People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
26 June 28, 2009 |
B Prasant
THE Bengal Left Front government
and the Midnapore
west district unit of the CPI(M) have been engaged for the past couple
of days
in extending food, drinking water, clothing, and related rehabilitation
and relief
material to the 3000-odd families or around 15,000-odd rural folk who
had been
forcibly ousted by the �Maoists� and their Trinamul sympathisers in the
guise
of the �people�s committee.�
The affected people belong to
principally the four
blocks of Lalgarh, Goaltore, Salboni (where the proposed steel
industries unit
yet hangs fire), and Jhargram. Six kilos
of rice is provided to each affected family, and here it is a declared
policy
of the pro-poor Left Front government that the administration would not
look
for political affiliation even if well-known for notoriety.
RELIEF
CENTRES
When the families approach the
relief centres with
containers and bags, they are � each one of them � treated to a large
dollop or
three of the ubiquitous khichdi on
sal leaves that the starving innocent visibly relish, with a second or
even a
third servings. We found it very moving
how entire families � even the walking sick � and thin-visaged bahus with children on their back, tribal-fashion,
stand patiently and in all politeness, no shoving here, in queue for
hours
together to await their turn of the rice, occasionally dal,
and of course the servings of khichdi that were much
appreciated by everybody around. Plenty of
drinking water was around for taking long swigs and then carrying home
in two-litre
plastic bottles
These are the people who were
forced by the predators
from the neighbouring lawless areas on the other side of the state
border to
starve, and to take up bows and quivers of arrows in a bid for
�revolution.� Unwilling to bear arms
against anyone, the peaceable people, as we were told in tales that
were filled
with pathos, were tortured, kept in a condition devoid of the basic
means of
life, and then muscled in to rob them of the little they had by way of
household items �� a few much-dented, and scrubbed-thin metal utensils,
earthen
water pots with long narrow necks, a pestle or two and a stone slab
with a rough-surface
to grind lentils and rice on, a extra sari, a spare dhoti or two, and
very
occasionally the prize possession, a charpoy.
MAOISTS
FLEE
Central forces carrying INSAS
sten guns and having a
variegated nomenclature, �cobras,� �strakos,� �greyhounds�, led by
cordons thrown
up by the hordes of state police squads armed with AK-47 rifles,
uncoiled past
us in two-by-two formations from Pidakata rural zone either to mount
anti-landmine trucks or to go ahead on foot, disappearing into the
thick of the
forestry. Some of the police personnel were in mufti,
t-shirts, denim trousers, and �sports� shoes prevailed ��
which made a strange sight to us of �civilians,� carrying AK-56 rifles,
GPS-equipped man-packs, and pouches of survival kits strung around
their
waists. One lives and learns.
Not much of the
much-feared-in-the-corporate-media
�Maoist� military opposition could be seen. From what we heard, and we
dared
not flout the state government�s strict instructions never to tag along
with
the force, although our corporate counterparts irresponsibly did, that
when the
�fierce warriors� of the extreme left did appear, it was in a most
amateurish
fashion. They ran without covers, they
took pot shots and stayed rooted on-the-spot completely exposed, were
clad in
bright clothing that was easy target for the professional
sharp-shooters in the
ranks of the �cobras�. All in all 12 or maybe more were picked off and
killed
on the spot before the rest 50-odd �braves� simply ran, dragging the
bodies
ignominiously away. By the time, the
combined
forces reached the Lalgarh police station, led by the Midnapore range
DIG, the
�armed� opposition has become distinguished by its absence.
DRAMA OF
THE ABSURD
A boring drama of the absurd was
played out all the
while on the air waves, in several TV channels, over one �Kishanji,�
supposedly
a �supreme leader� of the �Maoists,� occasionally sounding quite
plaintive and
pathetic while calling in a thin, high-pitched, reedy voice for an end
to the
�police aggression,� and asking piteously of the Trinamuli chief to
�please,
please, help us out.� The appeal was
echoed by the once-all-powerful-leader of the �people�s committee,� the
Trinamuli goon Chhatradhar who in turn appeared on TV as pale, bleary,
and somewhat
devoid of cognitive abilities, especially when he was solicitously told
by the
scions of the corporate media that the police �were out to kill him� (a
lie if
ever there was one). We are told that
the man broke down and started to whimper about him being caught
between a rock
(the �Maoists�) and a hard place (the Trinamulis who now disown him.)
POLITICAL
AHEAD: BIMAN
As we file this report, the
police are regrouping for
mopping up �ops� if there is need for any.
�Kishanji� and �Vikash,� the two Maoist leaders who appeared
almost
daily on most TV channels have quietly slinked away from Midnapore west
to Jharkhand,
in the company of their lackeys. The
anti-communist
�civil society� a few of whose members met �Kishanji� and came back
quite
unimpressed, are crest-fallen. State
secretary of the Bengal CPI(M) Biman Basu has said that the Left Front
was
against the banning of the �Maoist,� stressing the need for a political
battle
ahead while the administration looked to the safety and security of the
people.
At the moment, all is quiet, and peaceful, on the western side of the
red clay
zone of Bengal.
(June 23, 2009)