| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 51, Dated December 26, 2009 |
|
| |
The
After Kill Of
Narayanpatna
The bloodshed may have halted, but violence, fear and the
possibility of starvation still haunt. SANJANA reports from the remote
Orissa town where police killed two Adivasis last month
 |
Cycle of death
With police restricting
harvest, children may
end up starving |
| Photos: Tarun Sehrawat |
THE VOICE at the other end
of the line is weak and
tired. It’s past 8 pm. “We
are on our way to the village,”
he says. “We walk
six hours every day –
three hours at daybreak from our village
into the forest and three hours at sundown
back to the village. We hide in the
jungles during the day and come to the
village at night. We don’t want to be
arrested by the police who come to our
villages during the day,” says the 24-yearold.
A few minutes of conversation later,
he asks if his name and village can be
kept anonymous. “If the police read the
report, they may come to our village and
hunt us down,” he says. Nothing you say
can dislodge the fear.
Three weeks after a police firing,
Narayanpatna in Orissa continues to
resemble a war zone – with near-empty
villages. The 24-year-old Adivasi that
TEHELKA spoke with is only one of several
hundred families who live in constant
fear.
On 20 November 2009, two Adivasis
died in the paramilitary forces’ firing at
the Narayanpatna police station. Both
the Adivasis were part of Chasi Mulia
Adivasi Sangh – an Adivasi organisation
in the region that is fighting for the
last 15 years for the Adivasis’ right over
land – and were part of a 150 strong
group that had gathered at the police
station to protest over continued police
harassment. Last week, in the story ‘A
zone of twisted law’ (issue 50 dated 19
December, 2009) TEHELKA had detailed
attempts by the state to derail the CMAS
and other Adivasi organisations working
in the area by equating them directly with the Communist Party of India
(Maoist) active in the region.
 |
Silence stalks
Life has come to a halt
in the neighbouring
Bhaliaput town |
The Special Operations Group unit of
the police and paramilitary forces, such as
the Indian Reserve Battalion and the
COBRA force stationed at Narayanpatna,
continue with their search-and-combing
operations in their attempts to arrest
absconding leaders of CMAS. Arrests
from the villages continue – unconfirmed
reports talk of three more Adivasis being
arrested on 14 December 2009 – even as
the security forces seek to arrest key
CMAS leader Nachika Linga.
Currently, 70 people have been
arrested and lodged in the Koraput district
jail. Though all the arrests have
taken place after 20 November, not all of
them are related to the protest on the day. Says Gupteswar Panigrahy, a Koraputbased
advocate who has stepped forward
to represent the arrested CMAS members:
“Of the 70 people arrested, only 20 have
been charged with cases related to the
protest on 20 November 2009. The
charges range from voluntarily causing
hurt to rioting armed with deadly
weapons to criminal conspiracy. The
police have also levelled charges under
the Indian Arms Act. As for the rest of
the people, they have been arrested for
cases that are several months old. By
arresting all of them now, we believe that
the police are unnecessarily attempting
to create a climate of fear in the villages.”
 |
| Targeted During
search operations,
police destroy whatever
food Adivasis stored |
Panigrahy is one of three advocates
who has been allowed access to the
undertrial prisoners. He categorically
details the injuries sustained by those
arrested while in custody. On 14
December 2009, when the jail authorities
brought some of the undertrial prisoners before the Judicial Magistrate First
Class (JMFC) at Lakshmipur, 4 Adivasis –
Mahua Champa, Champiya Jama,
Prasanna Maleka and Mandangi Subbarao
– complained of injuries and
asked the magistrate for medical treatment.
Ask Panigrahy how many of those
arrested have been injured and he speaks
of the pathetic condition that he found
some of them in. “Visible body injuries
aside, I have heard that some of the
Adivasi women have been raped in custody.
