Experiences on Autonomy in East and North
East:
A Report on the Third Civil Society
Dialogue on
Human Rights and Peace
By
Sanjoy Borbara
Kolkata- 2003
The initiative was made possible by the support and collaboration of the
International Centre for Ethnic Studies, Colombo. This report is the result of
the Third Civil Society Dialogues on Human Rights and Peace in East and North
East held on April 11-12, 2003, in Shillong, Meghalaya. We acknowledge our debt
to all participants in the Dialogue.
October 2003
Published by:
Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group
5B, Mahanirban Road, Kolkata – 700 029
India
Phone: 91-33-24640079/24657260
Email: mcrg@cal.vsnl.net.in
Printed by:
Timir Printing Works Pvt. Ltd.
43, Beniapukur Lane
Kolkata – 700 014
Contents
Instead of an Editorial
The Proceedings
Participants’ Comments
List of Participants
Dialogues are
seldom as structured as one would like them to be. Dialogues are, by some
quirky definition, not fixed and (dialogues) are continuously expanding their
horizons, possibilities and in the bargain, opening the seams of thought and
transforming thoughts themselves. Hence, a dialogue on the issue of
Constitutional Provisions for Autonomy is in itself an exercise in reconciling
the limitless expanse of people’s aspirations with the pragmatic concerns of
governance, as framed in national constitutions. It is, by no means, an easy
task.
The significance of such a dialogue
focusing on the experiences of autonomy in East and Northeast India needs to be
stated at the outset, if only to provide the backdrop against which the
discussions took place. East and Northeast India are not just geographical
regions in the sub-continent. Together they offer a historical contrast. While
East India is part of the densely populated, fertile Indian sub-continent, the
Northeast comprising much of the Assam- Arakan basin and ringed by the southern
Himalayan Rim, was the sparsely populated crossroad for traders, migrating
tribes and warriors. Historically and culturally, the differences between the
two regions are many. Yet, there are several similarities as well. These
similarities stem partly from the contiguous geographical location and partly
from a shared colonial experience.
East India’s population density is
among the highest in the world. The region (including Bangladesh) has long been
the site of bitter conflicts over resources between strategic interest groups.
During the nationalist upsurge in the colonial period this conflict was mainly
articulated against the colonial administration and feudal collaborators.
Bengal was perhaps the first colonial province in the sub-continent to be
“divided” for administrative and political purposes in 1907. The machinations
of colonial subterfuge not only divided Bengal but also left behind cleavages
within the social structure in the region that would continue to define
political struggles for future generations as well. Feudal structures in East
India, though not a colonial creation, were used by the colonial authorities in
the articulation of a different mode of production and this in turn gave rise
to new forms of social relations between peoples. In the post-1947 period, East
India continued to simmer in the rural areas, with the conflicts between
different classes in the agrarian sector kept alive a process of renegotiation
of resource sharing and social relations. The peasant movement in East India
has till date remained the fulcrum on which political changes are effected.
Yet, it would be difficult to see the peasant struggle as homogenous and linear
in its programmes and forms. The peasant uprising in Naxalbari, in North Bengal,
signifies the ideological shifts and epistemological break in the understanding
of aspirations of the somewhat amorphous masses. One only has to look at the
forms that this struggle has taken in other regions such as Bihar, where caste
oppression remains a reality for a large section of the agrarian class of
landless labourers.
These are not the only issue that
emerge in the case of East India. A small but significant portion of the
Himalayan Rim is linked to the region. The Darjeeling Hills not only provide an
example of how colonial policies dismember composite cultural zones but also
show how in the introduction of new modes of production, places with little in
common are linked by the logic of markets. It would be difficult to think of
Darjeeling as anything other than a tea growing centre and also a tourist
port-of-call. Yet, its fascinating history shaped by the transition from a area
that was used by semi-nomadic graziers and indigenous tribes, to a hill station
linked to the global market by virtue of producing exquisite tea. Hence,
Darjeeling’s earliest links to metropolitan capital is signified by the fact
that it was made a part of the province of Bengal while culturally it belonged
to the Himalayan Rim. This contradictory condition still remains a factor that
pulls and pushes the demands for autonomy in the region. On the one hand, there
are political and economic realities, where the elite cannot harm the interests
of industry and commerce. On the other hand, the same elite is not above using
the cultural differences to squeeze out concessions from the administration and
industry.
