An appeal for peace in South Bastar
Ilina Sen
http://www.hinduonnet.com/2008/10/21/stories/2008102155340900.htm

Dr. Ilina Sen presents certain proposals made by Dr. Binayak Sen, medical 
practitioner and leading member of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties, 
Chhattisgarh. She has written this based on discussions with him during recent 
visits to the Raipur Jail where he is since May 14, 2007.
The present situation in South Bastar is characterised by an infinitude of 
chronic deprivation, along with a complete absence of political discourse. On 
the one hand we have the Salwa Judum, which the government dishonestly tries to 
characterise as a “people’s response to Maoism.” On the other hand, there is a 
purely military engagement between the state-based forces and the Maoists, 
which act as a proxy to a political discourse. Both parties to this enga gement 
deliberately ignore the fact that a purely military solution, imposed by either 
party, even if it were possible, would be neither valid nor sustainable.

Phase 1
Any quest for a resolution of this situation cannot start by addressing the 
humanitarian problem on the ground alone, catastrophic as that no doubt is.. 
The humanitarian situation in South Bastar today is both the end product as 
well as the precipitating factor behind the current impasse. Any standard 
appeal for peace would begin with an agenda for the resolution of the 
humanitarian situation, but given the total breakdown of societal mechanisms in 
the area, this might have limited possibilities for success. Instead, the first 
and most urgent necessity is the establishment of an institutional forum for 
political engagement without preconditions. The purpose of this forum will not 
be to search for solutions, but rather to concentrate on the identification and 
recognition of participants in the forum, and the elaboration of an agenda as 
well as the guarantees necessary for the forum to conduct its business, that 
is, talks about talks.

Essentially this proposal resembles that suggested on certain occasions for the 
resolution of the current situation in Jammu and Kashmir. The identification of 
members of the forum must be an inclusive process. This must include, apart 
from the government and the Maoists, representatives of political parties as 
well as civil society in the area of South Bastar.

Phase 2
Once this institutional mechanism is in place, it would undertake, within its 
overall supervision, a specific series of measures directed at relieving the 
humanitarian situation on the ground. As an immediate priority, the problems to 
be addressed will include Food and Water, Shelter and Livelihood, Health Care, 
and Transport and Infrastructure.

Education is a more contentious subject and may be addressed once we move 
beyond the preliminary stages.

Food and Water: For all intents and purposes, the entire region is 
famine-stricken and should be treated as such. The indigenous systems of food 
production and livelihood have been destroyed. A universal public distribution 
system (PDS), at zero cost to the identified card-bearing consumers, should be 
put in place as an immediate priority. The identification of consumer 
households should be through electronic ration cards that can be redeemed at 
any geographical location in the affected area. This will leave the option open 
for households and household members to either return to their villages or 
continue to reside at whichever camp or other place they may have relocated to. 
The PDS should supply, in addition to cereals, pulses and oil. Adequate locally 
relevant measures to obtain potable, safe drinking water should be put in place.

Shelter: Village homes, which have remained unoccupied for months, will need 
repair and reconditioning to make them habitable. Help should be at hand to 
enable returning families to rebuild their homes.

Livelihoods: The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act should be extensively 
deployed over the entire area to secure a minimum livelihood for all returning 
families. Only when guaranteed livelihoods are effectively put in place will 
people enjoy some degree of autonomous control over their own lives. The issue 
of pattas to revenue lands abandoned for lengths of time, and cultivation of 
what are technically forest lands, are extremely complex. In view of the new 
Act for granting land rights to families cultivating these lands, the matter 
should be handled with extreme sensitivity. Pending the reclamation and 
recording of people’s land rights, implementation of all decisions for land 
acquisition must be put in abeyance.

Health Care: Adequate and accessible health care facilities, universally 
accessible to all on a cashless basis, must be put in place as soon as 
possible. This should include supplies of drugs and other necessary equipment. 
No discrimination should obtain between different population groups with 
respect to access to basic health facilities. In case state-based facilities 
are not available, non-state providers who fulfil these criteria should be 
welcomed.

Transport and Infrastructure: The network of weekly markets must be restored on 
a priority basis. The minimum infrastructure for resumption of agriculture, 
including animal husbandry, should be put in place.

Citizenship records and voter rights: Widespread displacement and population 
dislocation have made citizenship records and voter rights critical issues at 
this particular time. Transparent mechanisms must be put in place to ensure 
that citizenship rights are preserved and entitlements to democratic 
decision-making are ensured.

Demilitarisation: It will not be possible or practicable to wait until full 
normalcy is restored in all these parameters. However, significant progress 
that demonstrates the bona fides of all parties as far as their commitment to 
peace and political discourse is concerned will have to precede the 
negotiations and a move for full demilitarisation. It is our belief that 
significant progress towards a ceasefire and eventual demilitarisation can only 
take place when the ordinary people have a stake in the maintenance of the 
peace.

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