I have not been able to confirm
these reports yet. I also found one minor
amongst those arrested. A school student,
aged around 14 years, has been
lodged in the same jail since the police
authorities have recorded his age as 18
years. There is a lot the police have to
answer for,” he says quietly.
Yet another question Panigrahy and
his team lay out is the presentation of
arms at a press conference held by the
Superintendent of Police, Deepak Kumar,
in Koraput on 29 November 2009. The
arms had been seized, the police claimed,
during raids a day earlier. The place of
weapons seizure falls under the Lakshimpur
JMFC jurisdiction and according
to procedure should have been deposited
with the court. Moving it out of the court
for presentation at a press conference
would then require the authorisation of
the court. “Even at the time of hearing on
14 December, the police had not even
provided the court with a list of the
seized weapons, leave alone the question
of depositing them,” points out Panigrahy.
It was only after Panigrahy pointed
this out that the court directed the police
to provide them with the list. “Procedures
have been laid out to ensure there
is no manipulation by the police. What is
to stop them from adding weapons to the
seized list now?” asks Panigrahy. When
TEHELKA contacted SP Deepak Kumar to
speak about the heavy police deployment
and reports of police high handedness,
he refused to answer questions, only offering the comment that “the police
were doing their duty” and that there was
no further discussion necessary.
| SECURITY FORCES HAVE TOLD
ADIVASIS TO REFRAIN FROM
HARVESTING THEIR CROP |
THE HIGH-HANDEDNESS of the security
forces in Narayanpatna is not
limited to what appears as indiscriminate
arrests of Adivasis or their
subsequent treatment. In the villages
that TEHELKA visited in Narayanpatna
block, including Palaput and Bhaliaput,
the few Adivasis who had remained
behind talked uneasily of the threats
issued by the security forces if they harvested
the crops from the lands they had
been cultivating. Consider the context in
which threats against crop harvesting
have been issued and the high-handedness
of the security forces becomes
apparent. Across Narayanpatna block,
over the years, reclamation of land
grabbed from the Adivasis was one of
the central rallying points for the CMAS.
Gananath Patra, or GP as he is called, a
key CMAS leader, told TEHELKA that
before the struggle for land reclamation
was launched a year ago, Adivasi land
possession had dropped to less than 5
percent in the block. “In an area where
Adivasi population is around 90 percent
(the 2001 census confirms these figures),
this meant serious land-grabbing by
non-tribals who had migrated to the
region less than 15 years ago. Over the
years, before CMAS gained ground, Adivasis
were dispossessed of their land
using liquor as an incentive. Most of the
people who took away Adivasi land were
liquour vendors and traders,” says GP.
The veteran leader talks of how the first
struggle that CMAS launched was to stop
manufacture and sale of liquour in the
villages followed by attempts to establish
Adivasi claims over their land.
Nachika Linga, the now absconding
CMAS leader, in a previously published
interview talked of the effort and the
patience the Adivasis exhibited while
attempting to recover the land through
legal procedures. “For years we followed
legal procedures, filed application after
application since the law, The Orissa
Scheduled Areas Transfer of Immovable
Property Regulation, recognises Adivasis’
right over paternal land. We would
file and wait. For Adivasis who are
mostly illiterate and have no knowledge
of the laws, this was a huge exercise in
itself,” Linga is reported to have said.
When filing applications yielded no
result, CMAS launched a forceful takeover
of land from the non-tribal liquour vendors
and the traders. In the clashes that
erupted in May 2009 between the nontribals
and the CMAS, one person died
and several non-tribal families fled –
leaving their lands and houses. Since
May 2009, Adivasis have cultivated the
fields, growing their staple crops of
paddy and millets – crops that are now
ready for harvesting.
| THREE WEEKS AFTER THE POLICE
FIRING, NARAYANPATNA STILL
RESEMBLES A WAR ZONE |
Following the firing on 20 November,
security forces – accompanied often by
non-tribals – have issued warnings to
Adivasis to desist from harvesting crops
from these lands. In Palaput village, Adivasis
told TEHELKA that the non-tribal
families who had fled the village had
returned a week after the firing to warn
the Adivasis of arrests if crops were harvested.
