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 The course of political life in Jharkhand has not run smooth since the
State was carved out of Bihar in 2000, the 28th to become part of the Indian
Union. In its short history, the state has seen it all: Naxalism, an RSS
presence, bribery cases, and murder, not to mention five chief ministers in
seven years.



As recently as October 2007, tragedy hit the family of Babulal Marandi, the
first chief minister of Jharkhand, when his son Arup was among 17 persons
killed in what was reported to be a Naxalite attack on Chilkhadia village in
Giridih district.  The village lies close to the Kodarma constituency which
the former CM now holds as an independent Member of Parliament.  A one-time
activist of the right wing Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, Marandi resigned
from the Bharatiya Janata Dal, the political wing of the RSS, in 2006,
forcing a by-election in one of Jharkhand's mining heartlands.  His victory
means that the BJP no longer has a Parliamentary presence in Jharkhand.



Ten months earlier, in December 2006, Shibu Soren was sentenced to life
imprisonment for conspiring to murder his ex-private secretary, Shashinath
Jha, in 1994.  Soren, or *Guruji* (venerable teacher) as he was popularly
known, was a respected *adivasi *(tribal; literally, original dwellers)
activist for the Jharkhand cause in the 1970s and one of the leading lights
of the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha.  Things turned sour, however, when MPs
belonging to the JMM were bribed to prop up the P. V. Narasimha Rao
government at the center during a no-confidence motion in 1993.  It is
alleged that Jha was killed – on Soren's orders – after he tried to muscle
in on the bribe.



So what exactly has been going on in Jharkhand? Wasn't the State founded to
bring fresh hope to the *adivasi* communities so long victimised by
*dikus*(outsiders) from the plains of Bihar and elsewhere?  Wasn't it
the
culmination of India's longest running regionalist movement, a movement led
in the 1940s, '50s and '60s by Jaipal Singh, and then through the next three
decades by Soren?



Yes and no.  The Jharkhand movement has been around for almost a century.
However, the state was officially founded on November 15, 2000, the birth
anniversary of Birsa Munda (1875-1900), the great freedom fighter from the
town of Ranchi, now the state capital.  And Singh's Jharkhand Party
*was*the major opposition party to Congress in Bihar in the 1950s,
when it
represented many of the region's *adivasi *communities.  But those
communities were never united.  Neither was the leadership of the Jharkhand
movement, which fractured badly in the 1960s.  The Jharkhand Party drew
strong support from Christian tribals in particular, a point not lost on the
Jana Sangh and the RSS.  Likewise, the JMM relies heavily on Santals, one of
the major *adivasi* tribes.  The party has never done well in Chhota
Nagpur.



In her book *Why Ethnic Parties Succeed: Patronage and Ethnic Headcounts in
India* *(*Cambridge University Press, 2004), the political scientist Kanchan
Chandra says the JMM is mainly an ethnic party, rather than an adivasior
regionalist party, and she is right in key respects.  The party tried hard
in the 1970s to build support among industrial workers in Dhanbad, where A.
K. Roy was a key figure.  It also made efforts to bring *sadan*s–
long-settled non-tribals – into the fold, as did Ram Dayal Munda and the
cultural wing of a broader Jharkhand movement.  But voting patterns suggest
that Santals mainly vote for Santals and Mundas for Mundas.  And neither
Santals or Mundas, nor Hos or Oraons refer to many of the remaining 26
Scheduled Tribal communities in Bihar-Jharkhand as '*adivasi*', or original
settlers.  Local identities and state-constructed identities are two
different things.



The States Reorganisation Commission picked up on this in 1956.  A separate
Jharkhand state was refused on the ground that there was no tribal link
language.  Nagpuri was not recognised as such.  But this was not the only
reason that Jaipal Singh was knocked back.   Bihari politicians were quick
to point out the economic value of Jharkhand.  How could India's resource
triangle be handed over to India's least 'modern' communities?  How could
India's iron, coal, mica and uranium resources be entrusted to a bunch of '*
junglee*s' (uncivilized person[s]; literally, forest dwellers)?



