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Assam Mazuri Sramik Union is Swabhiman's fraternal organisation & closest ally in grass-root activity for people's rights.It is Registered under trade union act 1926. registration no -2287.
বিগত বহু দশক থেকে আসামের সামাজিক ও রাজনৈতিক পরিমণ্ডলে নাগরিকত্ব ও বিদেশি বিতর্ক একটা জ্বলন্ত ও নির্ধারক বিষয় হয়ে থেকেছে। সত্তরের দশকের শেষে আসামের ঐক্যবদ্ধ শ্রমিক কৃষক আন্দোলনকে বিভাজিত করতে শুরু হয় আসুর উগ্রজাতীয়তাবাদী আন্দোলন৷ আসামের জনগণ বার বার সাক্ষী হয়েছেন নানা প্রতিক্রিয়াশীল আন্দোলন ও রক্তক্ষয়ী গোষ্ঠী সংঘর্ষের। আজ, ২০১৮ সালে NRC নবায়নকে সামনে রেখে, উগ্রজাতীয়তাবাদ তাদের অস্তিত্ব টিকিয়ে রাখতে আবারও ময়দানে নেমেছে৷ মুমূর্ষু আর্থিক অবস্থায় পুঁজিপতি ও বৃহৎ বাজারের খিদে মেটাতে গিয়ে রাষ্ট্রের জন-কল্যাণকামী চরিত্রও লোপ পাচ্ছে। এতে গিয়ে বেকারি, উচ্ছেদ, করের বোঝা,মজুরি ইত্যাদি সমস্যায় জর্জরিত আপামর অসমবয়সীর কাছে উগ্র জাতীয়তাবাদ জনসমর্থন হারানোর পথে। ছয় জনগোষ্ঠীর সংরক্ষণের আন্দোলন, সমস্যা জর্জরিত বোড়ো, কার্বি, ডিমাসা সহ অন্যান্য জনজাতীয় গোষ্ঠীর ক্ষোভ, বঞ্চনা নিপীড়নের বিরুদ্ধে ঝাড়খণ্ডী-আদিবাসী চা-শ্রমিকদের সংগ্রাম, ভাটি অসমের দিকে দিকে নিপীড়নের বিরুদ্ধে ভাষিক সংখ্যালঘু জনতার প্রতিরোধের বহিঃপ্রকাশ, আসামের প্রাকৃতিক সম্পদ লুটের জন্য বেসরকারিকরণ আজ অসমিয়া উগ্র জাতীয়তাবাদকে এক পতনোন্মুখ শক্তিতে পরিণত করেছে। এই পতনোন্মুখ শক্তিকে আবার মাথা তোলার আগেই শেষ ধাক্কা দিয়ে পরাস্ত করে উগ্র জাতীয়তাবাদ ও সাম্প্রদায়িকতাবাদ মুক্ত আসাম গড়ার লক্ষ্যে সমগ্র আসামবাসীর গণতান্ত্রিক ঐক্য সুদৃঢ় করে গণ আন্দোলনের দিকে এগিয়ে যেতে হবে। (১) আমরা দাবি করছি (ক) সুষ্ঠু এনআরসি রূপায়ণ (খ) কোনো ভেদাভেদ না করে সরল নাগরিকত্ব প্রমাণ ও ভেরিফিকেশন প্রক্রিয়া (গ) সমগ্র আসামবাসীকে একই মানবিক মানদণ্ডে বিচার করা (ঘ) প্রতিটি জনগোষ্ঠীর সম-অধিকার ও সম-মর্যাদা৷ ভারতবর্ষের বিভিন্ন রাজ্যের মতো আসামেও বেকারত্বের সাথে পাল্লা দিয়ে ঠিকা শ্রমিক-কর্মচারীর সংখ্যা দিন দিন বেড়েই চলেছে। সরকারি ও বেসরকারি ক্ষেত্রে স্থায়ী শ্রমিক নিয়োগের বদলে ঠিকাদারের মাধ্যমে সস্তায় অস্থায়ী শ্রমিক নিয়োগ হচ্ছে। এই শ্রমিক-কর্মচারীরা নিয়োজিত রয়েছেন ছোটো বড়ো সরকারি বেসরকারি উদ্যোগ ও বিভাগে, শিক্ষা-স্বাস্থ্য-পরিবহণের মতো পরিসেবামূলক ক্ষেত্রে, নির্মাণ শ্রমিক হিসেবে বিভিন্ন পরিকাঠামোগত ক্ষেত্রে। পরিকাঠামো নির্মাণে নিয়োজিত এই ঠিকা শ্রমিকদের অধিকাংশই আসামের এক অঞ্চল থেকে অন্য অঞ্চলে, গ্রাম থেকে শহরে বা এক জেলা থেকে অন্য জেলায় গিয়ে কাজ করেন। এই শ্রমিক-কর্মচারীদের আয় ও সামাজিক সুরক্ষা নেই, ন্যূনতম আইনি গ্যারান্টিও রূপায়ণ হয় না। নাগরিক হিসেবে তাদের সামাজিক নিরাপত্তাও বিঘ্নিত। ২০১৬-এর অক্টোবরে ধেমাজি জেলার গোগামুখে ভাটি অসমের ১১ জন শ্রমিককে বাংলাদেশী অভিযোগে পাকড়াও করে জেলে পুরে দেওয়া হয় ও এই কিছুদিন আগে দরং জেলার ধোলায় হাসান আলি নামে এক বাঙালি শ্রমিকের হাজত-মৃত্যুর অভিযোগের বিরুদ্ধে বিক্ষোভকারীদের উপর পুলিশের গুলিতে মহিদূল হক নামে আরেকজনের মৃত্যু হয়। বাংলাদেশী অভিযোগে শ্রমিকদের উপর নির্যাতন ইদানীংকালে বেড়ে চলেছে। (২) আমরা এই শ্রমিক-কর্মচারীদের আয় ও সামাজিক নিরাপত্তা ও নাগরিক অধিকার দাবি করছি। ঠিকা শ্রমিক (কন্ট্রাক্ট লেবার) আইনের আসাম রুল, ১৯৭১ অনুযায়ী এই আইন রূপায়ণের জন্য রাজ্যে উপদেষ্টা বোর্ড গঠন করতে হয়। ঠিকাদার বা নিয়োগকারীর পক্ষে ৪ জন ও শ্রমিকদের পক্ষে বিভিন্ন ইউনিয়নের ৪ জন প্রতিনিধি ৩ বছরের মেয়াদে এই বোর্ডে সামিল হয়। কিন্তু দীর্ঘ সময়ের মধ্যে আসামে এই বোর্ড গঠন করা হয়নি। ফলে মালিকপক্ষ ঠিকা শ্রমিকদের প্রতি মর্জি মাফিক ব্যবহার করে এবং শ্রমিকদের মজুরি ও সামাজিক সুরক্ষাজনিত সব ধরনের সুযোগ সুবিধা থেকে বঞ্চিত করে। এই আইন অনুযায়ী ঠিকাদারের নিয়োগকারী সরকারি ও বেসরকারি বিভাগ/প্রতিষ্ঠান/কোম্পানি এই আইনের রূপায়ণের ব্যাপারে ঠিকা-শ্রমিকদের মুখ্য নিয়োগদাতা হিসেবে দায়বদ্ধ থাকে। কিন্তু বর্তমান সরকার আইনের এই বিধান উঠিয়ে দিয়ে ঠিকাদারদের যথেচ্ছাচারের উপর শ্রমিকদের ভাগ্য তুলে দিতে চাইছে। এই আইন অনুযায়ী শ্রমিকদের জন্য (ক) পর্যাপ্ত বিশ্রামের স্থান (খ) ক্যান্টিন (গ)আপতকালীন চিকিৎসার ব্যবস্থা (ঘ) মুখ্য নিয়োগকর্তার উপস্থিতিতে ৭-১০ দিনের মধ্যে সাপ্তাহিক মজুরি প্রদান (ঙ) মজুরি রেজিস্টার, ওভারটাইম রেজিস্টার (চ) ১৯ নং ফর্ম (রুল ৭৮-২-ব) অনুযায়ী শ্রমিকদের মজুরি স্লিপ প্রদান ইত্যাদির গ্যারান্টি প্রদান করেছে। উপরন্তু, ঠিকাদার যাতে ন্যূনতম মজুরি আইন লঙ্ঘন করতে না পারে তারজন্য মুখ্য নিয়োগকর্তা দায়বদ্ধ থাকবে। (৩) আমরা উপরোক্ত আইনের সঠিক রূপায়ণ ও আইন অনুযায়ী পরামর্শদাতা বোর্ড গঠনের দাবি জানাচ্ছি এবং মুখ্য নিয়োগকারীর দায়বদ্ধতা উঠিয়ে দেওয়ার কেন্দ্রীয় সরকারের প্রস্তাবের বিরোধিতা করছি। এই তিন দফা দাবির ভিত্তিতে আমরা আগামী ৪ মার্চ, বেলা ১১টায় শিলচর গান্ধী ভবনে এক গণ-কনভেনশনে মিলিত হওয়ার আহ্বান জানাচ্ছি। _________________________________________ ফোরাম ফোর সোশ্যাল হারমনির পক্ষে- অরিন্দম দেব, ফারুক লস্কর। কোরাস-এর পক্ষে - নীলকান্ত দাস, স্নিগ্ধা নাথ, আজিম বড়ভূঁইয়া। অসম মজুরি শ্রমিক ইউনিয়নের পক্ষে - ধরিত্রী শর্মা, নোমান আহমেদ, পারভেজ লস্কর।
We, on behalf of the various constituent social
organisations of ‘Barak Valley Struggling Alliance, would like to bring to
your kind notice the following facts and the demand thereon for your perusal
and immediate needful action.
(1)(A) we
demand the tea-wage parity in Barak & Brahmaputra Valley.
Bypassing the negotiation
process initiated at the behest of State Labor Comissioner, the recent hike in
Barak Valley tea-workers’ wage which has been declared through an unilateral
agreement reached between a union and the tea owner’s association is in no way
an upward movement of the wages to minimise the prevailing disparity, and it’s
an arithmatical jugglery to hoodwink the people. Because in the year 2014, as
per the agreement, when the wage of Barak Valley tea workers will reach to Rs75,
the wage of Brahmaputra Valley workers will move to much higher level from the
present and already enhanced wage of Rs. 76. Moreover, the tea-workers in West
Bengal are also getting much higher wages than their counterpart in Assm
against the same nature of work. This is gross violation of the principle of
equal wages for equal work and these anomalies should be eradicated forthwith
by maintaining parity in wages at least within Assam and a broad framework on
task needs to be formulated.
(B)
when the MGNREGA-workers who are considered as unskilled rural manual workers
are getting the daily wage of Rs.130/worker, the present daily wage of
tea-worker of Barak Valley vis-à-vis Assam is too meager to maintain the
livelihood. So the daily wage of tea-workers should be enhanced to at least the
level of MGNREGA-wage.
(C) the
15th Indian Labour Conference held in 1957 stipulated that the need
based minimum wage for all industrial workers should be calculated covering the
food and living requirements of three units consumption. Under this guideline
and in view of the present consumer price index (CPI), the tea-worker’s wage
will be much more than the double of the existing wage. The resistance of the
employer’s associations to consider 1.5 units instead of 3 units in case of calculating
the tea-worker’s wage on the ground that the engagement of both male &
female workers implies two earners in the family is absolutely unfounded &
baseless. There are ample evidences contrary to their claim. Moreover, as the
existing wage is much less than the half of need based minimum wage that would
have been determined by the Wage Board under the guideline enshrined in the
declaration of Indian Labour Conference and the exiting CPI, the workers are
extra-economically coerced to accept less than bare minimum wage that would
have been the actual wage, if calculated on the basis of the ill-founded logic
of the employer’s too.
