People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 42 October 19, 2003 |
JHARKHAND
BJP
Govt Persists With Anti-Tribal Move
CORNERED
by the political pressure brought about by the Communist Party of India
(Marxist), recently the BJP led Arjun Munda government of Jharkhand has to stage
a retreat for the second time. The first time it had to stage a retreat was when
the Jharkhand High Court passed an order on the petition filed by the CPI(M)’s
state secretariat member Rajendra Singh Munda. The order then directed the state
election commission and state government to hold panchayat elections in the
state within March 31, 2004 (see People’s
Democracy, September 28). And now the government has to retreat again.
The development has taken the state government and the BJP by surprise.
On
September 2, the panchayat raj department of the government of Jharkhand issued
a circular to all heads of the district administration in the tribal dominated
fifth schedule area. The order directed these district administration heads to
elect the ‘pradhans’ (chairmen) of
all gram sabhas within September 30 and send their lists by October 16, through
special messengers, so that the chief minister could review the list of pradhans
on October 17. The circulars were marked urgent and special, and were sent by
courier service.
When
the issue came to the notice of the Jharkhand state centre of the CPI(M), its
state secretary J S Majumdar wrote to the secretary of the concerned department
of the government, talked to him on phone, met the governor in a delegation,
submitted to him a memorandum and called a press conference to oppose this move
of the state government. By September 24, the governor consulted the advocate
general and stepped, in giving direction to the chief secretary “to take
action” on the memorandum presented by the CPI(M). The chief secretary called
an emergent meeting of the deputy commissioners of 12 districts in the scheduled
areas on September 26. After the meeting, the government revoked the said
circular and, wherever action had been taken, cancelled its implementation. In
the meantime, every district administration had issued a press notification,
mobilised the government officials in massive numbers and started holding
village meetings.
Though
the government has retreated temporarily and given the excuse that it was a
clerical mistake by which the election process had unwittingly started, etc, it
is learnt that it intends to issue a fresh circular. The CPI(M) has written to
the chief secretary, warning the government against taking any such step before
the panchayat elections are held in the state.
The
dispute arose when the Arjun Munda government tried to undemocratically elect pradhans
in village meetings. It will be recalled that it is the Panchayat Raj (Extension
to Scheduled Areas) Act 1996, enacted by the parliament on the recommendation of
the Bhuria committee, that applies to the scheduled areas in eight states of
India. (The 73rd constitutional amendment on panchayati raj does not apply to
these areas.) As for the state of Jharkhand, it has both scheduled areas
consisting of 12 districts and 113 blocks and non-scheduled areas that include
10 districts and 97 blocks. The Jharkhand Panchayat Raj Act 2001 was enacted for
both the areas as per the 1992 general act and the 1996 extension act enacted by
the parliament.
As
per the Jharkhand act and in consistence with the general act, the mukhias
(chairmen), upmukhias (deputy chairmen) and members of a panchayat cannot
preside over the concerned gram sabha’s meeting. It is presided over only by
the traditional tribal chief, or by another tribal by the unanimous opinion of
the gram sabha. There is no post of pradhan
as a permanent presiding officer of the gram sabhas, which the Arjun Munda
government tried to create by its September 2 circular. The intention was to
create a network of pradhans in the
scheduled areas, such as would be under the command of the chief minister and
could be used to subvert the elected gram panchayats. Through this parallel
network of pradhans, the Arjun Munda
government not only tried to control the panchayats but also wanted to use these
men for this party’s electoral purposes just before the Lok Sabha elections.
The
CPI(M) has taken strong exception to the Arjun Munda government’s move at the
political level as well as on the constitutional and legal grounds.
But
the game of the BJP government did not stop here. The third round of the battle
is on. A special session of the Jharkhand state assembly was called from October
8 to 10, 2003, to consider a certain amendment to the Panchayat Raj Act in the
state. The main purpose of this amendment was to de-reserve the post of mukhias
in scheduled areas --- a post that is currently reserved for tribals. The Arjun
Munda government is under immense pressure for this change, from his alliance
partners. As per the central act, all posts of the chairpersons, i e mukhias at panchayat, pramukhs
at panchayat samiti and chairmen at the Zilla Parishad levels are to be tribals.
