People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No. 49 December 04, 2011 |
Isolate ‘Maoists’ Politically for
Enduring Peace in Jangal Mahal
Nilotpal Basu
ULTIMATELY, the
truth has come out. Not
that it was not known;
but now that it
has come straight from the, so to say, horse’s mouth; the chief
minister of West Bengal and the Trinamool
Congress supremo has eventually lashed out at the
‘Maoists’ for their heinous
crime of engineering the Ganeshwari Express tragedy which took the
toll of 148 innocent lives. Contrary
to what she has been claiming all this while that the
CPI(M) and the Left was
responsible for the tragedy to defame her and the Railway
ministry – she has
ultimately conceded that it was clearly the handiwork of
the ‘Maoists’.
What is the
provocation for this
belated ‘discovery’? Two activists of the Trinamool
Congress had been gunned
down by a ‘Maoist’ squad in a hamlet on the foothills of
Ajodhya in Purulia
district – an integral part of the jangal
mahal area in
The travails of
the TMC and its
maverick supremo are not only bizarre as one would think.
It is at the same
time extremely sinister.
The growth of
the ‘Maoists’ – obviously, not in terms of popular support
but its depredations
and mindless violence in the districts adjoining the
Jharkhand and Orissa
borders – was quite strange. Any avid reading of the
history of Left adventurism
in the country makes one to come to an interesting
conclusion. While Naxalbari was
the cradle of the Left adventurist movement in the country
and the CPI(M)
and the Left
suffered most due to its
violence in the late sixties and early seventies, the
movement completely
petered out, particularly after the Left Front assumed
office in West Bengal in
1977. The
agrarian reforms and the
protection and consolidation of the democratic rights of
the working people
completely isolated the Naxalites in the state.
The resumption of their activities in early parts
of the first decade of
the new century started as armed incursions from Jharkhand
initially and later
on from Orissa. The thickly forested jungles on the
borders of these states
provided the natural cover, as well as, the strategic base
that the ‘Maoists’
needed to move on to West Bengal.
The Left had
from the very beginning,
maintained that the ‘Maoist’ movement cannot be treated
merely as a challenge
to law and order. Their
involvement in
these forest fringe areas was not because of their
compassion for the poor and
the tribals who suffered from locational disadvantage and
consequent
comparative lack of development. Despite
this, the agrarian reforms and other benefits of
decentralisation had expanded
social sector development.
It is because
of this, the Left had always been politically strong in
these areas. Premised
on these experiences, the Left,
therefore, argued for facing the challenge of ‘Maoist’
violence through a three
pronged response; first, on the question of targeted
socio-economic
development, secondly on the question of
political-ideological offensive to isolate
them from the people- and finally, based on these two, to
initiate
administrative actions of the security forces that would
finally be successful
in containing the violence.
As opposed to
this, the central
government had always pitched for all out administrative
confrontation. The
home minister, P Chidambaram, the
fountainhead of such an exclusively confrontationist
approach even mooted the
idea of deploying the military and the air force to snuff
out the ‘Maoists’.
However, the
maverick TMC supremo was
totally opposed to the very idea of taking on the
‘Maoists’. Because
she understood that in order to
undermine and weaken the Left in these areas which have
traditionally been the
bastion of the Left, the ‘Maoists’ could prove to be her
hatchet men. The
‘Maoists’ – the opportunists that they
are – found these to be extremely convenient.
Their complete ideological bankruptcy and penchant
for military strategy
created conditions for the coming together of these two
forces. West
Bengal’s recent history – from the ‘Maoists’
involvement in the Nandigram agitation and the present
West Bengal chief minister’s
open dalliance with the ‘Maoists’ in Lalgarh - the
alliance was eventually made
official. The
media savvy ‘Maoist’ Polit
Bureau member Kishanji announced from behind his masked
face that the ‘Maoists’
would love to see the TMC supremo as the next chief
minister of West Bengal in
an interview to Ananda
Bazar Patrika
before elections.
This was music
to her ears. This
made her to claim that there are no ‘Maoists’
in
The complicity
was so complete that
while the ‘Maoists’ had hijacked a train, the Rajdhani
Express, the Railways
under her charge did not even mention the ‘Maoist’
involvement in the complaint
that the department filed.
And, finally,
came the shocking allegation in the wake of the
Gyaneshwari tragedy. Not only
did she claim that these gruesome deaths of the Ganeshwari
passengers were not
the result of ‘Maoist’ depredation but actually they have
been done by the CPI(M)
and the Left to discredit the Railway Ministry! The
intellectuals – the `civil
society’ her close band of trumpeters for `political
change’ in fact went a
step further. They
actually called a
press conference on the eve of a crucial municipal
election in Kolkata and
directly charged the CPI(M) of engineering the tragedy. These
intellectuals – of whom some are now
even part of the cabinet of the present
Now that the TMC
supremo has assumed
the chief minister’s office, she has to reconcile with the
harsh cold reality. She
thought that the zeal with which the ‘Maoists’ had worked
overtime to see her
in the office that she holds today would continue to do so
even after the
objective has been secured.
But, as we
know, the ‘Maoists’ show extreme opportunism in siding
with this or that
bourgeois political party for carrying on with violent
methods to physically
eliminate all political opposition. The ‘Maoists’
clearly had an agenda that they would use the TMC to
ensure the physical
elimination of the CPI(M) and the Left
to facilitate their own physical stranglehold over
a region which had remained
a bastion of the Left.
CHICKENS COME
HOME TO ROOST
But, now the
chickens have come home
to roost. The
latest dramatic turn of
events saw the felling of that very ‘Maoist’ leader who
once wanted to anoint
the TMC supremo as the incumbent chief minister of
It is in this
background that the gun
battle ensured in the forests of Burisole which has by now
become a household
name – as the site which marked the elimination of
Kishanji. In
a way, this was inevitable.
Far from being a revolutionary movement,
which the ‘Maoists’ claim to lead, apparently he found
himself thoroughly
isolated and encircled – that is what the security forces
had claimed.
But strangely,
neither the chief minister
nor any of her top ranking officials from the police or
the general
administration had come out with any authentic version
over the sequence of
events which led to the elimination of Kishanji
immediately after the
announcement of the incident. More than anybody else, it
is their supporters –
particularly those sections of liberal persuasion – some
of them even
sympathetic to the ‘Maoist’ cause have come out quite
sharply against the same
government and the security forces for having done what
they did.
In doing this,
they seem to have
taken a leaf out of chief minister Mamata Banerjee’s book
of records. She did
exactly this in questioning the elimination of Azad – the
spokesman of the ‘Maoists’.
She had actually demanded enquiry into Azad’s `murder’ not
only outside but
also in the parliament itself. In fact, directed by the
court, an inquiry is
still going on about this incident.
Now that
Kishanji has been
eliminated, the same charges are being leveled.
It is being alleged that the security forces had
him in custody and this
amounts to a `cold blooded murder of a prisoner in
custody’. It
is now for the state government to clarify
the real course of development transparently.
Rule of law would require that of her government.
However, in a
public meeting recently,
the chief minister has claimed that the security forces
had encircled Kishanji
for three continuous days.
The forces
had also made an announcement over a public address system
that he would be allowed
a safe way out . But according to her, he did not respond
positively and fired
back. This is
what led to the armed
confrontation which saw her one time `well wisher’ dead.
SINISTER
RELATIONSHIP
The convergence
of purpose which
brought the TMC and the ‘Maoists’ together to eliminate
the Left – does no
longer exist. The
functional alliance
appears to have come unstuck. And,
therefore, this belated admission over Gyneshwari Express
tragedy and this
renewed restoration of the joint security forces’
operation leading to the elimination
of Kishanji.
But the tenuous
exercise to try and
balance the relationship between these two sinister forces
had continued for
the last few months since the new government in
The course of
the sinister alliance
has really come to complete its vicious circle.
Sadly, the TMC and some of their grassroot level
activists who are also
poor and vulnerable have also now come to suffer from the
mindless violence of
the ‘Maoists’.
But the chief
minister is not
prepared to accept the reality. While she has lambasted
the ‘Maoists’ and their
liberal sympathisers who don the mantle of
the human rights organisations for failing to
condemn the death and
killings of hapless victims of the mindless ‘Maoist’
violence – even going to
the extent of pointing out that a large number of
activists of the Left
had suffered
– she failed to concede
that she herself had shown similar proclivities.
To compound her
almost criminal
negligence in shielding the ‘Maoists’ – she is actually
still maintaining that
the CPI(M) and the ‘Maoists’ are in league.
This is not withstanding the fact that after the
Lok Sabha elections
alone almost 250 CPI(M) activists and leaders mostly poor
and tribals laid down
their lives in the course of taking on the political and
ideological challenge
of the ‘Maoists’. But
still there is
time. The threat
that ‘Maoist’ violence
poses to the life and livelihood of the most downtrodden
sections of the
society in the remotest jungles of