(2)It is to be
noted with utter dismay of all concern that though there was an all India
BPL-survey in the year 2007, no field-level BPL-survey has been held after 2002
in Assam. Even BPL-card has not been issued to all those families who are
enlisted in 2002 survey. The 2012 BPL survey to prepar the list of BPL families
has already been kick-started and in that event, we demand that the survey
report must be verified through genuine and effective on-going process of
Gramsabhas. Moreover, lot of drama have been orchestrated, lot of APL-BPL
manipulation has been designed to hush up easy money, lot of food grains dumped
to the houses of well-off having BPL-card, when the destitute failed to have
one square meal a day for not having BPL card, and all these amply made it
clear that the APL-BPL categorization for PDS system is highly ineffectual and
unreliable. As per Arjun Sengupta Commission report, 77% of the population in
India falls in the BPL category and the BPL population in this part of country
will not be less, if not more, than this estimation. But here, a large number
of families do not even have ration-cards, not to speak of BPL cards. For
instance, the poorest of the poor slumdwellers in the suburb of Silchar do not
have ration cards. Those who have APL/BPL cards in these districts of Barak
Valley do get their full entitlements. A huge quantity of ration materials from
the entitlements of the consumers is off-loaded from the supply chain of
FCI-Coopertive-District Wholesale Agency-dealers, and siphoned off to the
market, and this is time and again vindicated by the news of grabbing of
unauthorised Tuck loaded with FCI-foodgrains. All the tea-gardens receive the
ration-entitlements from the PDS chain in PDS price. But in most of the
tea-gardens, the workers’ are getting poor quality and less than the entitled
quantity of ration-materials. The inspection regime in the PDS system either
utterly failed or disinterested to grab the culprit and to mend the loopholes.
With this in view, we demand that
(A)Universal PDS
system should be put in place again to eradicate corruption and to ensure the
BPL population to avail subsidized food grain. BPL list should be verified
through gramsabhas.
(B)The ration cards should be immediately issued to all
the valid applicants.
(C)Thorough and effective inspection, easy consumer
complain mechanism at the dealer-end, quick grievance-redressal mechanism need
to be put in place.
(D)Garden-wise
Inspection from both the labour (as the ration is wage-in-kind also) and supply
department should be done on regular basis.
(E)District, garden and village level monitoring public
committees should be formed at your behest.
(F)A thorough inquiry with public hearings of all the
past misappropriation of PDS materials should be initiated.
(3)Though there is
a huge mismatch between the official record of the NREGA implementation and the
ground reality due to the manipulation of the implementing agency, even the
official record shows that the implementation of NREGA is gradually
deteriorating especially in Cachar District and dismal in all the three
district of Barak Valley. The mechanism of manipulation cab be cited as (i) The
mandays of work shown against the Jobcards issued to the well-off families are
fictitious and recorded without the actual work done. (ii) employment sought,
complaints lodged, unemployment allowance claimed etc are not registered
properly and are not reflected in the website-record. (ii) machines are used
and jobcard holders are engaged as contractual workers in the NREG-schemes
without making any proper entry to the jobcard as well as MR. (iii) Innumerable
complaints to the grievance redressal authorities are lying unattended. (iv)
Formation of monitoring committes and the social audits are done throughfake Gramsabhas. In addition to the
manipulative and corrupt practices, let us put the official record straight to
vindicate our claim of dismal performance of the implementing agencies. In
2008-09, Cachar, Karimganj and Hailakandi recorded 3991, 40, 2 households
respectively who were provided with 100 days of work, that recorded in 2009-10,
2010-11, 2011-12 are 751-134-23, 172-245-163, 39-52-0 respectively. None in
these three district received any unemployment allowance and many claims of
jobcard-holders for unemployment allowance are lying at programme-officer or at
other level without being processed to requisition fund from the state
Government for payment. Among the three districts of Barak Valley, 2011-12
record shows that Hailakandi district with less population has spent much more
fund (though it is also too measly an amount to meet the work demand)than the other two districts and as such
argument of scarcity of fund on the part of the lower bureaucracy is baseless
and smacks of inefficiency or inertia syndrome of the implementing agencies, as
the sanction of schemes and fund flow are the on-going process basing on
demand. This fact-sheets speak volumes about the dismal performance and the
insensitivity of the implementing agencies. Moreover, we are of the opinion that
the rural people need 200 days of work and the guaranteed minimum wage to the
tune of at least Rs. 200 considering the existing CPI.
With this
in view, we demand that
(A)The total
days of work and wage should be enhanced to 200 days and Rs 200.
(B)The present stipulated 100 days of work must be
ensured to all the job-seekers.
(C)Claim of un-employment allowance should be settled
forthwith.
(D)In addition
to the Ombudsman, a district level committee comprising of the representatives
from NREG-workrs’ union, social organisation, experts should be formed
forthwith in consonance with the provision of the act and at the behest of the
program co-ordinatorto monitor the
NREGA-work and social audit.
(E)Word level gramsabhas and social audit should be done
on regular basis and with full transparency.
(F)Block level physical audit must be intiated at the
behest of programme officer taking into the complainant union/organisation into
confidence.
(4)With deep anguish, we have observed that during recent
days, lots of hue and cry are being registered, all opposing the construction
of a 'water bomb' at Tipaimukh. A handful of
protests have been witnessed in Manipur, Mizoram, BarakValley of
Assam, besides lot many from our neighbouring country, Bangladesh.
We look at all these protests from the environmental and human point of view,
sincerely believe that any force, that lacks in feeling for the environmental
impact of the proposed dams should be dealt with severely. We sincerely like to
draw your kind attention on the facts mentioned hereunder;
(A)We
sincerely believe that there should be an extensive downstream environmental
impact study from the proposed dams site up to sea-mouth should be jointly
conducted at the initiative of the Government of India and Bangladesh where
experts from Non Government Organisations particularly from the environmental
outfits, IITs and Universities must be included to asses the possible
detrimental impact on the environment and life of inhabitants in the catchments
areas at large. Without downstream impact study, if a clean-cheat to the
projects are given it would be detrimental for both environment and people at
large and struggling outfits of both in India and Bangladesh in particular. It
is to be mentioned here that an expert committee was constituted to study the
impact of big dams in Bramhaputra Valley alone, we are here like to request you
Sir to form similar study team for investigating cumulative down stream impact
in Barak Valley too.
(B)the
proposed dams fall at the confluence of Indo-Burma, Indo-Malayan and Indo-Chinese
Biodiversity hotspot zone. These areas are characterised by the presence of a
large number plant and animal species, many of which are not seen or seldom
witnessed in rest part of the world. A large number of them have been
categorised as endangered and threatened as the IUCN Red Data book and the
Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972. Once the dam is constructed, these innocent
endangered and threatened species would have no other alternative, but to
perish! Moreover many of the tribal people including Hmar, Naga, Kuki,
Manipuri and others those who have been living there for generations
will have to leave the place for ever. Under such a situation, does the
construction of a dam in the proposed site speak quite well in favour of
Biodiversity conservation?
