Intellectuals concerned with issues of people have been under attack in recent 
years in different states. The Karnataka Government had prepared a list of 
teachers of colleges, editors of newspapers and some NGOs alleging them to be 
close to the Naxals in the State because of their involvement in the 
anti-communal struggle. A group of them including Girish Karnad, Professor 
Govind Rao, Dr Sridhar and a host others were arrested in 2003 when they had 
gone to participate in a rally in support of the Supreme Court decision to 
maintain neutrality at the Bababudan Giri shrine in Chikmagalur when the 
saffron forces were attempting to communalise the Sufi shrine. In fact, it was 
the Congress Government headed by S.M. Krishna, the present Foreign Minister of 
the country, that was in power then. The allegation against Binayak Sen was 
similar. He was dubbed as a sympathiser of the Naxalites and kept in jail for 
more than a year without trail. Now you have the West Bengal Government. Days 
after some members of civil society went to Lalgarh to broker peace, the police 
have lodged a general complaint against film-maker Aparna Sen, dramatist 
Shaonli Mitra, poet Joy Goswami and others with breaking Section 144 while 
entering the villages. Gopal Menon, the documentary film producer from 
Karnataka, was put behind bars for filming police and Army atrocities. Police 
said reports submitted to the government suggested that some of the Maoists had 
accompanied the intellectuals during their Lalgarh trip and the intellectuals 
are in nexus with the Maoists to destabilise the State. When the intellectuals 
were asked of the nexus, they claimed total ignorance..

The state has various kinds of intellectuals. There is a group of committed 
intellectuals the state makes use of to further its vested interests. They are 
no threat to the safety and security of the state. Since independence, most 
intellectuals have not risen above petty party politics. They are intimate with 
Ministers and bureaucrats and some of them enjoy considerable perks for their 
unstinted support to the government in power. They are intellectuals of the 
establishment. They are most willing to do the biddings of the party in power 
and tune their thinking to the party in power. On the other hand, the state has 
problems with intellectuals committed to the cause of the people. Wherever 
there are radical and extremist groups, there is much deprivation of basic 
rights, and disregard by the state to the basic issues of livelihood. Those 
States or areas that have become Maoist or Naxalite targets continue to lie at 
the bottom of the human development index and at the top of the world 
corruption index. The ultimate consequence of the State’s brazen looting of 
funds meant for development is obviously violence. The radical or extremist 
movements have their roots in impoverished socio-economic conditions increased 
by the inaction of the state. Who can deny that the anger of the masses against 
massive state terror, underdevelopment and corruption is not valid? By 
pinpointing the root cause of violence, of course, intellectuals are not 
supporting violence. They are only performing their role and responsibilities 
to society by highlighting the apathy and the inaction of the state. If the 
intellectuals do not condemn the colonial stance of those elected to govern us 
and who are thus doing their people a great disservice, why should they exist? 
All said and done, the primary task of the intellectual community is to 
announce and denounce. While they are expected to voice the concerns of those 
who are voiceless, it is their responsibility to pinpoint institutions and 
structures responsible for the discrimination and oppression of the poor.

¨

Given the wide and increasing gap between the rich and the poor, the country 
should expect from intellectuals to be committed to the cause of 
nation-building by understanding the socio-economic reality of the people.. 
India does not need “ivory tower intellectuals” or “state intellectuals”. The 
country is in need of “organic intellectuals”—committed to the cause of the 
people and respond to the challenges that affect the poor and the marginalised. 
That is exactly what the states resist. They prefer “ivory tower intellectuals” 
who could restrict their lives to the campus of their universities or the four 
walls of the classrooms. Intellectual activists, like the ones in Bengal, 
threaten the State and make those in power insecure. Those intellectuals whom 
the State had alleged of subverting the state had gone to Lalgarh to get first 
hand information of what is taking place in the area.. They were merely doing 
their duties when they alleged that the security forces were torturing women 
and children. The group had met agitating tribal leaders as well as the common 
people in some villages during their visit to the affected zone. After being 
shocked by the intensity of the violence both by the state and the Maoists, 
they had made a very sincere appeal to both Maoists and the administration to 
lay down arms and to begin a dialogue. The common people were not getting food 
and water and were caught in the cross-fire between the Maoists and the police. 
The group had made it clear that they do not believe in the politics of 
violence and counter-violence where ordinary citizens become victims.

Taking an equidistance from both the state and the extreme elements of the 
state, it is the responsibility of intellectuals to stand by the people. 
Whenever there are extremist elements controlling the lives of the people, 
there is the state terror by the police where women are molested and children 
are harmed. People have to live without food and water for days. Security 
forces loot and torture innocent citizens. Intellectuals would be failing in 
their duty if they do not express deep concern at the ongoing violence and 
massive police action. State violence in the name of law and order only leads 
to another round of blood-letting and a spiral of renewed violence, tragedy and 
injustice. The two kinds of violence only feed and aggravate each other. 
Whenever there is state operation, it normally hits civilian life and social 
safety of people living in sub-human conditions. Public services and social 
opportunity worsens by unremitting police atrocities.

It is important and necessary therefore to understand that violence is an 
expression of frustration with a failed State and deserves only condemnation in 
a democracy. People in remote areas of the country are unhappy with the 
administration but not all of them may support the Maoists or the Naxalites. 
Most of them are victims of fear. Instead of counter-violence, why doesn’t the 
government implement a comprehen-sive development programme to end the misery 
of the people? While the Dalits and tribals have been denied their livelihood 
in the name of ‘forest protection’, the timber and land mafia have been allowed 
to run free by conniving with local administrators. The natural resources of 
the indigenous people have been allowed to be robbed pushing them to the 
extremes of poverty and helplessness. The government’s efforts in ameliorating 
poverty are not wholehearted. Given the nature of the market economy, 
governments to a large extent are in support of traders, businessmen, 
multinational corporations and the industrialists. People are becoming more and 
more aware of it. To end the extremist problem for good, governments may have 
to give up their commitment to neo-liberalism. Violence could only increase if 
resources are transferred from the people to corporates. At this juncture to 
initiate peace, States should arrange for adequate relief to the inhabitants of 
the disturbed areas, restore law and order and start long-term development 
programmes with special emphasis on their socio-economic needs. 
Confidence-building measures like land reforms, development of local industries 
and entrepreneurship have to be initiated among those adversely affected by the 
current economic policies of the governments in power to avoid violence and 
further bloodshed. n

Dr (Fr.) Ambrose Pinto S.J. is the Principal of St Joseph’s College, Bangalore.

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