The Northeast offers yet another
contrast. Essentially, the region inhabited by various tribes and ethnic
groups, remained one where labour shortages would shape the forms of
administration and relations between different peoples. Geographically, small,
semi-nomadic groups that often had to raid the adjoining plains for food and
supplies during months of scarcity inhabited the hills in the region.
Interestingly, pre-capitalist state formations in the region as typified by the
Ahom, Koch and Manipuri kingdoms, never really “annexed” the hills and instead
developed a system of trade and barter that allowed the people of the hills
access to surplus land and labour in the plains. This delicate and sometimes
bewildering relationship was punctuated by periods of excessive violence and
punitive raids by the state formations in the plains. At other times, a unique
relationship of trust and solidarity was formed. Villages and clans in the
foothills and plains, continue to receive their “relatives” from the hills.
Indeed the vicissitudes of the relationship between the plains and hills
deserve more than a small socio-historical footnote, but at this stage one has
to recall that the relationship was fundamentally altered by colonial
interventions.
Not only did the colonial experience
re-alter the relations between the people of the hills and the plains, but it
also introduced new forms of agriculture, which linked the region to a ‘world
market’. The establishment of the plantation complex marked a radically
different period in the political economy of the region. The hills were marked
off as “excluded and partially excluded” areas and the forests that sustained
many of the indigenous groups were brought under colonial control. The Luit
(Brahmaputra) and Surma valleys together contained most of the tea plantations
in the region. On the demographic front, indentured labour was introduced in
large numbers to address the demand for cheap, pliable labour for the
plantations. Moreover, as in other cases where frontiers were created, the
colonial authorities also encouraged a policy of immigration, in order to
ensure the persistence of ethnic divisions among the indigenous people and settlers.
It is against this backdrop that one can assess the post-1947 scenario in the
Northeast.
For administrators and politicians
in India, the Northeast was actually seen as part of the old colonial province
of Assam. The first signs of the complex ethnic aspirations among various
groups were seen in two simultaneous processes following the transfer of power
in 1947. The first involved the recognition that the region needed special
provisions to be granted to the tribal people who were left out of the process
of political participation by the “excluded and partially excluded” areas act.
The process that was carried out under the aegis of the veteran Assamese
politician Gopinath Bordoloi had several intriguing asides, some voiced by
tribal leaders and others by Assamese politicians. The constitutional committee
was faced with the aspirations of the tribal leaders for greater autonomy,
while Assamese politicians wanted more federal powers to be allotted to the
state, especially in matters related to finance and immigration. The second
process was the politicisation and radicalisation of the demand for a Naga
homeland. This ethno-nationalist demand was based on the principle that a
people have the right to self-determination and that as a people, the Nagas had
asserted that they sought to be free. Without digressing into the minutiae of
what constitutes the core of almost all the ethno-nationalist demands in the
region, one may say that this is essentially the pattern of political
negotiation and mobilisation in the Northeast. This is to say; most political
demands for self-determination are centrally linked to the idea of a distinct
identity of an ethnic group. The manner in which this identity consciousness is
articulated is precisely the subject of discussion.
It is against this backdrop that
much of what appears as guarantees of autonomy compatible with the aspirations
of given groups of people within the framework of the constitution, or even
within international law, can actually be seen as a condensed body of intricate
political negotiation. In essence, these negotiations are supposed to appear as
processes that lead to further democratisation of society and politics. In the
Indian context, this idea was supposed to form the core of the federal ethos of
the republican tradition. Hence, provisions like the Sixth Schedule, Article
371 A and even the recent Panchayati-Raj Bill are seen as efforts to
ensure the devolution of powers of administration and governance to the
grassroots. In each case, legislative, resource mobilisation and executive
powers are supposed to somehow address the complex web of people’s aspirations.
Yet in the manner in which the filter down, they are leave more questions than
answers in their wake. One senses the overwhelming assertion of the concerns of
the (centralised) state in losing its locus as the sovereign font of law and
administrative processes. Indian democracy is defined by its constitution,
inasmuch as it is defined by a particular notion of the rule of the “majority”.
Herein lies the crux of the problem.