(C)We strongly
believe and observe with deep concern that this rock filled 500 mts. long and
162.8 mt. high Tipaimukh dam to be constructed at the earthquake
zone-V, Wherein there will be constant pressure of water, if for any
reason cracks, the entire civilization of the whole of downstream will be
washed down in no time. The age old Barak-Surma culture will
live in history only. Can any force or technology prevent this and ensure
against such catastrophic mishap?
(D)Besides the
above mentioned burning issues, other important impact like water scarcity,
crop cultivation, navigation, siltation, ecological imbalance, river pollution,
extinction of aquatic life forms and the like are never the less important
frontier areas that deserve careful and serious attention, before construction
of the dam.
Thanking You
Yours faithfully
Signed By:-
Pijush Kanti Das, Committee on People's and Environment (COPE)
Nirmal Kr. Das, Asom Majuri Sramik Union
Sankar Dey, Barak Nagarik sangsad
Sanathoi Devi, All Assam Meira Paibi
Biplab Kr Goswami, Grahak Suraksa Samiti
Dilip Kr Singh, Hindi Bhasi Chatra Parisad
Pumeba Ai, Rajbangshi Samiti
Sahidul Haque Laskar, Kisan Bikhash Samiti,Ashu Kanti Sinha, AIDSO
Ranu Dautta, Barak Juba Sangsad
Neharul Alam Mazumder, Barak Human Right's Protection Committee
Q: You have written extensively on what you regard as the crises facing Dalits and the Dalit movement in contemporary India, seeking to articulate a caste-class analysis of Indian society. One of your major focuses has been the challenges Hindutva poses to the Dalits. You regard Hindutva as extremely inimical to Dalit interests and their struggle against ‘upper’ caste/class hegemony. Given, as you have written, Hindutva groups have made deep inroads among Dalits, how do you feel a progressive counter-cultural alternative can be presented to and popularized among Dalits in order to counter the attraction that Hindutva seems to offer them?
A: While Hindutva is a form of Brahminism and is definitely geared to suppressing the Dalits and serving the interests of the ‘upper’ caste/class elites, one should be clear that Hindutva is not entirely a cultural phenomenon. It is more of a political phenomenon. So, challenging Hindutva cannot be limited only to articulating a counter-cultural alternative, as some have sought to do in the name of Dalit identity-politics. Rather, Hindutva needs to be challenged politically.
As regards a counter-culture to Hinduism from the Dalit perspective, I am not sure if we have the resources for this or if sufficient attention has been paid to how to popularize this alternative given the immense hold of the Hindu framework. We may say, and rightly so, that the conflict between Brahminism and Shraminism, as represented by Jainism and Buddhism, has been present throughout Indian history. On this basis, we may invoke the Shramanic tradition to critique Brahminism. However, we also have to admit that despite the immense popularity of the Shramanic traditions for over 10 centuries, the Brahmanic castes have survived; nay they have thrived. How does one explain it? These religions—particularly Buddhism—did offer alternatives to Brahminism at the philosophical level but, despite this, caste as a social reality did not vanish. I think the same can be said of the conversion of Dalits to other religions as a means for liberation from caste oppression. Dalits have converted to Islam, Christianity, Sikhism to escape caste bondage of Hinduism but this did not make much difference to their lives. Caste has rather infected these seemingly egalitarian religions, keeping its Dalits at the lowest rungs. In objective terms, not much is changed for the converts. While they continue to remain Dalits for others, among themselves they appear to follow the same cultural paradigm laid out by the Hindu framework, albeit with cosmetic changes. Babasaheb Ambedkar did expect a new cultural paradigm for the Dalits based on scientific rationality, but it remained an unfulfilled dream like many others. That is perhaps why many Dalits in Maharahstra have, unfortunately, not been averse to joining hands with Hindutva forces. Even many well educated Dalits with some social recognition did not see anything wrong in jumping onto the RSS’s Samarasata platform which talked of the ‘unity’ or ‘assimilation’ of castes. Politically, Ambedkarite Dalits have been joining the Hindutva forces with impunity. The current alliance between Ramdas Athwale’s RPI and the Shivsena-BJP combine under the guise of Bhimshakti+Shivshakti is a case in point. The fact that there is not much opposition to such ideas and actions bespeaks volumes about alternative culture. So, I would say, the hegemonic influence of the Hindu or Brahminical worldview still remains, and Dalits, as a whole, continue to operate within that cultural framework. Q: If that is the case, then what is the alternative in terms of a counter-cultural challenge to Hindutva?
A: I think the alternate is only possible from the Left—not the parliamentary Left that still appears to cling to the idea, notwithstanding their wordy acrobatics, that religion and caste are simply ‘superstructural’ issues or of little or no importance, but a Left that is rooted in Indian social realities and recognizes the salience of these issues. Fortunately, some sections of the radical Left is developing such an understanding organically. If Dalits also review their journey so far objectively, I am sure they also will reach similar radical understanding. That said, I do not negate the importance of culture in both perpetuating as well as challenging an oppressive system, but, at the same time, I disagree with some Dalit ideologues who insist that cultural revolution must necessarily precede political revolution. The two must go together, working in a dialectical fashion. Alternate cultures do not develop in vacuum, just by wishing for them. They are born in the process of peoples’ struggles over the material issues of their living—essentially politico-economic struggles. I am sure the counter-cultural to Hindutva will also emerge from these sorts of mass-based struggles. I don’t see it as a question of one preceding the other in time in a mechanical way. Q: Some analysts argue that focusing mainly on the issue of reservations and critiquing Brahminism, which, of course are necessary, sections of the Dalit movement have ignored the material issues and concerns of the Dalit poor. Do you share that analysis?
