Monday, October 26, 2009

The Great Indian Nation: Are We Racist?
*Saumitra Mohan

We, as a nation, have been very sensitive to ‘racism’ for a long time and continue to be so. The recent times have seen a lot many issues relating to race and racism hogging media attention. The recent attacks against Indians in Australia have also kept the racism debate alive in this country. It was our own Mahatma Gandhi who had taken up the cudgel against ‘apartheid’, the dreaded racist policies in South Africa of the yore. His first encounter with racial discrimination at the Pieter Maritzburg railway station in South Africa towards the end of 19th century became the symbol of a fight against the colonial powers all over the world.

When India became independent, non-discrimination on the basis of race was included in Article 15 of the Indian Constitution. Later, India also joined and signed various global instruments including the International Convention against Racial Discrimination. But one finds it really surprising when Indians are accused of racism and racist behaviour.

Be it the ESPN advertisement during the Cricket World Cup, the preference for fair complexioned cheer leaders over dark ones during the Indian Premier League cricket matches, the alleged comment made by a Radio Jockey against Prashant Tamang, the Sony Indian Idol or the Andrew Symonds controversy surrounding Harbhajan Singh’s alleged ‘Monkey’ remark against the former, the issue of racism seems to have become a regular part of our intellectual consciousness. Very recently, one very senior and respected politician from North East alleged that he has been butt of racist remarks in this country. Are we, as a nation, really racist?

Is the hoary caste system or the related obnoxious practice of untouchability (now banned vide Article 17 of the Indian Constitution) responsible for the same? Even though caste system and untouchability are still living realities (though with subdued rigour and vigour) in this country, is it that the same has also fashioned our likes or dislikes for a particular community, caste, race, religion or is it just our misplaced fascination with the fair complexion. After all, fair complexion has been associated with the high caste Aryans in this country even though that barrier has long been broken. We have dark complexioned members in any and every caste or community as a result of inter-caste and inter-racial matrimonies. Not only this, we also have differently complexioned members as part of the same family.

Still, the affection for fair complexion subsists and survives in our sub-consciousness and often comes forward to modulate our behaviour towards differently complexioned differently. The Indian perception of beauty is often defined in terms of fair complexion. Aren’t almost all our Gods fair complexioned and all the demons dark complexioned?

Since then, dark complexion is believed to be associated with sins and vices while fair complexion has been associated with piousness, chastity, virtue and beauty. Indians’ craze for the white/fair complexion is borne out by the huge market for the fairness cream and other such cosmetic products in this country. You can sell any ‘damn’ product here as long as you can promise that the same could enhance fairness of the skin. Our matrimonial advertisements also bear out the preference for a fair complexioned spouse. Many males in this country harbour the desire of having a fair complexioned wife, if, at least, to have fair complexioned children. If your kids are fair complexioned, you could be assured of finding a suitable match for them quite easily. This applies more to the daughters than to the sons.

Many African nationals have often alleged discriminatory/racist behaviour by Indians. Being relatively fairer than the Africans, many Indians deem themselves racially superior. There was a time when there was an innate bias in favour of fair complexioned people while selecting air hostesses, TV newsreaders, actors and actresses or, at least, so was alleged. Still most of our successful actors and actresses are not shot with their true complexion. Most of the successful Bollywood actors and actresses, even though not-so-fair-complexioned, are all portrayed as fair complexioned persons. At least, that’s how most of us know them.

Various colloquial appellations with racial overtones are also part of our day to day cant. Words such as Mallu, Chinky, Sardarji, Gujju, Punju, Bihari and so on have become inalienable part of our day-to-day vocabulary. And so have become the jokes based on stereotypical behaviour relating to them. And we all love sharing or cracking jokes based on a Mallu, a Sardarji, a Bihari or a Gujju. But does that prove that we are racist?

One feels that such prejudices are not natural to India or Indians alone, but it is a global phenomenon. Racial, gender or regional typecasting or such prejudices are formed on the basis of our day to day interactions. Such typecasting also stems from some hoary folklore or history. All this slowly becomes ingrained in our subconsciousness and forces us to form a particular opinion about a particular caste or community. We gradually start accepting the same as natural. At least, the hoi polloi does the same.

And that is why a ‘Gujju’ or a ‘Marwari’ is associated with his love for money or a ‘Mallu’ or a ‘Bihari’ is known for his penchant to go anywhere in search of work or a business. The ‘Mallu’ is also ridiculed for his accent and so is a ‘Bihari’ or a ‘Jat’. A ‘Sardarji’ is the perpetual butt of many of our jokes as is a ‘blonde’, or an ‘Indian’ (read Red Indian) or a ‘Pathan’ elsewhere.

One feels that this is all very healthy as long as the same is done and accepted with a sense of humour without making much of it and as long as the same helps us in enjoying a hearty laughter at the expense of each other. This is how societal camaraderie grows and a civilization evolves. Actually, it is our unwarranted and over the top reactions which is responsible for creation of a needless controversy. It is definitely not in the same genre as ‘apartheid’ or the abhorrent ‘slavery’ of the recent past. It is definitely not racism unless and until the same is not said or done with an intent to insult or humiliate someone.

When someone cracks a ‘Sardarji’ or a ‘Mallu’ joke, the idea is definitely not to inflict insult or humiliation on someone as both are supposed to be very successful members of the Indian society. But it becomes a problem once we take the same too seriously and start depriving each other of the deserved opportunities or social goodies or in allocation/distribution of societal values (a la David Easton) on the basis of such prejudiced opinions. The violence stemming from such opinionated prejudices can actually turn out to be serious enough as to break a nation as happened to Pakistan during the 1970s. Thankfully, this is not true in case of Indian society.

If separatism in Punjab could not succeed, one reason for the same is said to be the ‘Roti-Beti Ka Rishta’ (relationship of livelihood and matrimony) between the two dominant communities there. Similarly, as we go along and the society experiences more inter-caste, inter-religious, inter-community and inter-regional marriages, such notions and prejudices shall slowly lose their sting. And then even if cracked or commented, such jokes or remarks shall probably not evoke the same reactions as they do now.

India traditionally has been a very open society, welcoming and accepting anyone reaching its shores. And that is why it has become what it is today, a ‘salad bowl’. A plural, multi-racial and multi-ethnic society often experiences such behaviour by members of the society and it is not abnormal as long as the same is in a good spirit without malice to anyone. One also feels that such conduct or such reactions shall get tempered with time as we go along and become more mature as a society, when our nation building process is complete in all respects, when our society become more egalitarian and when almost all members of our society become relatively more educated and enlightened.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Changing Climate: Changing Ourselves
*Saumitra Mohan

There is a wide consensus all around that the problem of climate change stemming from the increasing concentration of green house gases (GHG) in our atmosphere is going to be the biggest challenge to the existence of life on this Blue Planet. And if there were any scruples left, the erratic climatic behaviour all over the globe including the Monsoon Deficit in India has disabused the same. It is also agreed unanimously that we would postpone the solution to this problem only at our own peril.

It is believed that the rise of even two degree Celsius shall mean the collapse of the global ecosystem. The global temperature has already risen by 0.6 degree Celsius since the beginning of the 19th century. The Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) believes that global temperature shall rise between 0.5 and 2.5 degree Celsius by 2050 AD with an estimated rise of 1.4 to 5.8 degree Celsius by 2100 AD. An estimated 10 billion metric tons of carbon is said to be pumped into our atmosphere every year.

Even if we go by the most optimistic scenario, the global temperature, because of the sustained anthropogenic emissions and other cognate reasons, is likely to rise between 1.1 to 2.9 degree Celsius by the end of this century. As a result of crossing this critical threshold of two degree Celsius, it is believed that the same shall result in the global GDP loss between 1-5 per cent. The sub-Saharan countries are likely to be the most affected. Their economies may get devastated as a result thereof.

There is a real apprehension that melting ice cap of the snow-clad mountains and the melting ice sheet at Antarctica shall result into a gradual rise in the sea level. The IPCC assumes a sea level rise between seven to 23 inches by 2100 AD. The same is likely to displace millions of population in the littoral and riparian areas giving rise to the phenomenon of the environmental refugees. It is believed that every one centimetre rise in the sea level results in the displacement of about one million people.

A customized relief and rehabilitation programme needs to be drafted for them to preempt the impending catastrophe that may befall the human race in the times to come. Not only this, the resulting large-scale migration would also mean increased tension and discord among the countries of the world. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the UN agency concerned with the refugee matters needs to gear up early to face up to the challenge. The phenomenon of environmental refugees may turn out to be one of the biggest human catastrophes of all time.

The aggravating global warming is also likely to result in erratic climatic behaviour including irregular precipitations as is already visible now in the form of deficient monsoon in this country. The meteorological and climatogenic changes shall herald myriad problems. They would vary from flash floods stemming from abnormal precipitations at certain places to storm surges to drought-like conditions at many others. The rainfall patterns shall change for ever and so shall change the soil composition at many places thereby negatively impacting agriculture of that region.

All the situations shall uniformly lead to crop reduction or crop failures bringing in a food crisis with very serious implications for the nutritional security of world’s 6.75 billion people. Even though it is projected that India may be freed from the clutches of poverty, hunger and malnutrition and would become an environmentally safe country by 2030 AD, we should not forget that there are reportedly about 200 million undernourished and about 300 million people subsisting below the poverty line in this country. One just hopes that our National Food Security Mission succeeds in realizing its objectives and should thereby see through the feared food scarcity.

