| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 50, Dated December 19, 2009 |
|
| CURRENT
AFFAIRS |
|
ground zero |
|
A Zone Of
Twisted Law
Two Adivasis — supposed Naxals — are killed
by police in a remote Orissa town. SANJANA pens
the only on-the-spot report from a land where
the state dubs dissent as automatically Maoist
PHOTOGRAPHS BY TARUN SEHRAWAT
 |
Vigil A woman in Dombsil village
sits before the wreckage of her
house, destroyed by the
CMAS |
IF GIVEN a map and told this town’s
name, chances are you’d find it
difficult to spot. Devoted scrutiny
would reveal, ultimately, a small
two-street settlement in Orissa, about 500
km from the state capital Bhubaneswar,
almost astride the border with Andhra
Pradesh. There are tens of thousands of
remote Indian towns like this but there is
a good reason to take a closer look at
Narayanpatna.
| THE INJURIES ON THE DEAD
INDICATE THAT THE POLICE SHOT
TO KILL, NOT TO INCAPACITATE |
On the afternoon of November 20, the
Indian Reserve Battalion, a paramilitary
force stationed at Narayanpatna police
station opened fire on 150 Adivasis who
had gathered in front of the station. Two people, Wadeka Singanna and Andru
Nachika, died; around 60 were injured.
The victims were members of the Chasi
Mulia Adivasi Sangh (CMAS), an Adivasi
rights organisation working in Narayanpatna
block.(interview with advisor to the CMAS) They were protesting against
excesses committed by police and paramilitary
forces that entered their villages
during search and combing operations.
Narayanpatna block (in Orissa, a
block is an administrative unit comprising
several villages which falls under a
tehsil) is a hilly tract of land on the
Orissa-Andhra Pradesh border. Almost
90 percent of the 45,000 people who live
in the block are Adivasis. For several
years, according to the police, the block
has witnessed violent attacks by Maoists
– informers and contractors have been
declared anti-people agents of the state
and murdered with impunity and even
police stations have been blown up. The
November 20 firing, it is clear, took place
in an extremely troubled land.
The reasons for the actual firing,
however, are less clear. After travelling to
the spot, TEHELKA discovered that even
nine days after the incident, there was no
consensus on the events of that day.
| EYEWITNESSES AGREE THAT THE
BULLETS CAME FROM THE
POLICEMEN ON THE STATION ROOF |
In a press conference two days after
the firing, SP Deepak Kumar laid out the
official police version: leaders of CMAS
broke down the police station gates and
confronted Gaurang Sahu, the inspector
in charge of the station. Heated arguments
followed. At one point in the altercation, the Adivasis snatched a self
loading assault rifle and opened fire. In
all, 22 rounds were fired, claimed the SP
and Sahu was shot in the leg. According
to him, the police firing that killed the
two CMAS leaders was in self-defence, in
retaliation to the firing by the Adivasis.
 |
Cause for alarm Seeing
TEHELKA staffers, a 26-member
Special Operations Group team
starts search and combing
operations in Basnaput village |
However, senior district administration
officials and a government-appointed
lawyer who reached the town a
few hours after the firing offered
TEHELKA a different account of the day.
Off the record, a medical staffer involved
in the post-mortem said that the bullet injuries indicated that the two leaders
had been shot from behind, along the
spine. No bullet injuries were found on
their legs, suggesting that the police were
shooting to kill, not to incapacitate. Singanna,
a key CMAS leader, was shot 14
times, with some of the shots being fired
after he fell to the ground. When
TEHELKA asked the medical staffer about
the injuries sustained by Inspector Sahu,
there was silence. In a feeble, nervous
voice, he revealed that the injuries were
by no means grievous. Ask if the examination
of Inspector Sahu’s wounds
showed signs of a bullet injury and the
staffer tells TEHELKA he wants to be excused.
He has a family that depends on
him and would like to keep his job, he
says. A constable at the police station
who, too, refused to identify himself told
TEHELKA that the injured inspector
declined an offer to airlift him to
Visakhapatnam, the nearest major city.
The constable admitted, however,
that that evening, Gaurang Sahu was
limping around.
| AFTER GETTING ADIVASIS HOOKED
ON ALCOHOL, THEIR LAND WAS
GRABBED BY MONEYLENDERS |
There are several other unanswered
questions. If the Adivasis fired 22 rounds
at the police and one bullet hit Sahu,
where are the remaining bullets? In a relatively
small police station compound,
how did the Adivasis who were apparently firing indiscriminately manage to
miss the other policemen and IRB forces?
Who did they seize the weapon from?
The altercation between the Adivasi
leaders and the inspector took place in
full public view in the station compound,
between the gate and the station building.
As the station sits on the junction of
Narayanpatna’s two main roads, there
were plenty of other eyewitnesses besides
the CMAS members. Despite this,
not one person talks of bullets fired from
multiple locations. All accounts state
that the bullets – 82 rounds were fired
said SP Deepak Kumar at the press conference
– came from the roof of the police
station. The IRB personnel on the
roof allegedly fired at the two leaders and
then at the crowd. When TEHELKA contacted
Gaurang Sahu, he refused to answer
any questions.
| VOICES OF DEMOCRATIC PROTEST
CAN EASILY BE SILENCED BY
CALLING THEIR OWNERS MAOISTS |
THIS REFUSAL by the medical
staffers and the police to come
on record or even answer any
questions is given some perspective
when you consider what the Adivasis
who were there that day say. Ranju
Wadeka says, “We went to the police station
to protest against their misbehaviour
with women in Dumbagoda and
Odipenta villages on November 18 and
19. When we reached the station, we demanded
that the inspector in charge
come out and talk with us. We waited for
half an hour outside the station before
four leaders walked through the open
gate into the station compound to speak
with the inspector. After a brief argument,
as the leaders were leaving, the inspector
yelled at the forces stationed on
the roof to open fire. We saw them
shooting down Singanna. After making
sure he was not moving anymore, they
turned their guns on us.” Ask Wadeka if
the Adivasis were armed — even with hatchets or bows and arrows — and he
laughs as he says, “If we wanted to kill
the police, would we have walked to the
police station? They frequently come to
our villages for search operations.
Wouldn’t it be easier to kill them there?”
 |
| No news is bad news Families of Adivasi men
picked up by the police await
word of their loved ones |
‘ONLY FROM AN
ADIVASI VILLAGE
WOULD THE
POLICE ABDUCT
THE ELECTED
REPRESENTATIVE’
CHETAN MADI, 27
FATHER INDRA MADI was taken away
on October 16, 2008. Has not been seen
since. Habeas corpus petition filed in
the Orissa High Court pending since
December 2008.
A day after his father Indra Madi
didn’t return home, panic gripped the
family. It wasn’t usual for the sarpanch
to stay away. It took Chetan and his
family a whole day to piece together
various accounts of eyewitnesses. His
father was on his way home after dropping
off a relative and the sarpanch of
another village at her house. Between
Tumsabadi village and his own, Tentuliguda,
villagers say Indra was
stopped by five plainclothes policemen
on two motorbikes. A brief discussion
later, Indra and his motorbike were
taken away by the policemen. A fortnight
earlier, Indra had petitioned the
district collector regarding the case of
a missing man from a neighbouring
village. More than a year later, Chetan
is determined to find his father. “Every
time I go to the SP, he tells me my father
was taken away by Naxalites. But
the villagers recognise the policemen
who took him away. My father was the
sarpanch of the village, an elected
government representative. Does the
police care at all?” asks Chetan. |
The police have since arrested 63 Adivasis
and launched a hunt for absconding
CMAS leader Nachika Linga. Even as
posters offering a reward for information
about Linga flood Narayanpatna and the
outlying villages, additional police and
paramilitary forces have been moved in.
With the Special Operations Group and
the COBRA force monitoring all movement
in the area, this once sleepy hamlet is now
a war zone. A climate of fear blankets the
entire region. In district headquarters Koraput,
about 70 kilometres from Narayanpatna,
the local taxi association told
TEHELKA that the police had warned them
against giving fares to outsiders. Of the
six villages that TEHELKA visited in
Narayanpatna block, several were deserted.