A: There is considerable truth in that assertion. By and large, the Dalit movement has been led and controlled by urban-based petty bourgeoise Dalits, and has tended to neglect Dalits living in villages. If you consider the demographic profile of Dalits, you will find that Dalits are predominantly rural people; some 89 percent of them still live in villages. More than half of them are landless, 26 percent are marginal farmers and the rest are artisans. Of the 11 percent urban Dalits, a vast majority lives in urban slums and work preponderantly in the informal sector. Over the last six decades, a small layer—certainly not exceeding 10 percent of the total—has emerged out of them who could be considered as ‘arrived’, thanks to reservations, political nexus and their enterprise. This small layer, however, has effectively hijacked the agenda of the majority of the Dalits and revolved it around the single issue of reservation. It reflects the urban- and class-bias of the Dalit movement that has persistently ignored the issues of rural Dalits. Reservations did have a utility for the first generation of Dalits but thereafter it increasingly became the monopoly of those who have come up, leaving the really needy out of its reach. It is a widely acknowledged fact that the caste issue is entangled with the skewed distribution of land or the high incidence of landlessness of Dalits. Even Babasaheb Ambedkar, towards the end of his life, had realized this fact and influenced some of his followers to take up the first land struggle in Marathwada. Thereafter, Dadasaheb Gaikwad, who was his close confidant and perhaps real political heir, had led a countrywide struggle for land. But, thereafter, we never hear of the land issue being raised within and by the Dalit movement. Lack of land, quality education, non-farm employment, proper housing and sanitation are the material issues that have historically been related to Dalit deprivation, and these have only been aggravated by the elitist ‘globalization’ over the last two decades. There is not a slightest reflection of these issues in the dominant Dalit discourse. Surprisingly, when reservations have effectively ended—statistically, from 1997 onwards the total employment in the public domain has been consistently decreasing—they shout louder about it.
So, yes, I sincerely think in the post-Ambedkar phase, the Dalit movement, driven by small elite among the Dalits, has completely ignored the material issues of most Dalits. Q: But now that government jobs are rapidly shrinking in the wake of privatization and ‘globalisation’, which means that jobs for Dalits in the public sector are even more limited than they hitherto were, do you see a shift in the focus of the Dalit movement? Given that ‘globalisation’ and privatization are hitting the poorest of the poor, particularly Dalits, the most, is the Dalit movement responding by widening its concerns and addressing the challenges posed by globalization, thus moving out of what you consider as its major concern with reservations?
A: I do not see a major shift happening, barring the fact that Dalit groups are now demanding reservations in the private sector and curiously campaigning about ‘Dalit Capitalism’. This, once again, illustrates their elite, urban focus. I do not see them interrogating ‘globalisation’ and mobilizing Dalits against the havoc that is causing to the poor, leading to mass pauperization and rapidly widening social-economic inequalities. Statistics reveals that the incidence of landlessness has been increasing among Dalits during the last two decades of globalization. But, they are oblivious of these facts. The question of land, or the issue of landless Dalits and their forced displacement by mega-projects, has been a virtual taboo in Dalit movement because most Dalit ‘leaders’ think it is a ‘communist’ issue. They have been programmed into believing that communists are their enemies! They have been fed on lies, by many Dalit intellectuals and leaders, that Babasaheb Ambedkar was viscerally opposed to communism as such—although it is well-known that Babsaheb did see the importance of land issue and was a confirmed socialist, as is evident from his monumental book States and Minorities. They have systematically constructed an Ambedkar icon sans the radicalism of Ambedkar, with superfluous embellishments of Ambedkar ideology, projected it as a virtual god-like figure to the Dalit masses, and invoking it in support of whatever they do. This icon is used and duly supported by the ruling classes to build a kind of ‘bhakti’ cult in the Dalit masses. Now, it is absolutely clear that Babsaheb hated the ‘bhakti’ cult around him and explicitly said that that he did not want bhaktas but sincere followers. This cult facilitated ‘brokers’ among Dalits to sell their wares in his name, and the Dalit masses simply bought their wares. This is the unfortunate paradigm that has degenerated the Dalit movement and has effectively thwarted sincere elements from coming up. It is entirely because of this that there seems to be little or no effort to re-read or contextualize Babasaheb’s thoughts in the contemporary context, including on issues related to class-based deprivation. At a time when the Indian state, Hindutva forces and the forces of imperialism are playing such havoc with the livelihoods of millions of Dalits, whose conditions are rapidly going from bad to worse, I see few Dalit groups taking these crucial economic issues seriously. Instead, they remain fixated on reservations—because this is a convenient populist slogan—and on invoking the name of Babasaheb while refusing to re-read him in the context of the contemporary situation of caste/class deprivation.
Babasaheb Ambedkar said that he was against Brahmanism and not Brahmans, and even explained that Brahmanism could be found in any caste, including Dalits. Dalits have conveniently forgotten this essence and picked up the superficial. Today, the situation is such that groups whom they include in their Bahujans, the superset of Dalits, are the real perpetrators of atrocities on Dalits. They are the real baton holders of Brahmanism in villages. But this sort of political-economic analyses just do not appeal to Dalits, who are enamoured with identitarian discourse. To oppose Brahmanism is to be anti-caste; but to hate Brahmans is casteist. Paradoxically, swearing by Ambedkar, many Dalits today unconsciously reflect casteist behavior, and thus act against Ambedkar.
That said, we must remember that the anti-materialist outlook of Dalits is actually born out of their encounter with the Left movement, which refused to acknowledge caste question as something basic to the class struggle in India. Babasaheb Ambedkar was no Marxist. He had genuine problems with Marxism but at the same time he ardently believed in socialism of the Fabian kind. This was a good enough basis for working together with the Left and enriching the strategy for class struggle in the concrete situation obtaining in this country. But the Left continued undermining Dalit movement and, in the process, completely alienated it. The onus thus squarely lies with the Left for the fact that today we are faced with the divergent, almost antagonistic, movements of the proletariat, bogged down with an idiotic duality of class and class.
The Left movement needs to rethink its perspective on the Dalit question. There is an urgent need for a dialogue between the Dalit movement and the Left, so that they can learn from each other and cross-fertilise each other. This will certainly help the Dalit movement in responding in a more appropriate manner to the changing nature of caste and helping it realize the importance of class issues and the need for class-based mobilization as well. I am uncomfortable with Dalit identity politics which only make the Dalit movement more sectarian and lead it away from the material problems, as experience shows. Caste as essentially a divisive category cannot viably serve even identity politics, not to speak of the goal of annihilation of caste. I am surprised that this basic understanding is yet to dawn on our social scientists as well as activists.