We shall also be confronting a severe water insufficiency as a result of the erratic rainfall. Abnormally high precipitation shall not mean high water table. Most of this hydrological bounty is likely to be drained out as a result of increased run-offs and also due to reduced holding power of the soil because of reduced forest cover. Melting ice cap or ice sheet shall deprive our rivers of a perennial water source. This would make our rivers seasonal thereby making water scarcity severer.

The dreaded sea level rise shall also mean that brackish water shall not only encroach upon the agricultural land making them unworthy of agriculture, but shall also infiltrate the freshwater aquifers thereby further threatening the source of potable drinking water. The resulting water stress or water crisis is told to be serious enough to engender water-related battles, even wars among nations. There shall, therefore, be a need for water use efficiency and a well-drawn water management policy. The watershed development would require special attention. More than that, there is a need for the end-users to use the water as efficiently and as sparingly as possible.

Besides, a serious health emergency is also awaiting us if we fail to respond to the incoming challenge in time. There shall be grave health-related problems in the form of increased incidence of various kinds of known and unknown diseases. They shall be mostly vector and water borne diseases, not to speak of various dermatological disorders and diseases occurring mostly because of hyper-thermogenic disorders. The climatic changes are also likely to affect our rich bio-diversity and physical geography. It is believed that millions of plant and animal species, many thousands already endangered, shall become extinct for ever.

The poor and the most vulnerable sections of the society are likely to be the worst affected by the climate change. This is because of their limited capacity, capability and resources at hand. There shall, ergo, be a need to find alternative livelihoods for these sections of the society. They shall not only lose their home and hearth first, but shall also be devoid of any resource or capacity to cope with the impending calamity. It is imperative today to ensure that millennium development goals (MDG) including halving the number of global poor by half by 2015 AD are realized will in time.

The provisioning of better hygiene and sanitation, health services, basic education and safe potable drinking water are among other important goals which are intricately intertwined with the problem of climate change. A healthy and better educated human resource can better cope with the problem at hand. After all, poverty is known to be one of the biggest reasons for pollution and global warming. And all round development is supposed to be the best antidote of this Mother of all problems. Famous social scientist John Rawls rightly says that ‘justice consists in maximizing the welfare of the worst off individuals’. Governments all over the world need to coordinate their actions to ensure that a suitable disaster management plan is in place to deal with any such situation.

But herein lies the nub of the problem. Notwithstanding the fact that there has been a series of dialogues to discuss the various aspects of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the developed North and the developing South are still to reach a consensus about the various modalities appertaining the ways to deal with the crisis. While the developing countries including India argue (quite rightly) that since it is the West which has caused the problem, hence, it is West which should share the major burden of meeting the challenge. They believe that the West must clean the Augean Stables it has left behind in its rush to reach to the top of the pecking order.

Even today, the per capita emission in the United States is four times that of China and 20 times that of India though China surpassed the United States in terms of emission of carbon dioxide in 2006 itself. India has proposed a 0.5 per cent of Gross Domestic Products (GDP) of the developed countries (reasonably less when compared to the 0.7 per cent recommended by the South Commission during the 1960s) to be contributed to an Adaptation Fund (something like a Green Marshall Plan) to be utilised for the purposes of helping the developing countries in meeting their sundry responsibilities arising out of the climate change problem.

To further curb emission of GHG, there is not only a need to check unbridled consumerism, but there is also a need for increasing production and consumption efficiencies across the board. Our water and energy consumption need to become more efficient. It is widely felt that people should be encouraged to use public transportation more than ever, but before that there shall be a need to make the same more efficient and more people-friendly.

There are recommendations for the impositions of high fuel and car taxes to discourage private car ownership. Tougher energy standards and high user (utility) prices are being suggested for everything to make the consumption more efficient across the board to reduce the ‘Consumption Overload’ on Mother Nature. There is also a need for an intensified education and awareness programme to conscientise our people and to make them appreciate the challenge at hand. Our day-to-day behaviour and consumption patterns also need to be adapted to bring the same in sync with the demands of our environment.

Our buildings need to become more energy efficient. The concept of ‘smart homes’ is required to be adopted in keeping with the changing times. All new constructions need to meet climate vulnerability norms. Our town planning and infrastructural constructions need to integrate the climate change concerns. There shall also be a need to build our infrastructures above the apprehended sea levels. In fact, many countries like Netherlands are already building defenses against the expected sea-level rise. Our weather forecasts shall accordingly be required to become more precise to safeguard the population from the vagaries of nature.

Besides, we need to undertake massive exercises for greening the globe to roll back the damages wrought to the Mother Nature. Hence, there shall be an urgent need to undertake afforestation at a massive scale as part of the humongous geo-engineering which might be needed for the purpose. The concepts of Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and Emission Trading System under United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) can be suitably brought into service.

CDM means carbon offsets offered to rich country firms and institutions in exchange for the financing of emission reduction projects in the developing countries. And emission trading means sale of one’s quota of emission in exchange for financial or other assistance to those who need higher emission caps. There is also a need to build more biological sinks, give requisite tax incentives for adoption of costly but eco-friendly technologies, discovery of clean energy sources, putting in place a system of emission credits, ensuring better energy efficiency and to discourage carbon-intensive energy infrastructures.

Furthermore, we need to give deserved attention to our agriculture. As far as India is concerned, there is a crying need for a second Green Revolution in this country. Still about two-thirds of our net cropped area is under dry land farming and is rain-fed, accounting for about 42 per cent of the total food produce. An effort should be made by all to reduce our dependency on weather by expanding our irrigation network and bringing more areas into it.

We need to strengthen our irrigation capacity further to ward against an erratic monsoon. The proposed river linking project could go a long way towards an improved food security for our country provided the same could be made cost-effective and scientifically more practicable. The related R and D and agricultural extension services need to be suitably attended and undertaken. Climatic stress proof seedlings and saplings need to be discovered and popularized to ensure an undisturbed supply of food grains for us all. Genetically modified food, even though not universally acceptable, can show a way forward provided popular apprehensions could be suitably taken care of.

It is felt that we need more of ‘Rurbanism’ i.e. keeping a balance between the development of rural and urban areas. Even though we already have a National Action Plan on Climate Change in place, we need to see to it that the same is implemented with all seriousness. There is a greater need for building practical partnerships among countries of the world, NGOs, INGOs, United Nations, businesses and all concerned to better face the climate change challenge.

Transfer of technologies from the West to the East is one of the many proposed solutions. Eco-friendly technologies for coal gasification, carbon capture and carbon sequestration apart from creation of an efficient carbon storage mechanism, discovery of low carbon fuels and expedited development of renewable energy sources shall be required to better face the global warming problem. We also need to find and invest in alternative energy sources. There shall be a need to make huge investment in research and development (R& D) efforts for the purpose.

There shall be a need to introduce suitable changes in WTO’s (World Trade Organization) trade related intellectual property rights (TRIPS) regime to encourage transfer of eco-friendly technologies from the North to the South. There shall also be a need for enough escape clauses in the UNFCCCC to allow the developing countries to be able to strike a balance between the demands for development and the concerns of climate changes. Today, initiatives like International Carbon Sequestration Technology Forum (ICSTF) need to be encouraged more.

Burden-sharing among members of the Comity of Nations is one of the principal solutions doing rounds. A major portion of the same has to be borne by the developed countries because it is rightly felt that it is reckless consumerism and unsustainable life style of the West which has been chiefly responsible for the present climatic conditions. The North need to take a lead in this because of their better endowment in terms of resources and share the same with the developing South as the advantages or disadvantages emanating from a ruined ecology shall unfailingly come to all. The countries of the world shall need to work out a better synergy to face this problem when they meet next at the Copenhagen Summit later this year.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

The Refugee Problem: Need for a Coordinated Response
*Saumitra Mohan

From a population displacement perspective, South Asian region has a unique history. Here, people have been pushed beyond their borders as a result of war or they have left their country of origin on ethnic, racial, ideological or religious grounds. Subsequently, migrations have taken place for environmental or developmental reasons as well. The States of India and Pakistan witnessed massive refugee movements from the time of independence itself. After the 1947 partition, 7.5 million Hindu and Sikh refugees from Pakistan crossed over to India and 7.2 million Muslim refugees from India crossed to Pakistan. It was the largest recorded refugee movement in history.

There was little international assistance in this massive humanitarian crisis. Later, in 1971, 10 million refugees crossed over to India during the war of independence of Bangladesh. In 1979, 3.5 million Afghans fleeing Soviet intervention in their country sought and received asylum in Pakistan of which 1.2 million are still said to be there in the refugee villages. Between 1970s-1990s, Bangladesh has been witness to the influx of over 300,000 Muslim refugees from Rakhine district in Myanmar, of whom nearly 30,000 refugees are still to be repatriated. Similarly, 90,000 Bhutanese of Nepali origin were expelled and a substantial number of them are still located in refugee camps in Jhapa district of Nepal. However, many of them have been recently resettled in third countries by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

Sri Lanka has often been described as an 'Island of Refugees' due to external displacement of Tamils and internal displacements of Sinhalese, Tamil and Muslims. Though Sri Lanka is not known as an asylum country, it is well known as a refugee-producing country. Since 1983, Sri Lanka has produced hundreds of thousands of refugees apart from over 500,000 Sri Lankan Tamil 'jet refugees' to the Western world. Major portion of Sri Lankan refugees in Tamil Nadu were voluntarily repatriated, but still over 60,000 have remained behind due to the ongoing security crisis in North-East Sri Lanka.

Since 1960s, India has been hosting over 100,000 Tibetan refugees and some 50,000 Buddhist Chakma refugees from Chittagong hill tracts in Bangladesh, some of whom were repatriated recently. India also has permitted UNHCR to assist about 12,000 Afghan refugees on pure humanitarian grounds. Maldives is the only SAARC country, which neither produced nor hosted a significant refugee population.

Despite these past and existing refugee movements and deep rooted humanitarian traditions of asylum, none of the SAARC countries has acceded to the 1951 International Convention on Refugees or its 1967 Protocol, which has been ratified by 136 countries in the world. However, all the SAARC countries, except Bhutan and Nepal, have offices of the UNHCR - the UN agency responsible for the promotion of the Refugee Instruments and marshalling of international humanitarian assistance on behalf of the refugees.

The reasons advanced for the non-accession to the 1951 Convention or the 1967 Protocol by SAARC countries are very similar in content. They argue that they have rich traditions of asylum comparable to international standards, sometimes even better than what is practiced by some of the signatory states to the International Refugee Instruments. Therefore, they would continue to deal with refugee issues on ad hoc bilateral policy basis, but welcome international humanitarian assistance based on burden-sharing (with the exception of India).

SAARC countries further argue that the persecution-based 1951 Convention or 1967 Protocol is inadequate to comprehensively address the current refugee issues in the region, which are mostly the result of internal conflicts and not due to fear of persecution by the states per se. In support of their contention of inadequacy of the International Refugee Instruments, they cite the regional refugee instruments of Africa, the 1958 Organisation of African Unity Convention and the one for refugees in Latin America, the 1984 Cartagena Declaration on Refugees which are more comprehensive in their definition of refugees.

Refugee situation in South Asia has become chronic and has affected both national security and inter-state relations due to the reluctance of states to discuss them on pure humanitarian basis. Since all refugees are technically considered illegal aliens, they have no institutional protection or the protection of the principle of the Rule of Law. In this context, a regional Convention or Declaration on refugees by the SAARC countries becomes timely and relevant. A regional agreement on fundamental questions such as the definition of a refugee, the granting of asylum and the exceptions thereto, the cardinal principle of non-refoulement, or the voluntary nature of eventual repatriation of refugees would reduce the room for friction between the state interlocutors. A SAARC Refugee Convention or Declaration would also mean a great step forward in developing a humanitarian regime in the region.

In the case of India, the Superior Courts have addressed certain humanitarian concerns of the refugees on the basis of constitutionally guaranteed fundamental and human rights. But no such developments have taken place in any other SAARC countries. The prevailing political and security preoccupations of each country determines the standards of treatment for the refugees. These standards may differ from time to time and from one country to another.

By developing a regional Convention or Declaration on refugees, the SAARC countries would not only be recognizing and refining the existing traditional humanitarian policies, but will also be developing a set of non-contentious principles, which will enhance the organisational solidarity and its commitment to human rights. Such a Convention or Declaration will not be a document borrowed from outside that is unsuitable for the specific needs of the refugee problem in the region, but a SAARC-developed piece of international law.

There are differing opinions on the advisability of having a regional or a national instrument but, there is definitely unanimity on the fact that there should be a specific legal instrument on refugees in the region to guide the governments in their policy towards refugees. Whether the South Asian governments would like to accede to the existing international refugee regime, or they would like to have a legislation of their own, is something that they need to take a decision about. However, there are certain issues that can be better dealt with within the multi-lateral regional framework.

It is high time the South Asian countries took a stand on the refugee regime issue, rather than dealing with the same through administrative measures. Hence, the South Asian countries should have a specific refugee legislation of their own. Since they have already been accepting and hosting refugees, by having a specialised legislation, they would only formalise and give a concrete shape to the existing practices. This legislation can be specially designed to factor the respective national interests, making it more in sync with the sub-continental reality than the international refugee regime that was drafted in a Cold War context and appears to be out of touch with the ground realities in South Asia.

By doing away with the element of discretion and putting in place an organised structure and infrastructure for dealing with refugees, the new system can be custom-made to regional and national interests. Such a system would make the regional reaction to refugee problem more consistent, coordinated and predictable. It would also help the countries of the region in meeting their international obligation required under the UN system. Drafting of a ‘Model National Law’ and ‘Draft Regional Declaration’ on refugees under the leadership of UNHCR are positive developments in this regard. It is hoped that by taking a positive decision to have a specialised legislation on refugees, the countries of South Asia would live up to their reputation of being a liberal host to the refugees on their shores.
Creating Newer States: How Desirable?
*Saumitra Mohan

Given the way demands for creation of newer states keep cropping up from time to time, it seems that the reconfiguration and reorganization of the Indian State could go on for ever. One felt that no such political demands centring around creation of a separate state would be put forward after the last such exercise was undertaken in the year 2000. The same resulted in the birth of three new states namely Chattisgarh, Jharkhand and Uttaranchal.

The country has witnessed many such demands in recent times as also borne out by the fact that as many as ten such demands are now pending with the Central Home Ministry. These inter alia include demands for a separate Mithilanchal in Bihar, Saurashtra in Gujarat, Coorg in Karnataka, a Harit Pradesh in UP, Telangana in Andhra Pradesh, Gorkhaland in West Bengal, Bundelkhand comprising areas from UP and MP and a Bhojpur carved out of Eastern UP, Bihar and Chattisgarh.

The demands have been raised by disparate political organisations like Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS) coming forward for a separate Telangana state and Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJMM) pitching for a separate Gorkhaland state. The demand for creation of Bundelkhand comprising districts like Banda, Chitrakoot, Jhansi, Lalitpur and Sagar of UP and MP has also been pending with the Home Ministry for quite some time.

The creation of a separate state of Saurashtra in Gujarat, one of the most prosperous states, is said to be pending with the Ministry for several years now. The Centre has also received representations for creation of a Harit Pradesh or a Kisan Pradesh consisting of several districts of western UP. The Central Home Ministry is also said to be in receipt of formal demands for creation of a Mithilanchal or a Mithila state comprising territories in Bihar, Greater Cooch Behar out of parts of West Bengal and Assam, Vidarbha in Maharashtra and a state for the Coorg region of Karnataka from different political and non-political organisations.

Before acceding to or even considering such demands, we should not forget as to how India broke into fragments after the decline and degeneration of the Mughal Empire. Many Ex-Governors of the Mughal principalities called ‘subahs’ declared their independence. And by the middle of the 18th century, there were congeries of ‘rajas’ and ‘nawabs’ who held sway over 600 principalities across the sub-continent. It was this India that Robert Clive defeated and subjugated after the historic battle of Plassey in 1757. This established British Raj in this country that lasted for about 200 years.

What was notable in all this was the fact that Robert Clive could emerge victorious with the help of a faction of army of Nawab Sirajudaullah. These ‘fifth columnists’, not bound by any feelings of nationality, did not deem it an act of treachery to let their Nawab down. This was again repeated 100 years later in 1857 when the English were able to stave off the challenge to their rule from Indian forces by using different factions of Indian forces through their notorious and reviled policy of ‘divide and rule’.

These forces, who supported the English, thought nothing of siding with an alien power as the feeling of Indian Nationhood or an overarching sovereign Indian State was conspicuous by its absence. There were Marathas, Sikhs, Muslims, Rajputs, Biharis and Jats, but there were no Indians. The famed ‘Aryavarta’ or ‘Hindustan’ was nothing but a geographical connotation. Today’s India actually emerged out of the womb of the British Raj. In fact, one of the unintended benefits of the Raj is said to be the integration of India which ultimately gave rise to the extant Indianness.

It was this feeling of Indianness which was responsible for catalyzing our freedom struggle, thereby paving way for the creation of a pan-Indian Nation. It is this Indianness that Jawaharlal Nehru discovered, Mahatma Gandhi nurtured, and Sardar Patel consolidated. We have only been fostering, cherishing and relishing the fruits of a free and sovereign Indian State that our forefathers bequeathed us.

Now, we need to ponder as to whether we can allow this hard-earned unity and nationhood to be dented or destroyed by new parochial demands for creation of smaller states based on ethnicity, culture or linguistic factors. There is also a considered view that creation of new states never means that no such demands would be made in future. In fact, their creation is actually said to be an encouragement to such fissiparous forces who make and pursue such demand if only to grind their own axe.

After the creation of Chattisgarh, Jharkhand and Uttaranchal, there are still newer demands to further divide these states e.g. the demand for Harit Pradesh in UP and that of a Mithilanchal in Bihar. Once Saurashtra is carved out of Gujarat, there is no guarantee that the Kutchis would not demand their own state. In fact, there is already such a move by the erstwhile Maharaja of Kutch. In Andhra Pradesh, the talk of Telangana has caused uneasiness in the Rayalseema region which wants its own separate state. Muslims in Hyderabad region also yearn for an Urdu state of their own. This is a never ending vortex into which the celebrated Indian Nation might get sucked for ever.

Some observers believe that many such demands are merely political in nature, being made as part of populist politics rather than being genuinely popular demands. Before becoming a reality, such a demand should not only be rooted in a genuine popular desire, but also needs the backing and recommendation of the local state government. No such recommendation has so far been made by any of the concerned state government, without which they remain mere wishful thinking.

However, many argue that some of the Indian states are still very large and need to be broken up into manageable units without being swayed by any consideration of petty politics. They also argue that there is indeed a case for a second State Reorganisation Commission to consider all such demands dispassionately with a view to better governance and faster development of the country as a whole. Without being judgemental about the advisability of newer states, one does feel that any such move for creation of a new state should be predicated on the practical considerations of geographic, administrative and economic viability rather than being rooted only in populist politics.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Belling the Naxal Cat
*Saumitra Mohan

After making a tactical retreat from Lalgarh in West Bengal following the state offensive, the Maoists were waiting for an opportunity to strike back to make their sinister presence felt. The recent outrage resulting in the killing of 36 policemen including an SP in Chattisgarh was an example of what the Naxals are capable of. This takes the casualty toll to 148 this year in that hapless state falling in the so-called Red Corridor. Indeed, the three almost simultaneous attacks were the deadliest of the extremist violence Chattisgarh has seen in recent times.

The Maoists seem to have struck with lot of precision and planning. The modality and dynamics of the strike are said to be somewhat reminiscent of the early seventies in West Bengal. The worst strike took place in Rajnandgaon, barely 70 km from the state capital of Raipur. This points to the audacity which informs the functioning of the Maoists these days. They appear intent on moving closer to the seat of authority from the forests and tribal areas. If some of the intelligence reports are to be believed, the Naxals are working hard to make forays into towns and cities through recruitment of more and more volunteers.

The slain SP, who was on the Naxal hit-list for quite sometime, is said to have been targeted for his deemed success in breaking the extremists’ urban network in Bhilai city in Madhya Pradesh. The way Naxals could pull off this strike with deadly effect points to the need for further sprucing up our intelligence and internal security apparatus.

Rightly, the Naxalism has been termed as the biggest threat to the national security by none other than the Prime Minister himself. The Union Home Minister Mr. P. Chidambaram has also bracketed Maoists with terrorists for the threat they pose to the internal security. Be it noted that CPI (Maoists) has been declared as a banned Organization by the Centre barely a few weeks ago.

While there still seem to be no consensus on banning the Naxals, the time definitely has come to take the Naxal threat more seriously than has been felt so far. The Union Home Minster Mr. P. Chidambaram rightly believes that the Naxal menace had so far been underestimated which allowed the Left-wing extremists to consolidate and spread their wings. He has promised that the battle against Maoists ultras would be joined in full earnest through sustained efforts and drive.

The ban and the branding of Maoists as terrorists should further convince the skeptics about their insidious design on the Indian Nation. We need to find out better ways of dealing with this internal adversary masquerading as Left Radicals. There is not only need for infrastructural upgradation in terms of better logistics, equipment and arms, there is also need for better and more scientific ways of gathering intelligence. Our police force needs to be better trained and better motivated to face the Naxal challenge. The training needs to be customized to make the force understand the various nuances of anti-insurgency operations. Besides, there is undoubtedly a need for better execution and better targeting of developmental schemes in the Naxal-infested areas to extirpate the grounds of frustration and alienation there as per the recommendation of an expert panel recently.

Even though many of the politicos and observers believe that the so-called ‘liberated’ or ‘compact revolutionary’ zones are nothing but media hype, we need to take the Maoist challenge in its true perspective. This, inter alia, requires a massive overhaul of planning and coordination, along with arming and training of specialized forces. The Naxal threat appears in sharper relief once we look at the latest statistics for this year. The sundry violent incidents involving Naxals exceed those involving terrorist violence in Jammu and Kashmir and North-East put together. While Naxal-affected states reported 915 incidents, Jammu and Kashmir and North-East witnessed 810 incidents till May this year. Of these, 624 took place in the North-East and 186 in Jammu and Kashmir.

The Government is learnt to have appointed Brigadier D S Dadwal as its military advisor to help out in operational matters. Plans are also being drawn up in close consultation with different state governments. Proper coordination among the affected state governments along with a unified command structure seems to be need of the hour. The Naxal expertise in executing ambushes and mine blasts point to the extent and amount of challenge Naxalism poses to our country.

Brigadier Dadwal, who was so far serving as Deputy GOC with the 11 Infantry Division, is supposed to coordinate among disparate police forces of different states. This is likely to help in tackling the Naxal threat better. He is expected to not only advise the security agencies on specialized training, but is also supposed to help out in operational and logistical coordination. The manner in which our policemen are being repeatedly targeted in ambushes makes it necessary to constantly assess and improve tactics and strategy. The counterforce to Naxals has to be speedier and unorthodox beyond the mundane operating systems.

The truth is that the Naxals are a confused lot, not knowing what they wish to do. They actually do not seem to have any ideological mooring or any vision for the alternative they proffer vis-à-vis the system they seem to be fighting. The Indian democracy gives every ideology ample opportunity to seek popular consent through the first-past-the-post system. But till the time the Naxals do not see reason, an efficient and effective counterforce seems to be the only alternative.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Protecting the Steel Frame
*Saumitra Mohan

In a recent survey by 1274 experts working across 12 North and South Asian nations, the Indian bureaucracy has been dubbed as the worst and the least efficient in the whole continent, behind Vietnam, China and Indonesia. While the findings are not very shocking and surprising, one has every reason to worry about. After all, the future development does depend on the strength and efficiency of this institution. There is, therefore, an urgent need to grope deeper into the reasons to fix the problem rather than just keep cursing the once famed Steel Frame of India.

Among the various reasons responsible for the present sorry state of affairs of Indian bureaucracy, one principal reason relates to the constant interference with its functioning as well as the power of the political class to transfer or shunt the civil servants to inconvenient or insignificant posts. The transfers are often made for the most absurd of the reasons or sometimes for the alleged or suspected proximity to the opposing political party or faction. More often than not, if a bureaucrat decides to put his/her foot down against illegal orders or just decides to go by the rulebook, he or she often gets the boot. It is against this background that the proposed Central legislation to tackle such irregularities becomes significant.

The Centre is believed to be busy preparing a legislation which shall not only assure the civil servants of a fixed-tenure posting, but is also likely to protect them from mundane political interference in their day-to-day functioning. Not only this, all such appointments, transfers and postings of top civil servants are likely to be subject to parliamentary scrutiny to remove the element of discretion in such orders. If the proposed Bill becomes a reality, the IAS and IPS officers in the country will no longer be at the mercy of the whimsical transfers and postings which seem to be order of the day in many parts of the country.

However, there is a rider to the proposed legal protection against irregular transfers and postings. The government is also learnt to be planning to bring in a new Public Service Code which would lay down a strict performance evaluation regime for promotions and postings of India’s ‘Babus’ (read bureaucrats).

All these provisions along with many other proposals are already on the anvil as part of the proposed Civil Services Bill, 2009 to reinvigorate India’s famed steel frame to prepare it better to deal with the newer challenges of development administration and governance. The Bill is being further fine-tuned and is supposed to be a spruced-up version of the Public Service Bill, 2007, which could not see the light of the day during the previous regime. The various provisions of the Bill are likely to be applicable, first to the IAS and IPS officers and may later be extended to all the other All India Services including the Indian Forest Service.

The Bill, having incorporated sundry suggestions of the Second Administrative Reforms Commission, has also envisaged setting up a new Central Public Service Authority (CPSA) at the national level. This Authority will not only supervise the professional management of the premier civil services, but is also expected to be a watchdog to secure the interests of the civil servants and citizens through a system of checks and balances.

If the Civil Service Bill does become an Act, all the civil servants are supposed to get a minimum fixed tenure of three years. And if one is to go by the provisions enshrined in the Bill, a civil servant, being transferred prematurely, shall have to be suitably compensated for the inconvenience and harassment caused due to the same. The top-level appointments including that of the Chief Secretary and the Director General of Police in the states are to be made out of a panel of candidates to be screened and drawn up by a State-level Committee comprising the Chief Minister, Leader of the Opposition as well as the Home Minister. As of now, the Chief Minister is the sole authority taking a decision on such appointments.

Usually, such transfers and postings have been the prerogatives of the government in power, with no reference to the Opposition. The proposed Bill fixes this anomaly with due recognition being given to the Leader of the Opposition as well in making a decision regarding such top appointments in the states and at the Centre. So, the Leader of the Opposition is likely to play a crucial role at both the levels. Like the state-level top appointments, the Leader of the Opposition is also to have a say in the appointment of the Cabinet Secretary and other top posts. Like the state level postings, the Cabinet Secretary, too, is likely to be selected from a panel to be drawn by the Central-level Committee comprising the Prime Minister, the Leader of the Opposition and the Home Minister. If the government decides to deviate from the norms laid out in the Act, it shall have to inform and explain the reasons for the same to the Parliament for doing so.

