A Prize For The Prisoner

Binayak Sen has just received a major international award but is still in jail. 
P. ZACHARIAH applauds his former student

Physician and activist Dr. Binayak Sen — currently behind bars for alleged 
links with Naxalites — this month became the first South Asian to get the 
prestigious Jonathan Mann Award for Global Health and Human Rights in 
recognition of his work in the remotest areas of Chhattisgarh. This award has 
been given to him by public health organisations and professionals working in 
more than 140 countries on six continents. On this occasion, Dr. P Zachariah, 
the retired Head of Physiology at the Christian Medical College, Vellore 
examines the life of his former student — a life that’s led to widespread 
admiration, international accolades and accusations of sedition by the state.

Binayak Sen was an exceptionally bright student. He got into Christian Medical 
College, Vellore, through the open category, a task as difficult as getting 
into the IITS. As professor of physiology I got to know him very well. From the 
beginning, it was apparent to us all that he was a great questioner; he wanted 
to know why everything was the way it was. Even while in college he wrote an 
award-winning essay proposing changes in medical education. The best thing that 
happened to Binayak was that, as a postgraduate student, he married Ilina. She 
was very bright, vivacious and deeply interested in the issues Binayak was 
involved with.

A Christian students group in CMC was very active in social work and Binayak 
became one of their most active members. CMC certainly had a tradition of 
charity but he was unusual in that he wanted to know why people were not 
healthy. He won a gold medal in paediatrics,then the most coveted post-graduate 
programme, and studied malnutrition as part of his dissertation. Visiting the 
slums of Vellore, he realised that malnutrition wasn’t just a medical issue; it 
had social and political roots. This was in 1966-71, way before the World 
Health Organisation’s 1978 Alma Ata Declaration stating that health is a human 
right.

Binayak went from Vellore to JNU to explore the notion of health as a human 
right. For a while he worked in a hospital in rural Hoshangabad that was run by 
a Quaker group known for their commitment to non-violence: this is relevant, 
considering the allegations against him now. Working on their anti-tuberculosis 
programme, he grew acquainted with mining communities. He then moved to 
Dallirajhara in Chhattisgarh. It was a moment of intensive union activity among 
mine workers. Permanently disenfranchised as casual labourers, these miners 
were beginning to fight their abysmal conditions, led by the iconic leader 
Shankar Niyogi. Healthcare was non-existent. Sanitary arrangements were 
primitive. One of the most active people in their movement died while giving 
birth. It then became clear to them that the community needed to push for 
medical care.

Binayak set up a clinic with the help of the community that later became the 
Shaheed Hospital. Miners volunteered and he trained them in nursing, laboratory 
work, accounts and management. Binayak believed that medical science needed to 
be demystified and at the same time he broke down the walls between 
intellectual activity and manual labour. Everyone in the hospital, including 
Binayak, did sanitary work. He empowered them so that they were able to take 
major policy decisions. They began with ten beds and in the seven years that 
Binayak was there it became a 90-bed hospital.

He left when Shankar Niyogi was assassinated by the mining mafia. Niyogi had 
thought of Binayak as his successor and he, in turn, thought of Niyogi as an 
elder brother. But the assassination changed things and the movement took a 
violent direction. Binayak left Chhattisgarh and was depressed for a while. He 
even came to stay with us in Vellore. Niyogi’s death was, perhaps, the only 
point at which he could have walked away from the life he’d chosen. In the 
years that followed, his life became too entwined with that of the rural poor 
of Chhattisgarh for him to ever leave.

He later moved to a place outside Raipur to serve the families displaced by the 
Gangrail dam. Binayak was very interested in the question of food security. He 
saw children die from malnutrition and saw that families below the poverty line 
had no access to ration cards. Through his organisation, Roopantar, he 
initiated programmes to promote food security. He encouraged villagers to 
create and preserve food banks as a community.

His interest in civil activism also grew out of witnessing malnutrition deaths 
among children. The lack of governance worried him deeply. Chhattisgarh is a 
complicated state with a complicated history. The government did not meet the 
people’s needs and it was easy for Naxalites to exploit that. The government 
found it difficult to deal with militants who operated out of dense forests and 
took a very repressive stance. In the end, it led to the creation of the Salwa 
Judum, the civilian militia drawn mostly from local villages. The police 
machinery too was getting large funds to fight the Naxalites. In the dark days 
that followed, people began to disappear. As a member of the People’s Union for 
Civil Liberties, Binayak couldn’t help getting involved. PUCL was constantly 
approached by villagers saying that their relatives had disappeared. The police 
had to be approached, FIRs had to be filed, and Binayak began to help.

It was against this background that he met with Naxalite ideologue Narayan 
Sanyal. During his time in jail in Andhra Pradesh, Sanyal had developed a 
contracture of the hand, a painful condition which required surgery. Sanyal’s 
brother wrote to Binayak requesting medical attention, and he took up the case, 
meeting Sanyal each time only with official permission. It was to eventually 
lead to his arrest for alleged ‘sedition’.

Having known Binayak Sen for years, I do not believe he would ever promote or 
condone violence. It is my understanding that the government finds Chhattisgarh 
difficult to govern. They think they can manage the Naxalite problem if they 
come down hard. At the same time, policemen are being killed everyday so there 
are strong emotions against Naxalites too. Besides, there are rich mineral 
resources that can be turned over to extractive industries only when the 
tribals are removed from the forests. So there are high stakes for the 
government to say: “If you are not with us, you are against us.”

Binayak is a very rare doctor — a man with a deep understanding of the social 
and political dimensions of health. The governments of the world, the World 
Bank and other organisations are now worrying about food security and 
alternative food policies; Binayak was decades ahead of them all. When the 
government makes such a man’s life impossible, what message is it sending out? 
A recent graduate from CMC said to me, “On the one hand I have Binayak Sen’s 
example and on the other hand, I have corporates waiting with open arms.” A 
group of doctors at AIIMS, inspired by Binayak, have set up a hospital in 
Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh.

The news of Binayak winning the award should be a source of national pride, but 
how can we celebrate this when he is in prison for his belief that health and 
human rights cannot be separated? When the state makes a scapegoat of a man 
like Binayak Sen, it destroys all the idealism in the world.


>From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 17, Dated May 03, 2008

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