Q: How do you assess the role of the Dalit media in raising and communicating these issues which you feel Dalit groups have failed to take up?
A: There is not much of a Dalit media actually. There are several small magazines and periodicals run by Dalits all over the country. Some of them do raise valid issues faced by Dalits, but many others are simply tails of this or that political group. This connection may not be always visible but it does exist in terms of direct or indirect support coming from these sources. During the last decades, a curious development took place in Maharashtra in this regard. Some Dalits started daily papers, one after another. Today, there are at least half a dozen full-sheet daily papers run by Dalits in Maharashtra. They do satisfy rhetorical need of having our own media. One does not know how their economics is managed, however, given that newspapers basically run on advertisement revenue, which is largely absent in their case. The content analysis of these newspapers does not indicate that they have significantly contributed raising the live questions of Dalits or catalysed any movement around it. They just meet the identitarian need of having ‘our’ own media.
I do not know whether a media owned and operated by Dalits could really be called a ‘Dalit media’. Most of Dalit papers reflect the concerns and interests of their readership—the ‘reservationist’ middle-class—and that is why they deal mainly with religio-cultural issues, besides, of course, reservations. They pay little attention to the issues of rural Dalits. Many of them are averse to taking up economic issues or to considering the need for a contextually-rooted class-cum-caste analysis of Indian society. Basically premised on the identity of Dalits, they often ignore other issues.
The media reflects to some degree the state of our intellectual activism. The tragedy is that we have few organic intellectuals who can articulate the concerns and interests of the Dalit masses. Instead, we have a whole lot of cut-and-paste intellectuals whose only task, it seems, is to rehash what others have written before them, refusing to engage in any creative intellectual work. The Dalit media eventually mirrors it. Q: In recent decades, a number of NGOs have taken up Dalit issues and concerns, and Dalits are one of their major ‘target’ groups. How do you see the impact of this NGO-isation process on the Dalit movement in terms of highlighting Dalit issues and empowering the Dalits?
A: In terms of highlighting, and even internationalizing, Dalit issues, I think many NGOs have played an important role. Even documenting Dalit problems and issues I think is a major contribution, giving that little of this sort was being done by others. But, beyond that, especially in political terms, I think that, barring some cases, the role of NGOs has been problematic. At a fundamental level, NGOs depend upon donors, and, according to the dictum “He who pays the piper calls the tune”, they have to eventually confirm to the agenda of their donors. And the fact of the matter is that NGOs have been deliberately promoted as a vehicle of ‘globalization’ in the context of the declining role of the state in the social sector. Naturally, then, NGOs work, by and large, to depoliticize radical people’s movements. They work in a fragmentary manner, taking up discrete issues, and this promotes fragmentary consciousness in people around them, which is what neo-liberalism wants. By remaining confined to funded projects, they inherently lack a macro political-economic perspective, which again serves the interest of global capital. Moreover, they also attract youths who might otherwise have gone into people’s movements or radical politics, by providing them salaries and job security, and in this way also work as agents of depoliticisation. You are right in terming this the NGO-ization of the Dalit movement. Before the Dalit movement could introspect on its degeneration, the influx of NGOs complicated the matters and made any such review extremely difficult. Q: In your writings, you argue that ‘globalisation’ spells doom for Dalits. In this context, how do you see the argument, made by a group of Dalit ‘intellectuals’, who have been much-highlighted in the ‘mainstream’ media, of the need for the state and multi-national corporations to promote what they term ‘Dalit Capitalism’?
A: I think this argument is completely fallacious and dangerous. It buys into the imperialist logic, and is geared to serving the interests of foreign capital and the Indian ruling classes, who are well aware of the pauperisation of the Dalits and their mounting opposition to the system that is destroying their already shattered lives in the name of ‘development’. This slogan of ‘Dalit Capitalism’ is being actually sponsored by some Western organizations linked to global capital. There is not much of guess work needed to see who the sponsors and supporters of this idea are. As a matter of fact, the idea has been floated by a bunch of individuals who are projecting some Dalit entreprenneurs as though they were the new breed produced by globalization. And this is being propped up by the ‘mainstream’ media, which is otherwise shy of touching anything Dalit. The Economic Times has published a series of features on it, and the rank neo-liberalist Swaminathan Ankalesvaria Aiyer wrote several pieces extolling the idea. As for the Indian state, the Planning Commission, which otherwise refuses to move on the continued stealing of special component monies meant for Dalits, has been enthusiastically considering how to channel the public funds to these Dalit capitalists. It is a pity that Dalits do not see through the game and, instead, are getting enamoured with the idea because of their identitarian fixation.
I do not think there is anything intellectually appealing about the notion of ‘Dalit Capitalism’. I would rather say that this notion is itself a contradiction in terms and smacks of ignorance of both Dalits as well as Capitalism. The Dalit entrepreneur is not a new species. Dalits have historically been entrepreneurs, grabbing whatever opportunities that came their way and made progress. Rich Dalits are also not a new phenomenon. There have been many rich Dalit individuals since colonial times. So, to claim that Dalits have only started progressed now as a result of supposedly benefitting from ‘globalization’ is simple and pure falsehood. To impute the progress that a small number of Dalits have made in recent years to ‘Dalit Capitalism’ suggests is fallacious. Although, knowing the systemic character of capitalism, I would never be the votary of capitalism, I am not so dogmatic as to discard it either merely for ideological reasons. After all, there is a dialectics that will determine the time of its death. I do not have any quarrel, therefore, about Dalits becoming big capitalists and amassing their billions. But what irks me is this motivated attempt by the proponents of the notion of ‘Dalit Capitalism’ to create a patently false impression that Dalits have benefitted by ‘globalization’, that Dalits have now ‘arrived’, that Dalits have abandoned socialism and have embraced capitalism. The vast majority of Dalits still live in horrendous conditions in villages and urban slums as the wretched of the earth, and their conditions are, as I said earlier, going from bad to worse, rather than improving, as a result of the ravages of capitalism and ‘globalization’. The relative distance between Dalits and others on most developmental dimensions was reducing until the 1990s but the recent trends clearly show that the gaps are widening. By WHO standards of body-mass index, Dalits would be famine-stricken community. To speak about such people in terms of ‘Dalit Capitalism’ is nothing but an unpardonable cruel joke. (Another link on East Bengal Migrant and Dalits in Bengal) [Dalit woes and hope]
A CLARION CALL TO THE PEOPLE TO UNITE AGAINST IMPERIALISM AND NEO-LIBERAL POLICY FROM A THOUSANDS STRONG MASS MEETING AND PROCESSION OF ASSAM MOJURI SRAMEEK UNION
The News Published in Dainik Samayik Prasanga, 15th Nov. 2011 issue
This prgramme organised by Assam Mojuri Srameek Union has also been addressed by the office bearers of Barak Human Rights Protection Committe, Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti, Citizens' Rights Protection Committee, Manipur Peoples' Struggle Committee along with Union's speakers and Mr Gautam Modi, Secretary, New Trade Union Initiative, New Delhi as guest speaker.
