Wed 28 Mar 2007
The Duckponds of Jibanananda
It was the mention of duckponds that brought Jibanananda Das to my mind. If only the poet of Ruposhi Bangla had been alive today. More than seventy years ago, mesmerized by the beauty of his native land, Jibanananda mused on his own reincarnation and wrote some of the most celebrated lines in all of Bengali literature:
When I return to the banks of the Dhanshiri, to this Bengal,
Not as a man, perhaps, but as a shalik bird or a white hawk,
Perhaps as a dawn crow in this land of autumn’s new rice harvest,
I’ll float upon the breast of fog one day in the shade of a jackfruit tree.
Or I’ll be some young girl’s pet duck — ankle bells upon her reddened feet —
And I’ll spend the day floating on duckweed-scented waters..
(Clinton Seely’s translation)
What then would he have made of Nandigram? What would he have made of Singur? The Tehelka reporter Shoma Chaudhury starts her exposé with a vivid description of shujola-shufola rural Bengal:
Singur is emerald country. Even an urban cynic, unmoved by pastoral idylls, can see in an instant that this is no poor man’s burden. Land here is wealth. Singur is merely 45 kilometres from Kolkata… Almost every villager’s house here is pucca, a secure shelter of cement and polished red stone. The fields are lush with crop — rice, jute, potato, and a myriad vegetables. And every 500 yards there is a pond swimming with ducks.
The next line reads:
Beauty never plays a role in the reckonings of macroeconomics.
The Bullets of 14th March, 2007
On Wednesday March 14, clashes between villagers and police forces took place in Nandigram in East Medinipur district in West Bengal. The police opened fire. 14 villagers were killed according to official figures; the true number is said to be higher. CNN gives the background to the clashes:
The trouble in Nandigram began January 7, after the leak of government plans to acquire 22,000 acres of land and build a petrochemical plant and shipyard in a Special Economic Zone.
The disturbances of March 14 prompted the government to temporarily suspend plans for scores of so-called Special Economic Zones, which are meant to attract investors with generous tax breaks. Most of the zones, including the one planned for Nandigram, were to be built on farmland.
The SEZ was to be developed by the Salim Group of Indonesia who had signed a deal with the West Bengal government. As mentioned, the SEZ would require the acquisition or confiscation of tens of thousands of acres of fertile farmland. As many as 29 villages in East Medinipur would be affected by this programme of land acquisition designed to support greater industrialization. It would dispossess the villagers of their lands and livelihoods and displace them from their ancestral homes.
What is remarkable in this tragedy is the arrogant attitudes and brutal actions of a government that is democratically-elected and that is filled with nominal socialists and communists. In true deshi fashion, the police forces’ brutality has been backed up by the ruling party’s hired goons. Pro-government papers such as Ganashakti have been justifying the tragedy in the name of Shilpayon (industrialization) and Unnoyon (development). The government’s mouthpieces accuse various parties – Trinamool, Naxalites, Jamayet, environmentalists - of forming a conspiracy against the development of West Bengal.
Some might argue that communists have a long and inglorious history of brutalizing the peasantry (cf. 1930s Ukraine, 1950s China). Rather early in their theological training, they fall in love with the process of industrialization and the creation (forcible, if necessary) of an urban proletariat. However, the present government of West Bengal can hardly be said to be attuned to the teachings of Marx and Mao. What motivates them instead is the dollar sign, the siren song of big business.
Large parts of West Bengal are now seething in protest. The ever-vocal intelligentsia is up in arms. Leading lights of Kolkata culture – from Aparna Sen and Indrani Halder to Gautam Ghosh and Suman Chatterjee - have demanded the chief minister’s resignation. Renowned poet Shankha Ghosh has resigned his membership of the Bangla Akademi. Novelist Nabarun Bhattacharya (son of Mahasweta Devi) has not only renounced the Bonkim Award he won for his novel Herbert, he has also handed over his prize money to the people of Nandigram. Others too have been resigning their seats at various state-sponsored cultural institutions and returning their Robindro Awards, Bidyasagar Awards etc.
A collection of articles on the crisis:
* Shoma Chaudhury’s reportage - Bengal shows the way
* Arundhati Roy’s ferocious interview with Tehelka- ‘It’s outright war and both sides are choosing their weapons’. If you have time to read only one piece, read this.
