|
Thus
from fighting legal provisions, accompanied by procedures and rules that
enhances the power of police and prosecutor at the expense of the
accused, and simultaneously relaxes the exacting standards for
collecting, collating and use of evidence, to the next where rules of
military engagement take over and general demand becomes asking the
warring sides to adhere to international covenants and protocols
governing war [protocol III of Geneva Convention which apply for
non-international conflicts] a seminal jump in public understanding is
compulsorily brought about.
At the
time Operation Steeplechase was launched by the Eastern Command of
Indian army against the Naxalites in 1971 (few months before the war
with Pakistan) 45,000 crack troops were deployed. Indian Express
(October 14, 2009) quotes Lt General Jacob to claim that there were
neither a written order nor record of this operation. At that moment
Naxalites did not have much of experience with weapons, armed
resistance, or art of war either. Going by what Shivraj Patil told the
Lok Sabha on March 1, 2006, Maoists in 60-70s possessed country made
guns, axes and swords rather than guns or had squads and PGLA. But there
was hardly any notice taken of the war then. It passed un-noticed except
for those who became its victims. But one thing remains unchanged.
State’s approach remains essentially unchanged.
Of
course, there are many who believe that Maoists have brought this war
upon themselves and in turn this will invite repression on adivasis
lured by them. How a force which has “modest capabilities” according to
the PM, speaking to the CMs on 6th January 2009, with an approximate
total of 8000 weapons, large quantities of explosives and country made
weapons can pose a threat to Indian State which possesses fourth largest
armed force in the world and which has deployed 75,000 central para
military forces trained in jungle warfare colleges backed by, at least
150,000 state armed constabulary, air support and using light to heavy
weaponry, is somehow never explained. What is important is that
questions of ethics are, however, posed to CL-DR groups; how can they,
under any pretext, justify use of violence to achieve political ends?
For one
thing by outlawing a political manifestation State succeeds in
criminalising an idea and destroying an organization, especially one
which enjoys mass support. In past experience outlawing ideologies and
ideological organizations acts as a ‘force multiplier’ in that these
laws accord legitimacy to armed resistance. How? Because if non-violent
activism i.e. dissemination of literature, mobilizing and organizing
people to politically articulate their demands, hold mass meetings….are
outlawed; if Maoists, their sympathizers or anyone who even remotely
speaks the language of resistance, can be hunted, arrested, tortured,
killed or persecuted, even denied humanitarian assistance then the State
forecloses the appeal of what passes for “mainstream politics”. By
allowing such groups to organize, work, hold mass meetings, as any other
organization increases the appeal and persuasive powers of other ways of
offering resistance. In other words, appeal of un-armed resistance gets
enhanced only when the State begins to cease to wage war against its own
people. It is this that forms part of the world view of CL/DR groups and
informs their activities.
However, history moves in a different way. Without armed people,
organized and therefore properly harnessed violence, there can be no
transformation of society. Without the protracted people’s war and PLA
as well as people’s militia it would have been well nigh impossible for
Nepal Maoists to compel the political formations to forge a front with
them in 2005. In fact they would have never reached the status of
strength from which to bargain/negotiate had they remained unarmed.
Indeed in Nepal after a long debate the party has agreed that had it not
been for their armed cadres they would have faced a bloodbath probably
at the scale of Indonesia. Nepal Maoists do not however, believe that
they need to renew military operations. What they say is that the fact
that they are armed, legitimized through the UN sanctioned agreement,
provides them with a strength and their opponents know that they cannot
be crushed militarily.
Without
this to believe that ruling classes, so well armed, will peacefully
submit/surrender may remain a wishful thinking. True, revolutions may
have failed after the initial phase of success but there are few
instances of revolution which has managed to retain power without arms.
Either armies have split to lend support to the rebels or the ruling
left combine has managed to neutralize the army of the ruling classes by
arming the people or in some other ways. But nowhere has any revolution
ever succeeded simply by remaining non-violent.
