People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXX
No. 12 March 19, 2006 |
THOUSANDS of agricultural workers, men and women, adivasis, dalit and others walked in step with CPI(M) Polit Bureau member, Brinda Karat, on the dusty roads of Barhagora on February 25, 2006. Barhagora is a small town in East Singhbhum district in Jharkhand, close to the state’s borders with both West Bengal and Orissa.
Women, most of them dalits, told Brinda Karat that they get as wage 4 kg of paddy against a full day’s hard work in the field. Their daily earning is thus not more than Rs 20 to 22 even though the minimum wage for agricultural labourers as declared by the Jharkhand government is Rs 72.30 per day. In a year, not more than 30 days work is available as, in the absence of irrigation facilities, there is only single crop agricultural production. The entire economy of the area is based on agriculture and there are no developmental activities.
Some
of the poor men and women brought their PDS cards to show they were not getting
food grains and kerosene oil through the public distribution system (PDS).
Kerosene oil is being diverted to petrol pumps on the highway passing through
Barhagora, to be mixed with petrol and diesel.
Yet,
this district, East Singbhum, has been kept out of the Rural Employment
Guarantee Act (REGA) since the Tatas have their TISCO factory in this district.
Barhagora being the state health minister’s assembly constituency, people here
expected better health services. But, the government’s health services are
non-existent, while chief minister Arjun Munda recently organised a yoga camp at
Ranchi in the name of providing ‘alternative health services’ in Jharkhand.
The
long procession winding through Barhagora roads reached the school ground for an
impressive public meeting chaired by the CPI(M)’s local committee secretary,
Milan Bala.
Addressing
the rally of the agricultural workers, poor peasants and youth, Brinda Karat
gave a clarion call for battle so as to bring the plight of the workers,
peasants and other toiling section to the centre stage of politics, giving new
orientation and definition of development. Jharkhand was created in the name of
adviasis, dalits and other poor; but the Arjun Munda government’s policy is to
uproot them from land and deprive them of livelihood, she said. BJP’s communal
agenda is to divide the poor. She called upon them to unite and get organised in
the Agricultural Workers Union, Kisan Sabha, women and youth organisations and
intensify the struggle for relief, and for their rights and dignity.
Others
who spoke on the occasion included the CPI(M)’s Jharkhand state secretary J S
Majumdar, West Bengal MLA Sambhu Mandi, West Midnapur district secretariat
member Dahar Sen, and Barhagora youth leader Swapan Mahato.