People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No.
05 January 29, 2012 |
Rural Distress
and Land Mafia in Tamilnadu
S P Rajendran
THE Chennai city police recently
booked former DMK legislator B Ranganathan as the prime accused in the
brutal murder
of a young man who was fighting against land grabbing in Avadi on the
outskirts
of Chennai.
The prime accused,
Ranganathan, is among several former DMK MLAs and ministers who have
been
booked on land grabbing charges after the AIADMK government took over.
Ranganathan was arrested in August 2011 on a similar land grab charge
but was released
on bail. Subsequently, he was detained under the Goondas Act, a
stringent law.
Bhuvaneswaran’s father
Siva, who worked as a ticket examiner in the State Express Transport
Corporation, said in his complaint that a group of people backed by
Ranganathan
had occupied 100 acres of land, including 30 acres belonging to the
former and
his friend Madhavan. Bhuvaneswaran had fought a legal case, filed many
RTI
applications and staged demonstrations to attract the government’s
attention.
He managed to recover more than 18 acres, and had filed more RTI
applications
to retrieve the rest.
Earlier, the state also
saw an attack on leaders of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)
including Thoothukudi
district secretary K Kanagaraj, by the land mafia who are trying to
occupy
nearly 915 acres of fertile land in Theivaseyalpuram village. Here too,
the
land grabbers are led by a DMK functionary and advocate called Selvam.
The land
which they have been trying to grab is prime land situated near the
Thoothukudi
airport and on the Thirunelveli-Thiruchendur highway. But there has so
far been
no arrest of the goons who attacked the CPI(M) cadre. CPI(M) state
secretary G
Ramakrishnan has vehemently condemned this lethargy of the state police.
However, the arrest of
DMK’s former ministers and leading functionaries took place on the
charges of
land grabbing.
On January 23, former
DMK minister Vellakovil Swaminathan was arrested for his involvement in
a land grabbing
case. He was the fifth DMK minister who has been sent to jail over such
an allegation.
Veerapandi Arumugam, N K K P Raja, K Ponmudi and K N Nehru were the
four other
former DMK ministers who were arrested and sent to jail, though they
later
managed to get bail.
Here it may be mentioned
that a complaint has been lodged against M K Stalin too, who has been
accused
of pressurising a man to sell a property in Chennai in a low rate to
one of his
relatives. Stalin is DMK chief M Karunanidhi’s younger son and was the
deputy chief
minister during the DMK’s tenure in Tamilnadu.
Karunanidhi’s grandson,
Udayanidhi Stalin, a film director and producer, was also interrogated
in the
same case.
In regard to this very case,
Stalin had had surrender himself before the investigation officers on
January
5, after receiving an order from the Madras High Court.
The above cases are just
a few examples of the massive land grabbing which has taken place for
the past
five years. According to the police, over 20,000 land grab complaints
have been
received since the regime change in the state. The complaints are
against not
only DMK men, but also against those of the AIADMK, the Congress and
the PMK.
Some corporate houses and IT companies too have indulged in land
grabbing.
Chennai’s suburbs and in particular the adjoining Kancheepuram district
have
seen a spurt in land grabbing incidence, as real estate prices have
shot up in
the area of late. The latter district has become the preferred choice
of IT and
multinational companies, including auto makers, in view of its
proximity to
Chennai.
With Tamilnadu in the
middle of an unprecedented real estate boom and urbanisation, land is
being
bought and sold at exorbitant and ever increasing prices. Land
transactions are
a significant source of revenue to the registration department whose
income
increased 30 per cent during 2010-2011 compared to the previous year’s
Rs 3,818
crore.
However, while the rich people take it as an indication
of the so called growth, in terms of real economy this is an indication
of the deep
rooted and growing rural distress in the state.
According to the 2011 census data, more people in
Tamilnadu have moved from rural to urban areas in the last 10 years,
compared
to any other state. Tamilnadu ranks high in the list of urbanised
states with
48.45 per cent of its population living in urban areas, followed by
Kerala,
Maharashtra and
The rate of urbanisation in Tamilnadu has been rapid
in the last 20 years. According to the 1991 census, only 34.15 per cent
of the
total population in Tamilnadu was classified as urban, but it has risen
to
48.45 per cent in 2011, an increase of 14.3 per cent. Since the 2001
census,
the percentage of urban population has risen by 4.41 per cent.
The census authorities have explained that people have
taken up non-agricultural occupations in many districts, even if they
have studied
up to class eight only. Such areas are classified as urban even though
they are
surrounded by fields. But in reality the rural mass is being driven out
from
agriculture and their own lands due to the deepening agricultural
crisis. They
are migrating from their own places to the state capital (Chennai) and
industrial cities like Coimbatore and Tiruppur to find jobs. The
younger
generations are moving even to Bangalore and other big cities outside
Tamilnadu.
It is thus that Chennai and the adjoining districts, Coimbatore,
Tiruppur and
port towns like Thoothukudi are now highly urbanised.
With the help of ruling
politicians and bureaucrats, the land mafias are using this situation
of rural
distress to grab lands on a massive scale in the state.
So far the Communist
Party of India (Marxist) has been the only political party to take up
this
issue and organise protests in the state. The fight continues.