[The author is one of the earliest legends of the "Naxalbari" current - the
hero of "liberated" Gopiballavpur.
Later came to lead, one of the innumerable factions that arose out of
"Naxalbari"- the Provisional Central Committee, CPI(ML), or more popularly
PCC, CPI(ML).

Gopiballavpur is pretty close to Lalgarh under the same Jhargram
sub-division in Paschim Medinipur district.

The otherwise fairly detailed account, for whatever reasons, does not mark
out June 12 2008 as the turning point.
On June 10, the Hindustan Times carried an interview by Koteswar Rao, better
known as Kishanji:
Quote
I personally ordered the attack on the chief minister. We had to lay one
kilometer of cables through the fields. However, during inspection, we found
that mice had chewed it up at several places. So, we had to repair it.
Unquote
(Ref: <
http://www.ilps-web.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1817&Itemid=38
>.)

That was the time when Maoists started coming overground. Face the TV
cameras with their faces covered and rifles slung on the back.
On the 12th the mayhem began. The murders and all. Particularly one became
too infamous. A young agricultural labourer, Salku Soren, with the CPI(M)
was killed. His corpse was made to rot in the open for days.
On June 18, the Joint Forces commenced the march.
On June 20, the Lalgarh Poice Station was recaptured, after a break of 7
months and within about a week of the mayhem had begun.

Just compare this with:
Quote
“I know an action (sic) is perhaps impending,” said Koteswar Rao, or
Kishnaji, the second in command of the Indian Maoists, in an exclusive
interview to the Hindustan Times. “But let them try once. It will be the
last time they will eye this territory.”
Unquote
(Ref: <
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Welcome-to-India-s-newest-secret-state/H1-Article1-419859.aspx
>.)
That was June 10 or thereabout.

Now there is a stalemate of sorts. The Maoist "actions" are continuing.
People are being killed. Mass actions have almost come to a halt. The
administration formally "dominates".]

http://otheraspect.freewebpage.org/LalgarhUprising.html

Lalgarh A People’s Uprising Subverted by the Ultra-Leftists

Santosh Rana


Lalgarh is in the Jhargram sub-division of West Midnapore district in West
Bengal (WB). It is part of the Paschimanchal (western zone) of the State,
being an extension of the Chhotanagpur plateau which lies mostly in
Jharkhand.

With its laterite soil of low water-retention capacity and Sal-Mahua
forests, the area differs from the Bengal plains both geographically and
culturally. It is actually part of the Jharkhand cultural region. Nearly 30
percent of the population are Scheduled Tribes (ST), 20 percent Scheduled
Castes (SC) and the rest are communities like Kudmi-Mahatos, Telis,
Kumbhars, Bagals, Rajus, Tambulis, Khandaits and others. The Kudmi-Mahatos
are the biggest among the rest. They had been treated as tribals till 1935
when they were de-scheduled. The Mahatos, Bagals and some other communities
are actually semi-tribals who have been partly Sanskritized but still retain
their tribal characteristics. Now they are treated as Other Backward Classes
(OBC). There are other OBC communities like Kumbhar, Tanti, Teli and others.
But in West Bengal, benefits for OBCs started late. Even now, there is very
little reservation for OBCs in West Bengal. It is only 7 percent, and, that
too, in government jobs. There is no reservation for the OBCs in higher
education in WB. The SC communities living in the region (Bagdi, Dom, Jele,
Mal, Bauri, etc,) are so backward that they are unable to get government or
semi-government jobs through reservations. The tribals are 30 percent of the
population locally, but in local jobs, they get only the 6 percent
reservation that is the State average for the STs. As a consequence of all
these factors, the people of this region have very little participation in
government and semi-government jobs or in the administration.
This has many devastating effects, especially in the field of education.
Among the primary school teachers, there are only 6 percent STs though the
STs are 30 percent of the population. So there are many primary schools
where the students are Santhals and Mundas but the teachers are non-tribals
who do not understand the language of the students. This creates a language
barrier between the teachers and the students. Apart from poverty, this is
one of the reasons for the large drop-out rates among the tribals. Those
tribal boys and girls who manage to reach the portals of higher, especially
scientific and technical, learning are systematically excluded by defying
the laws regarding positive discrimination. For example, the STs are
deprived of their admission quotas in medical and engineering colleges by
the West Bengal government. Since 2001, the rules of admission have been
manipulated in such a way that 90 percent of the ST quotas remain
unfulfilled in medical education.
Due to the laterite soil and lack of irrigation, agriculture is poor and
uncertain. Forests provided some means of livelihood traditionally but the
colonial forest policy deprived the people of this source. Those policies
were continued even after independence. Unemployment, poverty, illiteracy
and hunger are everyday companions of the people. This zone has a high
concentration of agricultural labourers. In West Bengal as a whole,
agricultural labourers are 25 percent of the main workers but in this
region, they are 50 percent. Concentration of agricultural labourers and
lack of employment is the cause of seasonal migration, known as going
“Namal” (low lands of the Gangetic plains). There are also cases of
migration to far-off places like Gujarat, Maharastra and Madhya Pradesh.

The Uprising
On the first week of November 2008, the Chief Minister of WB had gone to
Salboni to inaugurate a steel plant of the Jindals under the SEZ scheme. The
Maoist squads operating in the area blasted a land-mine on his return route.
It missed the target but the State government ordered night-raids in the
villages of the Lalgarh block. Since the colonial days, night-raids on
tribal villages by police take the form of inhuman attacks on the people,
unrestricted by any law. The police repression ignited a massive uprising of
the masses. The Santhals were the main force in the uprising but other
communities like the Mundas and the Mahatos also joined the struggle. The
Bharat Jakat Majhi (traditional headmen) Marwah — Association of Majhis —
was at the forefront of the struggle at the initial phase. Different
factions of Jharkhand Party and the CPI(ML) also joined the movement and it
spread to adjoining areas in Jhargram, Bankura and Purulia. It took the form
of a blockade of the highways and some other roads. For nearly a week, the
entire region was blocked. At this stage, the leadership of the Majhi Marwah
entered into negotiations with the administration. The administration
conceded some of their demands and they decided to withdraw the blockade.
However, the younger sections refused to withdraw the blockade at this
stage. A People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCPA) was constituted
and the blockade continued. At the time of its formation, there were people
of different political opinions in this committee though it was dominated by
Maoist cadres and sympathizers. In the first week of December, the PCPA
entered into negotiations with the government and withdrew the blockade. The
terms of agreement were more or less the same as those negotiated by the
Majhi Marwah. The movement was so strong that the administration had to
withdraw eight police camps from the sensitive areas by the middle of
November. It was a great victory of the people.

Opportunities Lost
After the withdrawal of police camps, the people were in a victorious mood
and the movement was spreading to new areas. An opportunity was found where
the awakened masses could be mobilized to establish organs of self-rule on
the basis of democratic principles. Just six months previously the Panchayat
election was held in the area. The CPI(M) had lost Lalgarh Panchayat Samiti
(block Panchayat) and most of the Gram-Panchayats in Lalgarh. Different
factions of the Jharkhand Party had own. Now, there was an opportunity to
activate the Panchayats and to exercise control over them through the
Gram-Sansads (a statutory body where every voter is a member) and to demand
more financial and administrative powers in the hands of the Panchayats
(like some power of control over the police and the administration of
forests, village-level planning and their execution, the running of the
NREGA, authority to issue BPL cards, etc.). Such measures would strengthen
democracy at the village-level and prepare the ground for the masses to
demand self-rule and autonomy.

But the Maoists operating in the area had a different plan. They wanted to
utilize the uprising to create an area where the rule of the Maoist Party
and their squads would be established, an area where there would be no
opposition, not even any differing voice. So they tried to abolish all other
parties and social organizations from the Belpahari and the Lalgarh blocks.
The differences with the Majhi Marwah was objectively not such as could not
be resolved within a democratic framework. This association of “Majhis” had
no landlords or even rich peasants among them. When the CPI(M) had tried to
impose its one-party rule in nearby Jamboni few years back, the Majhis
played an important role in mobilizing the masses in their fight for
democracy. But the Maoists wanted to abolish all social and political
organizations which would not abide by their dictates.

The PCPA led by the Maoists issued a leaflet announcing the trial of
Nityananda Hembrom, the head of the Majhi Marwa in a “people’s court.” They
did not stop at that. They issued orders that everybody living in the area
of influence of the Majhi Marwah would have to join processions called by
them. Some people under the influence of Majhi Marwah defied this order.
Many of them were beaten and some were killed. The murder of Sudhir Mandi in
the last week of November by the Maoists created a major split among the
masses. Sri Sudhir Mandi was the Chairman of Belpahari Panchayat Samiti in
2003-08. He belonged to the Jharkhand Party. He was a poor peasant having
one acre of Dahi (infertile highland). Even after remaining Chairman of
Panchayat Samiti for five years, he lived in his traditional mud-house with
thatched roof. On the day of his murder, he had gone to the market to sell
Sabui grass, a grass used for rope making and gathered only by the very
poor. But to the Maoists, he was a class-enemy. A poor tribal is a
class-enemy simply because he refused to carry out their order.

The Panchayat election was held in June 2008. Earlier Panchayats had failed
because they functioned bureaucratically. A democratic functioning of the
Panchayats was possible now with the supervision of the awakened masses. But
the Maoists have no respect for democratic processes or democratically
elected Panchayats. They beat up the Panchayat members and stopped them from
functioning according to their mandate, They set up “people’s committees”
with people loyal to them. In many villages, this loyalty was extracted by
coercion. To them, these “people’s committees” were the organs of people’s
rule in the area and had been given the power to impose any amount of tax
and punishment through beatings or murder. The “accused” had nowhere to go
for a hearing or an appeal. An Anganwadi worker earning Rs.1,500 per month
had to pay a tax of Rs.500, a schoolteacher had to pay Rs.5,000, a small
brick-kiln owner Rs.25,000, etc.

For seven months, there was no police in the area. During the period before
the Lok Sabha election, the CPI(M) government was so frightened by the
memories of Nandigram that they withdrew all administration in the area and
left it to the PCPA. After the withdrawal of the state, the armed squads of
the Maoists were the only armed forces in the area. Of course, there were
CPI(M) squads in nearby areas. During the Lok Sabha election, the people in
the CPI(M)-dominated areas were forced to vote for the CPI(M) while in the
Maoist-dominated areas the people were not allowed to come to the polling
booths. Thus there was “vote boycott” in nearly 75 booths with approximately
50,000 voters. The CPI(M) won the Jhargram Lok Sabha seat with a margin of
nearly three lakh votes, the highest margin in the State. In the State as a
whole, the CPI(M) lost heavily to the Congress-Trinamul combine and was
totally in the doldrums. In many areas, the people living under the rule of
CPI(M) thugs availed of this opportunity and raised the banner of revolt. It
happened in Khejuri and many other areas in East Midnapur.

In the Lalgarh block, Dharampur Gram Panchayat was under the control of the
CPI(M). During the Panchayat election, no other political party was allowed
to set up a candidate. Even after the November uprising, this area was under
the control of the CPI(M). The CPI(M) was actually using Dharampur as a base
to attack people’s movements. Anuj Pandey, the notorious leader of the
CPI(M) in Dharampur enjoyed the protection of his armed squads and the state
police. After the Lok Sabha election, there was a popular revolt in
Dharampur which was aided by the Maoist squads. Anuj Pandey fled to Midnapur
town and his house was burnt and smashed. After this success, the Maoists
openly held public meetings and press conferences in Lalgarh ¬announcing the
area as a liberated zone. Making the PCPA irrelevant, they announced that
they were leading the whole movement. They would mobilize thousands of
tribal men and women to resist the police, they announced.
The Indian state was waiting for this opportunity. Buddhadeb Bhattacharya,
the Chief Minister of West Bengal, abandoned all his federalist and Left
pretensions and prayed to Chidambaram to send central forces. The Indian
state readily agreed with the condition that the Maoist Party would be
banned. The Chief Minister of West Bengal accepted the condition (though
some Left Front partners objected) and Centre-State joint operations started
in Lalgarh.