“They told us that they would be
back with the police to make us harvest
the crops and hand them over. If we
went into the fields before that, we were
told that we would be beaten up and
arrested,” says Hiko Kalati, an Adivasi
resident of Palaput. “We cultivated the
land, it is our sweat and blood that has
tended the crops,” asks Kalati. “If our
leaders were around, we would have
gone ahead and cut the crops before they
came. But now what can we do but
watch?” he says before looking away. In
village after village, voices subdued by
fear ask the same question. In Bhaliaput,
as part of the search-and-combing operations,
the security forces had destroyed
the foodgrains Adivasis had stored from
a previous harvest. With destruction of stored foodgrains and a warning to not
harvest crops, what would be the source
of food in the months to come? The
Adivasis of Bhaliaput had only blank
faces to offer as answers.
Outside the villages, pose the question
to the non-tribals who are eagerly awaiting
police protection to proceed with
crop harvesting and there are ready
answers available. Anand Kirsani, a
trader who has emerged as the voice of
the non-tribals opposing the CMAS in
Narayanpatna, is very vocal about the
issue. “Why didn’t they think of this
before they took away our lands? First,
they threatened us, forcibly took over our
lands and when we turned to the police
for protection, turned on the police and
attacked them. They only have themselves
to blame for their present situation,”
says Kirsani. He goes on to explain
how they (the non-tribals) have gone on
to organise themselves – an organisation
called Koraput District Nagarik Surakhya
and Shanti Committee has been floated.
In the past three months the committee
has held several protests condemning the
CMAS and the land reclamation process it
has started in the region. A minute of
conversation with Kirsani and the vehemence
in obvious – the CMAS are Maoists
and deserve stringent punishment – a
fact that the police have thankfully
woken up to, he says. Are the police helping
them to harvest the crops? There is
not a moment of hesitation as he answers
in the affirmative.
| THE POLICE ASSAULTED AND
ABUSED A CIVIL RIGHTS TEAM
TRYING TO VISIT THE REGION |
Officially, Koraput Sub-Collector
Rajesh Patil has announced that the
harvests will be monitored by the district
administration and that there will
be a 50-50 share accorded to the Adivasis
and the original land owners. While
questions remain about the monitoring
and implementation of this arrangement,
there are several advocates who
point to the illegality of such an
announcement by the district administration.
Nihar Ranjan Patnaik, a special
advocate under the state government’s
Orissa Tribal Empowerment and Livelihood
Programme, says it is a clear violation
of the settled principle of law. “The
law recognises the rights of a trespasser
if he has a settled possession of the property
– in this case, the Adivasis’ rights as
trespassers is established since they have
been cultivating the land. If the crops are
not handed over to the Adivasis, there is
danger of starvation in the area in addition
to the existing lawlessness,” says
Koraput-based Patnaik. A few weeks is
all there is to determine the possession
of the harvests – before the crops rot
and become useless for both the Adivasis
and the non-tribals.
IN THE ordinary course of events, both
the issues of possible starvation and
continued repression of Adivasis in
the villages of Narayanpatna would warrant
an independent assessment. But in
the war zone that is Narayanpatna, this
is a remote possibility. When a team of
nine women from various civil rights
organisations attempted to travel to the
region on 9 December 2009, they were
severely abused and assaulted by the
police and armed youth. A press statement
issued by the team a day later provided
a detailed account of how the team
members were strangled, beaten up and
assaulted repeatedly – even right outside
the Narayanpatna police station. They
were ultimately forced to return – without
having travelled to the villages.
In a democracy, citizens are allowed
to travel freely across the country. War
zones are, of course, excluded. Has
Narayanpatna in Orissa then become a
war zone?
WRITER’S EMAIL
sanjana@tehelka.com |