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India: Congress uses lethal violence against Andhra Pradesh
land agitation
By Arun Kumar
11 August 2007
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The Congress Party-governed south Indian state of Andhra Pradesh
has been in political turmoil since the July 28 police attack
on demonstrators in Mudigonda, which is located in the district
of Khammam some 250 kilometers from the state capital, Hyderabad.
Police opened fire at Mudigonda with automatic weapons killing
at least seven people participating in a land agitation being
led by the Stalinist partiesthe Communist Party of India-Marxist
or CPI(M) and the Communist Party of India (CPI).
The July 28 demonstration had been called to protest violent
police lathi-charges and the arrest of more than one thousand
protesters during a state-wide day-of-action in support of land
redistribution two days before.
The police have sought to justify their use of lethal violence
by claiming that the Mudigonda protesters pelted them with stones.
But even right-wing newspapers such as the Indian Express
have had to concede that the police shot to kill, firing at protesters
heads and torsos, not the ground. It has been reported that among
the police forces the Congress state government deployed to Mudigonda
were special units created to fight the Naxhalites, a Maoist guerrilla
movement.
As on other occasions, declared a July 31 Indian
Express editorial, the police have chosen not to follow
the rule book. They fired directly into the crowd. Without warning,
without exhausting other options such as water cannons or rubber
bullets. That such monstrous behaviour by the police is being
sought to be justified by Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy
and the Congress, is shocking to say the least.
The states official opposition, the Telugu Desam Party
(TDP), and the Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
have joined the CPI(M) and CPI in condemning the police massacre,
with most of the opposition demanding Reddys resignation
as chief minister.
The Politburo of the CPI(M) issued a statement saying the genuine
demands of the people for house sites and land could not
be suppressed by such a brutal display of force.
Indian Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, whose Congress-led coalition
government is dependent on the parliamentary votes of the CPI(M)
and its Left Front allies, felt compelled to meet with CPM leaders
so as to contain the political fallout from the Mudigonda massacre.
But he has refused to condemn the police killings, characterizing
the one-sided confrontation an unfortunate incident.
Not surprisingly, the Congress leadership has rejected outright
the call for Reddys resignation, saying the Stalinists cannot
dictate to the Congress the composition of its leadership. We
dont appoint or remove chief ministers at the behest of
the Left parties, All-India Congress Committee General Secretary
Digivijay Singh told reporters.
In recent months the Stalinist parties have been agitating
for the rural landless to be given two acres of land and for housing
sites to be given those in the cities without shelter. In many
places across the state, government lands have been occupied to
press these demands. A CPI(M) report in mid-June, when the agitation
was six weeks old, claimed that protests had been mounted in 90
towns and 712 villages. In its editorial on the Mudigonda massacre,
the Indian Express conceded that peoples participation
in the agitation has been growing by the day. This is not surprising
considering that the twin demands of two acres of land for the
landless and house sites for the urban poor are ... something
for which lakhs [hundreds of thousands] of poor people have been
craving for decades.
With the support of the twin Stalinist parties and on the basis
of various populist promises, the Congress Party swept to power
in Andhra Pradesh in the 2004 state election.
Predictably, most of these, including a promise to redistribute
land to the poor, remain unfulfilled. Like the Congress-led national
government, the Reddy government in Andhra Pradesh is pressing
forward with neo-liberal reform.
A further factor fueling popular anger is the fact that the
well-to-do and the well-connected, i.e., politicians and their
families, have manipulated previous land reforms, appropriating
much valuable land especially in and around greater Hyderabad.
The Congress state government responded to the Stalinist land
agitation by pointing to the actions of the West Bengal Left Front
government, which has stripped peasants of their land so it can
be handed over to Indian and foreign investors in the form of
Special Economic Zones. In March, at least 14 peasants were killed
when the West Bengal CPI(M)-led Left Front government ordered
the police and party thugs to stamp out an anti-SEZ agitation
in Nandigram.
There is little doubt that the CPI(M) and CPI have mounted
the Andhra Pradesh land agitation in a desperate attempt to refurbish
their tattered and blood-stained left credentials,
as well as to distance themselves from the right-wing Congress
state government that they helped to bring to office just three
years ago.
While the land agitation has undoubtedly struck a strong popular
chord, the Stalinists are using it as a means to renew ties with
the TDP, the Telugu regionalist party that from 1998 through May
2004 played a crucial role in propping up Indias BJP-led
National Democratic Alliance government. Under Chandrababu Naidu,
Andhra Pradeshs state government, which fell from power
simultaneously with the NDA three years ago, became a darling
of the World Bank for its pursuit of neo-liberal policies.
In answering the Congress attempts to excuse the massacre
at Mudigonda, CPI(M) elder statesman Jyoti Basu, once again justified
the police assault at Nandigram. The two incidents are totally
different, claimed Basu. While he decried the police shooting
at Mudigonda as unwarranted, Basu maintained that
the police at Nandigram were forced into opening fire.
The truth is in both cases the state government resorted to murderous
violence in the hopes of drowning a popular agitation in blood.
In a hearing Tuesday on a TDP public interest litigation seeking
a judicial inquiry into the Mudigonda massacre, the Andhra Pradesh
High Court sought to lay blame for the wanton police murder of
unarmed protesters on the parties that organized the July 28 protest,
not the police or the Congress state government that deployed
them. Said the court, Every party which is mandated by the
people to sit in the Opposition is organizing strikes and bandhs
and provoking violence which at times result in the death of innocent
citizens.
Earlier, Congress Chief Minister Reddy announced a compensation
package for the families of those killed or injured by the police
on July 28. Families of those killed are to be given 500,000 Rupees
(about US$10,000). Jobs and two acres of land have also been promised.
Those who suffered serious injury are to be given Rs. 50,000 ($1,000)
and those with less serious bullet wounds Rs. 10,000 ($200). Two
police officers have been suspended.
See Also:
After an election marred by bitter conflict:
Pratibha Patil becomes Indias 13th president
[2 August 2007]
Sri Lankan war provokes deep
unease in Indian political establishment
[7 July 2007]
India-US nuclear agreement
at an impasse
[9 June 2007]
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