In the face of this joint operation, the Maoists tried their best to
mobilize the people for a mass resistance. It was expected by many
well-wishers that the tribal men and women with their traditional bows and
arrows would resist the police. It was being claimed that the paramilitary
forces would have to proceed to Lalgarh over mountains of corpses. But
nothing like that happened. On the first day, the Maoists mobilized some
people for a mass resistance. The police fired some tear-gas shells and
lathicharged them to remove the blockade. Subsequently, the police and
paramilitary forces reached Kantapahari, the capital of Maoist rule in
Lalgarh for six months, without any mass resistance. The squads placed some
landmines here and there but they were in no way an effective deterrent to
the paramilitary forces.

Now the paramilitary forces are setting up camps in Lalgarh and Belpahari.
The State government is sending high-level committees to promote the
“development” of Lalgarh. How far the paramilitary forces will succeed in
“sanitizing” the area or the government succeed in promoting development is
to be seen. But one thing is certain. The uprising has been suppressed. The
state had to withdraw in November 2008. In June 2009, it reasserted itself.
This is a defeat for the uprising.

Whether the defeat is temporary and how and when the people will rise again
in mass movements depends on many factors. But people interested in the
revolutionary transformation of our society must analyze the movement and
draw proper lessons.
The movement was powerful enough to force the state to withdraw in November
2008 because (i) all the democratic forces in the region participated in the
movement and a very strong people’s unity was forged, and (ii) there was
division in the enemy camp with the contradictions between the Centre and
State and between the Trinamul and the CPI(M) playing their role.

By March 2009, the situation was fast changing. The coercion on the people
for “collection” and forcible participation in processions, suppression of
all opposition by beatings, garlanding with shoes and killings were
destroying the democratic content of the movement. The uprising was losing
its internal strength. Then the squads resorted to more coercion and terror
to show their “support” to the outside world. It reached its peak during the
Lok Sabha election when the squads with guns went from village to village
telling the people that they would be punished if they would go to the
polling booths to vote. On the polling day, a landmine was blasted to kill
some polling personnel. All these activities further alienated the masses.

When the joint armed forces started their campaign, only the advanced
sections and cadres were ready for some resistance with landmines. The
people decided to flee their villages and take shelter in the surrounding
villages in Jhargram and Bankura. While the people’s democratic unity was
disrupted, the ruling classes bridged some of their differences. The Central
government offered all help to the State government in its fight against the
“Maoists”.

Apart from tactical mistakes and mistakes on the question of united front,
the Maoists hold a grossly wrong understanding of the nature of people’s
power. They hold that absolute power in the hands of their party is
equivalent to people’s power. They want a system where there will be no
election on the basis of universal suffrage and no opposition party.
“People’s Committees” would be formed with people loyal to them and they
would decide everything. They tried to use the favourable situation in
Lalgarh to start an experiment in political power on a miniature scale. So
they imposed their “144” against all other political and social
organizations in the area of their control. They did not allow a campaign
car of the CPI(ML)-New Democracy, with a red flag hoisted on it, to pass
through the area. The car was allowed to leave only after the red flag was
pulled down. Same was the fate of a vehicle carrying a flag of the Jharkhand
Party (Aditya).

In Lalgarh, the people’s uprising combined with the isolation of the CPI(M)
forced the state to withdraw for some six months and the Maoists got an
opportunity to practice what they understand as people’s rule. It is to be
noted that they did not raise any class-issue or the issue of the people’s
rights over the forests. They simply identified activists and supporters of
other political parties as “class enemies” and killed them. These are the
basic reasons for the failure of the movement.
The people of Lalgarh and the whole of Paschimanchal will certainly learn
from the experiences of the uprising and rebuild their struggle for “Self
Rule”, an aspiration which expressed itself during the Jharkhand movement
and more explicitly during the November uprising. This will be a self rule
where organs of political power will be elected by the people on the basis
of universal suffrage and where these organs will seize all economic and
political powers. They will certainly smash the limitations imposed by
bourgeois dictatorship on the democratic aspirations of the people. But
neither the people of Lalgarh nor the people of India will ever accept the
one-party rule of any political party.

Published in For A New Democracy, July-September 2009

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