress” headed by the 
theatrical self-promoter Mamata Banerjee (a Brahmin from a poor urban family, 
who poses one minute as the ally of the downtrodden and, the next, as the best 
friend of upper-caste large landowners) has no coherent development policy and 
has also allied itself opportunistically with the Hindu right, forming part of 
the coalition government that held power nationally before 2004. People 
committed to social equity stay with the CPI(M) because they have no 
alternative, and the government knows that. The CPI(M)’s key role in sustaining 
the Congress Party at the national level in the current coalition government 
adds to its arrogance. 

Singur and Nandigram
The first sign of trouble for the CPI(M)’s industrialization strategy came last 
year, when the government announced a deal to set up a Tata Group car plant in 
an agricultural area near Kolkata. Although the government claims 
(controversially) that it offered fair market value for the necessary land, the 
local inhabitants protested vigorously. The government’s basic idea, though 
contested by those who unduly romanticize agriculture, has won wide support 
from development thinkers (including Sen, for example), particularly in light 
of the fact that the Tata Group, an India-based corporation, has a record of 
sensitivity and decency on employment issues. The protests, moreover, were 
clearly staged by Mamata Banerjee to at least some extent, in a grab for 
personal power after a bad electoral defeat. Singur’s population is not 
overwhelmingly dependent on agriculture. Still, there were ominous signs for 
the future, such as the government’s lack of
 attention to transitional skills training and to public debate. Many people 
wondered why the government had selected this fertile tract of land for 
industrial development, rather than nonarable land closer to the city; the 
government refused to answer such questions. 

In addition, last year, a strange example of the government’s arrogance came to 
light in its handling of a tragic case of either murder or suicide. A young 
Muslim computer scientist, Rizwanur Rehman, married the daughter of a wealthy 
Hindu industrialist, Ashok Todi. Her family tried everything to break them up. 
The couple several times asked for police protection, in vain. Finally, the 
husband was found dead on a railroad track. The same (government-controlled) 
police, evidently eager to cozy up to capital by preventing any serious inquiry 
into the behavior of the Todis, quickly ruled the case a suicide without even a 
cursory investigation, although there was a good deal of evidence against such 
a conclusion. The government then defended the bad behavior of the police. 
Finally, after a public outcry, the CBI (India’s FBI) came in to do a real 
investigation, which continues.

Now to Nandigram. In 2006, the government announced plans to build a chemical 
plant in that district, west of Kolkata. The firm operating it was to be an 
Indonesia-based firm that lacked the good labor record of the Tatas. As in the 
case of Singur, there was little consultation and no program of skills training 
and employment transition. The resistance of local people (considerably poorer 
and more dependent on agriculture than the people of Singur) was both genuine 
and fierce, although no doubt Mamata Banerjee encouraged it. In February 2007, 
the government announced that it had abandoned the plan, but people didn’t 
believe it. Fears of dislocation and dispossession led peasants to form a group 
(very likely aided by Mamata) that seized control of several villages in the 
area, driving out by force the CPI(M) supporters who lived there.

On March 14, 2007, the government went in to seize control of these villages. 
Its pretext was that Maoist rebels belonging to a Naxalite terrorist group were 
training there and had smuggled in firearms. No credible evidence supported 
this assertion, as even government home secretary Prasad Ranjan Roy said, 
departing from the orthodox Party line. Police went in to take control, but it 
is also clear that many of the armed men were from CPI(M) Party cadres, a kind 
of private Party-led army and not the official forces of law and order. Shots 
were fired, mostly (it appears) by these cadres. Around fourteen civilians, 
including women and children, were killed and seventy wounded. The government’s 
official story is that armed Maoist terrorists were organizing the villagers 
and had put women and children up front, while firing on the government’s men 
from behind them. This story is not credible, in light of the fact that many 
people were shot in the back. No
 less a figure than Jyoti Basu himself reproved the government for its 
authoritarian strategy, saying, “Is this the way the Left Front government 
should function? I have been told that the mob went violent but on the contrary 
I saw men with bullets in their back on TV. Why is it so?”

Although the government tried to prevent journalists and other observers from 
entering the area and questioning victims, some were able to get in. Historian 
Tanika Sarkar tells me that she personally saw marks of sexual assault on the 
bodies of young women and girls, and, at the local government-run hospital, saw 
scores of desperately injured people whom officials had ordered discharged, 
although they could not stand or walk. A doctor who refused to sign discharge 
papers had been transferred. 