VIOLENCE
Question of means and ends, of natural aversion of people towards
violence, the fact that an armed group/party can end up using its
weaponry to impose its will etc have been employed to argue against
violence. And yet, it cannot be denied that violence has and will
continue to play an emancipatory and empowering role. How else can one
describe the fight against imperialism in Indochina or elsewhere? Did
not the victory of Japanese against Russia in 1905 enthuse Asian people
to challenge European racism? Did not the experience of Indian soldiers
who fought for the British Empire in Sudan, Iraq, China, Crimea bring to
realize that they were as good, if not better, than the European soldier
colleague of theirs. Did it not persuade many to become radicalized and
get inspired by 1917 Russian revolution? Can one deny that the heroism
and bravery of Russians led then by Stalin during the second world war,
especially the defeat of the German elite forces in Stalingrad mark the
beginning of the end of the defeat of German Nazi army? Why should one
dismiss this reality? Some argue that they are not against war but use
of political violence to achieve political goals? Thus the opposition is
not per say against violence, only to organized violence because the
very fact of organization is anti-democratic. This is a strange argument
and actually diabolical. There is nothing more harmful than so-called
spontaneous uprising of the people where mob mentality takes over and
killing spree ensues. This causes more harm than good. In France after
the war 45,000 “nazi collaborators” were lynched to death. How is this
superior to relatively fewer deaths at the hands of say Maoists in last
42 years? It is claimed that presence of a force with weapons
intimidates dissent. But when every second person is armed who
intimidates whom? Indeed violence demands that it be harnessed and used
sparingly which it can only be with training and discipline.
But are
not means important? Can one reach the ends people desire by recourse to
means which are violent? As Prof Randhir Singh says “it is axiomatic
that the means are justified by the end they achieve; there is simply no
other way to justify them.” Now, if the state and its votaries can
justify its monopoly of violence by referring to the use of force to
restore law and order say in a situation of rioting, civil strife etc,
notwithstanding acceptance that state also engages in use of
force/violence to militarily suppress people’s movements, then why is it
that political activists should fight shy in accepting that use of force
in pursuit of freeing people from exploitation and oppression is wrong,
even when everybody acknowledges that not every act of theirs furthers
people’s cause?
Even
the most ardent proponents of non-violence concede that violence in
certain conditions/circumstances is legitimate and needed. Stopping a
riotous mob from lynching those less privileged, raping women, killing
children….Death of a tyrant or mass murderer does not melt the heart of
the most peaceable person. Which is to say, that people do condone
violence. Besides, citizens are trained to accept legitimacy of state
using violence, even when it can be demonstrated that in 63 years since
‘transfer of power’ not a single year has passed when the Indian
military has not been used against their own people demanding and
raising the most valid concerns. The enumerable crimes committed by the
military in the ignoble task of military suppression has not resulted in
the ‘good’ people in India ever demanding that war as a matter of state
policy against their own people under any pretext ought to be ruled out.
If the PM on July 7, 2009 on the floor of the Lok Sabha could declare
that war as an option is ruled out against Pakistan, a country painted
in the most vile manner by the media and establishment, then why not
rule it out against his own people? If engagement and dialogue is the
only way out why not pursue the same approach with the aggrieved people.
If constituency for peace exists in India and rapprochement with
Pakistan will see it expand then why cannot the government have the same
approach towards its own people? Now if one does not do that and instead
prepares for war what are the people supposed to do? Sue for peace?
Surrender?
The
point is as Prof Randhir Singh points out “(s)ound ethics requires us to
always to judge the action by the results, good or bad, and not by its
conformity to a rule, regardless of results”. And then goes on to argue
that “(t)he principle that it is never right to depart from moral
principles, even to achieve some good end, no matter how many people
would suffer if the rule were not broken, far from reflecting a superior
ethical standpoint, is supremely unethical and is generally regarded as
such.” And therefore, draws public attention to the “real issue….over
means and ends is not therefore as to whether we may or may not adopt
means involving evil to attain a good which outbalances that evil or to
avoid a still greater evil, but as to whether the good attained is
really worth the cost, or whether there is another route to that good
involving less evil”.
