Showing posts with label Jaideep Mazumdar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jaideep Mazumdar. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20070406&fname=kolkatakorner&sid=1&pn=1

Kolkata Korner
Brinda Karat suggests that the US of A may have been responsible for Nandigram, while the Marxists misappropriate Tagore and begin an intrusive propaganda offensive to counter the recent losses by SFI in students' unions; polls. ...
Jaideep Mazumdar

Apr 06, 2007


Sinister Plans
The bloodbath at Nandigram has had, as has been mentioned in these columns earlier, its fallout on college students' union polls. The CPI (M)'s students' body, the SFI, was routed at Presidency and this was repeated last week at the Jadavpur University's Arts Faculty students' union polls. Till now, the SFI has been wiped out in similar polls in at least a dozen colleges all over Bengal, including at a college at Haldia (near Nandigram) that has been an SFI bastion ever since it was established a few decades ago.

The main issue in all these elections was, expectedly, Nandigram and the SFI had a tough time defending the massacre of farmers there. But enough is enough, the SFI bosses and their masters in the CPI(M) have decided. And they've planned a damage-control exercise. SFI activists in all colleges in the state have been asked to prepare extensive databases of each and every student with their names, residence phone numbers, mobile numbers and e-mail addresses. The authorities of the colleges-- most owe their positions to the CPI(M)-- will only be too happy to oblige the data hunting SFI cadres. And once this database is ready, a large scale operation would be launched to "reach out" to lakhs of students, bombard them with messages, mails and SMSes containing Marxist propaganda.

Knowing the CPI(M) and the SFI, the methods used to "convince" the students would often be strong-arm and intimidatory. Overt and covert threats would be issued asking students to fall in line and vote for the SFI the next time. And yet another terror mechanism would be put in place in Bengal, making it a little more of a Stalinist state. My Marxist friends may argue that such fears are unfounded; even if the benefit of doubt is undeservedly granted to them, may I point out the small matter of a citizen's privacy? In a democracy (our Marxist rulers have never come to terms with this), every citizen has the right to privacy; and that means not being disturbed by propaganda over telephone, cellphone or e-mails. Especially during the summer vacations.

Distorting History
The CPI(M) had, not so long ago, cried itself hoarse while accusing the Sangh Parivaar of distorting history. It has embarked on a mission to do the same now. All for the sake of SEZs. In what can be termed as an amazing act, the party is trying to quote Rabindranath Tagore-- never mind that the Marxists had once denigrated him as a bourgeois poet-- to justify industrialization and, hence, acquisition of land for industries. Tagore, it is true, had said that man cannot shun machines and industries were essential for generating employment and wealth. He was a votary for industrialization. No right-thinking person would argue otherwise. The CPI(M) is planning to bring out a booklet, perhaps titled 'Even Tagore said so..', with quotes from the Nobel laureate. But Tagore, Bengal's Marxists should be reminded, never said that fertile agricultural land should be snatched away from farmers for setting up SEZs. He never said that land acquisition should be carried out through an executive fiat without holding any discussions with the land-losers. Bringing out such a booklet would amount to misquoting Tagore and distorting history. But then, misquotes and distortions are oft-used weapons in the Marxists' armoury, aren't they?

Bizarre Brinda
CPI(M) leader Brinda Karat came out with a outlandish charge that even had her senior colleagues shaking their heads in disbelief.
Writing in her party's mouthpiece earlier this week, Brinda said the USA could have had a hand in abetting the violence-- she means not the mayhem by police and her party cadres, but allegations (since proved unfounded by the CBI probe) that the locals there had hurled bombs and fired at the cops on March 14-- at Nandigram! She has based her charge on a visit the US Consul-General in Kolkata paid to the state chief of the Jamait Ulema-i-Hind, Siddiqullah Choudhury, sometime in February. Choudhury is spearheading the opposition to land acquisition at Nandigram. Brinda, in her article, had argued that since the CPI(M) is against closer ties and strategic relationship with the USA that the UPA government has embarked on, the USA is trying to harm the CPI(M) by covert means. And that includes lending a helping hand to those who oppose the CPI(M) at Nandigram. Never before, I'm sure, has such a preposterous allegation been levelled. Not even by Indira Gandhi, the original proponent of the 'foreign hand' behind domestic turmoil. Had the charge not been so ridiculous, it would have been fit to counter it. But the sheer absurdity of her allegation makes it unworthy of serious comment. But it only reveals the lengths embattled Marxists, fighting hard to defend Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee's indefensible actions, can go to. And in doing so, little do they realize the theatre of the absurd they're enacting. Or was Brinda Karat just providing some comic relief?

