Nandigram says "No" to Dow's chemical hub
By Stevan Kirschbaum
Nandigram, West Bengal, India
Dec 14, 2007
For 11 months the people’s movement of Nandigram has defied the full
power of the Indian state, military, police and armed death squads in a
struggle to halt a planned “chemical hub” that would destroy their
district.
|
Women tell reporters who accompanied
IAC delegation about attacks on
Nandigram.
|
Nandigram comprises 38 villages in the East Midnapore district of West
Bengal, located 60 miles southwest of Kolkata (formerly called Calcutta). Its
population of 250,000 consists mostly of peasant farmers, laborers and
fishers.
The people of Nandigram trace their history back nearly 2,000 years. They
take great pride in their heritage of fighting to defend their land. One
village is named Pichabani—“We shall not step back”—in
memory of their successful struggle in 1942 to drive the British colonialists
out of the area.
In December 2006, the people of Nandigram were given notice that nearly one
quarter of their land would be seized and 70,000 people be evicted from their
homes. Some 127 primary schools, four secondary schools, three high schools,
112 temples, 42 masjids and countless houses, markets, shops and sacred burial
grounds were to be destroyed and the land given to the Salim Indonesia
group—a real estate “developer.”
|
Mother and children in front of
burned-out home..
photos: Sara Flounders
|
Salim is part of a growing number of dirty middlemen who develop the
infrastructure—roads, bridges and so on—to literally pave the way
for corporate special economic zones. In Nandigram the SEZ was to be a chemical
hub led by Dow Chemical, infamous for the development of napalm used against
the Vietnamese people.
Dow is also hated in India since it bought up Union Carbide. On the night of
Dec. 3, 1984, a pesticide plant of Union Carbide released 40 tons of methyl
isocyanate gas in the city of Bhopal, killing upwards of 5,000 people. The
disaster is ranked as one of the world’s worst industrial catastrophes
due to negligence.
The people of Nandigram are also aware of the fate of Singur, a nearby area
where lands were taken away and the peasants brutalized to make way for the
Tata Small automobile project. They were determined not to accept a similar
fate.
They immediately organized to fight back. On Jan. 3 of this year, 15,000
people assembled at the village governing office to protest. Police opened fire
and many were injured. Three days later, over 50,000 people gathered and
announced the formation of the Bhumi Ucched Pratirodh Committee
(BUPC)—Committee Against Land Grabbing and Eviction. This highly
disciplined, representative body has led the struggle. The next day, state
authorities fired into a crowd of protesters, killing three, including a
14-year-old boy.
The people then escalated to direct action in defense of their land. For the
next three months, house-by-house and village-by-village, BUPC organized to
establish effective people’s power. Roads were dug up, bridges blocked
and barricades set up to defend Nandigram by any means necessary. By March 2007
the people had effective control of Nandigram and the state could not move
forward on the SEZ.
It was at this point that the state unleashed a vicious terror campaign.
On March 14, in the village of Gokul Nagar, police, soldiers and armed
civilian thugs fired into a crowd of protesters who were worshipping to a
goddess to save their homes. State forces employed the most cruel and savage of
tactics, killing at least 14 and injuring hundreds with beatings and shootings.
Rape was an organized police tactic, with hundreds of documented cases of gang
rapes. Many people were “disappeared.”
But the people would not be defeated. They regrouped, reorganized and
continued to hold Nandigram. News of their inspiring battle spread and they
received solidarity and support from labor unionists, social justice activists,
the urban poor from Kolkata and beyond, cultural workers and actors. All came
to lend their support.
As part of the campaign to inflict maximum punishment and also cover up
their atrocities against the people, state authorities attempted to deny them
medical care and falsified the medical documentation of deaths, injuries and
treatment. A courageous group of doctors and medical workers, the Medical
Service Center, nevertheless went to Nandigram to set up a people’s
clinic. They ministered to the people’s medical needs and have been
steadfast advocates for their rights.
The MSC has produced a documented, detailed report on the deaths and
injuries—Health Spectra, Vol. 17, Special Nandigram Issue. This
horrifying catalog of atrocities is available through msc_cc@rediffmail.com. (The International
Action Center has posted this video on YouTube—type in
“Nandigram.”)
Unable to go forward with its plans, the government announced it would scrap
the SEZ. The people’s movement, however, vowed to remain vigilant. Faced
with a full-scale state coverup, the movement demanded justice, a full inquiry
into the state’s atrocities, prosecution of those responsible for heinous
crimes, and reparations and restitution for damages.
The breadth of the solidarity movement forced the Kolkata High Court to take
up the case, but it remained silent on its findings for months.
On Nov. 6 and 12, 2007, the government unleashed yet another terrible
assault on Nandigram. Nearly 100 people were killed, 652 houses were ransacked,
119 homes were burned to the ground, 9,205 people were left homeless and more
than 200 rapes were reported. Many people are missing to this day. Villagers
state that they witnessed government forces and their paid thugs carrying away
bodies to be burned in the nearby Janani brick field, in the town of
Kahejuree.