This
writer begs to differ from Prof Randhir Singh. Violence plays an
emanicipatory role, when the weaker is able to defend themselves, when
they can save people from being trampled upon by ruthless military which
invariably in matters of rich and poor sides with the rich and the
powerful and the privileged. To pick up guns, to learn to handle guns,
to harness it for a purpose which is greater common good, why should one
consider such violence per say as “evil”? Which is to say, that people
need to consider violence as value neutral. It is how it is used,
harnessed, for what purpose is used that becomes more relevant. Thus
people have to look closely before concluding one way or another. To
assume that just because communal fascists use violence and therefore
there is no difference between how they use and anyone else uses it, or
that it is one and the same, is grossly erroneous. In fact the big
difference is that for the communal fascist a community becomes enemy
and taking civilian lives is considered perfectly legitimate. Then they
are invariably backed and patronized by the state, Indian State in so
far Hindu communal fascists are concerned, which molly coddles them,
reduces the nature of their homicidal crimes, treats them with kid
gloves, refuses to accept that they are the treacherous force which
targets Indian people. This is something Indian security apparatus
refuses to accept.
There
are some who point to certain action of the Maoists, (beheading,
people’s court awarding death, killing of ‘informers’, attack on
economic ‘assets’), and from that arrive at the conclusion that these
acts carry within them “social impact”, and insist that no achievement
lasts if it is brought about violently. There are others who go a step
further and argue that whether or not crimes get committed the very fact
that they are armed and justify violence suffices to raise questions
about strategy and tactics of a movement, its understanding of social
reality, and mars the chances of a state and society, where weapons in
possession of one party can be used to cow down people in general and
dissidents in particular. Both arguments have to be addressed.
Furthermore, it is the ‘poorest among the poor’ who are used as foot
soldiers and they are the ones who suffer most? Finally, how will an
armed movement agree to disarming itself in order to ensure that others
are not harmed who too work among the people, albeit may not agree with
the politics of armed movement?
Unless
one party seizes power and imposes its diktat over everyone such a
situation cannot arise. Because it took place in China or Soviet Union
does not mean that this will happen in India in the 21st century with
its own political history. In fact it did not happen in Nepal where a
protracted people’s war pitch-forked CPN(Maoist) to become the leading
political force. In contrast to CPN(M) all the other parties have used
and see National Army (NA) and police as their force, there to protect
them. In India political parties who accept the present status quo know
that when they acquire government power they have access to a huge
repressive force at their command. And even as opposition parties they
are not defenseless. Even in the best of circumstances the forces
commanded thus by political parties is many times stronger than that of
the left wing rebels.
Besides, the unfolding dynamics of a political development are not
predictable or uni-linear. Maoists in Nepal, once they reached strategic
equilibrium with Nepal’s royal military, decided to replace strategic
offensive with democratic closure. In conditions which apply in India,
where one party hegemony is difficult to envisage considering the
diversity and political plurality with which people have lived for more
than six decades to believe that CPI(Maoist) can impose their one party
rule is good for fear inflators but for any sober scholar this is well
nigh impossible. This way or that without having armed cadres and
without recourse to using weapons in some areas where war is imminent,
social transformation of Indian State and society is not possible. But
this does not mean that in every instance and everywhere there has to be
or will be war. Those who work in say Delhi do not feel the need for
arming themselves because so far they are able to work un-thwarted. Of
course Delhi is a bad example because in some places in India state has
had no compunction in assassinating a dissident. Nevertheless, it cannot
be denied that the conditions which operate in DK for instance do not
operate everywhere, uniformly, across India. But in J&K, NE and now
tribal region of central India are different. Conversely, where left and
progressive sections dominate and spearhead popular resistance use of
weapons may not be necessary. In any case, size and spread of political
consciousness in India is vastly different than elsewhere in the world.
It is
often argued by some that any organized military force is in itself
anti-democratic whereas violence which ensues as a result of mass
uprising is alright. Contrarily it should be pointed out that a
spontaneous recourse to violence can cause greater harm. In France as
mentioned earlier after 2nd war more than 45,000 people were lynched for
being “collaborators” of Nazi occupation force. Would people justify
this lynching in the name of spontaneous reaction of masses freed from
Nazi tyranny? In fact it is in the nature of violence, as with fire,
that it must be harnessed or else it can cause greater damage than good.
Therefore, what is regarded as anti-democratic i.e. training, hierarchy
and discipline, are of utmost necessity. Indeed fascist political
formations use the spontaneous mass violence path to gloss over their
deliberate targeting of minorities or left and progressive elements. It
is when force is organized that one stands chance for compelling them to
ensure that those who violate ethics of war can be brought to justice.
This writer’s experience is that working to get armed rebels to agree to
abide by ethics of war, or be held publicly accountable, is best
possible when they are a disciplined and organized force. A rag-tag band
is incapable of adhering to this and tends to be less accountable. When
armed forces are sent to suppress a people it is part of their brief to
terrorise the civilians. They are expected to burn, loot and kill
precisely in order to crush an insurgency. Whereas insurgents cannot
afford to do that or else they will lose what is their biggest
advantage; mass support. Indeed pitting mass spontaneous violence is a
patently irresponsible, if not convenient, way to accuse left radical
rebels.
Finally, it is intriguing as to how the left radical rebels whose
numbers are variously said to be 5600, 8000, 10,000 and even 20,000 pose
a threat? While they are better armed than before, they are organized
better and receive fairly rigorous arms training, incidents of violence
were confined to 400 police station areas out of 14,000. Yet, why is it
that possession of 8000-10,000 guns by Maoists and explosives a bigger
problem when, according to International Action Network on Small Arms
India has more than 40 million private guns. And most of it is with the
upper class/caste men. Besides, is possession of weapons more important
than who possess them, given the power equation in the society? Or is it
that people resent that Maoists refuse to give up armed struggle?
There
is violence and violence. Therefore, a distinction must be drawn between
spectacular raids such as for looting armouries, freeing prisoners and
defending what is called “janta sarkar” as in Bastar and heinous acts
such as beheading or custodial killing. But not all crimes attributed to
Maoists/Naxalites have been committed by them. In the Nayagarh (Orissa)
in 2008 incident the media carried unsubstantiated report of Maoists
mutilating the bodies of dead soldiers. And some eminent persons issued
a statement without even bothering to verify the facts of the matter.
The Khagaria massacre in September 2009 was attributed to them although
it later turned out to be a caste conflict over 40 bighas of land. Thus,
Jehanabad jail break, for example, was criticized by ‘good’ people of
India for inviting possible retaliation by landlord armies in Bihar upon
the poor. This did not happen. But it exposed the administration as
being capable of stopping landlord armies if it so wishes. This enhanced
rather than eroded the sense of security of landless dalit agricultural
labour.
This is
not to say that Maoists have been upright in all circumstances, and
above criticism or fault. The recurring mistakes committed by the armed
cadres and targeting of passenger train etc do raise question about the
socalled ‘people’s war’ when they have yet to curb such attacks on
civilians. However, their critics should know that Maoists have been
rather forthright in accepting criticism as well as engaging in debate.
In fact no other Naxal group has ever engaged in debate with so many
groups and individuals over the past 40 years as the Maoists and their
forerunner PU and PWG. The question is all that is fine but what about
killing of ‘informers’ and the role of the so called ‘people’s court’,
which is cited against them? As a DR activist this writer damns mad at
them for engaging in custodial killing. But four years of efforts has at
least brought them to accept that the party will consider the issues
raised as well as take a position on compliance with Geneva protcol III.
And rights activists must remain engaged with them, precisely because
they form an integral and leading part of resistance against neo-liberal
policies which continue to rule the roost.
Under
such circumstances to essentialize the issue of Maoist violence is the
way in which class society dehumanizes struggles and movements. There
are, besides, as many instances of movements degenerating because they
use violence as there are of those, which use non-violent methods. But
the bottomline is that reproduction of social inequality is
unacceptable. Those who believe in step-by-step process, and others in
leap or qualitative jump, from one stage to another, must accept that
there will remain a divide and both must respect each other. Those who
decry armed struggle claim that popular movements can make existing
institutions responsive to people’s needs. The point is that these
movements get crushed, co-opted and contained before they ever reach a
stage where they can challenge authority. These efforts have not come to
standstill because of Maoist rebellion, but, actually gained some space
and used their presence to espouse their politics, which would probably
have been ignored otherwise.
Here is
a quote from a very senior IPS officer and believer in crushing Maoist
movement RK Raghavan : “to say that … (the tribal person) would have
remained mute and soft forever is being somewhat naïve, especially at a
time when the divide between… (them) and the rest of the lot is becoming
more and more galling. The average tribal person believes he/she has
nothing to lose in life, and the only way he/she could make
himself/herself heard is by fighting an unjust social order”.
