Hello Friends,


I can't be wrong if I say Adivasi and Displacements are forced to get
married to each other by incapable policy of our government. Some of us may
be feeling slightly indifferent to market oriented hyper media, which
are reporting Adivasi movements for their equal benefit. But, it's different
than other million of issues of our billions of population, which need a
proper attention of our policy makers. Here, I am sharing a small report on
displacement of Santali Adivasi due to ethnic conflict in Assam, written by
K Soren. It is bit old now but, still relevant.


-- 
Regards,

Sudesh Kumar
J H A R K H A N D
www.jharkhand.org.uk
[email protected]



The ghost of displacement is once again visiting Santhali families in Lower
Assam eleven years after they were displaced from their homes in the 1996
Bodo-Santhali ethnic violence. This time the ghost is in the garb of forest
officials with "orders from above" (which mysteriously cannot be traced to
whom) to evict the forest encroachers.  On 24th September 2007, with a few
sweep of their sticks, forest officials broke down the huts of 18 Santhali
families of Aie Powali village in Chirang District (earlier Kokrajhar
District). Two days before that they had suddenly descended and broke down
the Shiv Mandir near the village. Notices were not served either time.
People are not sure when they will come again and break what next.

The problem is not just in the breaking of 18 huts, which made of bamboo and
straw can be assembled together again (though at the cost of the precious
few rupees of the poor). But the demolition and so called "eviction" throws
up disturbing questions which needs urgent answers.

Over 200,000 people were displaced following the two waves of Bodo-Santhali
ethnic violence in 1996 and 1998. 80% of the displaced were adivasis (mainly
Santhalis) while the rest were Bodos and a few Nepalis and Rabhas. The
government put the refugees in make-shift relief camps in Kokrajhar and
Dhubri districts. A small fraction of the displaced went back to their homes
and villages not long after the riots but most of the displaced have been
living in sub-human conditions in these camps for over ten years. The
conditions in the camps are abysmal.

After the initial period, the Assam government seems to have washed their
hands off the IDPs. They get just ten days of rice as relief (which they
share with many families who were never listed as camp inmates). In
*Deosri*camp in Chirang District, 126 families who arrived later in
the camp
following the second wave of violence have never been listed. This despite
repeated appeals by the families and by camp leaders to the authorities.
People starve for days as daily wage labour is not regularly available and
they get just half the rate as in other places! Many of the able-bodied men
go to neighbouring Bhutan to find work for a day's ration. In the same camp,
hand pumps for drinking water has been provided by an international NGO and
so has medical care for the past six years. With the said NGO having
completed its mission and withdrawn services from last month, people in
Deosri camp have been left with no medical services again. The teacher
student ratio in the Deosri camp is 1:500 in the camp with just two EGS
teachers at a rupees one thousand monthly salary for one thousand families!


The Assam government started the second phase of the so called
"rehabilitation" in 2004. Families have been given Rs.10,000 as housing
grant and "released"('release' as from a prison?!). Release means stopping
relief rations and now the family must fend for themselves, not that they
were not doing so before that. In Deosri camp, 643 families have been
released in two batches, once last year in August 2006 and once this year in
2007. In the haste to "rehabilitate" the camp inmates, the government has
conveniently forgotten to ask where the Santhalis are supposed to go after
being "released?" It would be suicidal to go back to their villages since
their land, house and village has been taken over by the others. No land
compensation has been given to "released families" and people are bewildered
about how they are supposed to secure their lives and livelihoods with a
mere ten thousand rupees. It is not enough to buy land. Are they to buy
bullocks or build a house or return their debts? The injustice of the ten
thousand rupees rehabilitation money is unacceptable in any humane society.
Compare this to the 5 lakhs rupees rehabilitation given to riot victims in
Gujarat or to flood affected people in Rajasthan. Perhaps people are less
people because they happen to be violence affected in Assam!