A peculiar “trade off” begins to
become evident when one looks at the manner in which two discourses can be seen
in the debate on rights and representation. On one hand, a ‘statist’ view
asserted that it was the individual citizen, rather than seemingly amorphous
collectives, who were the backbone of the state. This view harked on the
tensions between notions of citizenship and that of communitarian collectives
and reiterated that the state “was above all gods”.[1]
This view that the individual’s loyalties as a citizen of the state supersede
her or his loyalty to other identities is constantly being challenged by a
second discourse that is articulated against the backdrop of inadequate
representation in matter of governance and administration. Central to both
discourses are certain principles that govern the quest for autonomy. As
Ranabir Samaddar pointed out during the course of the dialogue, autonomy is
rarely seen in the context of justice. Hence, it is rare to find an instance
where autonomy has sought to work on the principle of restitution, by
acknowledging that an injustice has been committed. It is also rare to find an
instance where autonomy has included the principle of guarantee, where the main
actors are guaranteed that their roles within the process will be respected in
letter and in practice. Moreover, autonomy- as framed within a statist
discourse- does not address the issue of custodianship of resources in a
comprehensive manner. When they do, as in the Sixth Schedule, they seem
ineffectual and laden with contradictions that make the principle of
custodianship appear more like a managerial policy.
It would be foolhardy to make an
extravagant claim that any dialogue can hope to encapsulate the very real and broad
issues that make the very substance of negotiation and struggle for
democratisation a dynamic process. Autonomy is one such process that needs
sustained engagement lest the tensions between the statist discourse and civic
expectations leads one (or both) into the subterranean level, where rule of
law, principles of justice and quest for realising democratic aspirations
become insular processes where the possibility of dialogue becomes impossible.
Autonomy after all, is what Samir Das referred to (in the course of the
conference) as “…(a) means to an end, rather than an end in itself”. One feels
that such a view was the consensus that emerged in the course of the civil
society dialogue. This is a tacit acknowledgement of the fact that autonomy is
a process that needs constant nurturing and engagement with. Its desired role
is to increase the democratic capacities of both the civic and political spaces
in any society.
Proceedings
April 11,
2003.
Inaugural
Session:
Samir
Kumar Das, introduced the third series on civil society dialogue on the issue
of human rights and peace in the East and Northeast, which was being held in
Shillong. He introduced Udayon Misra, who was the Chairperson for the session.
Thereafter, Pradip Bose welcomed the assembled participants and introduced the
work of the Calcutta Research Group after which the participants introduced
themselves.
The session commenced with Ranabir
Samaddar outlining his thoughts on the issue. The legal and political thinking
in India, he felt, viewed autonomy as something related to exceptional and
extraordinary circumstances. Essentially, he felt that autonomy was not viewed
as something that inherently leads to greater democratisation, rather, the
existing political and legal discourse view autonomy as a tool to govern
peoples in the frontier. As such, autonomy was meant for certain categories of
people and not something that could be considered to be an integral part of the
democratic process. He rooted this condition in the peculiar events of the
national movement, leading up to the process of establishing forms of
governance in the sub-continent. Federalism was built into the republican ethos
of the Indian National Congress. However, this itself was being pulled in
different directions, all somehow leading towards more centralisation. The
ideology of the Muslim League was not the same as that of the Congress’
inasmuch as they did not believe that a federal structure could be viable in
the context of the sub-continent. He further added that the debates around
autonomy had another important dimension that was often sidetracked in the
convergence of political discourse. This had to do with issues with
redistribution of resources like land and minerals.
Samaddar
prescribed three principles that ought to be considered in any event where
autonomy is discussed. Firstly, he said that the principle of justice
ought to play an important role. This would acknowledge that injustice has
been committed upon those seeking autonomy and the moment of granting autonomy
would engage with processes that seek to redress this injustice. Secondly, the principle
of guarantee was cited as an essential element of granting
autonomy. This implied that autonomy itself would guarantee substantial rights
over resources and processes that seek to control these resources for those
seeking autonomy. Thirdly, the principle of custody was
cited as an important principle to specify some measures whereby actors have
agency over the autonomy granting mechanism. All too often, he said, these
principles were left to chance and to the fact that autonomy was posited as a
challenge to sovereignty. Samaddar ended his presentation by questioning the
possibilities where “sovereign” structures confront “autonomy” in its
comprehensive dimensions and said that the tensions between the two structures
will eventually present a fertile ground for future political battles.
Commenting
on Samaddar’s presentation, Udayon Misra pointed out that the tension between
the “sovereign” and the “autonomous” were especially important in the context
of the Northeast. Members of the early Assam Legislative Assembly raised
pertinent issues related to this tension during the transfer of power. He
mentioned the debates initiated by members like Gopinath Bordoloi and Stanley
Nichols-Roy, who demanded not only what Samaddar classified as the “horizontal
conception of justice” during the course of his presentation earlier but also
substantial financial powers. Misra mentioned that the political battles for
autonomy were soon taken over by other demands and resurfaced again in the form
of the struggle launched by groups like the United Liberation Front of Asom
(ULFA). Rather than seeing the demand for autonomy as something that
“re-emerged” with ULFA, Misra felt that it would be more appropriate to say
that ever since the transfer of power in the middle of the twentieth century, a
subterranean debate on the nature and forms of autonomy for the peoples of the
Northeast continued and took the shape of a coherent seemingly intractable
demand.
Misra
also outlined the measures taken by the Indian state to anticipate the demands
for political and fiscal autonomy and cited experiments contained and inscribed
within the Sixth Schedule of the Indian Constitution. He located the uniqueness
of the provisions of the Sixth Schedule, especially in keeping alive
traditional institutions, which have played an important role in mediating
forms and events of violence within civil society. Speaking of the role of the
Naga Hoho in maintaining a “moral” and “ethical” balance during periods
of conflict, Misra wondered if similar institutions based on traditional
notions of justice and ethics could have prevented the massacres that happened
in Gujarat in throughout the year 2001- 2002.
Referring
to the somewhat arbitrary and sometimes violent episodes leading up to the
creation of states, Misra also hastened to point out that some provisions
contained within the formal state formation event were indeed remarkable. He pointed
out that despite the inherent problems and suppressive history linked to the
formation of the state of Nagaland, the provisions under Article 371A, that
guarantee the Naga denizens the right to control their resources and land, is
truly a measure worth replicating in other areas where resource based conflicts
are going on. He briefly spoke of the provision being the basis upon which
student groups in Nagaland, like the Naga Students Federation, have resisted
attempts by mining and exploratory companies from digging for oil. However,
Misra also acknowledged that the practices of the Indian state were at odds
with such established norms of autonomy. He further added that this was perhaps
a reflection of the changing demographic and political face of the Indian
state, where the strong assertions of a multi-ethnic society are being tested
by the rigours of a centralised, hegemonic polity defined in the discourse of Hindutva.
This interplay of political positioning has redefined the concept of
self-determination and autonomy itself.
First
Session
Speakers:
Subhas Chakrabarty; Bhupen Sarma (for C. Nunthara), Gautam Chakma and Udayon
Misra.
David
Reid Syiemlieh, Director of the Indian Council of Social Science Research
(NERC) and professor of history at North Eastern Hill University, chaired the
first session of the day. The topic of discussion was “Experiences of
Autonomous District Councils in the East and Northeast”. Before opening the
session for discussion he mentioned that the demand for autonomy itself is a
multifaceted articulation. While some demand autonomy within the Constitution,
others wish to go beyond it. In the case of movements like the Gorkhaland
struggle, one sees the operation of District Councils and yet this can hardly be
considered to be a yardstick, as the Naga people seem to have done without such
councils and have managed to retain their tradition. He further added that the
modern nation-state has imposed its apparatus on traditional patterns of
administration and governance- especially in the Northeast. Hence, he felt,
structures like the District Councils that invariably form part of the
‘autonomy package’, ought be questioned with respect to their relevance in each
and every context.
Tracing the history of the Gorkhaland
movement in Darjeeling that culminated in the formation of the Gorkha Hill
Council, Subhas Chakrabarty, spoke of the distinct Nepali identity that evolved
in the Darjeeling area, even when it was a part of British India. This sense of
a separate identity was bolstered by the emergence of Nepali as the main
language in the area. He mentioned that the early demands for autonomy came
from a section of the collaborationist elite, who supported the policies of the
British government. The plantation economy that sustained the elite played an
important role in the articulation of their demands, he said. Furthermore, he
added that the idea of self-governance in Darjeeling was to a large extent
muted during the colonial period as the area remained outside the reforms
introduced in other parts of the sub-continent. Outlining the trajectory of the
demands for self-governance, Chakrabarty marked the important milestones, such
as the demand for a separate administrative unit made by the Hill men’s
Association; the split within the Hill man’s Association that led to the
formation of the Gorkha Association that was amenable to the idea of remaining
within the province of Bengal (with substantial autonomy) and the brief, almost
mystical idea floated by sections of the Communist Part of India of an
independent “Gorkhastan”.
