*http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl2704/stories/20100226270408800.htm

Behind the concern *

 ASHISH KOTHARI

 * In the name of national security, a FICCI report makes a thinly veiled
argument to open up central India for exploitation by corporations. *



* Adivasis in a camp run by Salwa Judum at Dornapal of Konta tehsil in
Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh. A file picture. According to official
statistics, 640 villages were laid bare, burnt to the ground and emptied
with the force of the gun and the blessings of the state. As many as 350,000
tribal people were displaced in Chhattisgarh. *

JUST as on climate change, everyone has an opinion on naxalism these days.
The latest to join the chorus is the Federation of Indian Chambers of
Commerce and Industry (FICCI). On November 9, FICCI released a report of its
Task Force on National Security and Terrorism. The report takes on the
question of terrorism from outside India and the internal security threats
brewing in central and northeastern India. The report refers to naxalism as
a “war in the heartlands” and is unequivocal in its stand that everything
must be done to defeat the forces of internal destabilisation represented by
Maoist groups. But while clothing its analysis in the garb of national and
local security, the report is actually a thinly veiled argument to open up
central India for exploitation by corporations.

Noting that “Maoist insurgency” has spread from 55 districts across nine
States in 2003 to 192 districts in 16 States, the report presents an
alarming picture of a situation going rapidly out of hand. It minces no
words in describing the failure of the state to contain this spread,
pointing to a thoroughly unprepared security force, untrained police forces,
communication lapses and other such factors. But it also notes that naxalism
has an enormous mass base, in no small measure owing to the failure of
governments to deliver on development promises and the growing alienation of
tribal populations. This makes the task of tackling the threat much more
complex than, say, the challenge posed by “extremists” from forces external
to India.

FICCI’s diagnosis of the problem is relatively well nuanced and not
restricted to the security failures of the state. The report talks of “our
long neglect of development in tribal areas, which has created large pockets
of alienation against the government”, “criminal neglect of the rural
economy, scorched earth policy in the rural agrarian sector with feudal
lords in command, unemployment, poverty and unbridled exploitation of the
poor”. It notes that “people living in remote village clusters, where there
is no tangible presence of governance, nor developmental activities and are
subject to rampant corruption by the government officers and exploitation by
the landlords and loan sharks, gradually start looking up to the Maoists for
protection”. It admits that the state’s response to naxalism, in the form of
coercion and force not only against Maoists but also against “innocent
villagers”, only alienates people more.

It even notes that the Salwa Judum drive in Chhattisgarh, a widely
criticised state-sponsored attempt at generating people’s resistance to
naxalites, is self-defeating in the way it has violated human rights.
Because of all this, the hold of Maoists on local people is clearly much
greater than the legitimacy of the state, it says.

So far so good. But the report soon betrays FICCI’s real interest in
stopping the “war in the heartlands” of India. The very first paragraph of
the chapter dealing with naxalism reveals the bias, when it talks of central
India as “mineral rich heartlands”. Later on it argues that “the growing
Maoist insurgency over large swathes of mineral-rich countryside could soon
hurt some industrial investment plans”. All pretence of concern for the
people of the region is thrown away when it asserts: “Just when India needs
to ramp up its industrial machine to lock in growth and just when foreign
companies are joining the party, the naxalites are clashing with the mining
and steel companies essential for India’s long-term success.”

So development in India is a “party”. Never had corporations had it so good
in the country’s history. Even the most culturally and ecologically
sensitive areas are being opened up in the name of rapid growth and
globalisation to mining, industries, ports, expressways and the like.
Profits of companies have skyrocketed, what with cheap raw materials and
labour, tax breaks, relaxation of land and environmental laws, and all kinds
of incentives offered by the Central and State governments. The so-called
‘free market’ is actually able to show remarkable progress because the state
heavily subsidises it. And it does so at the expense of millions of people
whose land and resources and water are taken away to be handed over to
corporations. The state even backs this up with the use of force against
anyone who resists. A March 2009 report by a committee set up by the Union
Ministry of Rural Development (
www.rd.ap.gov.in/IKPLand/MRD_Committee_Report_V_01_Mar_09.pdf), made public
in October, called the process in central India the “biggest grab of tribal
lands since Columbus”.

The FICCI report itself admits to “the grievances of the rural peasantry,
especially against their displacement due to development projects and
cornering of the benefits of natural resources by a few”. It further says,
“Judging from their past experience with development, the tribals have a
right to be afraid of the mining and constructions that threaten to change
their environment”.

And yet, in the same breath, it rues the fact that naxalism is making such
projects difficult to execute. This schizophrenia becomes acute in one
particularly revealing paragraph: “The other reason for sounding the alarm
stems from the increasingly close proximity between the corporate world and
the forest domain of the naxalites…. India’s affluent urban consumers have
started buying autos, appliances, and homes, and they’re demanding
improvements in the country’s roads, bridges and railroads. To stoke Indian
manufacturing and satisfy consumers, the country needs cement, steel, and
electric power in record amounts…. There is a need for a suitable social and
economic environment to meet this national challenge. Yet there’s a
collision with the naxalites…. Chhattisgarh, a hotbed of naxalite activity,
has 23 per cent of India’s iron ore deposits and abundant coal. It has
signed memoranda of understanding and other agreements worth billions with
Tata Steel and Arcelor Mittal (MT), De Beers Consolidated Mines, BHP
Billiton (BHP), and Rio Tinto (RTP). Other States also have similar deals.
And U.S. companies such as Caterpillar (CAT) want to sell equipment to the
mining companies now digging in eastern India.”

