Preliminary Fact Finding report of Democratic Students Union from
Narayanpatna, Odisa

A team of students from DU, JNU and IGNOU belonging to the Democratic
Students’ Union (DSU) visited Narayanpatna Block in the Koraput district of
Odisha from 11 April to 16 April 2011. The objective of the visit was to
study the ground situation at present in the region where a militant mass
struggle is going on for the last few years, and according to the media
reports, has faced extreme forms of state repression. The aim was also to
study the socio-economic aspects of the social life of Narayanpatna region,
and to look into the factors that have contributed to the emergence of this
important peasant struggle in contemporary South Asia.



Narayanpatna* *is inhabited by sixteen tribal communities including Kui,
Parija, Jorka, Matia, Doria and others, of whom the Kuis are numerically
predominant. The adivasis, who constitute more than 90 percent of around
45,000 people of Narayanpatna block, are interspersed with Dalit communities
such as Mali, Dombo, Forga, Paiko, Rilli, etc. Dominant castes such as the
Sundis and Brahmins are numerically small but are powerful and influential.
Though the incursion of non-adivasis has a long history going back to the
establishment of the Narayanpatna Raj centuries back, the Sundis have
entered the district after they were driven away from Coastal Andhra during
the Srikakulam armed struggle in the 1960s. The Sundis as well as a small
section of Dalits from the Dombo and Rilli castes too have made money by
exploiting the adivasis and selling them liquor. The non-adivasis are around
5000 in number, and the ruling elite of Narayanpatna belong to this group.
It was also clear to us that the identities such as that of landlord, liquor
trader, money-lender and politician are not separate or mutually exclusive,
but usually coexist in the members of the dominant classes of the region.



Over the last few years, the poor and landless peasants of Narayanpatna,
Bandhugaon, Simliguda, etc. have organised themselves under the banner of
Chasi Mulia Adivasi Sangha (CMAS), and fought back their tormentors the
Sundi-Sahukar-Sarkar nexus. Even though CMAS was working in the region for
more than fifteen years, it was only in the last three to four years that
its anti-liquor movement took a decisive turn. It reached a flashpoint in
January 2009 when the rural masses of Narayanpatna not only drove away the
liquor traders from their villages, but mobilized themselves in thousands to
pursue them to their stronghold, the towns. Four thousand people went to
Narayanpatna town and destroyed liquor factories and wine shops, including
shops selling foreign liquor. By late 2010, only two liquor shops were
running in the entire region, and that too in the block headquarters of
Narayanpatna and Bandhugaon where state’s armed forces are stationed. In
January 2011 more than 3000 CMAS members destroyed the shop in Bandhugaon
town as well. In villages like Baliaput, Mahua trees from which cheap liquor
was produced were destroyed under a political programme of CMAS and BAMS
(Biplabi Adivasi Mahila Sangha), and today not a single Mahua tree is to be
seen in Narayanpatna’s villages. The prohibition in the sale and consumption
of liquor was almost total by 2009. The mass upsurge led to the fleeing of
landlords and liquor traders from the region, leading to the collapse of
this parasitic trade. The villagers narrated how Jairam Pangi, the incumbent
BJD MP from Koraput, tried to dissuade the people from the anti-liquor
agitation by claiming that it was a part of adivasi culture, custom and
worship, to which the people retorted that the very instrument which
destroyed their lives cannot be a part of their devotion and sacrifice that
is conducted for their common wellbeing.