The performance evaluation of the bureaucrats has also been given adequate attention in the said Bill. The performance parameters of the officers are to be given due importance before being considered for the top jobs. A more scientifically-designed objective system of performance evaluation is proposed in place of the extant practice of Annual Confidential Reports (ACR) which merely takes a panoramic view of a civil servant’s work through the year. The new Performance Management System shall evaluate the bureaucrats on their job-specific achievements and the number of tasks that they perform as a Team Leader in a particular department.

The proposed system is likely to be managed by the CPSA which will supposedly be supervised by a Chairman of the rank equivalent to that of the Chief Election Commissioner. The Chairman, CPSA is to be appointed for five years by a Committee comprising the Prime Minister, a Supreme Court Judge, the Union Home Minister and the Leader of the Opposition in the Lower House of the Parliament. With the Cabinet Secretary acting as its Convener, the CPSA will aid and advise the Central Government in all matters concerning the organization, control, operation, regulation and management of public services and public servants.

CPSA is also to be the custodian of the Public Service Code for the civil servants. This Code, supposed to replace the current All India Services Conduct Rules, is to be framed with a view to enable the civil servants towards proper discharge of their official duties with competence, accountability, care, diligence, responsibility, honesty, objectivity, impartiality, without discrimination and in accordance with the law of the land. The CPSA, comprising three to five members, will also have the power to recommend action against the public servants who do not adhere to the Public Service Code and public service values. After the Bill becomes an Act, the CPSA will also compile and submit a report to the Central Government detailing the compliance with the various provisions of the new legislation by every Ministry and Department of the Government every year.

One hopes that the necessary spade-work for making this Bill into an Act shall soon be completed to make it a reality sooner than later. However, one does feel the need to hammer out the various implications such a Bill is likely to have for the Centre-State relations in our federal polity.
Employment Guarantee, Not Employment Subsidy Approach Suits Indian Conditions
*Saumitra Mohan


A liberal welfare state tries to ensure equitable distribution of the development pie by resorting to myriad ways of redistributive allocation of values among its citizens. One of such measures include employment guarantee schemes for the toiling masses to ensure them work for minimum number of days on pre-decided subsistence wages. It is with this objective that the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) was launched in all the districts of this country. This follows on the back of various employment generation and food for work programmes including Integrated Rural Development Programme (IRDP), Community Development Programme (CDP) and Swarnajayanti Jawahar Rojgar Yozna (SJRY). NREGS is actually predicated on the experiences and knowledge gained during implementation of all these previous schemes.

Since then, many observers have come up with suggestions and proposals for further fine-tuning of this flagship employment guarantee programme. This author read with interest an article recently which espoused the idea to provide employment subsidies to employers instead of providing guaranteed jobs through state-run employment generation programmes like the NREGS. The underlying assumption of the said proposition was the belief that such an approach would create jobs more efficiently and effectively than done by the present employment guarantee scheme.

Nobel Laureate Prof Edmund Phelps was quoted in the said write-up as saying, “Although such programmes have been substantial in Europe and the US, the working poor remain as marginalized as ever. Indeed, social spending has worsened the problem because it reduces work incentives and, thus, creates a culture of dependency and alienation from the commercial economy, undermining labour force participation, employability and employee loyalty.”

Proposing an alternative, Prof Phelps says, “The best remedy is a subsidy for low-wage employment, paid to employers for every full-time low wage worker they hire and calibrated to the employee’s wage cost to the firm. The higher the wage cost, the lower the subsidy, until it has tapered off to zero. With such wage subsidies, competitive forces would cause employers to hire more workers, and the resulting fall in unemployment would cause most of the subsidy to be paid out as direct or indirect labour compensation. People could benefit from the subsidy only by engaging in productive work.”

It is believed that the employment generated through this alternative scheme that Prof Phelps proposes, shall be an asset for the economy instead of a burden. Prof Bharat Jhunjhunwala of IIM, Bangalore believes that the present approach provides for taxes to be imposed mainly on urban business enterprises while money is spent in rural areas. The urban businesses have to bear the tax burden while the benefits are reaped by faraway villages. The business sector suffers on account of higher wage rates. The availability of some employment in the villages acts as a disincentive for workers to move from labour-surplus to labour-scarce areas because some employment is available locally under the Rojgar Guarantee Scheme. The author bemoans the fact that the business enterprises do not only have to pay higher taxes, but also have to pay higher wages. The author believes that if Prof Phelps’ suggestion is accepted then the taxes paid by businesses are recouped by receiving employment subsidies. The net outgo on wages shall be reduced due to subsidies thus received.

While the author’s suggestion for subsidy to labour-intensive industries does make some sense, but going whole hog for Prof Phelps’ proposed alternative definitely does not, more so in the Indian context. To begin with the beginning, notwithstanding the supposed failure of the employment guarantee scheme in the developed countries, they still have not been able to replace the same with the ‘employment subsidy’ approach as advocated by many including Prof Phelps.

This is notwithstanding the fact that such employment guarantee schemes have been in force for over 50 years in most of these developed countries. Prof Phelps’ proposal is fraught with loopholes and complexities and prone to more corruption than one thinks. Moreover, it also does not promise to increase the job opportunities for the jobless as has been proved to be practicably possible by the present employment guarantee scheme, the many implementational hitches and glitches notwithstanding.

First and foremost problem with this approach is the moral hazard of passing off the extant employment in a firm to claim wage subsidies falsely and dishonestly. The employers led by petty and comprador bourgeoisie, in stead of creating new employment, would try to ingenuously cheat the system for claiming the subsidies. After all, we don’t necessarily have a data-base of employed manpower of all such firms and industries. And such a data-base, even if created and maintained, may not be completely sacrosanct. Our experience tells us as to how such data-base is often tinkered and tampered with, often to the advantage of the high and mighty.

So, any system of working out compensatory subsidies for employers by establishing contrived linkages to employment generation is going to be very complex and is also likely to involve a lot of scope for discretion and subjectivity for the bureaucracy than the extant system. There is definitely no need to compensate big businesses for higher taxes levied on them as there are already multiple government schemes and incentives for performing enterprises and businesses. Moreover, even after paying those taxes, they are still left with decent profit margins to go shopping the world over for acquiring many of the renowned companies even in times of recession. Over the years, our tax and incentives structure have come to be comparable with the best in the world.

The assumed fear that such employment guarantee scheme actually encourages mediocrity and dependence on government is far from the truth. The present system is an incentive-based transparent system where a more productive worker can earn more if she/he gives more output and her/his wages shall correspondingly be higher compared to others whose output is less. The fear that villages unduly gain at the expense of towns is unwarranted, to say the least. The fact remains that towns are always better endowed in terms of basic services and facilities than those found in the villages. The employment guarantee scheme not only ensures assured employment for a household throughout the year (considering 100 days for each adult member of a family including the handicapped), it also envisages creation of basic infrastructures in the countryside.

It is believed that the progressive creation and availability of such infrastructures and employment opportunities in the countryside shall discourage people from migrating to the urban areas where basic infrastructures and services are already feeling pressure of increasing population. It shall also bridge the gap between rural and urban areas in terms of socio-economic indicators which are quite uneven at the moment. It is believed that wages in the urban areas shall go up consequent to reduced emigration and reduced availability of workers from the rural area. With less workers competing for more works, the real wages in urban areas shall go up which would continue to attract a minimal number of workers from the countryside as per changing demand and supply curve. The increased wages for urban workers shall be in keeping with the increased expenses required for urban living eventually enabling them to lead a better life than has been possible otherwise.

The apprehension that reduced availability of low wage workers shall either lead to shut-down of enterprises in the urban areas or relocation of many of them to the rural areas is also unfounded. At a time when we are talking of liberalization and globalization, we definitely should have no reason to think of the industries who shut down as a result of having to pay higher wages to the workers, more so when multiple government incentives are available. The enterprises need to learn to survive the cut-throat competition in the market. They always have the option of shaping up or shipping out. Moreover, such an apprehension remains far fetched as the pool of low wage workers shall still be larger in this unreasonably populous country despite local availability of guaranteed employment in the villages as there still are many push and pull factors which drive people to the urban areas. As such, there is no reason to panic.

Still, if some of them decide to move to low-wage areas which are likely to be under-developed, it is all the better as that would lead to infrastructural and capacity development of such areas and further improvement of quality of life there which eventually may see rise in labour costs in those areas as well. The cycle may go on till all parts of the country are more or less equitably developed. The government can actually think of giving incentives for relocation or establishment of new industries including labour-intensive ones in the backward and underdeveloped areas.

The belief that the current employment guarantee approach reduces labour force participation and employability of a worker is also not true. The experience from all over the country tells us that labour force participation in the economy has only increased as a result of operation of such a scheme and as a result, per capita income has also gone up. The multiplier effect of such a rise has been perceptible in the relatively high economic growth rates and other development indicators of our economy, recession notwithstanding. Besides, an employment guarantee scheme is also immune to the negative impacts of a recession. While the government shall have more reason to persist with such employment guarantee schemes in difficult times like recession, the employers, finding reduced demand and market for their products, would shut down overnight rendering all the workers under their dispensation jobless.

Again, contrary to the belief, the employability of a worker is also not compromised because of in-built incentive structure in such employment guarantee schemes as the worker learns to be more hard working to earn higher wages by giving better output and by being more productive. The various training programmes given to people under the said scheme and under many other schemes do give the workers a choice to decide for themselves as to what do they intend to do. The dovetailing and convergence of many such cognate schemes and programmes further could yield better results with better value allocations among the hoi polloi. The cascading multiplier effects and resultant pay offs for the country as a whole is bound to be better and greater than commonly understood.

The supposed acquisition of newer skills under the employment subsidy approach is quite problematic and is more at the level of assumption than a reality. The belief that the innocent, ignorant and gullible workers would get better jobs and acquire better skills as per their choice and aptitude moving from one industry to another for job-shopping is misplaced and fraught with danger. The danger emanates from the feared exploitation of workers by these enterprises who are likely to take advantage of their helplessness and non-possession of requisite skills by paying low wages and forcing them to work in unhygienic and undignified working conditions.

Most of these enterprises are not likely to be enlightened enough to do a charity by employing an ignoramus and inexperienced worker to teach him/her newer skills to employ him/her later. However, the spirit of the proposal here is well taken and one does feel that the scope and ambit of such employment guarantee scheme needs to be further broadened and diversified. It could also be creatively fine-tuned to offer better wages and better opportunities to the people. But one has to give the scheme some time to evolve naturally and be more promising and better suited to the requirements of the employment-seeking workers.

After all, the Constitutional Right to Work, as envisaged in the fourth chapter of the Indian Constitution detailing directive principles of state policy, which took five decades to be translated into a reality, is likely to be some more time to be better customized to the requirements and needs of the target people. The very fact that NREGS, after being launched selectively in some districts of the country for guaranteed employment in the rural areas throughout the year, has now been extended to the entire country, is itself a big achievement of sorts.

The belief that the alternative proposal is corruption proof compared to the present one is also not true as already pointed out above because of the element of discretion and subjectivity inherent therein. The extant scheme because of the transparent system of job-card, fixed responsibility to provide jobs within fifteen days of receipt of an application demanding work or to pay unemployment allowance in case of failure of the same and the provision of social audit is much better placed to do the needful. The provision of job cards, public hanging of Muster Roll, public notice of details of an on-going works and Muster Rolls and a participatory social and financial audit of all the aspects of the schemes ensure better transparency and accountability than any other scheme. The Right to Information plugs the loopholes and fills the gaps, if any left anywhere.

Yes, one does feel that there is lot of scope for further improvement of the scheme. One is sure that as more feedback from the field is received and fed into the system to further fine-tune it, the extant scheme shall respond better to the tasks and objectives it is supposed to realize. To give some credit to Prof Phelps, his proposal can be tried on an experimental basis in selected areas as a pilot project rather than completely replacing the extant scheme. After all, it is too early to pronounce a judgement on the success and failure of the same. And in any case, an ingenuous and creative mix of the two conceptions rather than an exclusive reliance on any of the one can always be a better idea. One hopes that NREGS would evolve with time in keeping with the objective of realizing and ensuring growth with equity and justice.

Also, with the failure of the invincible capitalist system of economic development as represented by the Washington Consensus, it is all the more accepted and acknowledged that we can no longer depend on market forces for taking up social responsibilities. Rolling back the state completely is no longer an option. The state has to be there as a regulator and disciplining force with minimal responsibilities of maintaining law and order, dispensing justice and building an equitable society. So, the ‘employment subsidy’ approach, as dependent on private enterprises, is just not acceptable in preference to the employment guarantee approach.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Indo-Bangladesh Relations: Moving Forward
*Saumitra Mohan

Indo-Bangladesh bilateral relations have been through many ups and downs in recent times even though one expected the same to be ensconced in better understanding and appreciation of each other’s problems and expectation. The expectations were predicated on the positive and proactive role played by India in Bangladesh’s liberation. Though, it also helped India by reducing the need to fight Pakistan on two fronts because of the latter’s ability to mount a pincer attack on India from two sides.

This, however, turned out to be pious wishes merely because of the ensuing political games in Bangladesh. Whatever may be the reason, the fact remains that the present state of Indo-Bangladesh relations actually belies the expectations of the initial euphoria immediately in the aftermath of Bangladesh’s liberation.

Now, with a supposedly pro-India liberal government in the saddle, expectations of an improvement in the bilateral ties have naturally soared again. The visit of the Bangladeshi brass to thank India for its neutrality during the recent revolt is another example of a simulated bonhomie. Different issues including bilateral economic ties, illegal infiltration from Bangladesh, sheltering anti-India forces in its territories and disputes relating to border demarcation are among the contentious issues still dogging the bilateral ties.

However, a development, noticed recently as worth recalling and deserving some close attention for the very implications and ramifications the same entail for the Indo-Bangladesh relations. An Islamist Arsenal-cum-Madarsa, masquerading as a British charity organization, has been unearthed in Bangladesh’s Bhola town. It only confirms the level of fundamentalist penetration in that country, more so when we have a supposedly tolerant, liberal and pro-India dispensation. Such a discovery contains very ominous portents for India’s internal security management as this may only be a tip of the proverbial ice-berg.

The very fact that the constituent articles seized from the said religious Seminary included a speedboat gives tell-tale indications of ominous intentions of the operatives there. Had the same not been discovered, many more destructive and disruptive activities must have been in store for India. It also reminds us of the Karachi to Mumbai voyage of another group of militants finally eventuating in the terrorist incursions of Mumbai on 26th November last year. It is quite obvious that the said Seminary as much as the arsenal, arguably covering the dispensation of the military-backed interim administration, were built over time, with clandestine support from the anti-India forces in that country.

Such a development also raises important questions about the role of the UK-based charity organization in this bizarre and senseless export of terror. The involvement becomes still more suspect as the arrested financier of what has functioned under the label of a Madarsa-cum-Orphanage is based in London. What is surprising is the fact that notwithstanding all the hot air regarding curbing terrorist and cognate incendiary activities and infrastructures in the West, one could still find such agencies operating with impunity right under the nose of the British government.

One can very well argue that Faisal, the said Bangladeshi tycoon, fits into Britain’s ethnic profiling of terror, a perception formulated after London’s 7/7 (2006), something which has been rightly resented in the sub-continent for the racist overtones of the same. Still, the unearthing of such activities by the people from the sub-continent, particularly from Pakistan and Bangladesh, does compel one to do a rethink over this ethicizing of terror. The Seminary, with its lucrative offshore connections along with incoming resources and expertise, used the same to run a training centre for the terrorists with evil designs against this country.

It is really quite tragic that even after 38 years of its independence, Bangladesh still stands in unsplendid isolation in terms of geography. Myanmar, the only other country aside from India with whom it shares a land border, has lately reinforced its troops to fence a portion of 270-km border which is just a fraction of India’s over 4000 kilemetre-long frontier with Bangladesh. But given the recent noises emanating from Bangladesh soil, it is increasingly being favoured as a strong-hold for different militant organizations including as a proxy for Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) to carry out disruptive activities against neighbouring countries. It is in view of this development that the Mynmarese authorities have pulled out all stops to complete the task of border fencing.

This is in sharp contrast to the Border Security Force’s (BSF) partial border fencing because of strong reservations and protestations from across the border. Unlike the Western flank, India is yet to install the state-of-the-art anti-infiltration obstacle system, fitted with sophisticated alarm gadgets to check illegal infiltration by militants and economic migrants into this country. In absence of the same, guarding and securing our borders would remain quite a tall order as it is just not possible for our security men to guard every point of the difficult terrain along the 4000-kilemetre long Indo-Bangla borders.

We not only need to complete the border fencing immediately notwithstanding objections from our eastern neighbour, we also need to resolve the long-festering problem of the 225 enclaves, in each-others’ adverse possession, still subsisting within the borders of both the countries. The latter would make our borders more manageable and secure. It would significantly reduce, if not totally eliminate the infiltration from across the borders into this country.

It is believed that more than one crore Bangladeshis have entered this country illegally over the years, something which Bangladesh Government stoutly refuses to accept. The Hasina administration, if earnestly committed to its agenda, should not only open multi-level dialogue with India to resolve all the outstanding issues with this country, but ought to make honest effort to discourage illegal emigration into this country. It should also take the British government into confidence to get to the bottom of the sinister operations behind the façade of religious instructions as unearthed recently. The same should be done in right earnest with all seriousness it deserves if Bangladesh really wishes to come out of the trap-door of under-development to promise a better future to its populace. A happy and prosperous neighbour is always a better bet for India’s security.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Working Out Rehabilitation Package for Land-Losers
*Saumitra Mohan

While the negativism surrounding the land acquisitions for developmental purposes around the country may have hogged newspaper headlines in recent times, a huge land acquisition success story in Darjeeling-Jalpaiguri region for a new township has escaped deserved media attention. The reason for the same seems to be the fact that the entire range of issues relating to land acquisition and rehabilitation of the land losers has been executed and handled too well to warrant salacious banner headlines. Even though the entire land acquisition process here actually started much earlier than the ones at Singur and Nandigram, still the land acquisition process at Kawakhali, Porajhar, Tiknikatha, Boro Potturam, Chhotto Potturam and other adjoining areas at the intersection of these two districts of Darjeeling and Jalpaiguri for the proposed new township by Bengal Unitech Universal Group (BUUG) has been a success story.
Notwithstanding Singur, Nandigram and numerous other hitches and glitches galore on way to final land acquisition, Siliguri Jalpaiguri Development Authority (SJDA) could actually work out an acceptable rehabilitation package through persistent consultations with all the interested stake-holders including land losers and political parties. It was SJDA which entered into a public private partnership (PPP) with BUUG after the latter succeeded in bagging the project through a competitive bidding process by way of Expression of Interest (EOI) for development of a new township at the proposed site. The sundry details of the rehabilitation process have been very painstakingly worked out through regular negotiations and consultations with all the stake-holders. While SJDA had to agree to whittle down its profits from the project by making the rehabilitation package much more liberal than the one warranted under the hoary but draconian Land Acquisition Act, 1894, it still made social gains in terms of roping in a good financial investment with huge employment potential. To make the rehabilitation package more broad-based and acceptable, BUUG has also agreed to shoulder a portion of the rehabilitation package, which was actually not part of the original Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) entered into between SJDA and BUUG.