On Dec. 6, authorities discovered the charred bone and skull remains of
bodies believed to be those killed in November. Notwithstanding all these odds,
the people refuse to give in and continue to return to their burned-out homes,
staying with neighbors and fashioning makeshift tents.
Solidarity campaign escalates
The movement in India, and in Kolkata in particular, has organized exemplary
solidarity. On Nov. 14, a massive solidarity protest of 100,000 people took to
the streets of Kolkata in support of Nandigram. Political activists, jurists,
trade unionists, professors, “Bollywood” directors and actors,
college students, youth workers, environmentalists and doctors are raising one
voice to demand justice for Nandigram and the truth about the state’s
criminal actions.
On Nov. 16, the High Court finally released its findings declaring that the
state’s actions in Nandigram were “unconstitutional.”
However, instead of taking action against those responsible, the court ordered
further investigation.
Now the press are carrying daily stories that support the claims of the BUPC
and the people of Nandigram. Witnesses have come forward with video and still
photos of the rapes committed. (The Statesman, Dec. 1) Missing bodies have been
discovered. (Press Trust of India, Dec. 7) Finally a few of the thugs have been
charged and taken into custody. However, 10 of these thugs had earlier been
picked up and quickly released without charge by the state authorities.
Nandigram has now entered the vocabulary of class struggle in India. The
Dec. 1 Hindustan Times carried an article headlined “Nandigram re-run
alleged in Orissa.” The article refers to the government’s campaign
in another district to browbeat protesters into submission as “the
Nandigram strategy.” But the business pages of the Indian press are
filled with panicky articles assuring future imperialist SEZ investors that
India is safe and that Nandigram is an isolated case.
Global imperialism’s favorite tactic
A “special economic zone” is global imperialism’s model of
super-exploitation at its most severe. In different countries the name
changes—free enterprise zones, maquiladoras, SEZs—but the tactics
are the same. The people are ruthlessly driven from the land to pave the way
for unrestricted corporate exploitation. Corporations have virtually
totalitarian authority, ignoring all labor standards, hiring and firing workers
with no redress, paying starvation wages with no social benefits, and ignoring
any environmental protections.
In the United States, the union movement in an earlier period fought against
what it called the “runaway shop.” Now the runaway is global.
Why would Dow Chemical pay union wages to workers in a plant in the United
States when it can pay SEZ workers pennies a day? Dow just announced it was
terminating more than 1,000 jobs in Charleston, S.C. In the state of West
Bengal, over 56,000 firms have been shut down while at the same time SEZ
industries are cropping up all over India.
An ironic and cruel feature of the Nandigram struggle is that, since the
1970s, the Indian capitalist state in this section of West Bengal has been
administered by a party calling itself the Communist Party of India-Marxist.
However, the CPI-M’s shameful, treacherous and unfathomably savage
repression of the BUPC and of the people’s movement generally has forever
branded it as an all-too-willing servant of global imperialism and of the
Indian capitalist state. Its program and actions do the greatest injury to the
history and name of communism and Marxism. In Nandigram and elsewhere, genuine
communist, socialist and other progressive forces are organizing and leading
the struggle against the SEZs, global imperialism and the Indian capitalist
state. It is these “new,” truly revolutionary organizations that
represent the future of the Indian struggle for socialism. Nandigram provides
yet another, if not the most severe, lesson on the fatal and tragic error of
communists joining and administering a capitalist state.
IAC solidarity mission
On Nov. 29, an International Action Center delegation led by former U.S.
Attorney General Ramsey Clark joined with West Bengali activists to visit the
area of the attacks in Gokul Nagar. The state authorities had sealed off all
roads leading into Nandigram both to increase their isolation and keep evidence
of the November atrocities from the media.
Heavily armed police accompanied the delegation. There was concern this
would make residents fearful to speak freely for fear of reprisals. But as the
IAC arrived at a refugee camp at the Brajomohn Tewari School, scores of victims
came forward. One after the other gave their stories of suffering and injuries
sustained at the hands of police and armed mercenaries.
A mother showed the wounds of her 10-year-old son, Bulu Mir, who had been
shot through the head but miraculously survived. A 30-year-old woman gave
moving testimony of how she had been gang raped. She is one of more than 200
women, ranging from children to elders, who have been brutally raped in a plan
to punish the community. Daughters and mothers were raped in front of their
fathers.
The IAC surveyed homes that had been burned to the ground and then looted of
all belongings. The worst attacks were clearly reserved for leaders of the
BUPC. Roshmi Das Adhikari, 90, told how state-sponsored forces had set fire to
her home while she was inside. Despite everything, the people expressed their
determination to stay in Nandigram.
At an impromptu press conference at the close of the tour, Ramsey Clark
declared: “We do not need any more Dow Chemical companies in India. We
need more food, housing and schools. We need health care and opportunities for
every man, woman and child. The people of Nandigram have stood up for us all.
Nandigram should be the battle cry for the future of humanity.”
Today corporations have globalized their exploitation. It is critical that
the movement globalize the resistance. Messages of support and solidarity may
be sent to Secretary Nanda Patra of the BUPC, care of the All India
Anti-Imperialist Forum, 77/2/1 Lenin Sarani, Kolkata 700 013, India.