The success in the anti-liquor movement encouraged the masses to intensify
the land struggle. The CMAS led the reclamation of agricultural land from
the landlords and sahukars which were tricked out of the adivasis. Within
months, we are told, more than 3000 acres of such land were recaptured and
distributed among the villages. As a reaction to the growing tide of mass
struggle, ‘Shanti Committee’ was formed by the landlords and liquor traders
with the active support of the state administration on 4 May 2009. After the
successful culmination of the anti-liquor struggle and the intensification
of the land struggle by 2009, and particularly after the NALCO raid by the
Maoists in April that year, the state repression on the people and their
movement was also scaled up. One such incident of state repression was the
murder of Wadeka Singana and Nachika Andru at Narayanpatna police station on
20 November 2009, followed by wanton attacks, raids and combing operation in
the region, establishing a reign of state terror. Entire village populations
are often forced to take shelter in the forests and hills as fugitives. The
government has now virtually imposed a seize of Narayanpatna by deploying
more than 5000 paramilitary troops including BSF, IRB, CRPF, and hundreds of
Special Operations Group commandos, Odisha police personnel and Shanti
Committee vigilante forces and closing off all the important entry and exit
points to and from Narayanpatna. Rather than addressing the demands of the
people, it is mobilising more and more troops to crush the movement.



In the six days of our visit from 11 to 16 April 2011, we interacted with
the residents of above twenty villages spread out in the adjacent blocks of
Narayanpatna, Bandhugaon, Simliguda, Lakhmipur and Potangi, and visited
about twelve of them. Our first stop was Dimtiguda village in the Alamanda
panchayat of Bandhugaon block. We passed through the village Jangri Walsa in
Kabribari panchayat, where we met the family of Kondahara Kasi who was
arrested in 2010 for allegedly being a Maoist. The plea of his wife to meet
him in prison has been repeatedly turned down. 14 persons associated with
CMAS are presently in jail from this village alone. The next village we
visited was Silpalmanda where we were told that Ratnal Madhava was arrested
in March 2011 by the Bandhugaon police and a false kidnap case was slapped
on him. Village Karaka Itiki under Borgi panchayat was the first village we
visited in Narayanpatna, where we heard stories of atrocities committed in
the region by landlords, liquor traders, the police and now the Shanti
Committee. There we came to know from the villagers that eight out of the
thirty houses in Masarimunda village were burnt down by the CRPF in January
2011 after an encounter with the Maoists in the vicinity of the locality.
Just a month before this, CRPF personnel destroyed houses in Goloknima
village as well after another battle with the Maoists, and looted Rs.8000
from the villagers.



The team could also talk to villagers from Jangri Walsa village. Madan
Merika, Poala Malati, Polla Bhima and Seena Mandangi described the attacks
from ‘Shanti Committee’ and Bandhugaon CMAS under the leadership of Kedruka
Arjun of CPI ML (Kanu Sanyal) party in 2009. They attacked their village in
thousands wearing police uniforms and with firearms on the suspicion that
the villagers have started to align themselves with the CMAS Narayanpatna
Area Committee under its president Nachika Linga. Nariga Poala, Aashu
Pirika, Bhima Kedraka, Kasi Kondagari, Muga Poala, Penta Kondagari, Acchanna
Poala and Enkanna Poala of this village, many of whom are teenagers, were
arrested by the police later that year for allegedly being Maoists, and kept
in prison for almost 1½ years, and only recently were they released on bail.
K. Suhabsh and K Raman of Keshbhadra village of Bandhugaon block testified
to the atrocities committed by the police, the Shanti Committee as well as
by the Kanu Sanyal group led by Arjun.



In Upar Itiki village we were told that the people have collectively
undertaken developmental works under the leadership of CMAS, and rejected
the government schemes. Though the pace of the land struggle has been
reduced of late due to the intense state repression, the villagers have
continued to undertake developmental works with their own initiative. They
have completed 7 big irrigation projects in the last two years, and three
are under construction as one we witnessed at Boriput village. The Block
Development Officer (BDO) tried to distribute money to the villagers for
these works, but was refused by the people. In February and March this year
the CMAS gave a call to stop all governmental projects in Narayanpatna in
protest against the continued atrocities by the state’s forces including
arrests, torture, forcible detention, etc. and demanding a halt to Operation
Green Hunt and withdrawal of armed forces. As a result of the call, all
projects such as NREGA, PDS, Indira Avash Yojana came to a halt in the
entire region for two months. The influence of NGOs, which was rampant till
the CMAS movement became popular, has also considerably waned, with very
little presence now in Narayanpatna block.