The Red Raj

http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20070622&fname=westbengal&sid=1

AP

The Red Raj
On June 21, 1977, when Jyoti Basu was sworn in as Bengal's Chief Minister, little did he, his comrades -- or anyone, for that matter -- even dream that 30 years hence, the Left Front would be celebrating three uninterrupted decades of rule in the state... ...
Jaideep Mazumdar



On June 21, 1977, when Jyoti Basu was sworn in as Bengal's Chief Minister, little did he, his comrades -- or anyone, for that matter -- even dream that 30 years hence, the Left Front would be celebrating three uninterrupted decades of rule in the state. And, what's more, appear to be on firm ground and an unassailable position even after such a long tenure. Apart from creating history--no other party in a multi-party, electoral democracy, leave aside a Communist regime, has ever won so many elections in a row--the very fact that the Left Front, with the CPI(M) being the overwhelmingly dominant partner, has ruled for such a long time (and appears set to rule for many more) is quite paradoxical and defies all logic.

Factors like anti-incumbency, policy mistakes (like driving away capital or abolition of English from the primary school stage), severe failings (as in health, education and infrastructure), charges of corruption and nepotism, and even glaring instances of use of brute force and high-handedness have done little to even marginally erode the Left's formidable support base. This hasn't happened anywhere else in the world.

What, then, are the reasons behind the Left Front's seven successive electoral victories? For one, it isn't definitely rigging as opposition parties have vociferously claimed for so long--the strict monitoring of the Assembly polls last year by the Election Commission has demolished that allegation. While the actual reasons are many and a combination of many factors which requires extensive research and analyses, a few major ones stand out.

The first among these, as is well-known, is land reforms--re-distribution of lakhs of lakhs of acres of ceiling-surplus arable land to the landless and Operation 'Barga' that gave ownership rights to sharecroppers and tillers of agricultural land. In one clean and deft sweep, the Left Front government made lakhs of people die-hard party supporters. They, in fact, still form the backbone of the Left's, and the CPI(M)'s, support base--Singur and Nandigram notwithstanding. The beneficiaries of these land reforms--the peasants and their families--have always blindly supported, and will continue to, the Left. Understandably so, since the Left Front government had, overnight, changed their status dramatically from that of landless peasants at the mercy of the rich landlords to landowners themselves.

Along with benefiting lakhs of poor peasants, the Left Front also gave a voice to millions of workers and poor wage-earners in the organized and unorganized sectors. The industrial workers, the bus drivers and conductors, the lowly garage employee, the domestic help, the vegetable seller, the fishermen, rickshaw pullers, cobblers, coolies et al--they were organized into unions, encouraged to demand their due share and made conscious of their rights. From centuries of near-slavery and exploitation, these sections suddenly found themselves empowered and able to hold their heads high, look straight into their employers' eyes and confident enough to post their demands. These people, too, became die-hard supporters of the Left, especially the CPI(M), and continue to be so till this day. It is, after all, the Left (in their cases, mostly the CPI-M) that gave them a voice and enabled them to extract their due share, however small that may be. This may, to the middle classes and above, hold not much significance, but to, say, an over-exploited domestic help, getting organized into a union under the patronage of the ruling party and thus being able to demand better pay and working conditions from an abusive or exploitative employer certainly made a huge difference. And were I in their shoes, I'd have unquestioningly supported and voted for the CPI(M) for the rest of my life, and so would my family members.

Yes, this led to militant and irresponsible trade unionism and a sharp decline in the state's work-culture, but that's another story.

Another very significant factor behind the unassailability of the CPI(M) is the party's carefully cultivated image as one dedicated to the cause of the poor and the marginalized. The party has always indulged in the pro-poor rhetoric and, to be fair, framed policies and programmes in consonance with it. In the eyes of the people, the CPI(M) and its partners have always remained the parties of the poor and the disadvantaged. Thus, even those who have never benefited from the three decades of Left rule find themselves drawn to the Left parties.

Yet another policy that has stood the CPI(M) in very good stead is the creation of the three-tier panchayati raj system even before it came into existence in the rest of the country. Power and policy-making was, thus, de-centralised and this resulted in lakhs of poor and marginalized villagers finding a voice and becoming the masters of their own destinies. The importance of this cannot be underscored heavily enough. For the millions in the villages who had always felt ignored by city-based policy makers and the power elite, this newfound power was an important tool for self-governance. They felt that the country's independence, at last, meant sense, and a vital difference, to them. For, till then, they had only considered (and justifiably so) India's independence as an event that made no difference to them for it only resulted in the replacement of one set of rulers (the British) with another (the city-based Indian elite). Naturally, for three decades now, they've been voting for the CPI(M).