As the months went on, things got worse. Although the CPI(M) tried to keep 
journalists out of the area, there is much evidence by now that armed Party 
cadres patrolled the villages, engaging in rape, assault, and murder. 
Opposition villagers were forcibly evicted from their homes, and many remain in 
temporary camps today, still vulnerable to violence. (Much of this is 
extensively documented in the report of an investigative People’s Commission 
published last summer.) In the late fall, things heated up, and numerous 
clashes were reported, again with Party cadres, not the official police, 
playing the aggressive role. The state’s high court ordered normalcy restored 
and refused to hear the government’s objections to the involvement of national 
forces (both police and investigators) in restoring law and order. Left Front 
chair Biman Bose scoffed at the court, calling its judgment 
“unconstitutional”—and was cited for criminal contempt. By now, the
 nation’s Supreme Court has agreed to review the matter on both sides, at the 
same time chiding the CPI(M) for wasting people’s time with litigation rather 
than doing something constructive for the people of Nandigram. By November, 
violence escalated, again with Party cadres, not officers of the law, taking 
the aggressive role. Indeed, the police were withdrawn, and the chief minister 
openly handed the area over to the cadres, stating that he was not just a chief 
minister, but also a Party person. Graves from these assaults are still being 
discovered by the central police force.. It is alleged that 
government-controlled hospitals were reluctant to help the victims. Chief 
Minister Bhattacharjee defended the use of force, saying that the villagers had 
been “paid back in their own coin.” 

Critics and the Left Split 
Enter the governor. A governor, in an Indian state, is a basically ceremonial 
officer, usually nonpartisan. West Bengal’s current governor is Gopal Krishna 
Gandhi, the youngest grandson of the Mahatma, a man of delicacy, grace, and 
sympathy. A strict vegetarian and supporter of animal rights, he has a 
passionate interest in bird-watching. One might have thought this peaceful, 
cultivated man hardly a match for the thuggish party leaders of the CPI(M). One 
would have been wrong. Taking a degree of initiative unusual for a governor, he 
issued a lengthy public statement. Nandigram, he said, had become “a war zone,” 
and “No government or society can allow a war zone to exist without immediate 
and effective action.” The treatment of villagers “was against all norms of 
civilized political behavior.” He urged peace talks, a call in which he was 
joined by Jyoti Basu. He ended by saying, “Enough is enough. Peace and security 
should be restored,
 without any delay, from where they have been evicted from Nandigram.” 

CPI(M) officials don’t like to be criticized, and they truculently denounced 
Gandhi’s speech. The state secretary, Biman Bose, said that Gandhi was 
“overstepping the constitutional limits of his office.. . . .[S]ome of his 
predecessors had to depart without completing their tenure.” India’s prime 
minister, Manmohan Singh, however, backed up Gandhi on November 20, asking the 
state government to restore law and order. “It is the duty of the State 
Government that all sections regardless of their political affiliations get 
protection of the law enforcement agencies. I understand the spontaneous 
outpouring of grief and anguish over the issue as expressed by the artists and 
intellectuals in Kolkata.” 

Singh was alluding to the public protest against the government’s violence in 
Nandigram led by leading Bengali artists and writers. West Bengal has always 
cared about intellectuals. It has the largest book fair in the world and a 
proud tradition of achievement in arts and letters, in religious, 
philosophical, and economic thought. (Sen’s Nobel Prize was occasion for a 
parade of approximately a million people in Kolkata in 1998, something 
difficult to imagine in New York or Chicago.) So it was no mere gesture when, 
shortly after the March 14 incident, leading historians Tanika Sarkar and Sumit 
Sarkar (joining other artists and activists who had begun protesting earlier) 
returned major literary awards that they had won from the government, saying 
that what had happened in Nandigram was even more shocking than the infamous 
British massacre of innocent civilians at Jallianwala Bagh in 1919, more 
shocking because one would not expect better behavior from
 the British, but one would from this left-wing government. “We are shattered,” 
said Tanika Sarkar. “All this has happened and there is not a word of shame or 
apology from the CPI(M) central committee or state committee.” By November, 
many more had joined the Sarkars. Leading members of the film industry 
boycotted the state’s film festival, and on November 14—the occasion to which 
Singh was alluding directly, a group of artists and writers, including 
filmmaker Aparna Sen and writer Mahasweta Devi, held a protest against the 
government in downtown Kolkata. Some claimed that the violence in Nandigram was 
comparable to the use of violence against Muslims by social groups allied with 
the BJP in Gujarat in 2002. 

