https://scroll.in/article/827500/as-bastar-mob-hounds-researcher-bela-bhatia-out-of-her-home-little-has-changed-for-activists-here

MOB VIOLENCE

As Bastar mob hounds researcher Bela Bhatia out of her home, little
has changed for activists here
Monday's attack came days after the researcher helped record the
statements of Adivasi women who have filed sexual assault cases
against security personnel.

5 hours ago
Updated 3 hours ago

Raksha Kumar

On January 19 and 20, five members of the National Human Rights
Commission toured the forested villages of Peddagelur and Bellamnendra
in Chhattisgarh’s Bijapur district. The team was on a mission to
record the statements of the 14 women who had filed cases of rape and
sexual assault against the security forces in the past two years. They
took down the statements of six victims on the first day and of five
more on the second. The team was assisted by Aam Aadmi Party leader
Soni Sori as well as civil society members Lingaram Kodopi and Bela
Bhatia.

Two days later, on Monday, more than 30 men barged into Bhatia’s home
in Parpa village, 8 km south of Jagdalpur, the commercial capital of
the Bastar region. The men, who came in cars and motorbikes, gave
Bhatia 24 hours to leave the village, threatening to burn down her
home and kill her dog if she did not do as told. They also threatened
her landlady.

The recent expedition to the villages with the National Human Rights
Commission team may not have been the only motive for the mob to want
Bhatia out. The social-scientist has been actively researching sexual
violence against Adivasis in Bastar. Notepad in hand, she is often
seen walking several miles to remote villages deep inside inhospitable
forests to speak with villagers about their relationship with the
state. Through her work, the 53-year-old researcher has come to earn
the trust of the villagers, many of whom have shared their personal
stories with her. “I saw myself becoming more and more involved in
activism after I moved to Bastar in 2013,” she said in an interview in
March.

Sexual assault by troops
It was this line of work that took Bhatia to Peddagelur and
Bellamnendra, along with other activists, in October 2015, to meet
with women who had been sexually assaulted by security personnel. The
testimonies of these women led to the filing of several first
information reports. On the basis of this, the National Human Rights
Commission on January 7 indicted the troops for the rape and sexual
assault of 16 Adivasi women in 2015-’16. This was a massive blow to
the Chhattisgarh Police in Bastar, said a journalist in the region on
condition of anonymity.

On January 16, the commission summoned Inspector General (Bastar
range) SRP Kalluri to testify. The officer failed to show up “on
account of health reasons”.

“If those activists had not ruffled feathers so much, no one would
know that hapless tribal women were exploited indiscriminately by
security forces,” said the journalist. “We were seeing action
happening for the first time.”

The expedition of the National Human Rights Commission, which Bela
Bhatia was assisting.
The expedition of the National Human Rights Commission, which Bela
Bhatia was assisting.
Past attacks
But the FIRs came at a cost for Bhatia. In November 2015, her then
landlord, a tailor with a contract to sew uniforms for the Central
Reserve Police Force, asked her to vacate the house in Jagdalpur she
occupied.

The pressure on Bhatia only grew from then on. In January 2016, when
Bhatia revisited Bijapur, where she had helped several women file FIRs
against security personnel, a few hundred people of a civilian group,
the Naxal Peedit Sangharsh Samiti (Committee of Naxal Victims),
shouted slogans against her: “Bastar chhodo, Bastar chhodo, Bela
Bhatia Bastar chhodo.” Leave Bastar, Bela Bhatia.

Rather than be cowed down, Bhatia offered to listen to their concerns
as she said she didn’t espouse violence by either the state or
Maoists. But there was no calming down the mob.

In March, close to 100 people in four jeeps, five autos and a pick-up
truck drove into Parpa village. They carried banners with the slogan,
“Naxal samarthak Bastar chhodo.” (Naxal supporter, leave Bastar). Not
finding Bhatia at home, they distributed leaflets to villagers that
read: “Janiya aapke beech mein rahne waali Naxali dalal Bela Bhatia
ko.” (Know the Naxal broker Bela Bhatia who is living amidst you).

When Bhatia complained to district collector Amit Kataria, he assured
her of her safety. “I have personally pulled up the troublemakers to
ensure this won’t happen again,” he said.

But his promise seemed to carry little weight, as a mob returned to
Parpa again on Monday, this time forcing its way into her house. “They
said I would have to leave the house immediately or they would burn
the place,” she wrote in a WhatsApp message to a group of journalists.

It was unclear who threatened Bhatia on Monday. She is expected to
file an FIR on Tuesday.

The villagers, too, want Bhatia out at any cost, said a WhatsApp
message from Subba Rao, a member of the civil vigilante group Agni,
which is said to have active police backing and has turned violent in
the past. “Even though the police are trying to control the crowds
that had voluntarily gathered in the Anganwadi Bhawan of Parpa, the
common folk stood resilient and wanted to see Bela Bhatia out of their
village,” his message read.

This version was in sharp contrast with the support Bhatia had
received from her neighbours during the attack in March. Her landlady,
who belongs to the Gond community, had told her then: “They said you
are a Naxalite. I told them that you bought your own rice and dal and
cooked yourself. You lived quietly. There were only books and papers
in your room. How could you be a Naxalite?” The landlady now seemed to
have changed her mind.

Bhatia has to vacate her house, where she has lived for 11 months, by
6 pm on Tuesday. She called the collector, Amit Kataria, again,
seeking his help. “I have asked him to make sure I get any
accommodation, a tent or a garage or anything, until I find a place
for myself,” she said, adding that she may have been forced out of her
home but that she was staying put in Bastar. Kataria reportedly
assured her of help in finding temporary accommodation. For now, she
also has policemen guarding her house till she vacates it.

Not the first
The threats and attacks on Bhatia are routine in Bastar, where
journalists, human rights lawyers and activists have been forced to
flee not just their homes but the region itself. In February, shortly
after the filing of the FIRs against security personnel in October
2015, vigilantes had vandalised the house of Scroll.in contributor
Malini Subramanium, who had filed many reports on the subject, and
forced her to leave Jagdalpur. Shalini Gera and Isha Khandelwal,
lawyers with the Jagdalpur Legal Aid group, had faced a similar fate.

“It is always a comfort to be surrounded by like-minded people,”
Bhatia had said back then. She had also maintained that she did not
feel lonely or sad in Parpa. “I look at the paddy fields outside my
backyard and feel extremely happy,” she had said.

Bhatia, a social scientist with a PhD from Cambridge University, has
served on several Central government panels examining the governance
challenges in areas facing Left-wing extremism. “The fact is she has
thought a great deal on Left-wing extremism and state repression in
Bastar,” said economist Jean Dreze of Bhatia in an interview in
Jagdalpur in March. “That she can courageously raise pertinent
questions is what scares them.”

Bhatia, speaking on the phone from Parpa, said simply, “Will see how
this story ends.”

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Peace Is Doable

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