* Well-known columnist Praful Bidwai reviews the situation
* Professor Amit Bhaduri, one of India’s leading economists, wonders: Development or Developmental Terrorism?
* The Financial Times has an overview of SEZ and its discontents - India’s farmers grumbling as SEZs eat up land
Economic Growth and the Rule of Law
The killings in Nandigram may not concern us in any obvious way. But Purbo Medinipur is also a part of Bengal. It is not a million miles from Bangladesh, nor are the larger issues completely irrelevant to our own development path. In fact, anyone who followed the protests in Kansat or Phulbari in Bangladesh last year will experience a peculiar sense of déjà vu when reading the reports of the villagers’ resistance in Medinipur.
Phulbari and Kansat, Singur and Nandigram – these are the faultlines, the stress fractures of our rapidly changing world. On the one hand is our pastoral past. Or should we call it our pastoral present? The vast majority of our people are still connected to the land, their lives governed by the rhythms of the seasons. Their traditions and cultures accumulated over generations and are inseparable from the land - the land which is the key element of their lives, the same land which is at stake in Nandigram.
On the other hand is the juggernaut of growth. Economic Development, we are told, is imperative if our populations are to enjoy a higher standard of living. But runaway growth demands a high cost as well, yet there is precious little discussion of that. The policymakers are mesmerized by glittering GDP numbers and want more and more – 6%, 7%, 10%. The urban middle classes love their new-found affluence. The multinationals, the mass media and the advertising industry are only too happy to feed the frenzy of consumerism to newer heights. But outside their air-conditioned bubble, arable land is hijacked for “infrastructure” (read eight-lane highways), ancestral villages drown under “power projects” (read dams), green fields become industrial wastelands.
The development theorist Arthur Lewis taught us that industrialization is a necessary stage. There are too many people on the farm in poor countries (even more so after the Green Revolution), and some of them should move to the city, work in factories, build roads and bridges, participate in the growth process. But I doubt if even Lewis foresaw what Buddhadeb Bhattacharya had in mind for Nandigram - using naked force to grab property, and turning a settled, prosperous population into vagrants and beggars in their own land.
The problem here is democracy. The problem for the West Bengal government is the rule of law - more specifically, property rights. One of the major bottlenecks, for example, in India’s drive towards double-digit growth is the abject state of its infrastructure. (In any comparative study of China and India, this point comes up repeatedly. Only yesterday, a Financial Times feature on global trade revealed that the port of Shanghai alone shipped 21 million cargo containers last year, whereas the whole of the Indian economy only managed 5 million containers.) Given legal hurdles and bureaucratic bottlenecks, India’s infrastructure and industrial capacity is set to remain lightyears behind China’s. The latter boasts scores of new industrial parks and export zones, a world-class network of roads and highways that is expanding rapidly as we speak, massive ports and airports that literally sprout out of the ground and become fully formed in a matter of a few years. But such dazzling speed, scale and efficiency are only possible within a political system that tramples all over property rights and individual rights. There’s no doubt that China’s political system has helped to deliver the kind of growth that will very soon make it a world power to rival the USA. India cannot hope to match that performance under its present political dispensation.
But what was the cost in China? Who knows how much farmland was illegally acquired to make this miracle possible? (At least 1.5 million hectares, according to one Chinese official.) How many villages were drowned by the dams? How many farmers displaced, how many killed?
Politicians in nominally-democratic countries like India and Bangladesh are caught between a rock and a hard place. They like to boast about their “people’s mandate” but at the same time they are desperate in their desire to prove their pro-business credentials to the corporates and MNCS. They are enthralled by the shonar horeen called “GDP growth”. For its part, big business is only doing what it is built to do – maximize profits. Corporate Social Responsibility is a joke and there is no depth that big business will not sink to in order to make an extra buck - whether it means flattening a score of villages, bulldozing virgin rainforest, even pandering to cheap jingoism over a cricket tournament (ladega to jeethega, anyone?) Hey, if it shifts some more product, it must be alright!
