Dear Friends

Please find attached an article on Singur and displacement which appeared in
The Assam Tribune on October 28, 2008. With best wishes

Walter Fernandes




Displacement and Political Parties

 

 

After a long struggle the Tatas have decided to pull out of Singur. Now is the 
time to look at the situation objectively because what has happened at Singur 
is not specific to West Bengal. It has been happening in the past and will 
happen in the future all over India. The first issue is the role of political 
parties. Ms Mamata Banerjee is held responsible for what many consider a 
setback to the industrialisation of the state. In reality, her party hijacker 
for its political gain, a major issue affecting the people, the poor in 
particular. The cause then got caught up in the political battle. The CPM led 
alliance had neglected industries in West Bengal for three decades. Suddenly it 
woke up to the situation and decided to industrialise the state with a 
vengeance. It has promised 232,167 acres to different private industries in the 
near future and more to other projects. Only 997 acres of it were allotted to 
the Tata factory.

 

That happened to be in Mamata Banerjee’s vote bank area and she opposed this 
takeover but did not oppose the remaining 231,200 acres elsewhere. The basic 
issue of forced displacement without people’s consent was lost in this battle 
for political gain. If she had become the chief minister she would probably 
have done the same but on land on which CPM supporters lived. The media too 
presented the struggle only as a political battle and allegations were even 
made that the competitors of the Tatas were supporting Banerjee. One cannot 
exclude that possibility but I shall deal only with the issues affecting the 
people.

 

For the time being I shall ignore the ethical issue of depriving people of 
their livelihood without their consent and the impoverishment that land 
takeover without rehabilitation or very low compensation causes. I shall only 
ask whether a car factory needs 997 acres or is it part of real estate 
speculation? Past experience points towards the latter. For example, in 1952 
West Bengal allotted 750 acres to the Birla owned Hindustan Motors. The company 
has used only 300 acres of it and in 2006 asked the state government to allow 
it to build a residential colony on the remaining 450 acres. The agriculturists 
from whom that land was alienated were impoverished in the name of a public 
purpose. That land is now being used for real estate speculation and for 
private profit. 

 

It also shows that a car factory including its township needs not more than 300 
to 400 acres. So these 450 acres could easily have been allotted to the Tatas. 
That plot is next to a highway and the Hindustan Motors has a railhead that 
could be extended to the Tata factory. Instead more than double that area was 
allotted to the Tatas far from there. Was excess land allotted to them for real 
estate speculation? The Tatas are not an exception. Excess land takeover in the 
name of national development has been the norm all over India for five decades. 
Among dozens of examples I have come across is the Hirakud dam in the Sambalpur 
district of Orissa. The whole town of Burla has been built on excess land 
acquired for it. 

 

The Nano factory is one of many examples of this approach continuing today. The 
most glaring examples are the Special Economic Zones (SEZ) 366 of which have 
been sanctioned till now. Each of them can have up to 12,500 acres and the 
Centre justifies them in the name of job creation and industrialisation. In 
reality the Special Economic Zones Act stipulates that only half of the area 
has to be put to productive use. Its section 5(2) allows the rest to be used 
for hotels, malls and residential colonies on the rest of the land. As a result 
many SEZs built on agricultural land acquired from poor farmers are in the 
hands of companies that only have experience in real estate and none in 
industrial production. The CPM has been opposing the SEZs in other states but 
is promoting them where it is in power. That is the other side of Mamata 
Banerjee who is using Singur for political gain.

 

Then comes the type of land. The Commerce Minister Mr Kamal Nath has declared 
that fertile agricultural land will not be used for the SEZs. In practice most 
SEZs, for example three in Goa and one near Mangalore in Karnataka, are on 
fertile agricultural land on which three crops are grown. Also the land at 
Singur belongs to this category. In Assam, more than half of the 14 lakh acres 
used for development projects 1947-2000 were fertile land. Because of its very 
successful record in land reforms West Bengal has the highest food grains 
production of 5.6 percent in India. It seems to be sacrificing its food 
security and land reforms in the name of industrialisation that may not replace 
the livelihood lost. 

 

Compensation is the next issue. It is paid according to the “market value” of 
the land acquired, defined as the average of three years of registered price. 
It is a public secret that not more than 40 percent of the price is registered. 
By following this norm the state pays a very low compensation to the land 
losers. Moreover, according to the 19th century colonial land laws that 
continue to be in force today, only individually owned land is compensated. 
Much of the land acquired is community owned on which tribal or other groups 
had lived for centuries before the colonial land declared them encroachers on 
their own habitat. In Assam, for example, only 3.9 lakh acres out of the 14 
lakh acres used for development projects 1947-2000 were private land for which 
compensation was paid. 15 lakh persons were displaced from the remaining 10 
lakh acres with no compensation. Moreover, most projects are in the “backward” 
areas where the market price is extremely low.

 

In West Bengal the major issue is the bargadari (sharecropper) system. 
According to its law, the registered bargadar gets 25 percent of the 
compensation paid for the land acquired. However, many bargadars, including 250 
of those cultivating some of the 997 acres at Singur, are not registered. They 
will get no compensation, nor will the 1,000 landless agricultural labourers 
working on that land. That gives you the picture of impoverishment it would 
have caused.

 

Impoverishment is the lot of the land losers. The projects built on their land 
do not replace the jobs lost. Most jobs they create are highly skilled one 
while the land losers only have agricultural skills. As a result, more than 50 
percent of the cultivators are rendered jobless and most of the rest experience 
downward occupational mobility from cultivators to unskilled daily wage 
earners. However, political parties use their struggles only for political 
gain. To the industrialist their land is only a source of profit. Both ignore 
the voice of the people whom they impoverish.   

 

Dr Walter Fernandes is Director, North Eastern Social Research Centre, Guwahati.

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