Most of the 643 "released" families in Deosri (the story is the same for
most families in other camps as well) have settled in and around the camp,
in a 1-2 km radius. They have cleared some land and started growing maize
and other small cash crops. Deosri and most areas where the camps are
located in Chirang District are reserved forest areas. People were living in
forests even before they were displaced and came to the camps. Some were in
recognised forest villages and paying a tax while others have been forest
encroachers from the days of their forefathers. They have become
"encroachers" again after getting "released" from the camp. They are more
vulnerable than ever, constantly living under the shadow of eviction, with
terror of being displaced yet again.

Sonaram Tudu left the Deosri camp after 11 years and settled in nearby Aie
Powali last year in August 2006 when he got his ten thousand rupees release
money. With two small children he felt that "there was no future in the
camp" and he could not go back to Malivita village since his lands had been
taken over by the Bodos. In the new place, he cleared 4 bighas of land (a
little over 1 acre) which was run over with wild grass and planted some
tapioca. Sonaram proudly says that he did not cut even one single tree. He
does his cultivation work at dawn and then leaves to search for wage labour
in Gelengphu in Bhutan. If he is lucky, every two or three days he gets some
work and earns Rs.60-Rs.70 a day.  Sonaram's was one the first huts to be
broken five days ago on 24th September when forest department came for the
eviction drive. Five days has gone by but Sonaram is yet to rebuild his hut.
He lives with his wife and children in the open under a mosquito net. He
will need two thousand rupees to rebuild his hut but is scared that if he
rebuilds his hut, they will break it down again. Sonaram is sad as to why
the forest officials had to cut off all his tapioca plants when they came to
demolish his house.

Sonaram's neighbour Lakhi Hasda has a similar tale to tell. With the ten
thousand rupees release money, she and her husband Bhuta Murmu bought two
small calves which cost them nine thousand rupees while they spent the "rest
of the money on some kitchen utensils and clothes". They also cleared some
land and have been cultivating maize on the land. But the eviction has left
her with a broken house and crops destroyed. She is bewildered that if the
forest people had to clear the forests then why they have not picked on the
Koch Rajbongshi settlement just a stone's throw away from their row of huts.
Why were they targeted? For Lakhi it is little comfort that after people
protested, the demolishers also went and uprooted the bamboo fences of five
houses of the nearby Bodo village. She is worried that they will have to
spend precious money in repairing their house only to have it broken again
if the forest people come again.

It is difficult getting the Adivasis of the camp any sort of rights under
the forest laws of the land – old forest laws or even under the new "The
Scheduled Tribes and other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of
Forest Rights) Acts 2006". For one, Santhals (and all adivasis in Assam) do
not have a Scheduled Tribe (ST) status and hence, they have to prove that
they have dwelled in  forests for at least three generations or 75 years.
What "acceptable" proof can they possibly show? Also, even if they can
"prove" their three generations old stay in forests, it would be in their
earlier villages before they came to the relief camp. Now that they have
been "released" by the government after 13 December 2005 (the cut off date
to define "forest dwellers" under the new forest act), where does that place
them? The forest people now label them as "fresh encroachers" and according
to the G.C Basumatary, the Conservator of Forests in Kokrajhar "(have) *no
choice but definitely to be evicted*".

*But are there really no choices?  *

What choices did and do the Santhali refugees of Assam have? Was it their
choice to have their homes and hearth burnt and to run to save their lives?
Was it their choice to live in sub-human conditions in the relief camps for
11 long years? Did they have a choice when they were paid only ten thousand
rupees and "released?" Is it their choice not to be able to go back to their
villages for fear of being killed? It is their choice that they have to
settle in forest areas because they have nowhere else to go?    And now, *do
they have a choice when their homes are being demolished and they are being
displaced once again or perhaps it is their choice to have their *rights as
human beings trampled and crushed?!
Kadey Soren
www.jharkhand.us/kadey-soren
  • The ghost of displacemen... Sudesh Kumar

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