Volume 6, No. 8, August 2005

 

Rise of the New Power in Jharkhand

{Report based on discussions with leading members of the KKC, Company, Platoon, etc all members of the CPI (Maoist)}

— Subhash

 

Compared to the mafia rule of the past the new power emerging in many parts of Jharkhand is like a paradise for the poor and oppressed of the region. Earlier they were looted by one and all — the landlords, the contractors, the Mahajans (moneylenders), the police, the government officials and even the petty traders. Already poverty stricken due to a lack of land or gainful employment, this loot would break the backs of the poor. When the MCCI {now CPI(Maoist) first entered the area we visited — now under the North Chota Nagpur Zonal Committee of the Party — the place was a haven for not only the above exploiters but also for criminal gangs and mafia. The districts under this Committee comprise Girdhi, Hazaribagh, and parts of Dhanbad, Koderma, Chatra, Dumka.

Initially the main struggles were for the confiscation of the crop on the land of the poor peasants seized by the mahajans and also against the forest department and big moneylenders. It was 1990 when Com. A, now a Zonal Committee Member had just joined the movement.

He recounted: "there was terror in the Gumia region by the Raghunandan Sah (RS) mafia. Earlier they had killed Jivla Mahto (Doctor) and would terrorise all activists of the mass organisation and the Party. They got many arrested and would actively defame the Party. In this gang RS belonged to the Congress and his right hand, Hafiz Mia, was linked with A.K.Roy’s organisation. Finally the then MCC annihilated RS in 1990 and HM in 1991. This silenced the gang and it was only then that our organisation could grow.

"Also the Gumia region was run like a fiefdom by the notorious landlord, Bhim Singh. He was a terror in the region. So, for example, if someone did not greet him when he entered the village he would be tied to a horse and dragged around. When we mobilised against him, he first ran away. Then he came back. He was tried in a people’s court and taken around ten villages on a buffalo. Later he had a heart attack and died. Large numbers of guns were seized form the landlords.

"But after 1992 it was the CPM and the Liberation who jointly sought to crush the growing influence of the movement. They widely spread rumours that the MCC was involved in raping, robbing, etc. They also took a very aggressive attitude of destroying sympathizers houses and informing the police. In 1995 the Liberation killed our main activist in the Konar Dam area and captured those villages. They had acted similarly in the Bokharo Thermal area. Around that time we took a march to Jhumra hill. 10,000 people took part. The Liberation and the police were lying in wait. They shouted slogans to destroy the MCC. They were warned not to advance, but they continued to explode bombs and were firing. Then we counter-attacked with bows and arrows. Many were injured and one was killed. They fled. Only after the organisation was able to spread and KKCs were formed in village after village.

"By 2001 state repression had increased phenomenally. But, now none of the original mafia/landlord/ govt. official combine exists in the area and the loot has basically stopped. Forests are in the hands of the KKC. The landlords have fled and the smaller ones have surrendered to the party. The Mahajans are also gone, mostly to the urban areas. But now began the regular battles with the police. The last four years has seen these battles intensify. Raids on the police stations for weapons became necessary and ambushes were conducted to stop the police offensive. Besides the regular forces of the people’s army, militias were built in all the villages. The police are taking the lumpen youth ad making them informers and even recruiting them."

It is only through such intense struggles the new power is beginning to emerge in this area. Today, all activities in the village are decided by the KKC. All disputes are settled in people’s courts. Besides this, in most villages mass organisations have been built of the women, youth and students, workers, cultural organisation, etc. As com S (Zonal Committee Member and Platoon Commissar) added "soon the organisational form of the new power will take birth in the form of the RPC — Revolutionary People’s Committees. These will have in them members of the mass organisations as well as the KKC. At present there is an informal coordination between the mass organisations and the KKC." Since a number of years all disputes are settled in the people’s courts. First a meeting of the villagers is called and the problem is presented by the KKC. Then both parties present their view-point. Then the public is asked to give their views. Then the KKC generally gives the judgment, considering all the views presented. No one goes to the police or the courts.

The mass organisations have mobilised the people to better their living conditions. The women’s organisation extensively propagate against patriar-chy and punishes the culprits. Both the women and cultural organisation propagates against age-old super-stitions. The cultural body also performs songs, dance and plays to educate the masses on basic issues, including health and hygine. The poor have been organised to fight for increased wages for tendu-leaf picking. A decade back it was Rs. 2 per 1000; each year it slowly increased. Now it is Rs.45, while in areas where the organisation is not there it is still Rs.28. Many agricultural labourers and poor peasants now have land, confiscated from the landlords or the government’s vacant land.

Since the last couple of years as the new power is being consolidated the KKC has begun to take up developmental works.

Much earlier on confiscated lands orchards have been planted and the fruits are distributed to the people. Through shramdan (voluntary labour) wells and canals are being dug. In one area nine wells have been dug and one tank. In another area 7 wells, 8 tanks and one check dam have been built.

Also cooperative farming ahs been started in a couple of villages — this will not only raise productivity, but will help induce the spirit of community living. The KKC distributes widely anti-malaria tablets and propagates widely on the need to boil drinking water and other aspects of hygiene. Since the last two years the KKC took a 15-day cleanliness campaign — they removed the rubbish from the paths, put bleaching powder in the wells, distributed tablets and boiled the water in people’s houses.

Also in the summer the KKC takes up building houses for the poor through shramdan. In one area so far 18 houses have been built.

The KKC has also begun some schools where the teachers payment is raised from the students and the KKC gives a subsidy. In one area six schools are being run.

The funds of the KKC comes basically from (i) 25% of the produce on land confiscated from the landlord, (ii) fish rearing in ponds and lakes, (iii) special fund collection drives.

These then are some elements of the new power emerging in the guerrilla zones of Jharkhand under the leadership of the CPI(Maoist) Party. The government tries to portray the Maoists as terrorists when, until now, what the rural poor have faced is nothing but the terror of the establishment and excruciating poverty. It is with the entry of the Maoists that they have been able to get a whiff of freedom from not only their oppressors, but also age-old superstitions and degenerate customs. It is this alone that is the hope for a new really democratic India.

 

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