The question is whether democratic politicians should collude with corporate power to push through projects of doubtful legality. The West Bengal government obviously thought that it should – the bloody excess of Nandigram was the result. (Even in China, the natives are getting restless – 20,000 protesters collided with a thousand policemen in Hunan province a fortnight ago over rising living costs. Such protests have been gaining in volume and frequency all across the Middle Kingdom, as the voiceless majority realize just how much the new economic order is loaded against them.)
There is also the insidious mentality spreading these days that whatever is good for the urban middle classes must be good for the nation as a whole. The steep rise in inequality between the classes is largely brushed under the carpet by the mass media, eager as they are for trivial “content” that doesn’t disturb the comfortable repose of the bourgeoisie. The Tehelka article summarizes: The underlying stories everywhere are the same. Land takeover in the name of development or big industry. Summary eviction and displacement. Inadequate compensation. Lack of informed consent. Police action and state oppression. The breakdown of democratic process. And the arrogant sense that unless you have a high, urban standard of living and speak English, you are not a legitimate Indian.
Bangladesh, with its unsustainable and inflationary growth rates of 6-7%, will soon be facing similar questions, if it is not doing so already. Phulbari was an early example of competing demands ending in bloodshed, and there may well be more. The creaking infrastructure of Dhaka, for example, is thoroughly unfit for the capital of a modern economy; some day, the planners and policymakers will come to the realization that the only way to achieve a more rational infrastructure system is through expropriation of (some) private land. Also, as development and industrialization reaches out to the regions, our politicial leaders will be faced with the same questions that plague Bhattacharya babu. What to do about those pesky farmers and their pathetic patches of land standing in the way of some mega-project? What will be the rules of engagement? What will be the policies with respect to compensation, relocation, employment, benefits? What limits on the behaviour of the corporates, what duties towards the surrounding population and the environment? I hope our political leaders spend some time thinking about these questions and reflecting on the West Bengal experience. The welfare of millions will depend upon it.
An interesting side note: It is ironic how the CPI-M’s rule in West Bengal began with a massacre, the little-known Morichjhapi incident of 1978. After 30 years, its electoral decline may yet be heralded by another massacre. A comprehensive analysis of Morichjhapi can be found here.
March 29th, 2007 at 6:40 am
Great stuff, Zub. I don’t think corporations and politicians don’t take enough time to make the people partner in the process of change. Its just too easy to silence them and bulldoze them over rather than walking them through the process, holding public meetings, proper compensation, explaining the pros and cons to the public and help them make an educated decision.
Meanwhile the latest from Nandigram is similar to what happened in Phulbari
Buddhadeb says he is responsible for lapses in Nandigram
(PTI)
29 March 2007
KOLKATA — In the wake of public outrage over the March 14 police firing and escalating unrest, West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee announced the scrapping of a chemical hub in Nandigram and owned responsibility for the ‘lapses’ of his government, prompting opposition Trinamool Congress to demand his resignation.
Speaking for the first time after the violence in Nandigram that claimed 14 lives, Bhattacharjee told a rally that his government had decided to relocate the chemical hub and was waiting for Centre’s communication before announcing its new location within 7 days.
“I own up responsibility for the lapses in Nandigram on behalf of the state government. I don’t want any more deaths,” he said. Reacting sharply, Trinamool chief Mamata Banerjee demanded the resignation of the Chief Minister. “If anyone indulges in killing and says sorry, can the person be excused? If he really owned up responsibility and has minimum respect for democracy, he should step down,” she said.
March 29th, 2007 at 12:31 pm
well My opinion is that Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee is one of the most dynamic
Chief ministers of India. Chandra Babu Naiidu,
MM Krishna, Digvijay shing were the leader of Vision. Nandi Gram Incident is the war of two
classes. Basically I have question ” is industrial growth important in an agricultural
based economy?”
Major strength of CPM is on Rural area.
In last some years I am quite connected to Indian engineers.
In IT sector South is doing very good but
surprisingly Bengali engineers are dominating. amount is almost 35%.But they
have no work scope in West Bengal.
But Nandi Gram Incident is inhumanic no doubt.
But Mr Bhattacharjee want an Industrial boom
in West Bengal. So He needs to take over land for Tata and Solim Group.
I am not favor of any one.
Becausse I know Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee is a
very honest man.