The
rout of NDA government in 2004 was directly related to its pursuit and
promotion of predatory global capitalism. The experience of the
‘silenced majority’ under UPA rule I and II has been of big words and
small deeds. The biggest deal for “aam aadmi” was NREG. But was it not
the fear of Maoists, which ensured passage of ‘national rural employment
guarantee scheme’ and the formulation of the forest bill? Why NREGA but
the recent decision of the Jharkhand administration to withdraw cases
filed against at least one lakh adivasis to wean them away from Maoists
not something where credit goes to Maoists? Maoists have their use too
for reformers who leverage them for pushing reforms.
Consider, for instance, what the Home Minister told the Lok Sabha on
last 7 July, that “(n)axalism is no longer a disjointed or uncoordinated
actions by groups in states. Today naxalism is directed by CPI(Maoist)
which is now a very structured organization. It even has a Central
Military Command.” In other words they are now a strong organized
military force capable of launching multiple simultaneous attacks, in
which several groups of 200-500 armed cadres, travel long distances,
escaping a network of surveillance/intelligence/informers. Equally
important to note that without people identifying themselves with the
Maoists, voluntarily and not out of fear, this fairly large social
support base cannot be sustained.
To
vanquish such a force is of course not impossible. Indian state
possesses immense arsenal and laws to suppress rebels. But, it is not
improbable that the Indian State may find for once its resilience
tested. So, it is unlikely that the war will end by 2012, as the UPA
government believes. But now even the Union home minister has begun
hedging his bets by saying that it will be a “long drawn” out war. One
reason is because unlike what intellectual detractors of Maoists have to
say, when the State cracks down on Maoists they will not be cracking
down on some alien armed cadres, but will be taking on the people
because there is no difference between people and Maoists. Moreover, it
is in the nature of sub conventional warfare, an euphemism for
counter-insurgency, that first task is to wean away the people from the
rebels. On all sides of the jungle exit and entry is now controlled by
armed forces. Medicines, food stuffs, pencil (lead is dual use) and
notebooks are not allowed into areas held by Maoists. It is yet to hear
the mealy mouthed pacifists ever open their mouth to condemn the
government. Recent experience of the team which visited Nendra in south
Dantewada district of Bastar is noteworthy because after the SP
Dantewada threatened the team members; anyone seen in the jungle will be
shot dead it was left to Union home secretary GK Pillai to order that
they be allowed. Those who do not have access to the home secretary
stand little chance of getting in or getting out. Strangely enough, some
even deny that there is a war being launched against the Maoists!
Now
Indian State propagates that Naxalites are irredeemably bent upon waging
a war against the Indian State and are anti-development. Thus short of
suppressing them there is no other option. Of course Maoists want to
seize power. And certainly those who take up arms cannot escape
opprobrium for violations of principles, in what they themselves regard
as ‘people’s war’. But the more important question is what brought this
about? It did not happen overnight but over forty three years? In this
period several groups gave up this path to pursue non-violent
parliamentary or extra parliamentary struggle. Their experience hardly
inspires confidence that the Indian state has become amenable to
people’s concerns now that some of these left wing rebels gave up arms.
In this sense, appeal if not prospect of non-violence has been
undermined, by the state itself. What is so remarkable about this? How
does it make non-violent political transformation attractive? If
struggle for power requires positioning for strength why should Maoists
try what is not possible (peaceful way), and not do what is necessary
(offer armed resistance)?
Or else what are the Maoists supposed to do, say in Bastar? Surrender to
enable corporation a free run of forest, land and waters of adivasis?
Will this provide tribals a better deal? Has the condition of people
improved since Maoists retreated from north Telengana? Will the three
districts of Purulia, Bankura and West Mednipur in West Bengal usher in
prosperity were the Maoists to pullout from there? Will the UP
government bother about the 30 year long struggle of dalit ‘patta’
holders to get possession of land when they woke up to their plight only
when Maoists began to organize them? Will the NDA government in Bihar,
engaged in distributing arms, begin to distribute land were Maoists not
around? Will the UPA II give up its corporate led ”development” program?
Will they return the land grabbed through coercion and fraud? Reverse
privatization of rivers in Chattisgarh? Will they allow adivasis to
return to their village from where they have been displaced? Let critics
of Maoists ponder over these issues first.
(Author is
Editorial Consultant, Economic and Political Weekly)
Source:
countercurrents.org, Courtesy: frontierweekly.com
|