*Dial M For Maoists*

*IF THE GOVERNMENT IS HONEST, IT MUST ENGAGE THE MAOISTS IN TALKS AND NOT
SPURN KISHENJI’S UNCONDITIONAL OFFER*

*[image: image]
SAROJ GIRI* *
Academic*


WITH MAOIST leader Kishenji’s rather bold offer for ceasefire to the Union
government, a new situation seems to be unfolding in the red corridor of
heartland India. Seeking to place the ball in the Centre’s court, the 72-day
offer clearly seems to trump Union Home Minister P Chidambaram’s 72-hour
offer. Moreover, it’s the nature of the offer — unconditional, as opposed to
earlier Maoist proposals stipulating the release of their key leaders,
restoration of land and forests to the tribals, scrapping of Memorandums of
Understanding (MoUs) with big investors etc, all major irritants for the
government — which begs a serious consideration. Practically the only
condition set by the Maoists this time is that the State should reciprocate.
This is at a time when reports of the CRPF in Lalgarh killing Lalmohan Tudu
of the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) in front of his
family members on February 22 are filtering in, over and above the initial
propaganda about him being killed during an attack on a CRPF camp.

Chidambaram, instead of welcoming the offer to start a process of
negotiation and addressing the substantive issues at hand, responded with a
presumptuous and hypocritical statement calling upon the Maoists to abjure
violence first. The Planning Commission’s Expert Group on Development
Challenges in Extremist Affected Areas has argued that the government is
engaging in peace talks with other rebel groups like the Nagas even though
they have not abjured violence and in fact ‘taken advantage of the peaceful
conditions to consolidate their parallel government’. So, they ask, ‘why a
different approach for the Maoists?’

Chidambaram is clearly trying to make violence the key issue — that the real
problem facing the country is violence by illegitimate actors like the
Maoists and not the inequalities and injustices that are spiralling in the
country. On the other hand, basking in the cover of being constitutional and
democratically elected, even as it spearheads a system of a million
injustices and the repressive Operation Green Hunt, the charge of being
‘violent’ somehow does not stick against the government. Instead, with
terror attacks in Mumbai and Pune, the non-State violence as the main
problem gets reinforced by the discourse of the ‘war on terror’ — that our
country is under attack and hence no dissensions. NATO troops at Marjah,
Afghanistan, are currently supposed to be flushing out the Taliban and then
installing a civilian government — not too different from Chidambaram’s
policy of flushing out Maoists to make way for a civilian administration.
THE GOVERNMENT IS MORE COMFORTABLE ENGAGING WITH THE NAGA OR KASHMIRI
MILITANTS IN TALKS, THAN WITH MAOISTS

This approach frames the Maoists in terms of a conflict model — that this is
primarily a problem of violence, of illegitimate actors challenging the
State and rule of law, and indeed the understanding that the Maoists are
‘the biggest internal security threat’. There is an underside to this
seemingly straightforward picture. By simply raking up the violent nature of
the Maoists again and again, the substantive issues at hand — corporate
plunder, land grab, vigilante groups like Salwa Judum — are easily set aside
or regarded as secondary.

Hence Kishenji’s dropping of the other conditions for ceasefire might add to
this perception that violence is the real issue. In fact, several civil
society groups and independent intellectuals who have always insisted on
addressing the core problems facing tribals might even feel that this is a
new situation where only violence and hostilities become the real problem.
However, through this offer, the Maoists may actually be trying to reach out
to civil society. They are probably appealing to the wider civil society —
maybe to gain some credibility as a political force; or be recognised as not
only interested in violence and a military solution. This must be seen as a
positive development. The ‘abjure violence first’ line, however, is bent
upon undoing this.

So what about the ‘skeptics’ who argue that the Maoists have come with this
offer only because they are feeling the heat of Operation Green Hunt, or
they are being strategic and trying to regroup — biding time, trying to trap
the government? What is significant is that even though they may be feeling
the heat, given the repression unleashed by the State, the Maoists are
seeking a political process, involving sections of civil society, unlike the
belligerent attitude of the State.

Indeed the government has made it impossible for anyone from outside to
visit these ‘affected areas’ — human rights activists and independent
observers have been harassed and chased away repeatedly. A cessation of
hostilities is therefore what the State fears the most — for that will mean
the possibility of a free exchange between the Maoists in the hinterland and
urban civil society. The State clearly does not want that to happen — for
that will turn the heat on it. This is the real trap it fears — getting
politically cornered for its misdeeds. Hence, the need for this hysteria
surrounding Maoist violence and human rights activists of supporting it.

There is nothing retrograde for the Maoists in seeking a political way out
when cornered militarily — if this is what the ceasefire means. But the
‘abjure violence’ approach of the government seems to be aimed at precluding
precisely such a possibility. Even the language used in the media — regroup,
bidding for time, walking into a trap — all assume a situation of continuing
war. In a way, the demand to ‘abjure violence’ is nothing less than the
guilt of the State slipping out. Foregrounding violence in the context of a
ceasefire allows the State to skirt the key issues and keep portraying the
Maoists as liable to be physically eliminated, catching them off-guard.

This is the experience of the talks between the State and the Peoples War
Group in Andhra Pradesh, where the ceasefire was used by the State to finish
off the Maoists. Making the ‘violent’ tag stick on the Maoists meant that
they could be delegitimised and made easy targets even after formal talks
had started in October 2004 between the Maoists and the government, while
the undercover attacks and elimination of Maoist leaders and sympathisers
continued unabated. Leading civil liberties activist KG Kannabiran, who was
one of the eight mediators then, told BBC that, “It was agreed that the
police would not undertake combing operations against the Maoists. Why was
there a need for the police to become so active, launching combing
operations and killing the extremists in encounters?”

PERHAPS THIS is where return to a focus on the core issue of tribal
displacement and habitat, cannot in the circumstances, be delinked from the
fate of the Maoist movement. After all the Maoist movement is not only a
current problem or a temporary happenstance specific to the present
conjuncture. Since 1967, the Naxal movement and its present avatar, the
Maoists, have stared in the face of the ruling order of the country. Indeed
the Naxal slogan — *Yeh azaadi jhooti hai *(this independence is false) is a
comment on the state of our nation. To relegate the Maoist issue to only one
of violence, or for that matter that of Adivasis or land reforms or
livelihood — is to deny and suppress its wider political provenance —
something which might have implications on the very ‘idea of India’. This is
perhaps why the government is more comfortable engaging with the Naga or
Kashmiri militants in talks, than with the Maoists.

Those on the left and progressive liberals, ruing the erosion of ‘the idea
of India’ and the decline of our political ideals, are so status-quoist in
their upholding of the constitutional values of democracy, that they have
conceded any possibility of rewriting history, or revising the basic
structure of the Constitution, to the Hindu right. This seems true of the
post-ideological, neoliberal age where the right-wing free marketeers are
the radicals, calling for change, whereas the left are the conservatives,
holding on to the myth of the founding moment and a dream of the long-dead
founding fathers of the republic. The Naxal who refuses to ‘abjure
violence’, in precisely being unconstitutional and undemocratic, in moving
out of the shadow of our founding fathers, has come to stand for a left-wing
agenda of change, taking the wind out of the Hindu right’s sails and
realigning the terrain of thinking for the left as a whole. Whether the
Maoists are adequate to this fertile moment is however not a settled
question yet.

*(Saroj Giri is Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Delhi
University)*

*WRITER’S EMAIL:*
[email protected]

http://www.tehelka.com/story_main44.asp?filename=Op060310opinion.asp

-- 
-- 
"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org




-- 
"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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