This finally got into the New York Times. -- Yoshie

Cf. Analytical Monthly Review (a sister edition of Monthly Review
published in West Bengal), "Land Grab and 'Development' Fraud in
India,"
<http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/amr210906.html>

<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/29/world/asia/29india.html>
December 29, 2006
Razing Farms for Factory Creates Battleground in India
By SOMINI SENGUPTA

CALCUTTA, Dec. 22 — Just beyond the city limits, a patch of land where
an auto factory is planned amid a sprawl of potato fields and rice
paddies has become the battleground for the world's longest-running
democratically elected Communist government.

This government, of West Bengal State, plans to turn over 997 acres of
fertile farmland to one of the country's largest industrial
conglomerates, The Tata Group, for a factory that will produce a fleet
of small, low-cost cars for India's growing middle class.

How the land was acquired is a matter of red-hot contention, igniting
crippling demonstrations, hunger strikes and occasional violent
conflicts. The government says most of the landowners consented, but
opponents charge coercion.

Land is one of India's scarcest resources. So how this fight plays out
is likely to teach far-reaching lessons to India as a whole, as it
tries to balance the demands of industrial growth with the needs of
those who rely on agriculture. Across the country, steel mills, power
plants, roads, ports and hundreds of so-called Special Economic Zones
are planned, all of which will require state governments like this one
to acquire vast swaths of land.

On one side of the conflict here is, improbably enough, the Communist
Party of India (Marxist) and its leader, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee,
chief minister of West Bengal State, for whom the auto plant at
Singur, 22 miles west of Calcutta, represents the beachhead of
industrial resurgence.

To that end, the state government has recently fenced off the land,
deployed hundreds of state police officers and private guards on its
perimeter, and, to stave off protests, banned assemblies of five or
more people in villages nearby.

The stakes for Mr. Bhattacharjee, 62, a Communist Party stalwart who
has of late aggressively courted private investment, could not be
higher. And that shows in his zeal.

"All leading investors are closely watching whether the government
will fail to start this project," he said in an interview. "For us,
there is no space. We just cannot roll back. It will send a bad
message all over the country and the world."

His message is stark and simple: West Bengal, a symbol of strife and
ruin for more than 30 years whose capital, Calcutta, was once called
"a dying city" by Rajiv Gandhi, the former prime minister, is once
again open for business.

It is for this reason, not to mention his party's iron hold on this
state since 1977, that Mr. Bhattacharjee is sometimes regarded as the
Chinese-style leader among Indian Communists. He has staked his
reputation on promoting industrial growth. He has embraced
privatization of state-run enterprises. He has scolded trade unions.
He has criticized the general strikes that shutter this city for at
least a couple of days each year. He has welcomed foreign
multinationals. Money, he declared this year, has no color.

"We committed some mistakes in the past," he said of the Communist
tenets of yesterday. "Now I can humbly say our policy has changed."

If Mr. Bhattacharjee's government sees the car plant as "the flagship
project" of a rising West Bengal — more hammer, less sickle, one might
say — his critics, who range from the political opposition to
advocates of peasants' rights, are equally confident that the
industrial project will bring ruin. They accuse him of railroading
people into selling their farmland, and of neglecting those who
survive on it, chiefly laborers and sharecroppers.

That the land here is particularly rich, at times producing three or
four crops a year, has made the fight more intense. In recent weeks,
protests against the project have spilled into Calcutta, further
snarling traffic in the city center and, in December alone, prompting
three general strikes.

Tensions flared in mid-December, when the body of a teenage girl who
had protested the project was found inside the fenced perimeter of the
factory site, strangled and burned.

In Singur, a village pressed against that fence, resignation is mixed
with rage. Graffiti on the side of one building screams: "Look around.
Identify the stooges of Tata."

Singur is sharply divided between those who said they agreed to sell
their land, and those who held out. The happiest are those like Nimai
Chandra Mukherji, 71, a retired civil servant, who long ago gave up
tilling his land and rented it to sharecroppers.

The bitterest losers are those like Sukumar Malick, who make their
living by tilling other people's land. Mr. Malick said he did not
expect the landowner to share the proceeds. "They didn't inform us,
they didn't ask us, they just took the land away," he said. As in many
villages across the country, the people here readily acknowledged that
agriculture did not make them rich. Those families with some means
sent at least one breadwinner to work elsewhere. Still, they spoke of
the land. It was basic sustenance to some, family savings to others.

Brothers Sheik Tahir Ali, 64, and Sheik Sayeeb Rehman, 45, said they
gave up their property only after police officers had come to their
door and told them that their land would soon be fenced off. The
brothers hurriedly picked the last of their rice harvest, signed
consent letters and collected their checks.

Gautam Kolay, 39, was among the last holdouts. He remembered when
state officials came to the village with bullhorns and police escorts,
urging farmers to collect their checks. By early December, fencing
began, and his family's property, a little more than an acre, was
encircled. He cannot get to his land, but he refused to consent.

"What our grandfathers cultivated, we are cultivating," Mr. Kolay
said. "This is for our future generation. It won't fly away. If I take
money, how long will it last?"

Because of the troubles at Singur, Tata Motors, a Tata Group company,
is behind on its construction schedule. A spokesman for the company,
Debasis Ray, would say only that construction would start "very soon"
and that the company would meet its target to roll out the first car
by 2008.

It is difficult to overstate the importance of this project to Mr.
Bhattacharjee. He wooed Ratan Tata, chairman of The Tata Group. He has
expressed confidence that critics will be silenced when the first car
rolls out of the factory. He says it will bring investment and jobs.

On the table, he says, are several other industrial projects,
including steel mills and a tractor factory, and a procurement chain
proposed by one of India's new retailers. He is also considering a
trip to the United States to drum up investment. He referred to a
recent conversation with the American ambassador to India, David C.
Mulford. "If you can do business with China, then why not West
Bengal?" he said he told the ambassador.
--
Yoshie
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