The handful of Adivasi women
who had stayed back said the other villagers
had fled into the jungles, fearing
police harassment and arrests.
IN BHALIAPUT, Linga’s village, ostensibly
as “part of search operations”
the forces burnt a portion of Linga’s
house. When TEHELKA visited the village
two days later, the three Adivasis who remained
in the village said the police
burnt the house after daubing it with
enamel paint and dousing it in kerosene.
A few metres away from the scorched
debris, TEHELKA found tins of paint and
an almost-empty kerosene bottle. Also
strewn amidst the burnt debris were
medicines which had been kept there for
the village anganwadi centre, according
to the Adivasis. In almost every house in
the village, stored food grains had been
destroyed by the forces.
Beyond the questions that arise about
police excesses, what is perhaps of greater
concern is the campaign unleashed days
after the firing. Two days after the firing
on 20 November, the police dubbed
CMAS a Maoist front. Two weeks later,
they asked the Home Department to ban CMAS. Supporters of CMAS who attempted
to travel to the region have been arrested
and called Maoists. (One of the CMAS
supporters arrested by the police is Tapan
Kumar Mishra, a popular civil rights activist
in Orissa. Mishra had even contested
the 2009 Assembly elections as an
independent candidate. Mishra was
hooded and produced before the media.)
The police also claimed to have recovered
150 Maoist uniforms, a powerful landmine,
2 kg of highly explosive material
and a VHF communication system.
BUT WHAT is the Chasi Mulia Adivasi
Sangh? For more than 15
years, the CMAS has been working
in Koraput district on two linked issues:
the illegal and fraudulent grabbing of
Adivasi land and alcohol addiction. With
Adivasis’ rights over ancestral land and
the prohibition of transfer of land to non-
Scheduled Tribes recognised by the
Orissa Scheduled Area Transfer of Immovable
Property Act and the Orissa
Land Regulations Act, the CMAS mobilised
Adivasis to take back land that they claim
has been unfairly appropriated by nontribals.
Before the November 2009 firing,
Adivasis told TEHELKA that over 2,000 acres of land had been reclaimed by CMAS.
 |
Empty vessels Even basic household
utensils were crushed
and broken by the CMAS |
However, rather than approach the
courts or the revenue department for
this reclamation, the CMAS in some cases
did use violence. It destroyed the houses
of non-tribals, including extremely poor
Scheduled Caste families. As stories of
attacks by CMAS activists spread, many
Dalit families left villages of their own
accord. TEHELKA met several families
who had left for fear of CMAS attacks. Jihoya
Kendruka – a man who was driven
out of Domsil village by the CMAS told
TEHELKA that in May 2009, clashes had
broken out over CMAS’ attempts to reclaim
land. Kendruka said the clashes left at least one dead and the houses of
both CMAS members and those opposing
them utterly destroyed.
The main force behind CMAS is
Nachika Linga, currently on the police’s
most wanted list. Several colourful stories
of Linga abound. A man who escaped the
shackles of slavery he had endured for 10
years from the time he was 6 years old. A
man who used the story of his father’s alcoholism
to motivate Adivasis to give up
drinking and implement a liquor ban in all
villages where the CMAS is active. A man
who confronted an irregular anganwadi
worker by seating her on a specially decorated
cot and carrying her over 6 kilometres
back to her house. A man the police
say is currently hiding among the Maoists.
‘GO TELL THE
PEOPLE IN DELHI
THAT IF THEY
BEHAVE LIKE THIS
WITH US, WE WILL
THROW THEM OUT’
JAGANNATH KHARA, 50
SON SADHURAM KHARA was taken
away on 29 November 2009. Has no
idea where he is now or who took him
away. Three police stations in the area,
including one across the border in
Andhra, deny arresting or detaining
his son.
26-year-old Sadhuram Khara was at
the weekly Sunday haat with another
relative when two people dressed in
typical Adivasi clothes stopped him.
Even as his relative listened openmouthed,
the men asked Sadhuram if
he spoke Telugu. When he said yes,
they asked him to take his shirt off. As a
frightened Sadhuram complied, the
men asked him about the hair on his
chest and his fit body. A minute later,
Sadhuram was marched off as the relative
took to his heels. People in the haat
later told Jagannath Khara that the
men who took his son away were from
the Andhra Pradesh Greyhounds police.