It was because of the very fact that SJDA took care and pain to rope in and take on board each and every interested group or faction, almost on their terms, that the entire land acquisition process has gone on for a wee bit longer time than was warranted, but with the hindsight one can say with confidence and satisfaction that given the prevailing mood and circumstances, all this delay or procrastination has been worth its while. The entire long-drawn and complex land acquisition process at the proposed new township site has been completed without much of a problem though minor hiccups and roadblocks have definitely been experienced.

And substantive amount of the credit for this near miraculous feat goes to the local political leadership, though SJDA also took a lot of pain and initiative to work out such an ingenuous package to the satisfaction of all. SJDA constituted a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) in the form of a Rehabilitation Advisory Committee with representation from all concerned including land losers and other stake-holders to discuss and work out a detailed rehabilitation package for the land-losers of the proposed new township project. The Committee is supposed to oversee and supervise the various activities relating to rehabilitation.

The selection of land for the proposed township itself was done very carefully. The land selected is the one which has largely been non-agricultural, abandoned and wasteland where no economic activity was noticed for the past several years. A total of 302 acres of land has been acquired for the purpose. Of this 302 acres, 232 acres have been identified for the proposed new township, while about 70 acre land has been earmarked for different socially-productive schemes including rehabilitation of the land losers. These 70 acres include 36 acre land for rehabilitation of the land losers and the rest for construction of educational, health, sports and other socio-cultural-economic infrastructures for the rehabilitated people and also for other local people.

SJDA has agreed to give not only the legal dues as mentioned under the LA Act, 1894, but has also agreed to provide other benefits and compensation as have been mutually agreed among all stake-holders. Not only this, apart from promising a liberal rehabilitation package for the land losers, SJDA has also agreed to undertake the development and upgradation of the necessary physical and social infrastructures of the surrounding hinterland including rural and suburban areas by way of electrification, construction of roads, drainage systems, water supply and school buildings. Much of the promised works has already been undertaken and completed.

SJDA has taken special care to secure the benefits and interests of small and marginal land-holders who had to lose lands for the proposed township project. Many effective, but assured positive benefits have been worked out for the small land-holders. For the people having built houses at more than 10 cottah (one cottah amounts to 720 sq ft in West Bengal) of land, two cottah of developed land with attendant infrastructures are being given without any charges while another three cottah of the same land are to provided at the acquisition price or alternatively, ready flat at subsidized price has been promised apart from compensating for the full cost of the land price as assessed by LA Department.

Those in possession of less than a decimal (435 sq ft) of land are being provided similarly developed land of the same amount without any charges. The families, who have been living on encroached government land for a long time and who supposedly have no legal claims to the lands in possession or to the compensation being offered, are also being provided with two cottah of alternative land or a flat (380 sq ft) without any charges.

Those in legal possession of one to three decimal (less than two cottah) of land are being given one and a half cottah of land free. Those in legal possession of up to five to ten cottah of the acquired land are being given two cottah free land and a cottah at the acquisition price or alternatively a flat (750 sq ft) at a subsidized price. The families being given rehabilitation plots of a size bigger than two cottah would not be charged anything for the first two cottah, but the rest shall be charged at the acquisition price.

All these rehabilitation plots being offered are developed plots and have become prime lands because of the proposed township in the vicinity and also because of the infrastructural works undertaken or proposed to be undertaken by SJDA. The real market value of the offered plots exceeds the original land value of the lost plots by many times over. SJDA has also promised to take necessary initiative for exemption of the land registration charges, if possible or to shoulder the entire financial burden for the same.

Some of the land losers who do not otherwise qualify for allotment of any plot or those willing to take a flat in exchange of a plot shall be given the same at a markedly subsidized rates including 75,000 rupees for a flat of 380 sq ft size, two lakh rupees for a flat of 500 sq ft size and three lakh rupees for a flat of 750 sq ft size. 80,000 rupees as a grant shall be given to those destitute and BPL land losers who have been living on the acquired lands legally or illegally for construction of the house on the rehabilitation plots given.

If the acquired plot is held jointly in two names, then both could be granted a separate plot as per the package prepared for the purpose subject to final approval and satisfaction of the Rehabilitation Committee created for the purpose. Again, all those people who have been holding or possessing government lands illegally shall be compensated with 60 per cent of the land cost as assessed by the LA Department notwithstanding the ‘moral hazard’ problem implied in such a policy initiative.

Again, the acquisition land value is to be distributed in the ratio of 80:20 between those people who have been in illegal possession of such lands as are legally registered in someone else’s land and those who are the legal owners after the two submit an agreement specially entered into between them for the purpose. The compensation for the structures built on the land, being possessed legally, have been compensated as per the LA Act which itself has been interpreted very liberally and to the maximum benefit of the land losers. Those who had built makeshift structures on illegally possessed government land are also being compensated liberally in the range of 5000 to 20,000 rupees apart from the alternative piece of land. The land losers are also being provided with Rs. 4000/- for shifting the household effects to the new site.

Large tracts of lands have already been identified and earmarked at the rehabilitation site for the development and promotion of economic activities including small industries, trades and businesses. Two children from all land losing families shall be given an educational scholarship of Rs. 1500 per annum up to graduation. Scholarships are also being given at the post-graduate level for undertaking any specialized or vocational training including engineering, medicine or MBA. The shops or houses identified till 2007 on the project site have been compensated with provisioning of a built shop at a subsidized rate.

All land losers are also entitled to health benefits including reimbursement for the cost of treatment or medical care. All these social benefits are, however, limited only up to first generation and shall be given only after the same is claimed in writing from SJDA. The land losers’ cooperatives are also major stake-holders in the proposed construction works in the way as they shall be the only authorised agencies who shall be given priority in supplying the required sand, earth and stone chips for the purposes of all the construction works at the proposed new township site or the rehabilitation site.

All the rehabilitation plots are to be registered either in the name of husband or the wife. The plots, given free, shall not be eligible for transfer before ten years. All these plots or flats are being distributed through an open and transparent lottery. Scholarships are also to be provided for any vocational training to the BPL families. Self help groups are also to be provided with training and equipment. The land losers are also to be given priority in any employment opportunities created at the project site. The land losers, over 65 years of age, are being given old age pension.

The land losers are to be issued special identity cards for availing all these benefits. Any special demand or needs of the destitute land losers shall be sympathetically considered by the Rehabilitation Committee. The land losers shall be entitled to an extra 10 per cent of the land value assessed if they willingly consent to the same by way of a Consent Award. An unemployed widow is to be given a two cottah of plot without any charges. Besides, socially marginalised including physically or mentally handicapped, unemployed, unmarried women of over 35 years of age, widow or abandoned women are also to be provided with a shop.

What is significant in all this is the fact that in spite of working out a liberal rehabilitation package for the land losers, SJDA shall still be left with enough surplus funds. All this surplus money is already being ploughed back to beef up the physical infrastructures and public amenities in the Siliguri Jalpaiguri Planning Area (SJPA) which shall further result in positive multiplier effects for the local economy in particular and for the economy of the state in general. Arguably, one should go ahead with such projects even if there are no savings out of such projects because of working out a liberal rehabilitation package. After all, the project itself is a great social pay-off as they not only provide strength to the local economy by way of investment, but by further generation of employment opportunities and the resultant spiral of demand and supply chain. In fine, the successful pulling of any such project is always a win-win situation provided the benefits outweigh or equal the costs involved.
Tackling Naxalism in West Bengal
*Saumitra Mohan

Amidst so many of our internal security problems, the home-grown naxalism, prodded and abetted by external forces, keeps rearing its head from time to time in the most uglier ways than we can imagine. And all these expressions of their nefarious intent to tear down our painstakingly-built liberal democratic edifice have made it imperative for us to fix this problem right away without wasting anytime. One such expression of Naxal’s evil design on Indian state was the recent attack on the convoy including the Chief Minister and the Union Steel Minister at Salboni in West Medinipur in West Bengal in November last year.

The blowing up of a railway station by the Maoist Communist Centre on the Orissa-Jharkhand border and the relatively less damaging attack on another may are other significant expressions of Naxal fury. Outrage on obscure wayside stations, whether in Bengal’s Purulia or Orissa’s Bhalulata and Chandiposh recently by the naxals point to the audacity of the anti-national elements in carrying out such vandalism with clinical dexeterity. Such manifestations of extremist activity need to be examined in the larger context.

