[The human wall programme appears to be an elaborate farce, to reset the
Kerala scenario into, at least partially, a battle between the CPI(M) and
the BJP, so as to convert the future electoral contests from being bipolar
to a triangular one, to the benefit of the both, but, in the immediate
future, ensuring a big victory for the CPI (M) - given the abysmally low
starting level of the latter, regardless of long-term consequences.

《Ammini said the government should explain how hundreds of Hindutva workers
had been able to gather in Pampa despite a police order prohibiting the
assembly of more than four people under Section 144 in Sabarimala and
nearby areas. “It is major failure of the police department,” she said.

Dalit activist OP Raveendran said Sunday’s incidents showed that the
CPI(M)-led government is working hand-in-glove with Hindutva outfits. “The
government is helping Sangh Parivar to grow,” he said. “It is a shame that
this government has not been able to implement the Supreme Court verdict
till now.”》

In order to make some cohesive sense, the above has to be read together
with the following:
《In the last 35 years in Kerala, no government, either of the Congress or
the Left, has returned to power. Political commentators and analysts say
the CPM, under the leadership of chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan, is now
working overtime to buck the trend in 2021 by making the race to the state
Assembly a three-cornered one through which it hopes to ride to power once
again on a split of anti-incumbency votes. What used to be a traditional
two-way fight is being positioned as having the potential for a
three-cornered one.

“I think he (Vijayan) very well harbours a dream to come back to power
after five years because that would break a record. But for that, he needs
to split the Opposition votes. And the best way to do that is by ensuring a
stream of votes to flow towards the BJP. If you have noticed, he has a soft
approach towards the BJP/RSS,” says MM Somasekharan, a former central
executive member of the CPI(ML).
...
“The CPM is trying to pit itself against the BJP so that it can win in a
triangular contest. The BJP can only advance by depleting the Congress
which is not entirely possible because in Kerala, the latter is not that
organisationally weak. So in a way, the stronger the BJP gets, the better
is for the CPM,” remarks G Pramod Kumar, a former journalist who has
written extensively about Left politics in Kerala.》

(Excerpted from <
https://indianexpress.com/article/india/cpm-left-kerala-series-1-bjp-pinarayi-kuthuparamba-5222296/
>.)]

https://scroll.in/article/906774/sabarimala-kerala-has-no-will-to-ensure-womens-entry-into-shrine-say-thwarted-female-pilgrims?fbclid=IwAR0AbCSkL4OgEv_LRdACqu7NG1phxqeBqmuwVt0CiNBQv3XLUSJBBXAOZtA

Women's Rights
Sabarimala: Kerala has no will to ensure women’s entry into shrine, say
thwarted female pilgrims
Mob attacks 11 women attempting to pray at temple on Sunday morning.
Sabarimala: Kerala has no will to ensure women’s entry into shrine, say
thwarted female pilgrims

By Special Arrangement
2 hours ago

Eleven women pilgrims attempting to pray at the Sabarimala hill shrine in
Kerala’s Pathanamthitta district on Sunday morning were chased and attacked
by protestors with links to the Sangh Parivar, forcing them to abandon
their plans.

Since a Supreme Court decision in September lifting a ban on women of
menstruating age entering the shrine, six female pilgrims have previously
attempted to pray at Sabarimala – only to be thwarted by protestors
claiming that their presence will defile the temple.

Sunday’s violence has demonstrated the ruling Communist Party of India
(Marxist)’s lack of will to implement the Supreme Court verdict, said
Adivasi leader Ammini K Wayanad, who was supposed to join the 11 women.
Ammini, who prefers to be addressed by her first name, had been forced to
abandon her trip at Erumeli, 40 km from Sabarimala.

“If they are serious about the verdict, they would have used enough force
to take the women to Sabarimala,” she said. “Three months have passed since
the Supreme Court delivered the verdict. The Communist government has
failed us and the Constitution,”

She also questioned the relevance of the state-sponsored 600-km Women’s
Wall event planned for January 1. The event has been billed as a protest
against the Sangh Parivar’s actions blocking women from travelling to
Sabarimala and to highlight the Kerala’s progressive social traditions.
Around 30 lakh women are expected to attend, standing shoulder-to-shoulder
from the northern end of the state to the south.

“If they are keen on women’s empowerment, they should ensure women’s entry
to Sabarimala,” Ammini said.

Caught unawares
The 11 women, who were from Tamil Nadu had barely walked 100 metres of the
5-km hilly pilgrimage route on Sunday, when 500 men from Hindutva groups
charged towards them, chanting incantations to Lord Ayyappa, the principal
deity at the Sabarimala temple. The attack caught the women unawares and
they ran to the safety of the nearby police outpost. As they scampered for
cover, some women stumbled. The police personnel escorting the women also
ran away from the mob.

Following the incident, the women abandoned their pilgrimage. Selvi, the
leader of the group, said that the police had forcibly sent them back. But
police officials said the women had decided on their own to turn back.
“They have decided to go back to Madurai,” said G Karthikeyan, the police
officer in charge of the security at Pampa, in the Sabarimala foothills.
“We will provide them security.”

The police arrested ten people for the attacks, charging them with unlawful
assembly, rioting, wrongful restraint, disobedienceand obstruction of
public way.
The women were members of a Chennai-based women’s rights organisation
called Manithi. Though they arrived in Pampa at 5 am on Sunday, they were
not allowed to proceed by the workers of the Hindutva outfits. The police
asked them to abandon their plan but the women stood their ground. Six
hours later, when the police agreed to provide an escort the women.

The trek began with a few police personnel forming a cordon around the
women. But the protective shield was broken within minutes with the
onslaught of the mob. The police deserted the women and left them fend for
themselves, Manithi members claimed. Senior police officials were
conspicuous by their absence during the incident.

“Police failed to provide protection for the women,” said Adivasi leader
Ammini.

Charges of collusion
Ammini said the government should explain how hundreds of Hindutva workers
had been able to gather in Pampa despite a police order prohibiting the
assembly of more than four people under Section 144 in Sabarimala and
nearby areas. “It is major failure of the police department,” she said.

Dalit activist OP Raveendran said Sunday’s incidents showed that the
CPI(M)-led government is working hand-in-glove with Hindutva outfits. “The
government is helping Sangh Parivar to grow,” he said. “It is a shame that
this government has not been able to implement the Supreme Court verdict
till now.”

Formed in 2015, Manithi is a women’s collective based in Chennai. Selvi,
the group’s leader, told Scroll.in that she had written to Chief Minister
Pinarayi Viayan asking for police protection in order to be able to pray at
Sabarimala. “We decided the dates only after getting the assurance mail
from his office,” she said.

Despite the setback, Manithi members said they would not give up on their
mission. “We will come back to Sabarimala soon,” said Selvi.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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