THE CPI(M) government contains many decent people, dedicated to social welfare 
and equality. Among these, I am convinced, is Jasodhara Bagchi, chair of the 
West Bengal Women’s Commission, who has done a good deal to bring relief to 
women injured or raped in the violence. (Although she is accused of inaction in 
the People’s Commission report, and has been much criticized by protesting 
artists and writers for alleged inaction, the statements don’t seem to me 
correct: on March 28, she issued a very strong statement of protest against the 
March 14 violence, calling it a “shameful event,” and demanding both a thorough 
inquiry and compensation for the victims.) Similarly, the Institute of 
Development Studies Kolkata (IDSK), a government-funded think tank chaired by 
Bagchi’s husband, Amiya, a noted economist, has done a good deal of valuable 
intellectual work pertinent to the state’s economic crisis, including work on 
industrialization and
 agriculture. (I must divulge that these two people are personal friends—as are 
the Sarkars on the other side—and that I am an honorary professor at IDSK, 
though with no remuneration.) It is perhaps not surprising that people who can 
do good work within the government, despite its flaws, would be reluctant to 
denounce it publicly, and I do not condemn their failure to do so, particularly 
in light of the extremely low quality and the fascist ties of the opposition. 
Nonetheless, one who stands on and looks at these events as an outsider must 
conclude that the government’s actions are vile and utterly unacceptable.

It is this issue that has split India’s left. The artists and intellectuals 
I’ve named are in a few cases motivated by a woolly romanticism about 
agriculture and an ideological opposition to all industrial development. For 
this they should be criticized. Some of them may also have had unrealistic 
expectations for this government, whose Stalinists roots they have perhaps 
insufficiently appreciated. For this lack of caution they should also be 
criticized. They also, however, have had the courage of consistent moral 
principle, standing up against brutality even when the perpetrators are 
friends. For this they are to be greatly admired. Not so admirable, by 
contrast, have been the statements of some leftists to the effect that one 
should not criticize one’s friends, that solidarity is more important than 
ethical correctness. One may or may not trace this line to an old Marxist 
contempt for bourgeois ethics, but it is loathsome whatever its provenance. 

A particularly fatuous document of this kind was a letter authored by Noam 
Chomsky, signed by a number of Indian American intellectuals who should know 
better, and published in the Hindu, a leading national India newspaper, on 
November 22, 2007. Besides lauding the CPI(M) for “important experiments” for 
which it deserves no particular credit (such as “local self-government”), the 
letter reasons that people on the left ought to focus on opposition to the 
actions of the United States in Iraq, rather than fighting with one another. 
“This is not the time for division when the basis of division no longer appears 
to exist,” concludes Chomsky, having asserted, entirely without cause on that 
date, that things are basically back to normal and that the two sides have 
reconciled. This is the type of left politics that holds that the enemy of my 
enemy is my friend, no matter how many rapes and murders that friend has 
actually perpetrated. 

HERE WE ARRIVE at an issue that lies at the heart of all the leftist political 
movements of the twentieth century: is solidarity itself a major political 
value or is the basic value that of justice to each and every person, treating 
each and every one as an end? The latter vision is that of left-liberalism, 
which has always held that the purpose of a politics of human welfare is to 
improve the lives of individual human beings, and that each human being counts 
as equally worthy of respect. By contrast, “solidarity,” both on the 
communitarian right and on the antiliberal left, has suggested to many that the 
lives of individuals may and often must be sacrificed in the pursuit of class 
or group goals, and that worries about the justice of such sacrifices are 
irritatingly bourgeois. That’s really what the split in India is about, and it 
corresponds to a split between the Nehruvian/Gandhian founding of the nation 
and its long-standing communist
 tradition. Nehru and Gandhi knew that people come first and that each and 
every person is precious. Gandhi had an extremely rare ability to feel and 
express compassion not for “the masses” or “the proletariat,” but for each 
person who suffered. (He said that his goal was to “wipe every tear from every 
eye,” thus reminding his audience that suffering and death are uncompromisingly 
personal. Classes may be useful analytical categories, but it is individual 
people who weep.) In consequence, Gandhi eschewed violence against persons as a 
political tool, and he showed vividly what it was to treat the human body as a 
mere means, and what it was to treat it as an end. This politics of personhood 
survives in West Bengal, in the stance of Gopal Gandhi; in the protests of many 
artists and writers; and, also, in the courageous work of many individual 
members of the CPI(M). It appears to have been forgotten (if it was ever 
accepted) by the government’s
 central leadership. 