In the post 1947 scenario,
Darjeeling continued to be within the state of West Bengal. However, as with
most cases where autonomy is brought into play in political mobilisation, the
idea of a separate and distinct identity remained just beneath the surface of
the political process. It gathered momentum in the 1980s with the convergence
of demands for autonomy in the dynamics of the Gorkha National Liberation
Front-led movement. Chakrabarty then traced the emergence of Subhas Ghising as
the font of power within the organisation by going into the details of power
play involved in the movement. The formation of the Darjeeling Gorkha Hill
Council in 1988 provided the institutional framework for regional autonomy in
the district. The Ghising-led GNLF controlled the administrative bodies in the
council, though Chakrabarty mentioned that while the trappings of power were
visible in the display of the council members, their effective powers to govern
were seriously checked by the limited role that they have in controlling the
resources and revenue accrued from these resources. He further added that the
demand for autonomy takes on different shapes, as is evident from Ghising’s
frequently repeated rhetoric of raising the issue of a separate state at
strategic intervals.
Bhupen Sarma read out C. Nunthara’s
paper on “Autonomous Councils in Mizoram”. The paper briefly outlined general
notifications of the government of India on the issue of local self-governing
institutions. The paper also included a brief history of the Sixth Schedule,
which the author posited as an important Constitutional measure for autonomy in
the Northeast, especially in the context of Mizoram. The most important aspect
that the paper outlined was the manner in which village councils and panchayats
functioned within the state of Mizoram. The village councils, according to
Nunthara, used to enjoy a degree of autonomy prior to the dissolution of the
Mizo District Council. With the granting of statehood in 1987, the bureaucrats
and state agents are seen to have free play and this has further eroded the
autonomy and powers of the district councils. The most crucial sector where
this is seen is in the introduction of different land control and land use
policies. The new policies introduced by the state favour individual ownership
and village councils cannot do much about the fact that those who have the
purchasing power are now controlling land. The paper ended by questioning the
relevance of the Sixth Schedule in the hills of Northeast, as it fails to
combine regulatory functions with developmental functions.
Gautam Chakma presented the third
paper of the session, entitled “Inadequately Protected: Chakmas of Mizoram”. In
it, he addressed the issue of human life and conditions under the legal
framework of developing nations. He then addressed the case of the Chakma
minority group, who he felt are not provided adequate protection from the
domination of bigger, more dominant tribes like the Mizos. He said that the
inability of domestic law to address the issue of protection of the minorities
in Mizoram would have to be linked to the fairly comprehensive conventions on
the discrimination of minorities as worked out by the bodies like the United Nations.
In doing so, he felt, that one have to address the ultimate need for self-rule,
in order to experience human developments in all forms, for any minority group
like the Chakmas. He further added that this was essential as the so-called
autonomy generating institutions within the district council structures in
Mizoram were dominated by Mizos and ethnic minorities could not expect to
exercise their full potential for human development within these structures.
David Reid-Syiemlieh then asked
Udayon Misra to speak on the Boroland issue. Responding to this request, Misra
stated that though he was not adequately prepared, he would speak about the
Boro movement in light of the long negotiations between Boro leaders, the
government of Assam and the central government. He said that the question of
land is central to the Boro movement for self-determination. Furthermore, the
land issue itself is intrinsically linked to the question of immigration, he
added. Given this backdrop the demand for certain villages to be included
within the Boro Territorial Council need to be understood as the balance of
population in these areas is very delicate. In some, the Boro people are
actually in a minority. Hence, he felt that the whole issue of ethnic autonomy
has to be seen using different lenses. He pointed out to the emergence of
political formations like the Sanmilita Janagoshti Sangram Samiti (SJSS),
that have been formed to protect the lands of other ethnic groups in the newly
constituted Boro Territorial Council. The fact that SJSS has not been taken
into consideration by the government in its negotiations with Boro leaders has
led to widespread conflict, he stated. Focusing on the question of
representation within a framework of ethnic autonomy, he said that the SJSS claim
that they represent a majority position, as opposed to that of the Boro leaders
who would be numerically weaker that all the other groups put together. In this
interplay over the question of representation and control over resources, he
stated that the larger questions of Boro identity and autonomy have not been
resolved.