Press Releaese
A strong procession of thousands of union members entering the meeting venue
The neo-liberal policy
and the policy of appeasement serving the corporate interest of the Indian big
business houses and the global oligopolists, pursued by the Indian Govt. is
increasing the inequality, poverty, unemployment and the prices of the
essential commodities in leaps and bounds. In the list prepared on the basis of
human development index, India’s
place is 119 out of 129 countries. As per the Govt record of 2010, the rate of life
expectancy of birth (years) is 64.4%, the rate of malnutrition in the age group
of 6-59 months is 79%, below 3 years is 46% and that of below 6 years is 49%.
As per Arjun Sengupta report, 77% of people has the average daily expenditure
of Rs.20 or less. During the period of 1994-2008, the rate of employment per
annum in the Govt organized sector is (-)0.65%
and that of private sector is 1.75%. The workers in the private IT-BPO and
other private sectors, and the working class in the unorganized sector who
constitute the absolute majority of the India workforce are being compelled
to work with measly sum of wage. Almost 2.5 lakhs of farmers committed suicide
till date due to agricultural crisis.
The budgetary allocation
of fund for social sector development is very meager. As per Reserve Bank
report 2010, the expenditure in education is 2.98% of GDP, that of health is
1.27% and in other social investment is only 2.38% of GDP. With an intention to
reduce the social sector investment still further, the Government is conspiring
to show less BPL percentage, and pursuing the policy to allow the private
capitalists to enter these social sector for making profit through
commercialization.
A Sectional view of the mass-meeting
A Sectional view of the mass-meeting
This policy of the Govt.
has shattered the lives of the working class in general and especially the most
backward communities and the regions like BarakValley.
All the beneficiary schemes and the scheme under the right to work act like
NREGA are not being properly implemented due to the carelessness and
insensitivity of the people in the Govt. implementing machineries. The jobcard
holders are not getting 100 days work per year, and the state Govt is
dillydallying in giving the unemployment allowance against their failure in providing
jobs to the job-seekers, though the honourable high court has also passed an
order to pay the unemployment allowance against a writ-petition filed by the Union. The tea-workers are not getting the minimum wage
and the facilities they are entitled to get as per plantation labour act, even
the tea-workers in Barak are getting less than their counterpart in Brahmaputra
valley of the state of Assam.
In vehement opposition
to the neo-liberal policy and on the basis of the demands mentioned below, and
by being the part of the all India
working class movement initiated by New Trade Union Initiative, the Union is determined to strengthen this movement further.
Demands are – (1) All
the arrear unemployment allowance under NREGA must be paid immediately. (2) 200
days of work per year should be provided to the jobcard-holders. (3) On the basis of the guideline of Indian
Labour Conference, 1957 and the directives of Supreme Court, the minimum wage
of the tea-workers and the workers of all unorganized sectors must be fixed.
(4) The wages of the tea-workers of BarakValley should be at per with that of BrahmaputraValley. (5) The universal PDS should be
brought back in force. (6) The PRI and the Gramsabha should be strengthened for
empowerment of the people. (7) The power should be decentralized through
multi-layered autonomy to ensure equal rights of all communities. (8) The
rampant corruption at all levels and the skyrocketing price hike of essential
commodities must be arrested, and the Lokpal act must brought into force.
ASOM MOJURI SRAMEEK UNION
CACHAR DISTRICT COMMITTEE
H/O
KHUDIRAM SARANI, SIBBARI ROAD,
TARAPUR, SILCHAR-8, Regd. No 2287
সরকার অনুসৃত নয়া আর্থিক নীতি ও দেশি-বিদেশি ব্যক্তিপুঁজি
মালিকদের স্বার্থ রক্ষাকারী পদক্ষেপের ফলে সামাজিক অসাম্য, দরিদ্রতা, বেকারত্ব,
নিত্য প্রয়োজনীয় সামগ্রীর মূল্যের বৃদ্ধি ঘটে চলেছে। মানবোন্নয়নের সূচক অনুযায়ী
১২৯টি দেশের মধ্যে ভারতের স্থান ১১৯ নং। ২০১০-এর সরকারি হিসেব অনুযায়ী, জন্মবছরে
বেঁচে থাকার হার ৬৪.৪%, ৬ মাস থেকে ৫৯ মাস বয়সের শিশুর
অপুষ্টির হার ৭৯%, ৩ বছরের নিচে শিশুর ৪৬% ও ৬ বছরের নিচে ৪৯% অপুষ্টিতে ভুগছে।
অর্জুন সেনগুপ্ত কমিশনের রিপোর্ট অনুযায়ী ৭৭% লোকের দৈনিক গড় ব্যয় ২০ টাকা বা তার
কম। ১৯৯৪-২০০৮-এই পিরিয়ডে সরকারি সংগঠিতখণ্ডে গড় বছরে নিয়োগের হার (-)০.৬৫% ও বেসরকারি