But My question is which is most important?
Popularity to Mass? or long term unpopular
but bright planing for the Development.
I think This is the common question for Both west Bengal and Bangladesh.
March 29th, 2007 at 5:12 pm
In human history, the rise of industrialization led to rapid development for massive environmental and humane costs in England and Japan. David Landes’ “Wealth and Poverty of Nations” provides a great account of the pain and suffering many nations had to face to achieve high levels of ‘GDP’. We are all somewhat familiar with the environmental hell and horror stories of child-labour that brought England (and, as england was the pioneer, the world) to its present state of development through the (since we cannot alter history) essential stage of industrialization. Japan’s affluence also owes to the blood and tears of women who worked 7 days a week for 18 hours … almost all countries who are rich now has had their casualties ..
Industrialization is essential for the development of a nation as measured by ‘GDP growth’. Essentially, GDP growth means more economic activity — more goods more services — affluence through activity. That is the ONLY way that has ever worked or CAN work. But, more goods and services alone cannot be an end-all be-all. We all realize these days (thanks much to Amartya Sen’s relentless work on these tracks) that development is not just more production and more trade — better quality of life also means higher education levels, better healthcare, lower mortality, lower differences between the sexes, etc. –> as Sen would put it: higher capabilities and higher levels of freedom to deal with life is development. Lower difference between the classes is development.
But, even if industrialization is absolutely necessary for development, we of the third world nations are in a situation to be much more fortunate than the pioneers in development such as england and japan in the sense that we have their mistakes to learn from, and the gifts of science and technology to help us learn.
We all are in a situation to understand the importance and essentiality of environmental protection and the perils of polution. Development projects these days SHOULD have objective environmental assessments and these costs have to be accounted for when making decisions.
The question is of balance between benefit and cost. Giving up a garden or a field for an EPZ is not the end of the world, once you provide for controling polution. But, giving up a village — that’s a different issue.
So, in this ideal situation, if the issue is only of cost and benefit, who’s cost and who’s benefit are we talking about? This is where democracy in its true sense becomes essential. Participatory democracy taking into account all issues of the stakeholders involved — not democracy of majority oppression on the minority. Sure, India as a whole may benefit form the higher goods and services in EPZ’s — but, that does not give the majority of the population (living in mumbai, delhi, bangalore, etc.) to impose on small villages.
Development is just like the old saying: Koshto korle keshto mele … this is true everywhere always. But, we have to be vigilant that there be no oppression, and we have to think rationally and measure all avenues before making decisions … and resist against all forms of corruption, inefficiency or oppression.
March 29th, 2007 at 5:14 pm
[...] Unheard Voices takes a look at the violence in Nandigram in India. “What is remarkable in this tragedy is the arrogant attitudes and brutal actions of a government that is democratically-elected and that is filled with nominal socialists and communists. In true deshi fashion, the police forces’ brutality has been backed up by the ruling party’s hired goons.” Neha Viswanathan [...]
March 29th, 2007 at 9:25 pm
We all are educated here, and so we think mostly about the educated middle class welfare. The incident in Nandigram shows how short sighted we often are, how we forget the mass so easily just for our own benifit. Industrialization is necessary, but not at the expense of people. Without real empathy for people, no matter how visionary you might be, all the efforts are sure to fail.
Buddhadev Bhattachaya has become blind by his vision of industrial WB, forgetting the main support base of CPM. The city area voters have traditionally favored anti left parties in WB. It’s been the overwhelming support from the farmers which has enabled the left front win over and over again in the last 30 years. I hope it’s time for an end of CPM rule in WB. They have become too arrogant after their massive election win in both Lokshobha and Bidhanshobha. I guess Buddha babu will receive the same electoral judgement as Chandrababu Naidu in AP.
March 30th, 2007 at 4:29 am
I am not fully agreed with you Fz. Basically In west Bengal. There is no proper
Opposition which Andhra does have. Mamata Banerjee does not have very good impression
in mind of people. CPM does have a very strong root in rural area.
Above all Brand Buddha is still factor.
Very next day he took all responsibility on
his shoulder and he has still 4 years left
and It is long time . If his formula starts to work It will split urban vote also. opposition of west Bengal does not have very strong base in Rural area.
