Monday, April 26, 2010

Another article in Outlook Mag. after arundhati's black fantasy

The following writeup is contributed in Outlook Magazine by Mr.B.G.Varghese.Am reproducing it as exactly as it was,for the benefit of those who might have missed reading it in outlook.

The CRPF massacre in Dantewada was brutal though avoidable, with two beheadings thrown in for bestiality. The Rammohan inquiry will tell us more about what happened. It was done, Arundhati Roy informs us (Walking with the Comrades, Mar 29), by “Gandhians with a gun”, with the timely reminder that there is no humbug about her Maoist Gandhians. They fight to protect beautiful tribal homelands against the state, which is an ‘Enemy of the People’, and corporate predators intent on ruthlessly realising their militarised, state-supported dreamland of mines, industrial plants and big dams. She will stand and fight against these “crimes against humanity”.

The Maoists have said, through Arundhati, and directly, that they seek dialogue. What is the Maoist notion of dialogue? Let’s listen to spokesman Azad, recently interviewed in The Hindu: “We want to achieve whatever is possible for the betterment of people’s lives without compromising on our political programme of new democratic revolution and the strategy of protracted people’s war.” Further, “talks will give some respite to the people who are oppressed and suppressed under the jackboots of the Indian state....” But the government must “release some leaders. Or else, there would be none to talk to since the entire party is illegal”. So the Maoists want the ban on the party lifted, detained leaders released, and respite for the “oppressed” (cadres) while planning to pursue “protracted war” with greater vigour. Is that a reasonable precondition that any state can accept without abdicating?

The Maoists pose as Robin Hoods but rule by fear and authoritarian command over cowed camp-followers. Many comrades have broken rank in disgust over the Maoists’ brutality and hubris. Arundhati speaks of exploitation and corruption in, and neglect of, tribal India. She is right. But it is preposterous to talk of “genocide”. The tribal population of India was 19.1 million in 1951, rose to 84.3 mn according to the 2001 census and is estimated to be just short of 100 mn (8.1 per cent of the population) today.

Tribal neglect and exploitation can only be addressed through better governance and development, which, first and foremost, requires connectivity, an administrative presence and a sound delivery system. Official and, indeed, national failure has been blatant in this regard, and yes, there are powerful vested interests that favour an iniquitous status quo and “structural violence”. But this is a running thread through the governance-development-modernisation debate and the solution does not lie in abandoning ship.

The struggle the Maoists are waging to capture state power is, Arundhati tells us, “a war for the soul of India”. The battle has been joined. Yet the Dantewada “model of alternative governance” that Arundhati eulogises posits little more than a parlous, uncertain existence. Many tribes, admittedly, have fine communitarian institutions and cultural traits. These must be fostered; but for the rest, the tribal people must be assisted to be equal citizens, as is their constitutional right. The journey started late. But it has begun.

        

Poverty is the enemy of human dignity and the environment and it is callous to glorify destitution as “beautiful”. Yes, schools in Naxal-affected areas are often occupied by security forces, not to prevent education but because schooling and other developmental activities, such as they are, have come to a halt. The Maoists, for their part, don’t want schools but only agitprop centres to indoctrinate the young. Development and connectivity threaten them. Hence they destroy roads, culverts, bridges. Hence the wanton attacks on railway and highway projects that would, if completed, connect and open up remote, backward areas. If education, health services, roads, irrigation, markets and communications are provided and poverty rolled back, the Maoists would be out of business. And what is their business? Demonised corporates can’t think beyond a steel or an aluminum plant or two, a power station, mine, port or dam. The Maoists have their sights on nothing less than reconstructing India as a totalitarian state. Read history for the evidence.

Arundhati’s poetry is beguiling. However, facts rudely intrude on the prosody. Dantewada’s Salwa Judum remains a savage blot that certainly became part of the problem. But “strategic hamleting” was confined to just this one district—bad enough certainly—and was prevented from being extended to any other district, even in Chhattisgarh. As for helicopter gunships, when and where were they ever used ?

Why scoff at a cancer hospital built near Raipur by Vedanta, the aluminum corporate, or the proposed Vedanta University in coastal Orissa? Are these by definition all wicked enterprises? Arundhati extols the joys of sleeping in her private open-air jungle suite in a “thousand-star hotel”. And then she meets the doctor, obviously a dedicated soul, who serves this tribal area. The health conditions in Dandakaranya he describes make her “blood run cold”. It’s a terrible tale of chronic anaemia, TB, kwashiorkor (extreme malnutrition), malaria, severe eye and ear infections.... “There are no clinics, no doctors, no medicines” in this beautiful place for these beautiful people. (The word “beautiful” appears like a recurring decimal). So where do we begin? By burning down the Vedanta hospital?

Are these corporate social responsibility (CSR) actions merely to be seen as bribes to fulfil Arundhati’s prophecy that tribal people will be moved to make way for steel plants, aluminum refineries, mines and dams. Yes, there will be land acquisition and displacement—that is the story of civilisation; but there will also be resettlement, compensation and training for new vocations. Admittedly, this has not always been done wisely or well. But times are changing. New legal frameworks, better norms, closer monitoring, improved R&R and livelihood packages have continuously been put in place. 

How much land has been acquired and how many have been displaced? Doomsday figures of displacement from all development in India since the First Plan touch 60 million. Official approximations are far less. Yet, on another calculus, 30-40 million destitute move annually in distress migration. These are Nowhere People for whom there is no one to raise a voice. No R&R, no compensation packages and no warriors to win stay orders or do dharnas for them. These Malthusian refugees are casualties, not of development but of non-development.