Many events since Independence had created a strong impression among Bengalis that the Hindi-speaking rulers in Delhi bore a step-motherly attitude towards Bengal and its people. The refusal of the union government to help the state bear the burden of lakhs of refugees from erstwhile East Pakistan immediately after Partition and before the birth of Bangladesh in 1971, in stark contrast to the bountiful help received by Punjab, agitated all Bengalis. Policies like that of freight equalization strengthened the impression that Delhi was out to destroy Bengal's industrial base. Many steps initiated by Delhi after 1947 were perceived to be anti-Bengal and anti-Bengali.

By coincidence or otherwise, most of Bengal's pioneering industrial units started declining and going bust; the Bengali owners of the surviving ones were forced to sell their units to non-Bengali traders. These developments only strengthened the impression that Delhi, especially Nehru, was hell-bent on destroying Bengalis. Even today, many well-read, educated and accomplished Bengalis believe that Nehru and other Congress leaders in Delhi harboured ill-will towards Bengal and Bengalis due to the challenge thrown up by Subhas Chandra Bose.

When such feelings were at their peak in the early and mid-1970s, thanks to a series of unfortunate events and circumstances that had overcome Bengal, the CPI(M) entered the scene with its strong anti-Delhi rhetoric. Accusing Delhi of neglecting Bengal and displaying a dictatorial attitude became the cornerstone of the CPI(M)'s policies and pronouncements. For Bengalis, who had so far suffered under pusillanimous Congressmen ruling the state and taking orders from Delhi (with notable exceptions like Bidhan Chandra Ray), the voluble CPI(M) leaders with their strong anti-Delhi and anti-Congress rhetoric appeared as real heroes brave enough to challenge Delhi's hegemony. The CPI(M) followed this battle through, as in the case of Haldia Petrochemicals that the state built on its own after Delhi refused to finance or even sanction the project, saying it would be unviable.

The CPI(M), thus, re-kindled Bengali pride and, in the process, made itself inseparable from middle-class Bengalis. The party also tactfully aligned itself with middle-class values, customs and prejudices to strengthen its base among this section that, all over the world, is conservative and plays a critical role in electoral victories. In order to align itself with the middle-class Bengalis, the CPI(M) didn't mind championing conservative values that went against its own liberal philosophy like, for example, decreeing that girls should wear only sarees, and not "north Indian dresses" like salwar-kameez (leave aside western attire) to college. The Bengali middle-classes (and also lower middle classes), thus, became strong CPI(M) supporters and remain so till this day. In fact, with the CPI(M) now championing industrialization and liberalisation that'll create more jobs, the support of the middle-classes has only become stronger.

And then, the role of the formidable party machinery in ensuring successive victories for the CPI(M) cannot be underestimated. A clarification will be in order here--the focus of this article is the CPI(M) since it is the dominant partner in the Left Front and, for all practical purposes, it is the party that really matters; its partners are but just bit players. The CPI(M), even before it came to power, started building up its machinery in true Communist style. Starting from the 'para', or mohalla/locality, level, it built units right till the state level. Over time, the party units at the 'para' level became all-powerful, mediating in even family disputes and dictating the social lives of the people. Party cadres emerged as the connect between the people and the government, and, thus, became very powerful.

Along with this, the party started establishing its vice-like grip over other institutions, including hallowed ones like Calcutta University and Presidency College. All institutions were subverted and made to do the party's bidding. And at the same time, the state administrative machinery was also infiltrated and politicized. The bureaucracy and the police force became mere adjuncts of the party. All this was done very quietly, systematically and efficiently. The CPI(M) ensured only its members and supporters got government jobs, including that of school and college teachers. These teachers, in turn, ensured that indoctrination of youngsters started at a very early age, right from the school level, and continued through college and university.

The CPI(M)'s students' arm, the SFI, ensured that non-believers or opponents (of the party and its Marxist ideology) were harassed and even driven out of institutions. So strong has been the stranglehold of the party over all aspects of people's lives that it has effectively snuffed out all independent thought and behaviour, especially in Bengal's semi-urban and rural areas where the grip is much stronger than in Kolkata. The help and cooperation of the state machinery has also ensured the CPI(M)'s repeated electoral victories, though this is not to suggest that the state machinery has aided or abetted large-scale subversion of the electoral process. That, as stated earlier in this article, is just not the case. But the state machinery has undoubtedly been rendering help to the CPI(M) at the hustings, and while such help has definitely been critical in ensuring larger victory margins for the CPI(M), it has not ensured victory per se.

