SEZ: Corporate Statehood Defined

By C.R Bijoy

01 July, 2009
Countercurrents.org

The SEZ Act ( Special Economic Zone Act ) heralds the integration of
the powers of the executive, the elected institutions and the
judiciary, centralisd in the SEZ Authority – the Development
Commissioner (DC) and/or the developer (company) – paving the way for
the creation of of a political and economic entity, separate from the
Indian state. SEZs internally are structured for the establishment of
authoritarian capitalism with the Indian state as an instrument of
capital.

Imagine state sanctioned and protected small and mid-sized cities
built, operated, owned, and governed by ‘developers’ scattered all
over the country….no elected local government to bother about….heavily
state subsidised export-oriented economic enclaves ostensibly to
generate foreign exchange and foreign investment; insulated, free and
secured from the vagaries of the rest of the already liberalised
economy….a walled-in heavily guarded enclosure with businesses,
residences and entries strictly defined, regulated and controlled by
an ‘Authority’ that also controls and regulates provision of all goods
and services within these enclaves including water, electricity,
communication and transportation, provision of essential and consumer
goods, health, education, housing, sanitation, finance, entertainment
and culture. With subjects as revenue, internal security, law and
order and the justice system falling within the scope of the
‘Authority’ the picture is almost complete – the establishment of
‘corporate states’ or sovereign corporate-owned private states except
really in matters of defence and foreign affairs. The Special Economic
Zones Act, 2005 has within it all the trappings for the conceptions of
such political entities.

Redefining the Governance Structure

Though the SEZ Act or its Rules does not specify, the Model SEZ Policy
advocated by the Central government for the State governments states
that: "The State Government will declare SEZ as Industrial Township
and if necessary, relevant Act would be amended so that SEZ can
function as a governing and autonomous body as provided under Article
243(Q) of the Constitution" (item 10). In line with this, as local
governance being in the State List (List II of Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution), various state policies on Special Economic Zones (SEZs)
as that of Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala,
Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and West
Bengal envisage the notification of these zones by the governors of
the respective states as “industrial townships” under Article 243Q of
the Constitution. This exempts them from the provisions of Part IX of
the Constitution, which provides for elected local governments, i.e.
municipalities. An industrial township authority is constituted
instead with the same powers and duties as a municipal body with
nominees from the Developer and the State government with powers
including licensing, provision of infrastructure and planning. The
developer constructs the zone and effectively controls the local
government.

Further, the SEZ Act provides for the creation of a Special Economic
Zone Authority (sub-section 1 of section 31) headed by a
government-appointed ‘Development Commissioner’ for one or more
Special Economic Zones (sub-section 1 of section 11) who will govern
the Zone primarily to facilitate economic growth. The DC may be
assigned additional powers and functions by the Board of Approval
(subsection 4 of section 9). The Central government can also modify or
repeal any Central law and any rules or regulations by mere
notification in its application to SEZs with the exception of ‘matters
relating to trade unions, industrial and labour disputes welfare of
labour including conditions of work, provident funds, employers’
liability, workmen’s compensation, invalidity and old age pensions and
maternity benefits applicable in any Special Economic Zones’ (section
49) including any provisions of SEZ Act other than sections 54 (power
to add to omit any enactment provided in the First Schedule of the Act
containing a list of enactment for payment of taxes, duties or cess)
and 56 (power of the Central government to remove difficulties in
operationalisation of the provisions of the Act). This section gives
overriding power to the Central government over the Parliament and the
State governments in empowering SEZ Authority. The State Governments
are by law to make available water, electricity (uninterrupted) and
such other services to the proposed Special Economic Zone Units and
Developer (rules d of 5).

Together with the industrial township authority, the governance
structure webs the central and state government as instruments of
legitimacy and power of the developer company.

Governance Defined

The powers of the DC include infrastructure and public services by
agreement with the Developer (subsection 11 of section 3). There shall
be no investigation, search or seizure in a Special Economic Zone by
any agency or officer without the permission of the DC (section 22)
except in the case of ‘notified offenses’ notified by the Central
government (section 21). Even in the case of ‘notified offenses’, the
DC is to be intimated (section 22). Further, both civil and criminal
matters and any ‘notified offence’ falling within the Zone are to be
tried only by the special courts set up in SEZs (section 23). The High
Court of the State can hear appeals from these special courts
(section24). Put together, a separate investigative and judicial
process is in place where the DC plays a critical role in influencing
the outcome. State policies also envisage ‘separate and exclusive
arrangements’ for ‘law and order and control of crime’ within SEZ's.
The policing and justice system are sought to be brought under the
influence and control of the SEZ Authority.

Every person, whether employed or residing or required to be present
in an SEZ, are to be provided an identity card by the DC (section 46)
which will be used to regulate ‘the entry of persons to the processing
area’ of the SEZ (rule 70). The processing area and Free Trade and
Warehousing Zone are to be fully secured with specified entry and exit
points (rule 2 of 11). The processing area is moreover accessible to
‘authorized persons’ only (rule 4 of 11). The importance given to
securing the Zone physically as well as determining who can enter and
leave indicates intention of tight control within and isolation from
without.

While the Zones are not exempt from the application of labour laws
which anyway are flouted in the normal course in the country, the DC
who virtually controls life within the Zones, the work, personal,
social and political space is also in addition designated as the
Labour commissioner. By declaring the SEZs as ‘public utility service’
under the Industrial Disputes Act 1947 and the delegation of powers to
the DC under the Industrial Disputes Act and other related Acts,
dissent, trade union activities, democratic rights to protest and
labour rights are under tight leash if not extinguished as a right,
and if at all, are to be mere concessions. Further, the Model Policy
advices exemption from the Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition)
Act, 1970 and Minimum Wages Act 1948, licensing widespread use of
contract labour system. This seeks to complete the project of
informalisation of work and casualisation of employment ensuring a
shift to preponderance of casual positions from full-time and
permanent or contract positions to ensure sustained depression of
wages, a critical factor for super profit generation.

The establishment of these privileged secure enclaves will in turn
spiral a spill-over into the surrounding region that rapidly would get
converted into captive peripheries sub-serving the needs of the Zones
by colonizing and diverting livelihood resources of people, primarily
land and other natural resources by the their take over and conversion
by real estate speculators, service providers, traders and businesses.

(C.R Bijoy is a writer and activist associated with Campaign for
Survival and Dignity, a coalition of struggle based mass organization
of forest dwellers. Email:[email protected])

[Labour File, Vol.6, Nos. 4-5, July-October 2008, pp.22-24]

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