New Delhi seemed to agree with these arguments.  Central funds were pumped
into South Bihar, as Jharkhand was then called.  They built up public sector
steel plants and heavy engineering works at Bokaro and Ranchi-Hatia.  Mines
were nationalised.  All the while, however, villages remained without
electricity, decent roads, schools, even potable water in many cases.  JMM
activists saw Jharkhand as an internal colony for India and not without
reason, given the operations of the Freight Equalisation Act.



Academics refer to a resource curse when describing the continuing
underdevelopment of oil and mineral rich countries like Nigeria, Sierra
Leone and Sudan.  Politicians scramble to capture the rents provided by
geology, and use violence to enforce their will.  Regional or national
development goes by the wayside.  At best, the supporters of a local 'big
man' are paid off with stolen funds.



But that's Africa, right, not India?  Perhaps.  There are success stories in
Jharkhand, and Jamshedpur remains one of India's more vibrant and better
governed cities.  Capital did start to flow to the region after 2000, along
with non-governmental organisations (NGOs) anxious to escape Patna.  Some of
the region's best administrators opted to continue their careers in
Jharkhand, rather than in Bihar, infamous for its lawlessness.  And there
wasn't the bloodshed that Laloo Yadav predicted.  Even Babulal Marandi got
off to a good start by running an anti-corruption drive in Ranchi.



But it was not sustained.  In February 2001 eight *adivasi*s were shot dead
by police in Tapkara village.  This violent suppression of anti-dam
activists in the Koel-Karo region called to mind the notorious police
firings at Gua in 1980.  The JMM was then leading a campaign against 'police
terror and state employment policies' in western Singhbum, the iron ore
mining heartland of Jharkhand.  This was also the period of the forest *
andolan* (civil protest) in Kolhan.



Resource use has long been the key issue in Jharkhand.  But the struggle to
control Jharkhand's mineral wealth has prompted the looting of the state far
more than it has the building of a contract between politicians, state
officials and ordinary people.  More recently, neck and neck races between
the BJP and Congress nationally have made the capture of parliamentary seats
in Jharkhand a huge issue.  One could argue that the 2004 Lok Sabha
elections turned on deals made in Jharkhand, a la the 1993 bribery
incident.  Congress got its act together in 2004, which it hadn't done in
1999.  A coalition government in New Delhi gives local MPs considerable
bargaining power, something not lost on Marandi when he won Kodarma as an
Independent.  What it has not encouraged are efforts at state-building or
the effective provision of public goods.  Local people talk about anarchy
and the breakdown of law and order.  Schools and government buildings remain
under-, even un-staffed.  Living standards in rural areas resemble those in
sub-Saharan Africa.



It is within this vacuum that Naxalite groups have made headway.  Villages
in Ranchi District that were untouched by Naxalism in 2000 are now hotbeds
of Naxalite activity.  As the anthropologist Alpa Shah has shown, not all of
these Naxals are the poorest of the poor.  Nor are many of them imbued with
Maoist ideology.  Sometimes it is boys from better placed tribal – and
non-tribal – families who are muscling in on local businesses and
government, offering protection in return for payoffs and contracts.  All
forms of government resemble organised protection rackets to a degree,
albeit some are more democratic than others.  But it is the failure of
government and formal politics that has provided the seed-bed for the rapid
rise of so-called Naxalism in Jharkhand.  And it will take some time to
recover ground lost since 2000.



Meanwhile, Shibu Soren is back in Jharkhand, having had his conviction for
conspiracy to murder overturned in 2007 by the Delhi High Court.  Sadly,
there are few signs that ordinary Jharkhandis will soon be bailed out of
their woes.  For them, the creation of Jharkhand has been a huge
disappointment, as much a tragedy as a farce.
*Stuart Corbridge is Professor of Human Geography at the Development Studies
Institute, London School of Economics.*

 University of Pennsylvania Institute for the Advanced Study of India
(UPIASI)




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