|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
India: twelve protestors killed in police shooting
By Parwini Zora
17 January 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Twelve tribal villagers in India were shot dead by police on
January 2 during a demonstration against the development of the
Kalinga Nagar steel complex in the eastern state of Orissa. The
impoverished protestors were demanding a halt to construction
by steel developers on their traditional land. A 13-year-old boy
and three women were among those killed.
In 1992, the local government in Orissa seized the tribal land,
paying the villagers a pittance in compensation. The 12,000-acre
area was then designated as a steel complex, and lucrative leasing
contracts were negotiated with local and foreign investors. Local
people have repeatedly protested against the decision over the
past decade.
The massacre on January 2 occurred as villagers staged a demonstration
against the construction of a boundary wall for a site leased
to TATA Steel, Indias largest private steel producer. The
local government, led by a coalition of the right-wing nationalist
Biju Janata Dal (BJD) and Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP), dispatched
several hundred police to secure the site. According to Frontline
magazine: There were strict instructions from the State
Secretariat to facilitate the construction, and the district administration
was more than eager to obey.
After tear gas and rubber bullets failed to disperse the crowd,
police opened fire against the tribal people, some of whom were
armed with bows and arrows and fought back against the police
attack. As well as the 12 protestors, a policeman was killed in
the hour-long clash. About 25 people were wounded, including four
police.
Adding to the misery of the families of the dead, police later
severed the hands of five of the victims during the post-mortem
examinations. According to the police, this was standard
procedure in recording the fingerprints of unidentified
bodies. Demonstrators insisted, however, that police mutilated
the bodies in revenge for their colleagues death.
The massacre triggered ongoing protests throughout the region.
Steel workers at the Jindal and Mesco steel plants in Kalinga
Nagar went on strike in solidarity with the villagers. Thousands
of workers and tribal farmers attended the cremation of those
killed. The funerals took the form of mass protests, as mourners
blocked a highway and chanted slogans against the police and state
authorities.
The Orissa massacre once again brings to light the widespread
police brutality and torture inflicted on impoverished workers
and peasants, particularly those belonging to tribal communities
and oppressed castes. The killings at the steel complex follow
a series of similar incidents across India in recent years.
An oppressed social layer
Tribal people constitute more than five percent of Indias
total population, and have long been among the countrys
most oppressed and marginalised strata. Access to their traditional
lands, which are typically remote but resource rich, has come
under sustained attack in recent years. Successive Indian governments
at both the local and federal level have promoted India as a haven
for foreign investment, and have encouraged transnational companies
to launch projects on land requisitioned from the tribal inhabitants.
In Orissa, local authorities have made large sums of money
from this process. As one tribal protestor explained to the BBC,
We were paid only 37,000 rupees ($US823) per acre of land
whereas the government has sold the same land to the companies
for over 300,000 rupees per acre. In many cases, even the
small amount of money promised to the inhabitants has been held
back by pending lawsuits. Promises of jobs have also failed to
materialise. Local officials admit that just over a quarter of
the displaced families have been given alternative employment.
Eighty percent of the Orissa population are farmers and agricultural
labourers, and inadequate public spending in agriculture and public
infrastructure has led to a serious lack of employment opportunities.
Until recently, tribal villagers living within the Kalinga
Nagar steel complex area continued to cultivate the land, despite
the state seizure of their property. They have demanded proper
compensation for their land at current market rates and an adequate
resettlement package that provides them with a means of securing
their livelihoods. None of these demands have been met, however,
and as the steel companies have expanded their operations, the
tribespeople have come under government pressure and police attacks
to vacate the area.
The massacre has had political repercussions throughout India
as well as Orissa. The local BJP considered withdrawing from the
Orissa ruling coalition in an attempt to deflect popular outrage
over the killings. The national BJPwhich has been marked
by a series of internal crises following its defeat at the last
federal electionquickly overruled the proposal however.
As a sop to local anger, Orissa authorities announced that a judicial
inquiry will be held into the killings, and the district magistrate
Saswat Mishra and superintendent of police Binaytosh Mishra have
been transferred.
All of the established parties have tried to capitalise on
the outrage felt by ordinary working people. Sonia Gandhi, the
ruling Congress Partys leader, visited the area and laid
a wreath at the site where those killed had been cremated. She
also announced that compensation to families of those killed would
be raised to 500,000 rupees, from the 100,000 rupees initially
pledged. A further 50,000 rupees and the payment of medical expenses
was promised to those injured by police. These pledges have been
denounced by the victims families and tribal protestors,
who are demanding that at least 2 million rupees in compensation
for each person killed.
The local Orissa Congress Party joined the Stalinist Communist
Party of India (Marxist) in calling for statewide strikes, which
resulted in the ransacking of several government buildings on
January 7. Strikes called by Stalinist parties were held the same
day in the states of Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh, while the Communist
Party of India (Maoist) announced a one-day strike in West Bengal
on January 16. All of these measures are designed to divert public
anger into politically safe channels.
The entire political establishment in Indiaincluding
the Stalinist and Maoist leftbears responsibility
for creating the social and economic conditions for the Orissa
massacre. The integration of the Indian economy into the international
capitalist market, which is backed by all the established parties,
has been accompanied by a sustained assault on the social position
of the countrys workers and peasant masses. The Indian ruling
elite has sought to assure foreign investors that the extraction
of profit from its resource-rich and low-wage country will not
be threatened by strikes and protests.
The deepening gulf between rich and poor is evident in Orissa.
Around 30 percent of Indias iron ore reserves and 24 percent
of its coal reserves are located in the state. Despite this natural
wealth, Orissa remains among the poorest in India, with about
half of the total population living below the official poverty
line. Indian and international companies, on the other hand, are
expecting make huge profits in the eastern state. The local government
has signed contracts for establishing steel plants with 43 Indian
and transnational companies, of which 13 have reached the commissioning
stage. The contracts are worth a total of $40 billion to the state
government, while the steel companies are no doubt forecasting
tens of billions more in future profits.
Among the foreign investors is Australias BHP-Billiton,
the worlds largest mining company, which together with the
Korean steel company POSCO, has invested $12 billion in an iron
ore mine in Orissa. The operation is the single largest foreign
direct investment venture in India. The rapid growth of the Chinese
economy is also fuelling investment in Indian iron and steel.
Total iron ore exports, now standing at 5 million tonnes, swelled
five-fold in the last five years. Half of the countrys iron
ore exports now go to China.
The Indian ruling elite has ambitions beyond merely supplying
China with the raw materials for its industrial expansion however.
India is competing with China to attract foreign direct investment
and to develop value-added manufacturing industries and cannot
afford to allow protests to interfere with this strategy. For
this reason, the Orissa massacre will not be the last.
See Also:
Leading Indian daily
calls for suppression of strikes and unions
[7 October 2005]
One-day general strike
in India exposes need for socialist-internationalist strategy
[29 September 2005]
Fifty-four years in
jail without trial: the plight of prison inmates in India
[26 August 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |