[When Alex Paul Menon, then-Sukma collector, was in the custody of the
Maoists in April 2012, a young Maoist approached him with a humble
request: Sahab, handpump mechanic ka aavedan kiya hai. Bahar jakar
jara dekh lijiyega (Sir, I applied for a handpump mechanic’s job.
Please look into it after you are released.) The guerrilla, a Gond
tribal tasked with guarding Menon, was, in a vulnerable moment,
revealing the fragile nature of his existence to his hostage. His
appeal exposed the faultlines of the Maoist insurgency in
Chhattisgarh.
...
... Arms come as a last option to the Bastar tribal, in a moment of
realisation that he has nothing to lose. He is unlike the comrades of
Andhra and Bengal. His tribal world in the forest has been destroyed,
he is now prepared to be killed. Military power might scare an
opponent who dreams of a future after survival, but not those who have
been invaded by a death wish, with a firm belief that revolution will
come only a few generations after their sacrifice. In rare moments,
his vulnerabilities do surface in the form of a desire for a home, a
lover or a handpump. It is this moment that the state needs to focus
on. Bastar tests not the insurgent’s death wish, but the state’s
ability to transcend its prejudices and preferences and reach out to
its subjects in novel ways.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/sukma-attackmaoist-bastra-crpf-jawan-killed-4631081/

Staring down the barrel in Sukma
Bastar is home to the insurgent’s death wish. And to a state unable,
unwilling to reach out to the people.

Written by Ashutosh Bhardwaj | Published:April 28, 2017 12:06 am

The road in Sukma that the CRPF was guarding. Source: Dipankar Ghose

When Alex Paul Menon, then-Sukma collector, was in the custody of the
Maoists in April 2012, a young Maoist approached him with a humble
request: Sahab, handpump mechanic ka aavedan kiya hai. Bahar jakar
jara dekh lijiyega (Sir, I applied for a handpump mechanic’s job.
Please look into it after you are released.) The guerrilla, a Gond
tribal tasked with guarding Menon, was, in a vulnerable moment,
revealing the fragile nature of his existence to his hostage. His
appeal exposed the faultlines of the Maoist insurgency in
Chhattisgarh.

Soon after the Sukma incident in which 25 CRPF men were killed, a
senior TV journalist, while demanding a “mine-proof vehicle for every
CRPF patrol”, wondered: “Is that an anti-national question to ask?” Of
course not. Except that it could be a tactical blunder. Several of
them have been destroyed in landmine blasts in Dandakaranya. Since
such vehicles are easily identified by the guerrillas, the forces
prefer “neutral”, civilian vehicles, without any police insignia. The
anti-landmine vehicles are used for special purposes.

The clamour is for more militarisation of the region. But consider the
facts. The CRPF entered Chhattisgarh in 2003, the year Raman Singh
became chief minister, and has 28 battalions now, with nearly a dozen
deployed in Sukma. With a population of around 2.5 lakh, the security
personnel to civilian ratio in Sukma is nearly 1:14, among the highest
on the planet. The police to civilian population for the rest of India
is 1:100.

Send more troopers to Sukma, but spare a thought for the villagers who
are forced to see more men in khaki carrying assault rifles, than kids
on the playground. Think about villages where children learn words
like counter (encounter) and ghatna (violent incident) before they
learn letters, young widows who wait outside dilapidated mortuaries to
receive the bodies of their husbands who died in police custody. If
the Maoists are guilty of making Bastar their laboratory and damaging
tribal life, the state has mutated the tribal DNA by deploying its
incessant armed power against a people who are least concerned about
issues beyond their river and forest. The discourse on the Maoist
insurgency is largely limited to the violence on security forces. It
is an important aspect, but the insurgency cannot be understood unless
one includes fake encounters, rapes, custodial deaths and the
inter-linkages among mining companies, guerrillas and local
politicians.

The massive loot of weapons and ammunition during Monday’s ambush is,
perhaps, the biggest after the Tadmetla incident in April 2010. The
loot includes five Under Barrel Grenade Launchers (UBGL) of Bulgarian
make, with over 60 grenades. The Maoists looted their first UBGL in
Chhattisgarh in November 2013, and a few in March 2014, all from the
CRPF. The head of the Maoist’s Abujhmaad battalion, Ramdher, gleefully
explained to this reporter about their prized catch, which can destroy
a police barracks with one grenade. The present seizures can help the
Maoists launch at least 10 more major ambushes. Lest we forget, the
Maoists are mostly sustained on weapons seized from the forces.

The Maoist insurgency is now five decades old. There have been many
mergers and mutations, deviations and contradictions. However, the
core ideology remains: Parliamentary democracy favours a select few,
has little space for ordinary people, and hence an armed revolution is
the only choice. There are exaggerations in the above claim, but there
is also some truth. In his study, When Crime Pays, Milan Vaishnav
underlines the advantage wealth and criminal record lend to a
candidate in a general election. The poorest 20 per cent candidates
had just one per cent chance of winning the election, for the richest
20 per cent, it was over 23 per cent, he writes. A guerrilla once
offered another aspect of this correlation as he pointed at the
companies occupying their mineral-rich land in south Bastar, polluting
their rivers and forests with impunity. “Is there any other option?”
Madkam Bhima, alias Akash, asked this reporter, days after he led the
team that abducted Menon.

The state needs to offer them options, which can’t come out of UBGL
barrels. It must take care of their spouses and future children. Less
than a year after the abduction, Akash left the Maoists to be with a
woman he loved. He is, perhaps, untraceable. Would the state have
rehabilitated him? Unlikely. His friend, Korsa Joga, left around the
same time to be with a primary teacher he loved. Blushing, he had told
this reporter about his desire to be a father. They crossed the
Godavari, travelled south, reached Mysore, before the police
eventually persuaded him to “surrender”. A division committee member,
he was the topmost Maoist to have ever surrendered in Chhattisgarh.
Yet, in violation of the rehabilitation policy, he was deployed in the
Chhattisgarh police, given arms, sent to operations against his former
comrades, who killed him soon after. Barring a handful, the
Chhattisgarh police have deployed all the surrendered cadres on the
Maoist front.

A few jobs, of handpump or cellphone mechanics, obviously cannot put
end major assaults, but these can at least convince the guerrillas
about the intentions of the state.
Why would anybody surrender if the alternative is another life with
weapons? Arms come as a last option to the Bastar tribal, in a moment
of realisation that he has nothing to lose. He is unlike the comrades
of Andhra and Bengal. His tribal world in the forest has been
destroyed, he is now prepared to be killed. Military power might scare
an opponent who dreams of a future after survival, but not those who
have been invaded by a death wish, with a firm belief that revolution
will come only a few generations after their sacrifice. In rare
moments, his vulnerabilities do surface in the form of a desire for a
home, a lover or a handpump. It is this moment that the state needs to
focus on. Bastar tests not the insurgent’s death wish, but the state’s
ability to transcend its prejudices and preferences and reach out to
its subjects in novel ways.

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Peace Is Doable

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