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Government of India: Guilty as charged



*Here is a report from none other than a panel of the Planning Commission of
the Govt of India on the Naxalite violence in the country. Its verdict for
the Government of India is: GUILTY AS CHARGED.  *


<http://worldsikhnews.com/25%20June%202008/Image/SR%20final.pdf>There is no
end to the studies of popular discontent in India, and the Indian nation
state is always eager to find ways to control such uprisings of discontent.
That it fails strongly is a moot point, for it the main point is that it
wins. It has the army, the police, the required ability to brutalise its own
people and the complete lack of scruples. But after all that, New Delhi's
writ still does not run in nearly one-third of the country.

>From time to time, New Delhi's rulers keep setting up committees to study
the Naxalite problems. And for India, the Planning Commission is one of the
most reliable repository of comprehensive information. That it is also a
helpless witness to the government's unpardonable apathy to its important
proposals for remedying the situation all these years is a separate story.

The government however requires the Commission for hard statistical facts
and figures, and understanding of what is happening at the ground level.
That after all this, the GoI leaves all planning to the magnates of the
market economy is also a different story.



Quite rightly, the report says that poverty does create deprivation but
other factors like denial of justice, human dignity, cause alienation and
this results in the conviction that relief can be had outside the system by
breaking the current order asunder.


The story that we are to tell you is based on a report now in the possession
of the WSN that was commissioned by the government to understand Naxal
problem. That even such a wonderfully produced report may also end up with
the usual obligatory list of remedial measures should not reduce its
importance since these measures have remained unimplemented for years.

*"Development Challenges in Extremist Affected Areas" *is the title of the
report of an expert group set up by the Planning Commission of the
Government of India. Dated March 2008, the report contains meticulously
collected latest facts and figures, rigorously examines the causes of the
continuing economic exploitation and social discrimination in the adivasi
and dalit-inhabited areas even after 60 years of independence. It is
significant that this particular expert group was set up by the government
in May 2006, in the background of increasing Naxalite activities in Andhra
Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Jharkhand and Orissa.

The group consisted of a variety of people ranging from veteran
ex-bureaucrats (like D Bandyopadhya who chaired it, and is well known for
his implementing the Operation Barga land reform measure in West Bengal, and
S R Sankaran who heads the Hyderabad-based Committee of Concerned Citizens
which had been trying to bring the Andhra Pradesh government and the Maoist
rebels to the negotiating table) to retired police officers like Prakash
Singh, ex-director general of police, Uttar Pradesh and Ajit Doval, former
director of the Intelligence Bureau. From the other end of the spectrum, we
have well known activists and academics like K Balagopal of the human rights
movement and Sukhadeo Thorat, chairman of the University Grants Commission
and a champion of Dalit emancipation, among others.

That a mixed bag of this nature, consisting of experts from different
disciplines with differing opinions, could prepare a consensus report on
several contentious issues and come up with a unanimously agreed set of
recommendations, suggests that all is not lost. But all will be, given the
Government of India's ability at remaining deaf and dumb.



While the official attitude is to blame the Naxalites for violence, and call
all actions "an act of cowardice", this report talks about the structural
violence implicit in the social and economic system and underlines how
Naxalites have indeed carried out certain socio-economic reforms in their
areas of control. These are the reforms that the executive ought to have
implemented. The deep shade of Red is replacing the judiciary and the police
in ensuring law and order for the poor and the oppressed.


*Dalits, Adivasis and Naxalites*

Although the terms of reference did not specifically mention Naxalites (or
Maoists), the group's brief was to identify causes of unrest and discontent
in areas affected by "widespread displacement, forest issues, insecure
tenancies and others forms of exploitation like usury, land alienation and
imperfect market conditions…". Clearly, such areas fall in the
above-mentioned five states – and significantly enough, the group organised
field visits in these areas to observe the situation at first hand, on the
basis of which it has come out with stark revelations that expose the
culpability of the state in denying the poor their basic rights, the
treachery of a corrupt bureaucracy to implement the laws, and its complicity
with a trigger-happy police to suppress popular protest.

Maintaining that "the main support for the Naxalite movement comes from
dalits and adivasis", the group concentrated on these two sections (termed
as scheduled castes and scheduled tribes respectively in official parlance)
which comprise about one-fourth of India's population, the majority living
in rural areas.

Apart from the high levels of poverty, the dalits suffer from various types
of disadvantages like limited employment opportunities, political
marginalisation, low education, social discrimination, and human rights
violation. As for the adivasi population, besides remaining backward in all
aspects of human development including education, health, nutrition, etc,
they have been steadily losing their traditional tribal rights and command
over resources. The report points out in this connection the
administration's failure to implement the protective regulations in
scheduled areas, which has resulted in land alienation, forced eviction from
land, dependence of the tribals on moneylenders – made worse often by
"violence by the state functionaries".