The country needs to lift itself out of poverty and create 12 million additional jobs every year to cope with the population bulge. This requires wherewithal—financial, human, natural resources, managerial, marketing and technological. The vast bulk of the country’s mineral resources and headwaters of major rivers are located in Fifth Schedule areas, where tribal people live. Are these not to be exploited? The corporate world, both public and private, has been dubbed predator—the Maoists have repeatedly attacked the National Mineral Development Corporation in Chhattisgarh. However, the tribals themselves are incapable of working the minerals, apart from scratching the surface. Yet they have a vital stake in the land, forests and environment and must be made stakeholders and partners and trained for ever higher levels of participation. Unfortunately, every effort has been made to stall any kind of development.

There is much virtue in translating Gandhi’s concept of trusteeship in a new and evolving idiom of CSR to which corporates, the state and courts have variously given expression. The new deals being worked out by the POSCOs, Vedantas, Tatas, Mittals and others are greatly in advance of what was on offer even five years ago. These packages and the legal framework around them will keep improving too. India’s diversity defies “one size fits all” solutions; it is in variety and experimentation that best practices will keep emerging.

The corporates may have something to answer for too. Fly-by-night operators are part of the problem but the more responsible entities are becoming part of the solution as huge long-term stakeholders in the enterprises, people and environment they work in. They command the resources, manpower, technology and organisation to deliver. Various partnerships involving community and area development can be forged. This is happening. ‘People’s Tribunals’ keep mouthing yesterday’s tired slogans. They do not see tomorrow; may be they even fear it.

On another battlefront, the Sardar Sarovar project, Arundhati and her friends in the Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) have consistently been proved wrong in their predictions and pronouncements. They have revelled in scoring small points but have missed the wood for the trees. Whenever benefits were within reach, with every raising of the dam, they have tried desperately to halt progress. The theory they cling to is that the Sardar Sarovar project does not benefit anyone, so the realisation of benefits must be stopped at any cost. Once benefits flow, the NBA and its friends will be silenced and out of business. Indeed, drinking water is already being supplied to 25 million people. There have been significant improvements in health, women’s time disposition, distress migration, livestock, agricultural productivity, incomes, employment and land values and living conditions.

It is these benefits the NBA rejected as a bad dream, then faulted and sought to delay. Arundhati has conjured up another bad dream in Tribal India and, perhaps unwittingly, is working overtime with other misguided ideologues to make it come true. That won’t happen. The Maoists will fade away, democratic India and the Constitution will prevail, despite the time it takes and the pain involved. But both state and society have much work to do to right past wrongs and make Tribal India a truly just and beautiful place.

Martyr Sawinder Singh cremated with State honours

Sawinder Singh, one of the two policemen, who died fighting militants was cremated with full State honours at his native village Pokhar in Punjab's Gurdaspur district on Monday (April 26).


Sawinder was killed during a counter-militants operation near the India-Pakistan border on April 25.

The top brass of the police also joined hundreds of mourners including State ministers at the cremation ceremony and appreciated the heroic deeds of Sawinder Singh.


"Bravely, he (Sawinder Singh) killed those militants who otherwise would have caused much damage we just can't judge. A new way would have been created for the militants. These brave personnel of Punjab Police took the challenge risking their lives......... We salute them and pay our homage to him," said Sahota, the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Border Range, Punjab Police.


The nearly two-hour long encounter at Ratarwan village in the district took place after a couple tipped-off the police that two men carrying weapons had come to their house during night and wished to know the directions leading to the main road.


The other slain policeman, Constable Narinder Singh was also cremated with full state honours at his native village Jaggowal Bangar in Gurdaspur district.


Minister Sucha Singh Langah, Transport Minister Master Mohan Lal and Maninderjeet Singh Bitta, founder President of All India Anti-Terrorists Front were also present on this occasion at the cremation ground.

News Courtesy:newstrackindia.com

All the news channels are busy with IPL off-field dirt,phone tapping etc.
I remember seeing a report in some news channel about militants killed on the border.There was no mention of the martyrdom of the two policemen.Alteast,I did not see any.

As usual no respect,no homage for those who die defending our Motherland..

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Aye Mere Watan Ke Logo

English Translation :

O! the people of my country!
You continue shouting the slogans
This is a blessed day for all of us
Fly our sweet tricolour
but don't forget that at the borders
Heros' have lost their lives
Have few memories of them
who never returned home.

O! the people of my country!
have some tears in your eyes
for all those martyrs
remember their sacrifice

When the himalayas were stricken,
When our freedom was in danger
They fought till their last breath
and then laid down their life
with head on the hard ground,
those immortal souls slept
for all those martyrs.....

when it was Diwali in the country
they played Holi with their blood
when we were in our homes
they were facing bullets
they were the blessed soldiers of our country
blessed was their youth
for all those martyrs.....

some were sikh, some were jaat and some marata
some were Gurkha and some from madras
but everyone who died at the border
every warrior was an Indian
the blood that fell on the hills
that blood was Indian
for all those martyrs.....

their body was drenched with their blood,
but still they held their guns
Each killed ten in the enemy army
and then fell down unconscious
When it was their last moment,
they said, now its time for our death
Stay happy, citizens of my country,
I start my journey now
what crazy fans of the country were they
what proud and dignified were they
for all those martyrs.....

With the hope that you never forget them
This story has been said
for all those martyrs.....
Victory to India, Victory to the Indian Armed Forces
Victory to India, Victory to India, Victory to India