*http://kafila.org/2010/04/13/response-to-rohini-hensman-soumitra-ghosh/
*

*Soumitra Ghosh is with the National Forum of Forest Peoples and Forest
Workers. This post came as a response to Rohini Hensman’s recent post Getting
Indian Democracy
Right<http://kafila.org/2010/04/10/getting-indian-democracy-right-rohini-hensman/>
*

Is India a democracy? This question has to be seen in context of the complex
and plural character of the present Indian state and several other state
like formations(for instance the Maoist People’s Sarkar in the liberated
zones, the parallel administration run by the Nagas, areas and times where
and when the extreme hegemony of one or the other mainstream political party
or the feudal landlords substitutes the process of law—and others). There is
also the fallacy whether India is a nation-state in the way other
nation-states(for instance, China, USA, England) are, and whether the
concept of a monolithic Western-type at all democracy applies in the Indian
context (and if so, how far?). However, the question Rohini tries to raise
deals more perhaps with our ethical constructs of democratic values than the
character of the Indian state. If it is the former we enter the realm of
ethical a-priories, which I too share: democracy is something that as a
political process tolerates pluralism and leaves some space for minority
dissents against dominant majorities. To take the democracy debate further
and to include the Indian state in it will mean a different discourse, in
which I am not going for the time being.

The issue is that the Indian state has imposed an absolutely uncalled for
war upon a large section of this country’s citizens, on the pretext that the
Maoists are attacking the state. The military and political imperatives of
this war include a negation of the plural in the war zones and beyond(as it
happens in many other wars). Because the war zones are Indian forests, all
other forms of political mobilisations in forests and which have got nothing
to do with this war are under attack, if they refuse to take sides. Though
the attack comes mostly from the state, the Maoists also contribute; their
‘revolutionary violence’ often comes as an imposition. Also, the Maoist
party, like all other ‘vanguard’ parties do not politically believe in
pluralism: either you are for the revolution or against it. The truth is
what the Party says.

Partly as a result of the war-like situation and partly because the media is
more fond of violence than anything else, the state-Maoist conflict occupies
the centerstage of our attention, the so-called civil society and the urban
middle class knows hardly anything about the numerous other struggles in
Indian forests, infinitely more complex and politically and culturally more
diverse.

These struggles, contrary to the archaic ‘left’ perceptions, have their own
histories and politics. The concept of the belligerent ‘adivasi’ is rooted
in this histories and politics. No space here for a detailed discussion on
the issue—I’ll just mention a few of them to show that the state-Maoist
binary doesn’t explain the struggles at all.

The forest struggles and the movement organisations involved in those
struggles can be broadly classified into two groups: struggles against
development projects and evictions caused by those, and struggles against
the forest department. These are just extremely broad categories: there is a
perfect range of other issues that overlap and sometimes dominate(like
ethnicity, caste, wage, support price for NTFPs etc).

Of the two, anti-development struggles are better known; and I am not going
into them(though the two processes often have close organisational and
political links). A long and historic lineage of people’s struggles against
state control of forests(manifest through the continued existence of the
neo-feudal fiefdom of the forest department) that resulted in a historic
Forest Rights Act continues into the present, and let us take a very brief
look into how today’s non-Maoist movements in Indian forests are politically
situated.

I quote brokenly from a forthcoming paper(sorry for the long quote, but to
understand the dynamics of the struggles in Indian forests, the context
discussion can not be avoided)

“…the more the forests and forest communities were vandalised, the political
response to it became stronger. New and immensely popular forest movements
emerged as a direct response as much to increasing state invention in
forests as continued denial of rights.
….
>From the late 1980s onwards, non-party political mobilisations started to
emerge as the most popular form of people’s protests against
development-induced as well as ‘conservation’ evictions. These included
well-known and long-drawn movements like the Narmada Bachao Andolan in
Central India, the Koel-Karo movement in Jharkhand, and the Tehri movement
in Garhwal. …Today, the strong anti-mining and anti-industry tribal and
peasant movements in Kashipur, Niyamgiri, Kalinganagar and Posco of Orissa
all have a ‘forest’ component, though the centrality of forest issues in
terms of movement priority varies. In Niyamgiri for instance, the
destruction of the forest landscape as a result of the proposed bauxite
mining will devastate the Dongria Kondh, a typical forest community. In the
anti-Posco movement against the South Korean steel giant Posco company’s
proposed steel project, the forest issue is being used more strategically.

…In the Shiwalik forests adjoining the Rajaji National Park, forest
villagers engaged in bhabar grass collection and ban(a kind of rope)-making
organised themselves into GKMSS(Ghad Kshetra Majdoor Sangharsh Samitee),
demanding unrestricted and free access to the grass and better prices for
ban, as the park authority banned the practice of Bhabar collection…

….the forest-dependent people in vast tracts of Orissa . reclaimed the
‘government’ forests, and initiated a people’s variety of community forest
management. The practice is now fairly old, and some forests have 50-year
old (some yet more) village forest protection committees. A similar movement
happened in Maharashtra’s Menda Lekha, which has since then earned the
distinction of being the first ‘officially’ declared community forest under
the 2006 Forest Rights Act.

…the people’s movements in Indian forests had plural yet overlapping
contexts. The movements, however, remained localized and regional: in spite
of the political overtones and the essentially political nature of in many
cases large mobilisations, they could not pose a organisationally
consistent—and political—challenge to the forest department’s continued
hegemony over forests.