Incidentally, every dalit and adivasi poor in India have not joined the
Naxalite movement. There are many states with pockets of high proportion of
adivasis and dalits but little Naxalite influence, as in Punjab, Haryana,
Gujarat and Rajasthan. The report quite rightly points out that "poverty
does create deprivation but other factors like denial of justice, human
dignity, cause alienation resulting in the conviction that relief can be had
outside the system by breaking the current order asunder". It adds that for
such a violent upheaval to happen, there is the likelihood of the "spread of
awareness and consciousness". And this is where, as the report suggests, the
Maoists have played a significant role by stepping into the craters of dalit
and adivasi deprivation in the five states, and organising the deprived for
their rights.

Its authors situate the Naxalite movement in the historical context of the
"development paradigm pursued since independence", which they assert, has
"aggravated the prevailing discontent among marginalised sections of
society". While explaining the current surge in Naxalite activities, they
slam the neoliberal "directional shift in government policies towards
modernisation and mechanisation, export orientation, diversification to
produce for the market, withdrawal of various subsidy regimes and exposure
to global trade" as "an important factor in hurting the poor in several
ways".

Following this conceptual approach, they look at the Maoist movement in a
way that is different from the prevalent official attitude which primarily
blames the Naxalites for the violence. Instead, the present report lays
stress on the "structural violence which is implicit in the social and
economic system" and which in the opinion of its authors prompts the radical
groups to justify their own violent acts. The authors of the report admit
that the Naxalites have indeed carried out certain socio-economic reforms in
their areas of control.



It is better that India recognises this reality and legitimises the positive
Naxalite contribution to the implementation of the pro-poor laws – which the
state had failed to carry out. In other words, the government should
negotiate a settlement that allows the Naxalites to run their administration
in their pockets of control.


*Naxalites as a Surrogate State*

The report brings out that the Maoists are actually carrying out the reforms
that the executive ought to have implemented, and are replacing the
judiciary and the police in ensuring law and order for the poor and the
oppressed.

In the forest areas of Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, the Vidarbha region of
Maharashtra, Orissa and Jharkhand, the Naxalites have led the adivasis to
occupy forest lands that they should have enjoyed in the normal course of
things under their traditionally recognised rights, but which were denied by
government officials through forest settlement proceedings that have "taken
place behind the back and over the head of the adivasi forest dwellers".
While the government remained indifferent to the need for paying minimum
wages to the adivasi tendu leaf gatherers in Andhra Pradesh, the Naxalites
by launching a movement have secured increases in the rate of payment for
the picking. The practice of forced labour in the same state, under which
the toiling castes had to provide free labour to the upper castes, was done
away with due to a "major upsurge led by the Naxalites in the late 1970s and
early 1980s of the last century…". Commenting on the "peoples courts" set up
by the Naxalites in their areas of control, the report observes that
"disputes are resolved in a rough and ready manner, and generally in the
interest of the weaker party".

The report also reveals how despite change of government, successive rulers
suppress the poor and the disadvantaged. There is a design behind this
continuity. The rulers, irrespective of party affiliations, are
lackadaisical and sloppy in implementing pro-poor legal measures. But the
moment the Maoists try to enforce those measures they are quick to use
against them with extreme efficiency another set of laws – the draconian
laws that have been enacted over the years (e g, Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Act; Chhattisgarh Public Security Act; Andhra Pradesh
(Suppression of Disturbances) Act, etc).

Asserting that the Naxalite movement has to be "recognised as a political
movement with a strong base among the landless and poor peasantry and
adivasis", the experts warn the government against resorting to
"security-centric" measures like setting up vigilante groups such as Salwa
Judum in Chhattisgarh. Instead, they have called for "an ameliorative
approach with emphasis on a negotiated solution", and urged the government
for a resumption of the peace talks with the Naxalites which was initiated
in October 2004, but broke down in January 2005.

As for the Indian state, the experts have been rather frank.

They have shown how, in quite a large swathe of inaccessible territory, the
state's writ does not run, and the Naxalites have been able to establish a
parallel and alternative order that has largely benefited the poor –
especially the dalits and adivasis. It is better that India recognises this
reality and legitimises the positive Naxalite contribution to the
implementation of the pro-poor laws – which the state had failed to carry
out. In other words, the government should negotiate a settlement that
allows the Naxalites to run their administration in their pockets of control
– on the lines of the settlement arrived at with the Naga rebels of the
National Socialist Council of Nagaland (Isak Muivah) who have not given up
their arms and run a parallel government in parts of Nagaland.

Referring to the Indian government's conciliatory approach to such
insurrectionary groups, the authors of the report raise the legitimate
question: "Why a different approach to the Naxals?" It is for the Prime
Minister to answer this, since he is the one who calls Naxalite violence the
most serious internal security challenge faced by India.

25 June, 2008

worldsikhnews.com/25%20June%202008/Government%20of%20India%20Guilty%20as%20charged.htm

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