Right perspective

Talk To Naxals; Focus On Development, Land Reform

By Suhit Sen, The Statesman
2008-05-14

A team of experts constituted by the Planning Commission has cottoned on to
something the Prime Minister doesn't seem to comprehend. It has pointed out
that Left-wing extremism is not just ~ we could go further and say not at
all ~ a law-and-order problem. It is a phenomenon that arises from a
complete lack of development, desperate poverty and the dehumanisation that
arises from it, and injustice and inequality. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
does not agree, of course ~ not long ago he had characterised extremism as
the most virulent disease that afflicted India's body politic and Naxals as
the Public Enemy # 1. He should take time off his admittedly onerous duties
to pore over the report.

It must be said at the outset that none of the points that the report seems
to have made is particularly new ~ they have been made many times before, by
many people, not all of whom are apologists for or supporters of the radical
Left. Thus, for instance, the report points out that at the root of
ultra-Left radicalism is landlessness and bad governance ~ and that Naxals,
broadly speaking, have a big constituency among the landless, small and
marginal farmers and Dalits, especially tribals. In other words, exactly
those people who are the most exploited and marginalised, whose rights, in
some ways, existence, the establishment ~ polite society, should we say ~
takes no cognisance of.

Agrarian question

It isn't too much of a stretch by any means to argue, as the report seems to
have done, that the most effective way to tackle Left-wing extremism is to
put in place a land reform programme that works. Look at West Bengal. The
Naxal movement, as we all know, originated in North Bengal in the late
sixties. But by the early eighties it had all but died in the state where it
began its career, though it had spread to, and was alive and well in, many
other parts of India ~ Bihar and Andhra Pradesh first and in time Orissa,
Madhya Pradesh, mostly the parts that are now in Chhattisgarh, and
Maharashtra. Many factors contributed to the death of the Naxal movement in
Bengal ~ state repression, and the infiltration of idealistic but
ineffectual students, and lumpen elements.
But what was crucial to the Naxals being doomed for decades to a future
consisting mostly of sipping tea and smoking bidis in College Street while
plotting revolution, was the fact that in its early years the Left Front
succeeded in putting together the first credible land reforms programme the
country had seen. It will come as no surprise that the IAS officer who was
instrumental in implementing the reforms ~ Mr Debabrata Bandyopadhyay ~ was
the man who headed the committee instituted by the Planning Commission.
It should occasion no surprise either that the revival of the radical Left
in West Bengal comes at a time when, in its eagerness to industrialise the
state, the Left Front government has ridden roughshod over the constituency
that has kept the front in power for over three decades ~ the peasantry. The
most vulnerable strata of that, using the term loosely, class ~ the marginal
and small peasants, and the landless ~ are, in fact, hit the hardest by the
state government's policies of land acquisition.

The report submitted to the Planning Commission makes an interesting point ~
that there are 10 indicators that distinguish the districts in which Naxals
are a potent force: among them are a preponderance of people belonging to
the scheduled castes and scheduled tribes; large tracts of forests; high
incidence of agricultural labour; and low per capita foodgrain production.
This finding not only buttresses the point made above but also points in
another direction.

It is a matter of the utmost, and unfortunate, irony that some of the
richest stretches of territory in this country ~ rich in forest resources,
water resources and minerals, for instance ~ are populated by some of the
poorest of people in this country.

If you superimposed a resource map of the country on a map of poverty and a
map of Naxal-held areas, you would find an astonishing degree of
convergence. Which leads to the point that the people who live in, say,
mineral-rich areas, never benefit when these resources are utilised ~ either
the government or private, and usually extremely exploitative and
unscrupulous, mining companies benefit. It is no coincidence that Naxals
fight against land acquisition, or appropriation, for projects in such
areas.

The report submitted by Mr Bandyopadhyay's team presents a window of
opportunity, especially as it arrives soon after another significant
development. The Janadesh rally from Bhopal to New Delhi: 25,000 people, by
conservative estimates, including activists, and peasants and landless
labourers, marched to the national Capital to demand a resolution of the
land question. The government agreed to set up a national land commission,
after representatives met the chairperson of the United Progressive
Alliance, Ms Sonia Gandhi. This is the time to act. If the government can
put together a land reform programme throughout the country not only will it
have put a step in the right direction towards alleviating poverty, it might
just find that the problem of industrialisation and land acquisition will
also lessen. No one in his or her right mind will suggest that land reform
alone will solve all problems.

Not by force

For significant progress, other problems in the almost stagnant agricultural
sector will also have to be fixed. But land reform has to be the starting
point ~ if for no other reason, at least because it is an equity issue and
implementing land reform will establish at least some of the good faith that
is needed to legitimise the state-society compact.
There is another matter Mr Bandyopadhyay and his colleagues touched upon
that is related to the narrow vision of policy-makers. Since the Naxal
movement is seen largely as one connected to law and order, the government
has tried to counter it in Chhattisgarh by raising the notorious Salwa
Judum, a disastrous experiment involving press-ganging tribal people into
militia camps to fight the Left extremists.

Some of the 'volunteers' of the Salwa Judum are barely in their teens.
Chhattisgarh does not need militias and it does not need child warriors ~ it
needs land reforms and the kind of development that benefits people in the
shape of jobs, land, education, healthcare, shelter, etc, not the kind that
is brought about by chicanery, force and fraud and only benefits
industrialists, contractors, bureaucrats and politicians while destroying
the natural resources base that people are perforce dependent upon.

The writer is Senior Editor, The Statesman


*Naxalites are not public enemy No. 1
*http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=3&theme=&usrsess=1&id=206342

Sir ~ The article, "Right perspective" (14 May) by Suhit Sen is timely and
should act as a wake-up call for our policy planners.

The experts committee has pointed out certain basic factors at the root of
"ultra-left" extremism which should be tackled without wasting any time.
Development should be seen as a package involving education, healthcare,
employment and, above all, solution to the problem of "landlessness". What
is needed is a top priority action to address these problems, starting at
the grassroots level. The district planning committee of the affected areas
should swing into action and start a dialogue, in the first instance, with
representatives of the extremist organisations to know their perceived
needs. A strong political and bureaucratic support with an open mind will go
a long way towards the success of this effort.

Let our Prime Minister, who is the chairman of the Planning Commission, take
interest in the report submitted by the experts committee headed by someone
who is an authority on land reforms. He should, as a matter of fact, offer
his guidance to this programme. A pragmatic and sincere approach is called
for. Extremists are not "India's public enemy No. 1" and do not deserve a
high-handed policy of repression but a sympathetic consideration of their
needs and demands.
~ Yours, etc., Sujit K Chaudhuri,
New Delhi, May 23.

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