The land reclaimed by the CMAS in Manjariguda village under Borgi panchayat
was shown to us, where the villagers have collectively cultivated 14 acres
of irrigated land. We are told that in this village individual plots have
not been distributed to the landless peasants so far, but will be done in
the near future. Subbarao Somu, Sitala and Kanta from Langalbera village who
belong to the Dombo Dalit caste, testified that poor people from both
adivasi and dalit communities have benefitted from the peoples’ struggle
against liquor and for land. He said that dalits inhabit two of the nine
panchayats of Narayanpatna – Borgi and Langalbera panchayats. They said that
there was no truth in the misinformation campaign that the struggle has
harmed the dalits, and that there has been an exodus of dalits from villages
in the wake of the movement. Somu said that around 50 families from only two
villages of Gumandi and Podaradar have fled after the land struggle started.
He said that most of them were involved in the liquor trade and were working
against the interests of the adivasis. Dinabandhu and Simadri from Borgi
village informed that the six landless Dalit families in their village have
received 3 acres of land in March 2011 from CMAS, and have irrigated the
land by putting community labour. Simadri said, “Those among Dalits who have
garnered wealth and become politicians tried to instigate a contradiction
between adivasis and dalits, but the poor have no contradiction. The poor
dalits of entire Narayanpatna supports CMAS are in the struggle.” Gumpa
Vidika, a dalit worker who is presently the spokesperson of CMAS and is
hiding from the state in fear of arrest, also talked of the class unity
between the adivasis and dalits forged by this struggle in spite of the
repeated attempts to pit one against the other.



We were informed that 171 villagers connected to the CMAS have been arrested
so far, out of the 637 adivasi political prisoners jailed in entire Orissa.
We heard narrations of recent attacks by the paramilitary and police forces
deployed in the region on the villages. The police entered Dakapara village
on the night of 4 April 2011and beat up villagers including Sirka Sika and
Sirka Rupaya whom we spoke to. They looted Rs.5000 and Rs.2500 respectively
from the two villagers. On a previous occasion, the government’s forces
attacked Sirka Bina’s house on 1 January 2011, detained him and forcibly
took him to the police camp, tortured for many hours and released him the
next day. His wife’s gold ornaments were also taken away by them. The team
members interviewed Sonai Hikoka of Dumsili village whose husband Sitanna
Hakoka was taken away by policemen from Lakhimpur police station in November
2010 along with two others. While Kaila Taring and Sodanna Himbreka, the
other two villagers have been released by police, there is no trace of
Sitanna as yet. The police denied that they arrested him. She filed a Habeas
Corpus application in the Odisha High Court, but her plea has been rejected
recently by the court reposing full trust on the police’s affidavit. Sonai
says that her crops, grain, and cattle were looted by the goons of Shanti
Committee when she went out to attend the court hearings. We visited
Baliaput village where we saw the dilapidated houses of Nachika Linga and
Nachika Andru which were burnt and destroyed by Shanti Committee goons. We
met Nachika Taman who spent more than a year in jail for allegedly being a
Maoist, and were released in bail just a week ago, while Nachika Sanjeeva of
his village is still languishing in Koraput jail. In addition, two of the
undertrials were killed by the police through third-degree torture, and
later it claimed that they have committed suicide! Other prisoners are being
subjected to regular beating and harassment, and many have sustained
grievous injuries at the hands of the police and paramilitary forces. And
these are only a few instances which were brought to us by the villagers of
the region during our six days’ of interaction.