Says a weeping Jagannath, “In their
mind, my son did not fit the profile of
an Adivasi. But my son was young and
worked in the fields. He knew Telugu
since the border is so close. How can
any of this be a crime?” Villagers talk of
Sadhuram as a natural leader who
helped people obtain NREGS job cards
and other work in the village. |
Interestingly, this isn’t the first time the
CMAS has been accused of links with the
Maoists. In June 2006, Linga and 3 other
leaders were arrested and charged with
being a front of the People’s War Group
— which merged with the Maoist Communist
Centre to form the Communist
Party of India (Maoist) — and waging war
against the State. The charges were examined
and Linga and the CMAS were acquitted
in a November 2007 judgment in
which GC Panigrahi, Additional Sessions
Judge at Jeypore called the CMAS “a silent
political movement against exploitation of
Adivasis... it has none of the trappings of
waging war against the state...” The judge
also cautioned against the unwarranted
use of the term ‘Maoist’, saying that “in a
democratic society, there is elbow room
for all shades of opinion. In a democracy, holding meetings, giving public speeches,
carrying flags etc. are all part of the game.”
Almost two years later, the charges
have resurfaced. Vehement denials have
come – even from the Maoists. The CPI
(Maoist) says that while they support the
CMAS, it is an independent organisation
and there is no question of the CMAS or its
leaders being part of the Maoists. In effect,
the voices of organisations and individuals
who agitate for their democratic rights are
being silenced through the simple tactic
of branding them Maoists. This practice is
commonplace in neighbouring Chhattisgarh
and Jharkhand, states that have
emerged as ground zero in the State’s battle
against Maoists. However, in Orissa,
this tactic is unprecedented.
The Malkangiri Adivasi Sangh (MAS)—
another Adivasi organisation fighting
fraudulent land alienation — told
TEHELKA that arbitrary arrests have become
the order of the day in that district.
“Like Koraput, the Maoists are active in
this district too. We understand that the
security forces have to do their work and
arrest people behind the various Maoist
attacks. But why terrorise innocent Adivasis
who have no association with the
Maoists?” asks Videsh Goud, a MAS activist
who works in the Chitrakonda area
of Malkangiri district. They maintain a detailed list of people who have been arrested
by the police on charges of being
Maoists. In May 2009, a fact-finding team
that included the late Dr K Balagopal, VS
Krishna and other members of the
Andhra Pradesh Human Rights Forum
also documented several cases of police
excesses. TEHELKA travelled to three villages
and spoke to seven families whose
men had been taken away by the police
and paramilitary forces.
WHAT MAKES the situation in
Malkangiri worse is the fact
that the anti-Naxal Greyhounds
of Andhra Pradesh carried out
several arrests and illegal detentions
with no prior intimation or coordination
with the Orissa police. When TEHELKA
spoke with Rajesh Chatria, inspector in
charge of Chitrakonda police station,
about the disappearance of an Adivasi,
Sadhuram Khara from a village in his
station limits, the inspector admitted
that the local police were rarely
informed about Greyhound activities.
“The procedure is that the local police
should be informed and that personnel
from the local station should accompany
the team. Any arrests should be
recorded at the local police station,” says
Chatria. He has no answers when it
comes to Khara’s disappearance and
promises to register a missing person’s
complaint. A day after TEHELKA leaves
Chitrakonda, Chatria turns Khara’s father
away from the station.
In a world overrun by complexities,
recognising that different languages of
resistance can be spoken simultaneously
is a requirement that receives inadequate
attention. What is critical, however, is
the official acceptance and recognition
of the fact that some dialects of protest
are not only legal but are basic
components of a democratic polity. Instead,
the state is dubbing all those who
question it — including the Adivasis of
remote Narayanpatna and Malkangiri —
as Maoists.
Also read 'We Reject The Maoist Line', an interview with Gananath Patra, advisor to the CMAS
WRITER’S EMAIL
sanjana@tehelka.com |