The firm grip of the party over people's lives has also had another beneficial effect for the CPI(M). It has effectively rooted out all opposition. With indoctrination starting very subtly at the school level, it is very difficult in Bengal for any non-Marxist and non-Communist stream of thought or philosophy to strike root and blossom.

If a student starts showing signs of independence or, worse still, opposition to communist philosophy, he or she will be subtly asked and then forced to either fall in line or remain silent. Those who keep on defying are hounded or harassed out of their institutions. One or two such instances are enough to make other independent-minded submit silently to the party.

Defiance at the workplace, mainly government but also many private establishments, meets with similar response from the omnipresent party cadres. It is, thus, small wonder that no credible, charismatic and coherent non-communist politician gifted with a vision (all these qualities leads to Mamata Banerjee's exclusion) has emerged in Bengal over the last three decades. As for the ones who had been around when the Left Front took over the reins, they have mostly been co-opted (and corrupted) by the CPI(M) to the extent that they no longer command any credibility in Bengal, even though some of them occupy positions of power in Delhi (with the CPI-M's blessings, of course).

Whatever little political opposition remains in Bengal (read: Mamata Banerjee and her party) is vacuous and commands little support (once again notwithstanding Singur and Nandigram), as last year's Assembly polls have shown. Given this, it is inevitable that the CPI(M) and its junior partners win one election after another. And, unless Bengal's present set of rulers make extremely stupid mistakes (here, Singur and Nandigram should stand out as ominous warnings) or a host of unfavourable and unforeseen factors combine to mount a strong challenge to the Left, the last seven electoral verdicts in the state will witness repetition.

The Left Front's list of achievements is long. Lakhs of people have genuinely benefited. Lakhs more have been empowered. The Left has been unwaveringly secular. But, as is perhaps inevitable, the list of failures is also long, though not as long as the Opposition parties would like us to believe. But what's important, at the end of the day, is the quiet burial that democratic traditions and values, and the democratic ethos as such, has received in Bengal at the hands of the CPI(M).

Thirty years in power is definitely an occasion that calls for celebration. But it ought to set people thinking about and exploring the factors that have led to creation of such history. And in this exploration will one discover the total subversion, and deliberate extinction, of the very ethos of multi-party democracy in Bengal. A thousand flowers definitely don't bloom, at least not the non-red variety, in Bengal. That's sad and that's the most unfortunate fallout of three decades of communist rule in Bengal.




The Killing Fields Of Nandigram


http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20071112&fname=nandigram&sid=1&pn=1

The administration, especially the police, was asked to step aside and remain mute spectators to hundreds of well-armed CPI(M) cadres running riot in Nandigram for six days.
......
Jaideep Mazumdar


NANDIGRAM

The red flags are fluttering merrily in the early winter breeze at Nandigram after a gap of 11 months. On the ground, "victorious" CPI(M) cadres, drunk on their victory--the "recapture" of more than a hundred villages that had remained beyond their control for so long--are taking out processions and bike rallies, bursting countrymade-bombs like Diwali firecrackers and ensuring that the lakhs who had supported the anti-land acquisition brigade--the Bhumi Uchched Pratirosh Committee (BUPC)--submit meekly to the CPI(M). But tension is palpable, as is the intense loathing for the CPI(M) that had deployed its armed cadres, many from outside this East Midnapore district, to kill, rape, loot and "recapture" the villages that had remained under the BUPC's control for so long.

The operation to liberate Nandigram and re-establish the CPI(M)'s grip there started in the middle of last week and was, by all accounts, a well-planned affair that had the blessings of the party's top leadership. The administration, especially the police, was asked to step aside and remain mute spectators to hundreds of well-armed CPI(M) cadres running riot in Nandigram for six days till Sunday.

Even a stinging rebuke from Governor Gopalkrishna Gandhi asking the state government to act failed to move the powers that be at Writers' Building. The CRPF, which was sent following a request from the state government, arrived on Saturday, but is yet to deployed in the trouble-torn and traumatized villages, as I write this piece at 8:50 PM.

In fact, five companies of the para-military force, led by its IG Subhas Goswami and DIG Alok Raj, had to face barricades put up by the 'red cadres' at two places in the 30 km journey from Tamluk to Nandigram town. They'll remain stationed at Nandigram police station on Monday evening and will fan out to the villages only from Tuesday morning.