So, naxalism is bad because it is spoiling the “party” for India’s “urban
affluent consumers”. Is this the real reason for FICCI’s concern?

If the report of the Ministry of Rural Development committee referred to
earlier is to be believed, corporations are primarily interested in emptying
the central Indian ruralscape so they can easily get access to its enormous
land, minerals and forest resources. Here is what it says: “The first
financiers of the Salwa Judum were Tata and the Essar in the quest for
‘peace’. The first onslaught of the Salwa Judum was on Muria villagers who
still owed allegiance to the Communist Party of India (Maoist). It turned
out to be an open war between brothers. 640 villages as per official
statistics were laid bare, burnt to the ground and emptied with the force of
the gun and the blessings of the state. 350,000 tribals, half the total
population of Dantewada district [Chhattisgarh] are displaced, their
womenfolk raped, their daughters killed, and their youth maimed. Those who
could not escape into the jungle were herded together into refugee camps run
and managed by the Salwa Judum.

“Others continue to hide in the forest or have migrated to the nearby tribal
tracts in Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Orissa. 640 villages are empty.
Villages sitting on tons of iron ore are effectively de-peopled and
available for the highest bidder. The latest information that is being
circulated is that both Essar Steel and Tata Steel are willing to take over
the empty landscape and manage the mines.”
 Hollow and dangerous

 It is in this light that FICCI’s recommendations to contain the problem
sound not only hollow but dangerous even though at first glance they may
appear balanced. The report provides detailed suggestions on enhancing the
operations of the security forces and also argues that “the development
approach is even more important than the military approach”. It asks for
“national and state policies, including accelerated economic development,
social justice, security and media policies”, that “employment, land reforms
and development of road infrastructure in tribal areas must be given the
highest priority”, and that “tribal areas have to be developed on a crash
basis”. It even mouths the usual platitudes of “involvement of the people
in… governance and development”.

Sounds good, except that nowhere does FICCI acknowledge the need for very
different models of development than what have been practised elsewhere in
the country. Many of India’s leaders around the time of Independence
recognised that the cultural and ecological contexts of Adivasis were vastly
different from those of others and that development or other inputs must
respect this. The Indian Constitution provided for this different approach.
But large-scale mining, industrialisation and infrastructure are hardly
going to be sensitive to the ethos and lives of communities that are
intimately connected to the land, forests and water in ways that urban
decision-makers do not understand.

In all tribal areas of the country, and indeed in most areas with
traditional pastoral, peasant and fisher communities, such ‘development’ has
been environmentally and culturally devastating and has hardly benefited
these communities. This partly explains the massive exodus of people out of
such areas, the growing economic disparity between them and urban elites,
and the rapidly increasing movements of mass resistance. In such situations,
all talk of land reforms and participatory governance is meaningless. It is
worth noting that the report has no mention of Adivasi rights.

Corporate leaders of Indian and foreign companies are hardly the legitimate
flag-bearers of sustainable and equitable development. The track record of
most of the companies that the FICCI report names, which have signed MoUs
with the Chhattisgarh government, is not pretty. Some are globally known for
their unethical practices and their lack of compunctions in depriving
indigenous peoples of their traditional territories and rights. FICCI’s
recommendation of tribal areas being “developed on a crash basis” really
entails the crash of Adivasi economy, ecology and culture.

It is, therefore, not surprising that the report, in its recommendations on
“what corporates can do”, has nothing on building on responsibility and
ethical behaviour towards Adivasis and the environment. All the suggestions
are on how the corporate sector can work with the government and on their
own to improve security. No mention of leaving alone areas that are crucial
for food, water and ecological security. No hint of facilitating communities
to develop their economic base building on their own knowledge and cultures,
moving towards sustainable patterns of energy and food production, or simply
leaving alone Adivasis who do not want to enter industrial modes of
production (yes, they exist, and they are not anachronisms in a world that
is desperately seeking sustainable ways of living). It is as if FICCI has
decided that it knows what is best for Adivasis and forest areas, and that
there is only one way to develop: massive industrialisation. Anything that
is a hindrance to this has to be dealt with by the state.

This is not to argue that naxalism (in its many variants) is a solution or
is to be condoned simply because it may be slowing down the destructive
‘development’ of central India. If at all Maoist groups have a coherent
vision of human and social welfare or of economic development, it is not
clear from the activities they engage in. Nor is violence to be supported.
But FICCI’s vision of the security and future development of central India
is only a recipe for further devastation and alienation and is violent in a
different way.

A bold alternative would instead encompass paths of Adivasi well-being that
are ecologically and culturally sensitive, that respect the enormous
diversity of local situations, and that promote localised economic
strategies based on the sustainable use of local resources. It would
recommend the clear assigning of land and resource rights, along with
conservation responsibilities. It would promote true decentralisation,
empowering communities to decide their own future. There are in fact many
civil society initiatives of this nature across central India from which to
learn. Provided they are not bulldozed by the current approaches that the
Indian state and Indian corporations are taking or propose to take.

*Ashish Kothari is with Kalpavriksh – Environment Action Group.*

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