… Throughout the 1990s and the following decade, the various non-party
movements in Indian forests tried to come together on political,
organisational and strategic issues, demanding restoration of people’s
rights over forests. There were two distinct ‘national’ strands that ran
more or less simultaneously, though sometimes with common actors. The first
one was Bharat Jan Andolan, which re-interpreted the much earlier Gandhian
vision of Gram Swaraj, and talked about self-sufficient village communities
in full control of not only ‘jangal’ (forests), but also ‘jal’(water) and
‘jameen’(land). The movement led to the formation of the ‘National Front for
Tribal Self Rule’, and an intense campaign in the tribal areas of the
country that ultimately resulted in the historic PESA (Panchayat Extension
to Scheduled Areas) act in 1996.

…. the concept of the ‘forest worker’ locked in a class struggle against a
combination of a coercive state and various feudal and capitalist forces has
come up as a political alternative to the concept of the ‘adivasi’ or the
‘indigenous’.

…The ‘forest worker’ concept emerged mainly from the GKMSS-led movement. The
movement which predominantly comprised dalit forest villagers and ‘ban’
workers had from the very beginning been organised as a left-leaning workers
movement, though it was fighting for a classical ‘forest right’ that evolved
as a tenurial right as well as a custom. The process that led to the
‘formal’ formation of the National Forum of Forest People and Forest
Worker(NFFPFW) in 2002 later however accommodated the ‘adivasi’ concept,
without forsaking the concept of class struggle. .

NFFPFW, though organisationally as lose a process as the Bharat Jan Andolan,
tried to lend to the Indian forest movements an articulated political
context and ‘objective’. Pointing out to the inherent political commonness
among the ongoing movements against the oppression of the Indian state,
feudal forces and the capital, it called for a broad based democratic
alliance of the all working people in the country, including dalits and
‘adivasis’.

This overt emphasis on class struggle and alliance-building however
alienated many organisations working in forests. NFFPFW’s alleged ‘inaction’
in resisting the ongoing evictions as well as the notion that it was not an
‘adivasi’ process led to the emergence of CSD or the Campaign for Survival
of Dignity…

The aggressive and strategic lobbying by CSD, and a prolonged nationwide
movement in which NFFPFW and several other movement formations like the Lok
Sangharsh Morcha and NAA(National Adivasi Alliance) also participated, led
to the greatest mobilisation on forest rights that the country had ever
seen. It resulted in the passage of the Scheduled Tribe and Other
Traditional Forest Dwellers(Recognition of Forest Rights Act), better known
as the FRA or the Forest Rights Act.

….Both CSD and NFFPFW accused the Government of sabotaging the Act, and
called upon the people to prepare for a long struggle for the implementation
of it, because the movements had no faith in the Government’s munificence
and political will.

… the FRA.. admit(s)…that adivasis and other forest dwellers of India have
been historically deprived of their just rights, it provides for official
recognition of those rights. These include rights over homestead and
cultivable lands, ownership over all NTFP, fishing rights and community
rights like grazing. Besides, the act… empowers village institutions like
the Gram Sabha to govern their own community forests as well as all other
forests. The community institutions can stop any project in forests if it
harms their cultural or natural heritage, the act says, and they can also
take steps to protect and conserve forests, wildlife and biodiversity.

Subsequent events during the two years(the FRA came into force in 1st
January 2008) since the FRA was notified, however, bore out the
apprehensions of the movements. The Governmental implementation of the Act
turned into a hasty, politically motivated, and undemocratic exercise where
people had no role. The forest department opposed it tooth and nail
everywhere, and wherever possible..

…the movements in Indian forests now have two definite trends….one
represented by the ..CPI(Maoist) party …the other is a lose, often
ill-organised, and largely localised ensemble of diverse people’s movements.
CSD, NFFPFW and other groups like the Lok Sangharsh Morcha represent this
trend. Despite their inherently astructured and localized nature, there is a
growing tendency among the movements to take a more politically articulate
position on issues like how to engage with an anti-people and increasingly
military state, …

Despite their criticism of the FRA, the non-party social movements now focus
more on its implementation than anything else; significant mobilisations are
happening all over the country as people try to assert their control over
forests. New militant struggles are emerging in Assam, Jharkhand, Orissa,
Northern Bengal, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Rajasthan and
Madhya Pradesh, and also to some extent in Tamilnadu and …all of which view
the implementation of the FRA more as a long-drawn people’s struggle for the
control of forests rather than a bureaucratic process, and the centuries-old
hegemony of the forest bureaucracy is under real attack. Both CSD and NFFPFW
emphasize the necessity of using the FRA and its provisions for community
governance of forests in present and future struggles; the FRA can be a key
weapon in the battle against the aggression of capital in forest areas, they
point out. The movements are also campaigning against climate change
mitigation schemes like the REDD(Reduction of Emission through Deforestation
and Degradation of forests) and REDD plus, which they see as a capitalist
scheme to privatise people’s forests.

It seems that the forest movements in India are going through a process of
political and organisational consolidation, despite challenges from a
non-responsive and repressive state and serious organisational shortcomings.
The struggle for control of forests is also being increasingly seen as a
struggle for a better and more equitable social order, though differences
and ambiguities on political perceptions and key organisational strategy
issues on intra-movement and inter-movement levels persist”.

Because the above observations are excerpts, sometimes they may seem a
little arbitrary. I’ll try to clarify later if needed…this post is already
too long!

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