The whole area remained out of bounds for media persons ever since the CPI(M)'s operation began and it was only on Monday, after the party had been successful in re-establishing its total control in the area, that scribes were allowed in. But not before we witnessed a fair bit of "red terror", perhaps to serve as an ominous reminder about the CPI(M)'s "power" to us. The Outlook team, one of the first to enter Nandigram after its "re-capture", was caught in many CPI(M) processions and in one along Debipur village, cadres burst countrymade bombs in front of us to demonstrate their "power". The party's local committee secretary, Tilak Roy, however told us that the bombs were "firecrackers left over from Diwali" and asked us not to write about such "celebrations" by his "enthusiastic party workers". Perhaps it was this "enthusiasm" which was responsible for a TV camera person having her camera and mobile phone snatched when she went to cover the ransacking of the Trinamool Congress office by the CPI(M) cadre on Sunday.

By Monday afternoon, red flags were up in every nook and corner of Nandigram, including the Tekhali bridge that had served as the no-man's land between the warring CPI(M) and BUPC activists. CPI(M) activists and supporters who had been displaced from their villages were still returning home. They, too, had suffered at the hands of the BUPC: driven out of their homes, they have had to spend months in relief camps funded almost entirely by the CPI(M). Their houses had been looted and often torched and some have had to suffer serious injuries in exchange of fire with BUPC activists.
Their children had to stop going to schools and have lost a full academic year. Most have not been able to cultivate their fields or pursue their vocations, thus becoming dependant for their meals and all other necessities on the CPI(M). Naturally, they were desperate to return to their homes.

But with the BUPC resisting all efforts by the state administration to re-settle the displaced in their respective villages, and putting up stiff and often impossible conditions for such return, the ground became ripe for the CPI(M) to initiate 'direct action'. They did so with full and brutal force, importing sophisticated arms and sharp-shooters as well as leaders of the party's 'killer squads' from neighbouring districts.

Though the official death toll is four, local persons say they saw scores of dead bodies, all of which have been removed and burnt or buried by the CPI(M). There is truth in these allegations--on Saturday, 13 CPI(M) activists, including two persons who were wanted by the CBI for their role in the killings of Trinamool Congress workers in Choto Angaria a few years ago, were nabbed by locals while they were removing some injured from Nandigram.

For five days, while the CPI(M)'s 'killer squads' went on the rampage, the police kept themselves confined to their barracks. District Superintendent of Police S.S.Panda said his men were "scared" to venture into the killing fields of Nandigram and were awaiting the arrival of the CRPF. Which was just a lame excuse for inaction and a shameful ploy to give the CPI(M) squads a free hand to complete their task. But the non-deployment of the CRPF immediately after the force's arrival in Calcutta on Saturday has raised doubts over the state government real motive.

The Outlook team was also the first to venture into Satengabari, braving belligerent CPI(M) cadres who kept issuing warnings and threats openly. We had a close shave at Jambari village where party cadres surrounded us and demanded to know what we'd write. It was only after we assured them that we would report on the sorry plight of those who had been driven out of their homes by the BUPC activists that we were allowed to return in one piece. At the village, which was "liberated" from the BUPC on November 6, the party's killer squads looted and torched two houses, severely assaulted a 70-year-old and drove a few men, all activists of the BUPC, out of their damaged homes.

"Now, everything is peaceful here. We've established our total control and have rid our village of the BUPC's terror," boasted CPI(M) branch secretary Sudarshan Maity who had, only minutes ago, accused us of being "Trinamool agents" who needed to be taught a lesson.

But the calm that envelopes Jambari village is an elusive one. Before the CPI(M) activists arrived on the scene, many villagers, speaking in whispers, told us about the 'red terror' they had been liberated from eleven months ago that will again haunt them from now on. They spoke of the CPI(M)'s atrocities, high-handedness and total control over all aspects of their lives till January this year when trouble broke out and the newly-formed BUPC drove out the CPI(M) from their villages and their lives.

The Nandigram story is, however, not about the BUPC establishing control over more than a hundred villages 11 months ago and making them 'out of bounds' for the state administration after driving out CPI(M) supporters and activists. Or about the CPI(M) deploying its killer squads to 're-capture' Nandigram, killing, raping and maiming scores in the process. It is all about the state government having failed miserably in its task of administering.

The state administration has re-established control over Nandigram again now.But it did so riding piggyback on the CPI(M)'s extra-constitutional medieval warfare way. This is where it has erred. Sinned would be a better word. But then, the distinction between the party (the CPIM) and the government had long ago blurred in West Bengal.