The Chief Minister Mr Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and Union Steel Minister Mr Ram Vilas Paswan had a narrow escape when a landmine exploded within minutes of their convoy passing through on NH-60 near Salboni in West Medinipur on November last year. A spare pilot car of the convoy was, however, caught in the explosion, resulting in injuries to six police personnel, including two policewomen. The incident took place at Baroa, 17 km from Salboni, from where the Chief Minister, Mr Paswan, State Industry Minister Mr Nirupam Sen and industrialist Mr Sajjan Jindal were returning after laying the foundation stone for the proposed Jindal Steel Works plant.

The injured including Kartik Maity, Ranjit Mondal, Rabindra Nath Mahato, Yudhisthir Mahato, Fulmoni Mandi and Alaka Chakraborty were rushed to Medinipur Medical College and Hospital with splinter injuries. It is believed that Maoists planted the mine a few days back. The incident was supposedly quite daring in the sense that the same took place notwithstanding the deployment of over 1,200 security force personnel, including, CRPF, BSF and the state armed police to secure the area. It were the Naxals, active in the area, who were behind the attack. They had also blown up a state health department vehicle on 22 October in Belpahari resulting in the death of a doctor and had killed a CPI-M leader the previous day in West Medinipur.
Maoists who were hiding on either side of the highway near the blast site are also said to have fired several rounds towards the convoy. A probe has already been ordered to find out whether there was any intelligence failure. The enquiry team is also supposed to look into whether there was any neglect on the part of the policemen who had conducted anti-sabotage and anti-landmine checking in the area ahead of the CM’s trip.

In another incident on December 23 last year, the Naxals indiscriminately fired upon the policemen to reinforce their presence in the area while the policemen could not retaliate to avoid killing villagers in a busy weekly bazaar. “The perpetrators had merged with the market crowd. Had they been fired at, the bullets would have also hit many innocent villagers,” said Kuldip Singh, Inspector-General of Police (Western Range). Dressed in ordinary clothes in the crowded haat (bazaar), over 30 Maoists had fired at four policemen when they arrived at the construction site of a community hall to relieve their colleagues on the previous shift. Two constables were killed and a third was seriously injured. Their rifles were taken away. There were at least three women among the attackers, who were selling vegetables at the haat before the strike. Within minutes, some men and women got on motorcycles and sped away through the market towards the Jharkhand border. The police had been posted at the construction site after Maoists threatened to blow up the community hall being built by the panchayat six km from the Jharkhand border.

The Naxals are increasingly getting bolder in their acts, thinking ahead and acting smarter than us. This is definitely a time for some soul-searching for us. The incident points to the imperatives of further beefing up our intelligence gathering and processing by the state and the central intelligence machineries. The Naxals have this uncanny knack of picking holes through our security arrangements and make us look vulnerable to their radical motivations.

While the Prime Minister has already termed Naxalism as the greatest internal security threat, we need better counter strategies and mechanism including better coordination and intelligence sharing among the states falling in the so-called Red Corridor where Naxals are said to be active. Along with Purulia and Bankura, West Medinipur is part of the Red Corridor. It is a Maoist bastion contiguous to Jharkhand, the hotbed of Left radicalism. The inter-state border serves as an exit point after every act of dare-devilry by the Maoists.

It is long acknowledged that these districts need more attention in terms of more developmental initiatives. However, what is surprising is the failure on the part of the Maoists to see reason. While the government has been making every effort to ratchet up the developmental process in these under-developed regions, the Maoists are just not allowing the administration to do the needful in the area. With no positive plan of their own, the Naxals are forcing the administration to waste its energy and time by such meaningless act of theirs.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Understanding Popular Angst Against Politics
*Saumitra Mohan

The attack on Mumbai and its aftermath had resulted in a lot of drama and symbolisms with popular shock and disgust being experienced against politics and politicians. But, it needs no reiteration to say that no country can be run without a leader or many leaders at different levels howsoever they may be. Whatever political system we may have, the leaders shall always be required and so they shall continue to exist. This is more truthful for a democratic country like ours.

While much of this antipathy and revulsion may be seemingly justified, the same is definitely not wholesome for the health of our polity. After all, it is the political class or leadership from which are elected the peoples’ representatives who finally go on to form our government. A country without acceptable and responsible political leadership is actually an invitation to anarchy and chaos of the worst kind. While this revulsion seemed to be against all kinds of political leaders, this was actually targeted against a particular set of leaders who could practically be changed and replaced by the same people who have taken cudgels against them.

Have not the same people chosen and elected the leaders they are protesting against? The politics of a country is actually the reflection of the character of the larger society as our political class is actually a sub-set of the same. We get what we deserve. So, if we are not pleased with a particular set of leaders, it is well nigh in our hands to change and replace the same. The issue at hand is not of finding fault and pointing fingers, but that of finding and ferreting out problems and fixing the same.

This outrage against politicians is also an outrage against politics, but here again, the common man is on the wrong foot because we also cannot do without politics. Someone has rightly said, ‘whatever we may do or say, we may not be interested in politics, but politics is interested in us’. And politics is not only about all the wrong things that we have come to identify it with, but it is actually about all the positive things we do not associate it with. Etymologically speaking, politics originated from the Greek word ‘polis’, referring to the ‘city-state’ of Greece. Hence, politics means activities or affairs relating to the welfare of the ‘city-state’. Now the same has come to be identified with the acts and activities pertaining to the welfare of the modern sovereign state. Ergo, politics is the very basis of our lives and we just cannot do without it. It is just so essential to our living.

Politics operates at every level, starting from an inter-personal relationship in a family to a business organisation to the political system as we have come to know it. We just cannot do without it. After all, it provides us the basic life-blood for organizing our community living by instilling a sense of order and regulation throughout our corporate and communal living. In fact, the people busy protesting against politicians, perhaps don’t realise that they themselves are indulging in politics by such acts of theirs. By leading hundreds of thousands of people across Indian cities and towns, they had quietly taken over the role of a political leader. And whether they accept it or not, their act was very much political.

In all this, the ‘Homo Politicus’ or the members of our political class also have to understand the sentiment lying behind these protests and hate campaigns against them. They too have a duty to take their cue and set their house in order. After all, modern liberal democracy is increasingly getting more complex and difficult to handle. Now the means of information and communication have penetrated the civil society so deeply that a citizen even in the remotest village is reasonably informed about the happenings in different corners of the country. Now, s/he is also more capable of culling and processing information and analysing the same to find out the truth in his/her own way. As Abraham Lincoln had said, ‘you could fool some people most of the time or most people some of the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time’.

So, the time has actually come for our political class to come together to not only change the way things happen but to also change the way they have been doing their politics. The time has come to change the way they have been recruiting members for their organisations. Our politics and political culture still do not encourage young and promising men and women to plump for politics as a career. Politics, which throws up political leaders who eventually lead the country, is still not considered good enough to be taken as a career option. Still, the majority of political recruits are those who fail to make a mark academically or in other fields.

The reactions of some members of our political class in the wake of this revulsion and protest by counter-maligning these expressions of protests were also not in order as one would have expected them to be much nuanced and sobered than they actually were. After all, being leaders they are supposed to shape and lead from the front rather than coming out with another set of negatives as a counter to publicly-expressed sense of outrage. Politics, like any other thing, comes in a package. If you have loved the popular adulation and admiration, then you ought to be ready for the kind of revulsion and outrage as were noticed in recent times.

The tendency of a section of our political class to build the war hysteria is also not in order as that may not take us anywhere. It is more than true and established that a neighbouring country has been bent on ‘bleeding India through thousand cuts’. But the fact also remains that if we can set our own house in order, they could never do anything to us. After all, the terrorists who allegedly came from Pakistan came through our sea lanes, walked our roads, entered our hotels and finally executed their appointed tasks. And if they could all do these with ease, do not we ourselves have to blame somewhere.

We have accepted and acknowledged the security and intelligence lapses which happened and we have to guard against the same if we are to ward off their recurrence in future. Our preventive and pre-emptive actions including our intelligence gathering and processing have to be better and more effective than they have been. The proposed setting up of the ‘National Investigation Agency’ and reinforcement of other relevant laws further are definitely steps in the right direction.

While we need to cautious all the times, the terrorist needs just a single opportunity or one oversight on our part to strike all over again. So, we can never afford to lower our guard. But even with all our resources, it is just not possible to man and police each and every inch of the length and breadth of this country. So more than anything else, we need a conscientious and responsible citizen who needs to be careful and cautious all the times. After all, these are not normal times. We can not only blame our political class or the Government and free ourselves of all our responsibilities that devolve upon us as a citizen of this country. After all, it is the people who are the real leaders in a democracy.

One feels that that concept of ‘Neighbourhood Watch’ and ‘Community Policing’ needs to be operationalized more than is done presently. The National Cadet Corps, National Service Scheme and our Civil Defence systems should be further reinforced and be made more broad-based. Their beefing up would mean educating and training common citizens for the purposes of reinforcing our internal security system. Having more watchful and responsible citizens should solve much of our problems. We also need to upgrade the basic security measures. It should be made compulsory for the crowded establishments including markets, malls, hotels, cafeteria, restaurants, hospitals and education centres to put in place basic security measures including installation of security gates, latest metal/explosive detectors, installation of close-circuit cameras and a system of identity check besides building a city surveillance system by the local police.