In assessing the specific situation of West Bengal, we must distinguish between 
the government’s industrial strategy, which I, like Amartya Sen, believe to be 
generally correct and the means the government chose to implement it, which are 
appalling. First, one should condemn the utter lack of provision for job 
transitions, made worse by more general failures in educational development. 
Second (the focus of Sen’s recent critique) one should condemn the government’s 
lack of interest in public debate and public discussion, to which one can now 
add condemnation of the rude and truculent treatment of reasonable opposition, 
such as that of the governor. Third, one must strongly condemn the government’s 
reliance on unofficial “private army” cadres. The rule of law requires that 
enforcement be carried out by the agents of the law. The private armies of 
Nandigram are in that sense no better than the private armies of the Hindu 
right. Fourth, one must
 condemn the government’s cavalier way with truth and evidence, as in the 
unsubstantiated allegations about Maoist activity in the area. Finally, and 
most strongly, one must utterly condemn the (apparently continuing, at least 
until very recently) acts of rape, murder, and assault against villagers, 
mostly by these “private armies.” 

What led to this breakdown in governance? The seeds of catastrophe lie, no 
doubt, in the never-sufficiently-de-Stalinized background of this Party, always 
suspicious of democracy, always used to treating people as agents of class 
struggle rather than as individual human beings who need specific life 
prospects if they are to give up their land. This general orientation toward 
human beings led to a lack of appreciation that an industrial strategy, even if 
basically correct, needs to focus on what real people are able to do and to be, 
rather than thinking only in statistical terms. Under Jyoti Basu the party 
would never have erred in this way, so one must also impute the disaster to 
inferior, insecure leadership, fearful of genuine debate and transparency. The 
arrogance of long electoral success contributed further to turn this insecurity 
into an aggressive strategy for total control of the rural areas. 

Is the comparison to the events of Gujarat, frequently heard on the right, but 
sometimes also on the left, illuminating? Not very, I believe. The murders of 
Muslims in Gujarat were part of a concerted antiminority strategy fueled by 
ethnic hatred. I have argued in these pages and elsewhere that the pogrom 
deserved to be called a genocide (“Genocide in Gujarat: The International 
Community Looks Away,” Summer 2003). People were killed simply because they 
were Muslims. The killings in Nandigram are examples of hideous lawlessness, 
and a determination to wipe out opposition, but there seems to be no ethnic or 
genocidal component to them. Sarkar’s comparison to Jallianwala Bagh (where the 
British, bent on total control, opened fire on peaceful demonstrators) is far 
more apt, and we might indeed see Bhattacharjee as a first cousin of General 
Reginald Dyer, unable to accept the reality of a human being who disagrees with 
him. 

On December 26, 2007, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee went out to Nandigram and issued 
a public apology. He spoke with regret of the need to win people’s hearts, and 
he again assured the local residents that the plan for the chemical plant had 
been scrapped. Has this group learned its lesson? One would hope that the wise 
public counsel of the governor—and, one imagines, the behind-the-scenes counsel 
of many others—have convinced the CPI(M) that “bourgeois democracy” requires 
listening, together with a focus on educational development. If that turns out 
to be the case, well and good. If the government returns to its arrogant ways, 
however, it will continue to need and deserve the criticism of fellow 
egalitarians, who must not allow solidarity to trump justice.



 Martha C. Nussbaum is Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and 
Ethics at the University of Chicago, appointed in the Philosophy Department, 
Law School, and Divinity School. She is an Affiliate of the Committee on 
Southern Asian Studies and a board member of the Human Rights Program. Among 
the pieces consulted for this article are an issue of Tehelka called “Why 
Nandigram?” November 24, 2007; Nandigram: What Really Happened?, the report of 
the People’s Tribunal, published in Delhi by Daanish Books in December 2007; an 
excellent two-part article by Amartya Sen, “The Industrial Strategy: 
Developments in West Bengal,” the Telegraph (Kolkata), December 29 and 30, 
2007; and Malini Bhattacharya, “Nandigram and the Question of Development,” 
Economic and Political Weekly, May 26, 2007. 

Lal Salam (Red Salute)

P (India)


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