April 8th, 2007 at 7:32 am
I see a lot of confusion regarding the issue of Nandigram.
Though the issue started with the State Government trying to take over agricultural land for industry, the events of 14th MArch, 2007, were just use of the police force, which has been given to the State for governance, to re-establish the presence of the party in Nandigram. So essentially it is another crime against democracy. One of the numerous incidents that the CPI(M) has been indulging in for over 30 years. However, this time the involvement of the Police (an SP has admitted that 2 policemen raped women in Nandigram) and the CPI(M) goons has been well documented.
As such I call upon all persons not warped by their affiliation to the CPI(M) to demand 2 things :
1. The CPI(M) government of West Bengal, which has used the police force, not against criminals, but against innocent people of the State, should be dismissed and the President’s Rule be imposed.
2. The CPI(M) which has been using the Police, the State Government, from which persons manning elections are chosen, to perpetuate their existence and to KILL, RAPE and EXTERMINATE the opposition, and thus subverting democracy, should be banned from contesting elections for the next 10 years.
April 11th, 2007 at 2:31 am
Mr Dasgupta what type of Democracy is it?
May 3rd, 2007 at 2:11 pm
I am a Bengali person, age 33 years,but living 30 year in a phase of dark west bengal in all sides.These communist having dual charecter in everything,and they think they will stay for ever in power.By the foolishness of the left- front bengali people lost their inditity.Now they are going for the earese of whole bengali people. If we look their history, First they withdraw the English from our education system,because they know by this there will be a little chance of employment and unemployment will increare therfore their party cadre will defenitly increase for the hope of employment. On the other hand their tread Union named CITU they make all the factory been closed by their crual act, where West Bengal is one of the frontairsof the developed state of India in every aspects.Now What the cummunist done to this State. The system is breaking down. But they are barking bengal is signing.
November 10th, 2007 at 9:27 pm
amra ki sotti manus?????
amader bhitor manosikata ache bolei amra manus…ami rajniti bujhi na,bam dan bujhi na…sudhu eakta katha bujhi seta holo sobar upor manus..eakta manus ki kore opor manus er pran nite parey??????ki odhikar theke?????keu ki bolte paro??????
arey amader so called bhodro somaj tomra ar kobe bujhbe???????aj ekhon ami nijer computer e bose ato kichu likhchi kintu thik eai muhurte koto manus jege bose ache oi nandigram e,kokhon cholbe guli kokhon porbe bomb????….ami khejuri jai ni,jai ni ami nandigram-eo tao tv te oi osohay mukh gulo dekhlei kemon jeno maya hoy,kintu ami ki korte pari eai katha bhebe computer bondho korey kichukhon por nijer kaj niye besto hoye jai,kintu eak baro ki bhebe dekhi er upay ki????na,bhabte chai na,karon amra sobhho,amra bhiru,amra kapurus…amra bhabi jokhon nijeder upor hobe tokhon dekha jabe,amar ki??ami ki korte pari??sotti ki tai??ami budhha ke chini na,jani na mamta keo,jani na ke bhalo ke kharap,ke sotti bolche ke mithya,kintu jara jara bigoto din gulo te nandigram-e mara geche tader jibon ki firiye ana jabe???uttor dao amar bhodro bhiru somaj..aj aparna sen flim festival boykot korechen kitu tate labh ki hobe,porsu sohore bondh ghosona hoyeche kintu ki hobe???aj police,kal crpf,porsu military pathiye ki labh hobe??kichu loker pran jabe ar ki??rajniti somajer ongo eai katha ta jani kintu ekta limit obdhi thaka uchit noi ki??kichu sarthopor manuser uskani te mon ke bicholito na kore bhable hoy na ki kora jay??joto somoy jabe oikhan kar mati toto rokte lal hobe,tai aj eai irsar rajniti ke bondho kora uchit..majhe majhe mone hoy sedin ki dekhe rabi thakur likhechilen bharpt abar jogoto sobhay sresto ason lobey..jani amar eai ato boro lekha porar kono time nei karur kache,tao suru theke sesh obdhi bolbo bhabun ki kora jay eai rajnitir against e???
bhabun ar janan……………………karon bhabar din ese gache………………