People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No.
29 July 17, 2011 |
Beyond the Salwa Judum
Judgement
Archana Prasad
IN
its order dated July 5, 2011, the Supreme Court ordered the state
government of
Chhattisgarh to “take all appropriate measures to prevent the operation
of any
group, including but not limited to Salwa Judum and Koya Commandos,
that in any
manner or form seek to take law into private hands, act
unconstitutionally or
otherwise violate the human rights of any person.” In this way it
questioned
the constitutional legality of the five year old anti-Maoist counter
insurgency
strategy of the BJP government in Chhattisgarh. It also asked the union
government to “cease and desist, forthwith, from using any of its funds
in
supporting, directly or indirectly the recruitment of SPOs for the
purposes of
engaging in any form of counterinsurgency activities against
Maoist/Naxalite
groups.”
WELCOME
STEP
FORWARD
The
order has been hailed by the petitioners and democratically minded
citizens as
being ‘historic’ because it restrains the state from unconstitutional
activities. The judgement also points to the capitalist and neo-liberal
developmental policies as one of the most important causes for the
growth of
the ‘Maoism’ and ‘Naxalism’ is a result of that has been followed by
the union
and state governments. Interestingly, this order comes on the eve of
the
announcement by the
The
press release of the petitioners also appeals to the ‘Maoists’ to enter
into
peace talks with the government and desist from attacking the disbanded
SPOs.
While there is no doubt that this order is a welcome step forward to
stop the
atrocities being faced by the tribal people of Dantewada, its
implications need
to be examined for the larger strategy to fight the ‘Maoist’ political
tendency.
CHHATTISGARH:
THE
STATE
& THE ‘MAOISTS’
One
of the central assumptions of voices opposing Salwa Judum has been
based on the
understanding that the control of natural resources by the state has
led to the
penury of the tribal inhabitants of the region and contributed to the
growth of
‘Maoist violence.’ While this proposition is accepted by most of the
democratically minded activists in general, two specific points need to
be kept
in mind when the case of Bastar is concerned.
The
first point here is that the creation of the ‘guerrilla zone’ by the
‘Maoists’
just prior to the advent of the neo-liberal policies was a result of
the
absence of welfare activities by the state and the exploitation of its
nexus
with the traders and contractors in these tribal areas. Despite state
monopoly
control over forest lands, the lack of political will to combat the
market
forces in the trading pf forest produce in this resource rich region
led to the
entry of the ‘Maoist’ activists in the region. Most of these activists
were
from the People’s War Group (PWG) and had escaped from Andhra Pradesh
at the
time of police action. By the late 1980s they had started to build some
mass
organisations, carry out small local struggles against oppression by
the traders
and create their own network of managing the markets. Here the
government was
identified as the agency of extraction whose apparatus could not be
easily
controlled by them. Hence, the support to the contractor system was one
of the
first methods to ensure the absence of the government in ‘Maoist’
dominated
areas.
This
led to the second stage in the development of ‘Maoist organisations’ in
Dantewada where they effectively put an end to all state. In the
process they
identified local people who would be their informers and form an armed
local
militia that was trained by them. By the mid-nineties the control of
the
territorial control of the state over Dantewada was virtually
non-existent and
the stage for a conflict between the state and the ‘Maoists’ was
virtually in
the offing. The ‘Maoists’ had been allowed to penetrate to the extent
that they
set up their own ‘parallel governments’ by an unaccountable and
ineffective
state apparatus. Further the lack of an effective alternative political
leadership amongst the tribal rights organisations and their identity
politics
was unable to cope with the emerging challenges of neo-liberalism.
SALWA
JUDUM: A NEO-LIBERAL
STRATEGY
TO COMBAT ‘MAOISTS’
The
role of the state in tackling the ‘Maoist’ insurgency, which is the
main focus
of the Court Order, has to be considered in the above context. The
political
consensus on dealing with ‘Maoist’ insurgency through counter
insurgency
operations was evident in June 2005 when the leader of the main
opposition
party started counter insurgency militia of tribal volunteers to fight
the
‘Maoist’ operations in the area. This force soon gained the recognition
of the
BJP government and the volunteers were recognised as Special Police
Officers.
As the court has observed, tribal youth appointed as Special Police
Officers
were “being given firearms on the ground that SPOs are treated
“legally” as
full-fledged members of the police force, and are expected to perform
the
duties, bear the liabilities, and be subject to the same disciplinary
code.”
This meant that the main responsibility of combating the ‘Maoist’
insurgency
fell on the tribal youth who were the first line of defence in
Dantewada.
Once
again, thus, the neo-liberal state was trying to minimise its own
losses and
costs in fighting insurgency. Hence even on the law and order front,
the state
was more interested in recruiting and outsourcing policing operations
to local
youth rather than investing in the modernisation of its own police
force to
battle insurgency. Thus, the raising of a government supported local
militia is
not only a way of dividing the solidarity between local tribal people,
but also
outsourcing policing operations. This once again perpetuates the
absence of the
state that was in the first place responsible for the consolidation of
the
‘Maoists’ in the region.
Today,
the government is attempting a change in its strategy to tackle the
Maoist
insurgency of the area. Under pressure from allies like the Trinamul
Congress
and other groups, it has declared an integrated development programme
for
tribal areas in the ‘red corridor.’ Recent reports also suggest that Rs
10,000
crore will be invested in mineral rich tribal districts as compensation
for
mining by private companies. But the question is whether such
investment can
lead to an effective strategy for combating the ‘Maoist’ influence
without
ensuring an effective state apparatus that routinely combats
exploitative
forces in region such as illegal mining. Chhattisgarh is the second
largest
mineral rich state and had had over 7000 cases of illegal mining by the
end of
2009, with Dantewada and the Bastar region being the largest. However,
only
2203 cases were filed against illegal mining in the state. At the same
time,
the presence of the ‘Maoists’ was also used as an excuse to ensure that
no
action was taken against illegal miners.
But
the state was not the only one that benefited from this illegal mining.
Reports
from the ‘red corridor’ suggest that ‘Maoists’ themselves have been
involved in
such activities which give them funds as well as provide them
explosives for
their operations. Thus while on the one hand the state uses Salwa Judum
operations and the ‘Maoist’ violence as an excuse for allowing the
mineral loot
of the tribal areas, on the other hand the extractive presence of a
parallel
government also perpetuates this illegal mining that is an essential
outcome of
neo-liberal policies.
NEED
FOR AN
ALTERNATE
POLITICS
In
the light of the above analysis, it may be said that the Salwa Judum
judgement
points to only a part of the problem with respect to neo-liberal
policies. It
is right in asserting that a reversal of neo-liberal policies is
essential to
enable a solution to the problems of the tribal districts under
‘Maoist’
influence. But such a reversal of policies has to be accompanied by the
establishment of a democratic and accountable state administration. The
experience of the Left from Tripura shows that a humane administration
and
democratic power-sharing agreements can go a long way in providing
solutions to
such problems. To this end the Left has been demanding that the
Schedule V
areas (under which Dantewada falls) should be upgraded to the status of
Schedule VI so that the tribal people can enjoy full democratic rights.
At the
same time the Panchayat (Extension to Scheduled Areas) and Forest
Rights Act
should be implemented in letter and spirit so that tribal people can
enjoy some
control over their own resources. But for this to be achieved an
alternate Left
led democratic politics is necessary and needs to be extended to such
regions
on an urgent basis. In its absence the oppositional space is being
dominated
either by the ‘Maoists’ or by the politics of tribal identity, both of
which
are unable to cope with the challenges posed by an increasingly
undemocratic
neo-liberal state.