But the BJP government wants to remove this reservation right of the tribals in
scheduled areas in all the three tiers of the panchayati raj institutions. If
the amendment is passed, someone will challenge it in the High Court and this
will be precisely the plea on which the Jharkhand government intends to postpone
the panchayat elections so that they do not take place before the Lok Sabha and
assembly elections. The reason is simple. This government is mortally afraid of
its rout at the grass roots level. The BJP has a high stake in Jharkhand, as it
has 10 MPs from the state and 31 MLAs in the assembly. Any adverse impact of
panchayat elections before the Lok Sabha elections will naturally have a serious
impact on its electoral prospects.
In
a meeting held in the CPI(M) state office on October 6, the Left parties decided
to put up a joint opposition against this anti-tribal move of the Arjun Munda
government.
RESPONDING
to the call of the CPI(M) Central Committee and in pursuance of the 15 points
demands charter concerning the all-India and the state level issues, the
Jharkhand state committee of the CPI(M) decided to organise a movement in three
phases during August-September 2003. In the first phases, groups of 3 to 4 party
members ran the campaign door to door with handbills. In the second phase, block
level demonstrations were staged. In the third phase, two regional rallies and
district rallies were organised.
In
the first phase, there was good response from the people during the door to door
campaign. In Dhanbad district alone, about 20,000 families were contacted in
this phase of the programme. In the second phase, demonstrations were staged in
many blocks. The biggest demonstrations were held at Hunterganj block in Chatra
district, Silli block in Ranchi district and Barhagora block in East Singhbhum
district. After about two decades in the Left extremist affected area of
Hunterganj, a massive really was held here. It mostly consisted of Dalits and
other rural poor, including a large number of women. It is in this constituency
that one of the district committee members and the CPI(M) candidate for
legislative assembly election, Comrade Santu Das, was killed by the extremists
earlier.
Recently
the atrocities committed on the landless Dalits by the forest officials,
including the assault on and arrest of 8 party functionaries in the name of an
anti-encroachment drive following the 1998 central government circular,
galvanised the rural poor into action under the banner of the CPI(M), which was
reflected in the massive block level demonstration at Hunterganj on August 28.
At
Silli, more than 1500 rural poor including a large number of tribals, youth and
women staged a massive demonstration on September 24. At the instance of the
local MLA and PWD minister, the police tried to terrorise the youth. Some of the
youth were even arrested after the rally on false charges. However, they were
released on bail due to effective intervention by the CPI(M) district committee.
The supervision report of the DSP submitted to the court revealed the nexus
between the minister and the local police against the CPI(M). It is from this
assembly constituency that CPI(M) candidates had won three times earlier.
At
Barhagora, thousands of the rural poor staged a massive demonstration on
September 29. Here, Devipada Upadhayay, four times MLA from this assembly
constituency, and a large number of other CPI functionaries had left their party
and later joined the CPI(M).
Demonstrations
were staged in August in many other blocks in most of the districts as well.
Demonstrations were also staged at the district headquarters in Sahebgani, Pakur,
Gadda and Dumka. After many years the party organised an effective demonstration
at Dumka.
Two
regional demonstrations were also held --- one at Dhanbad on September 1 and the
other one at Ranchi on September 12. Participants from Bokaro, Koderma and
Jamtara districts joined the rally at Dhanbad which was one of the biggest
rallies held by any Left party at Dhanbad in recent times. The Dhanbad rally was
addressed by Basudev Acharya, MP. The Ranchi rally was joined by participants
from Ranchi, Hazaribagh, Chatra and Latehar districts. Here the rallyists paid
floral tributes at the martyr Birsa Munda’s statue at Birsa Chowk before the
meeting. The meeting was addressed by Sambhu Mandi, MLA from Binpur in West
Bengal, who was the main speaker. A 15-point charter of demands was submitted to
the chief minister.
The CPI(M) state committee of Jharkhand had also decided to continue the movement with its 15-point demands from October 7 to 15 through a door to door campaign, leading up to submission of memoranda to the block development officers on October 15. This will be followed by a state level rally being organised by Jharkhand state Kisan Sabha at Ranchi on October 17.