ক্ষেত্রে ১.৭৫%।
আইটি-বিপিও ও অন্যান্য বেসরকারি ক্ষেত্রগুলোতে এবং গরিষ্ঠাংশ শ্রমজীবী মানুষ
অসংগঠিত ক্ষেত্রে অত্যন্ত নগণ্য মজুরিতে কাজ করতে বাধ্য হচ্ছে। কৃষিক্ষেত্রে
বিপর্যয়ের জন্য ইতিমধ্যে মোট প্রায় ২.৫ লাখ কৃষকের আত্মহত্যার ঘটনা ঘটেছে।
Union's flag-hoisting (above) and procession (below)
সরকারী বাজেটে সামাজিক খাতে ব্যয় বরাদ্দ নিতান্তই অপ্রতুল।
রিজার্ভ ব্যঙ্কের ২০১০-এর হিসেব অনুযায়ী শিক্ষখাতে জিডিপি’র ২.৯৮%,
স্বাস্থ্যখাতে ১.২৭% ও
অন্যান্য খাতে জিডিপি’র মাত্র ২.৩৮%
ব্যয় করা হয়। সামাজিক খাতে ব্যয় আরও কমিয়ে দেওয়ার উদ্দেশ্যে বিপিএলের সংখ্যা কমিয়ে
দেখানোর চক্রান্ত করছে সরকার এবং সামাজিক ক্ষেত্রগুলিতে মুনাফালোভি
ব্যক্তিমালিকদের অনুপ্রবেশের পথ সুগম করার নীতি অনুসরণ করছে সরকার।
সরকারের এই নীতিতে সাধারণভাবে শ্রমজীবী মানুষ এবং বিশেষ করে
বরাক উপত্যকার মত পিছিয়ে পড়া অঞ্চলের ও পিছিয়ে পড়া জনগোষ্ঠীদের জীবনে বিপর্যয় দেখা
দিয়েছে। গণ-আন্দোলনের চাপে কাজের অধিকার সাব্যস্ত করতে এনরেগা সহ অন্যান্য যেসব
জনহিতকর প্রকল্প সরকার নিয়েছে তাও দুর্নীতি ও প্রশাসনযন্ত্রের অসংবেদনশীলতা ও
গাফিলতিতে সুস্টুভাবে কার্যকরী হচ্ছে না। এনরেগার বছরে ১০০ দিনের কাজ দেওয়া হচ্ছে
না এবং কাজ দিতে না পারলে যে বেকার ভাতা দেওয়ার কথা, তা দিতেও রাজ্য সরকার
টালবাহানা করছে। এব্যাপারে ইউনিয়নের এক রিট পিটিশনের পরিপ্রেক্ষিতে হাইকোর্ট
অতিসত্বর বেকার ভাতা প্রদান করার আদেশও জারি করেছে। চা-শ্রমিকদের ন্যূনতম মজুরি সহ
প্ল্যাল্টেশন লেবার আইন অনুযায়ী সুযোগ-সুবিধাগুলি দেওয়া হয় না, এমনকি বরাক
উপত্যকার চা-শ্রমিকদের ব্রহ্মপুত্র উপত্যকার শ্রমিকদের চেয়েও নেক কম হাজিরা দেওয়া
হয়।
ইউনিয়ন সরকারের ব্যক্তিগতকরণের নীতির বিরুদ্ধে এবং
নিম্নলিখিত দাবিগুলির ভিত্তিতে আন্দোলন গড়ে তুলতে এবং নিউ ট্রেড ইউনিয়ন
ইনিসিয়েটিভের উদ্যোগে সর্বভারতীয় আন্দোলনের সাথে যুক্ত হয়ে এই আন্দোলনকে আরও
শক্তিশালী করতে বদ্ধপরিকর।
(১)এনরেগার বকেয়া বেকার ভাতা প্রদান করতে হবে। (২) এনরেগার
অধীনে বছরে ২০০দিনের কাজ দিতে হবে। (৩) ইণ্ডিয়ান
লেবার কনফারেন্স’ ১৯৫৭ ও সুপ্রিম কোর্টের আদেশের গাইডলাইন মেনে চা-শ্রনিক ও
অসংগঠিত শ্রমিকদের ন্যূনতম মজুরি ধার্য করতে হবে। (৪) বরাক ও ব্রহ্মপুত্র ভ্যালির
চা-শ্রমিকদের সমহারে মজুরি প্রদান করতে হবে। (৫) সর্বজনীন রেশনিং ব্যবস্থা চালু
করতে হবে। (৬) পঞ্চায়েত ও গ্রামসভাকে শক্তিশালী করতে হবে। (৭) বহুস্তরীয় স্বশাসনের ভিত্তিতে
ক্ষমতার বিকেন্দ্রীকরণের মাধ্যমে সব জনগোষ্ঠীর অধিকার প্রতিষ্ঠা করতে হবে। (৮) সর্বস্তবরে দুর্নীতি ও নিত্যপ্রয়োজনীয়
সামগ্রীর মূল্যবৃদ্ধি রোধ এবং লোকপাল আইন চালু করতে হবে।
By Kalpana Kannabiran. This article is an English translation of the article in Telegu that appeared in Varta and in Bengali weekly tabloid ARUNODOY, Silchar.
At he time when the movement for the State of Telangana reaches its peak, and even as the leaders of this movement craft the contours of this state that is one step towards liberating the people of this region from a history of economic, political and cultural oppression, it is important to think about which way we would like to go. As somebody who believes in Telangana statehood, not as part of a general argument about the efficacy of smaller states alone, but as indispensable to the dignity of the region, I raise these questions with the aim of pushing for a greater democratization of the movement. There are unresolved issues that need to be addressed and there are leaders of integrity, with a radical vision and political astuteness like Kondandram and Ratnamala, who have the capacity to take difficult questions on board and turn them into strengths.
One pillar for the demand for a separate Telangana is the fact of economic hegemony and the appropriation of the assets in Telangana by the ruling classes and business interests in Andhra. Indeed what sets the Telangana movement apart is the fact that it is led by persons with a proven commitment to civil liberties and human rights. This is in stark contrast to the Samaikya Andhra movement. This however, is only the starting point. Having a leadership with a socialist vision in a region, which has seen the worst forms of feudalism and continues to grapple with the worst forms of caste discrimination and exploitation of adivasi communities, it becomes imperative to outline the economic contours of the new state. This is even more important because the power of the movement today, although the result of years of silent work and campaigning in each district by civil libertarians committed to the cause, is within the grasp of mainstream politicians of different hues who see in the new state unlimited political opportunity. It is of course necessary to broaden the base and create inclusive platforms by converting political opportunism into a commitment to justice. But what will be the non-negotiables in that platform, apart from the demand for a separate state?