The team interviewed Nachika Linga, the president of CMAS Narayanpatna Area
Committee, and the ‘most wanted’ person for the police at present. He
informed us that the movement has moved beyond the narrow limits of fighting
for economic demands, and have held the present political system to be
responsible for the marginalization of adivasis and the poor peasantry. We
were told that the election boycott call given by the Sangha during the
assembly elections in 2009 was highly successful in Narayanpatna, with very
few votes being cast. He also informed us that CMAS has been able to form
its organisation in every village of Narayanpatna block, and is spreading
its base to the adjoining blocks as well. Linga told that in spite of severe
repression, the people have been able to defend the gains of the movement by
resolutely depending on their collective strength, by fortifying
self-defence mechanism through the formation of Ghenua Bahini, the mass
militia of CMAS, and by educating the people in political struggle. We also
talked to the president and secretary of BAMS, who told us about the
overwhelming response of the women of the region to the anti-liquor struggle
waged by CMAS, which enthused them to form a separate women’s organisation.
BAMS have fought against the patriarchal relations and customs within the
adivasis such as the two-wives system, and have achieved considerable
success in their endeavor.



The presence and role of the Maoists in Narayanpatna have also come under
discussion in the media in the past, and this was one of the aspects we
wished to investigate. From our interaction with the political activists of
the region, we learnt that the Maoist movement started in Koraput from 2003,
and soon garnered support from the poor peasantry of the district. We are
told that the movement has grown to the extent of giving shape to embryonic
forms of peoples’ power to take place of the exploitative state power by
forming Revolutionary Peoples’ Committees (RPCs) covering two panchayat
areas of Narayanpatna block. The RPCs are presently concentrating their
energies in three heads: self-defence, agricultural development, and health
& education. The Maoist party seemed to have roots among the working masses,
and have so far been successful in withstanding the armed assault of the
state. The state, alarmed by the spread of the movement, has sought to use
brute force, and thereby further isolating itself from the people.



The Narayanpatna struggle, we came to realise, is one of the most important
but least known movements of our times, and the corporate media as well as
the statist academia has played their roles in presenting it in a distorted
form. We appeal to the media, academics and the people at large to visit
Narayanpatna and expose the crimes committed by the Indian state on its
people, fighting for their inalienable right to land, livelihood and
dignity. The fact-finding team wishes to bring out its experiences in
Narayanpatna in a detailed report in the coming days, so as to act as a
corrective to such media misinformation, to give voice to the peoples’
concerns and bring out the reality which the Indian state so desparately
wishes to hide.



*The DSU Fact-finding team reiterates its solidarity with the peoples’
movement of Narayanpatna, and makes the following demands to the Indian
government:*



   1. All the 171 prisoners associated with the Narayanpatna struggle must
   be released unconditionally and immediately. The state must ensure that the
   illegal arrests, torture and killings of people in custody must be stopped
   in Narayanpatna.
   2. Cases against the office-bearers, activists, members and sympathizers
   of CMAS, BAMS and other mass organisations must be withdrawn, and these
   organisations must be allowed to work freely without fear of attack or
   persecution. The ‘Most Wanted’ warrant on Nachika Linga by the police must
   be withdrawn, and he be allowed to perform his duties as the president of
   CMAS freely, without any fear of intimidation and arrest.
   3. The personnel of the state’s armed forces who are responsible for the
   loss of lives and property of the people of Narayanpatna must be punished,
   and the people who suffered their atrocities must be compensated by the
   government.
   4. The paramilitary and police camps in Narayanpatna must be withdrawn
   immediately.
   5. The vigilante organisation called Shanti Committee must be disbanded,
   and their members be punished for their crimes.
   6. The land reclaimed by the adivasi people of Narayanpatna under the
   leadership of CMAS must be recognized by the government.
   7. The rights of the adivasis over their land, water, and forests and
   minerals must be ensured, and they must be provided with the basic
   necessities such as healthcare, education, drinking water, etc.
   8. Journalists, intellectuals, academics, activists and all those who are
   interested to visit Narayanpatna and interact with the people must not be
   prevented from doing so by the government, and it must ensure their free
   movement to and from any part of Narayanpatna and Koraput.





Members of the DSU Fact-finding Team:



Kuldeep, DU,

Kundan, IGNOU,

Manabhanjan, JNU

Ritupan, JNU

Sourabh, DU


*Contact: 9818975145, [email protected]*

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
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*
*The UID project i**s going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists
of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.*
*
*
*http://saynotoaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/*
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