People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 06 February 10, 2013 |
A
Testimony to Pro-Poor Development
RAVIPALA
Tripura
is
a
90
year
old
tribal
living
in
Maikrosa
para
village
in
Tripura
chief
minister
Manik
Sarkar's
constituency,
Dhanpur.
He
has
been
living
in
this
hilly
village
ever
since
he
moved
here
from
the
neighbouring
district
Udaipur
in
1949.
He
narrated
an
interesting
anecdote
about
the
1971
Bangladesh
Liberation
war.
The
Indian
Army
while
marching
towards
the
border
had
an
altercation
with
the
local
villagers.
The
Army
kept
demanding
from
the
villagers
to
show
the
location
of
the
road
through
the
village
towards
border
and
the
villagers
kept
saying
there
was
actually
no
such
road.
It
took
some
time
for
the
Army
people
to
realise
that
in
the
corrupt
Congress
regime
the
road
existed
only
on
paper
and
not
in
reality!
Another
bit
of
history
conveyed
to
us
was
about
the
origin
of
the
name
of
the
village.
Mai
in
the
tribal
Kokborok
language
means
'rice'
and
Krosa
means
'not
available'.
This
remote
village
got
this
name
as
it
was
virtually
without
any
food
and
many
had
died
of
starvation
deaths
in
the
1960s.
Ravipala
told
me
how
he
managed
during
those
tough
times
by
moving
out
of
the
village
and
living
in
a
relief
centre
run
by
the
Communist
Party.
The
entire
area
was
a
dense
forest
with
wild
elephants
in
it
and
just
a
trekking
path
leading
into
the
village.
But
that
was
history.
Today,
as
we
drove
into
the
village
on
a
black
top
mountain
road,
at
the
entrance
we
found
a
group
of
boys
and
girls
dressed
in
blue
and
white
uniforms
trooping
into
a
government
high
school.
Jagatjivan
Tripura,
who
teaches
History
and
English
subjects
in
the
school,
informed
us
that
there
are
a
total
of
88
students
studying
in
classes
6
to
10.
The
same
building
is
used
as
a
primary
school
in
the
morning
hours
from
7:30
to
10:30.
He
had
studied
in
the
same
school
as
a
student
upto
8th
standard
and
completed
his
graduation
from
Udaipur.
He
was
recruited
as
a
teacher
in
2010
and
was
recently
posted
in
his
own
village.
We
later
got
to
know
that
he
is
the
younger
son
of
Ravipala
Tripura!
The
school
has
six
teachers
and
one
head
master
to
take
care
of
the
students.
Across
the
school
was
a
newly
built
Primary
Health
Centre
that
appeared
to
be
too
big
for
a
PHC.
It
was
more
like
a
medium
level
hospital.
Besides
it,
we
saw
two
buildings
being
constructed
and
on
enquiry
found
that
they
were
the
proposed
staff
quarters.
Dr
Debashis
Ghose,
who
completed
his
MBBS
from
Agartala
Government
Medical
College,
informed
that
a
total
of
20
staff
member
work
in
this
PHC,
which
includes
two
MBBS
doctors
and
one
Homeopath
doctor from NRHM.
The
PHC
has
a
pathological
lab
to
conduct
investigations
apart
from
a
labour
room,
minor
Operation
Theatre
and
inpatient
facility
for
10
beds.
On
an
average
the
PHC
gets
15
cases
a
day,
mostly
relating
to
viral
infections,
respiratory
tract
infections
etc.
Here
also
we
found
a
connection
to
Ravipala
Tripura.
The
new
PHC
is
built
on
the
2-acre
land
donated
by
Ravipala.
“One
of
my
eight
daughters
died
when
she
was
six
years
old
due
to
non-availability
of
medical
help.
I
gave
away
my
land
to
the
PHC
in
memory
of
her
as
it
will
prevent
recurrence
of
such
tragedies”,
he
told
us.
Dhanpur
constituency
has
been
electing
CPI(M)
candidates
from
1972.
Samar
Chaudhury,
who
was
state
home
minister,
represented
the
constituency
five
times
till
1998
when
he
contested
for
the
Lok
Sabha.
Manik
Sarkar
first
contested
from
here
in
1998
and
has
been
continuosly
winning
ever
since.
The
Congress
candidate
Saha
Alam
is
a
local
leader
who
is
doing
a
vigorous
door-to-door
campaign
to
take
on
the
chief
minister
who
visited
the
constituency
once
after
the
announcement
of
polls
and
addressed
one
meeting.
There
are
also
allegations
against
the
Congress
candidate
is
trying
to
bribe
the
voters
and
trying
to
bias
them
on
communal
lines.
The
CPI(M)
cadre
are
moving
door-to-door
canvassing
in
favour
of
Manik
Sarkar.
They
are
confident
that
the
winning
margin
of
Manik
Sarkar
will
definitely
be
higher
than
what
it
was
2008.
He
will
campaign
in
the
constituency
on
08th
and
11th
February
also.
The
chief
minister
often
underlines
that
the
Left
Front
is
committed
to
the
upliftment
of
the
poorest
of
the
poor.
The
development
visible
in
Maikrosa
para
and
elsewhere
in
the
state
is
a
testimony
to
translation
of
that
commitment
into
action.
There
is
therefore
hardly
any
doubt
about
the
outcome
of
February
14
battle
of
ballots.
From
N
S
Arjun
In
Dhanpur,
February
6,
2014