Summing up the session’s debates,
David Reid-Syiemlieh said that the discussions had opened out new questions
about the position of minorities within a proposed formation/ imagination of
autonomous states for ethnic groups. He further added that such discussions
must also be able to reach out to policy makers and others who are engaging
with such issues.
Following
Chakrabarty’s presentation, Misra asked the extent of powers that were granted
to the council and whether the fact that the tea industry was left outside the
purview of taxation is a significant factor in assessing the actual strength of
the council. Chakrabarty responded that the fact the powers of the council were
somewhat cosmetic can be gauged by the fact that major subjects of revenue like
tea were not entrusted to them. Syiemlieh then intervened to say that the use
of the generic term “Gorkha” Council was unfair as it glossed over the ethnic
differences that exist among the dominant Nepali groups and smaller indigenous
groups like the Lepchas of Kalimpong. Responding to this, Chakrabarty said that
the Lepchas today consider themselves to be a “caste” within the larger Nepali
identity and while this is not anthropologically acceptable, it certainly
speaks for the political and sociological dynamics of the region. Samaddar then
pointed out to the similarities that arose in other situations, where the
desire to bring about a “hurried peace” led to the compromise on some of the
major demands. Das then observed that autonomy seems to be more like the
“means”, as opposed to the “ends” of a movement- as is evident from the fact
that even within movements there are contested notions of autonomy.
Picking
up the thread from the presentation of Nunthara’s paper, Misra pointed out the
importance of land and the issue of private ownership in the evaluation of any
scheme that seeks to devolve powers. Sarma then added that in the case of the
Northeast, the autonomous councils have been a compromise rather than a
solution. Misra further said that autonomy of the self and autonomy of the
community are both important and in some contexts, it is difficult to idealise
traditional patterns, as they sometimes contain the kernel of inequalities. Therefore,
he added, it would be sociologically reckless to claim that all tribal
societies idealise the community and especially when this idealisation is based
on the principle of equality.
Focusing
on the point, related to the efficacy of international law and international
rights regimes, raised by Chakma in his presentation, Samaddar reiterated his
point about shared sovereignty, where to minimize sovereignty would lead to
greater autonomy. He raised the issue of ILO conventions that exist despite and
parallel to other labour legislation that come under the purview of the
constitution. While on the issue of the Indian constitution, Gurudas Das
inquired that if the Mizos were functioning under the powers that were derived
from the constitution, was it then possible for them to threaten the Chakmas as
a group? Responding to this query, Samir Das mentioned that while the
Constitution shapes the milieu, it does not necessarily determine it. The whole
question of autonomy is devising an autonomous form of sovereign. Unless this
is sorted out, autonomy would remain a cyclical event pushed by experiences of
exclusions and marginalisation. He quoted the example of the Mizos sought
autonomy as they were excluded by the Indians and now the irony of Chakmas now seeking
autonomy, as they perceive they are excluded by the Mizos.
Surajit Mukhopadhyay subsequently
pointed out that the key ingredient was not being addressed in the discussion.
This he clarified was the power of autonomy as an imagined idea and the political
dynamics being the space where constantly imagined idea finds grounds to evolve
and develop. Reiterating this point, Achumbemo Kikon of the Naga Students
Federation pointed out that autonomy is vitally linked to the issue of
identity. He further added that in this imagined idea, the notion of a
“scheduled tribe” was difficult to accept as it deracinated the idea of a
material struggle for land amongst a diverse ethnic population spread over a
particular territory. Chakma then clarified the problem by citing the example
of the Chakma community in Arunachal Pradesh, who were displaced refugees and
those in Mizoram, who were indigenous to the place and drew upon the concept of
“non-state framework of autonomy” which was pertinent to indigenous communities
within the United States of America. He believed that such a solution could
also be applicable elsewhere. Syeimlieh then drew attention to the plight of
Chakmas who have been displaced and whose case was adequately addressed in
similar movements for autonomy that had been internationalised. Misra
intervened to state that the US analogy could not be applicable to minority
issues, which are very diverse there. Tapan Bose added by stating that the UN
recognition of indigenous peoples is very important and that the US notions of
autonomy may help us refashion a non-territorial stance on the issue of
autonomy. Responding to this, Kumar Suresh added that one has to differentiate
between territorial and non-territorial concepts of autonomy.
Samaddar felt that the concept of
autonomy had to be disaggregated, as much of the examples of autonomy happen
after the event of disempowerment and autonomy happens after “the danger is
over”. Hence, he felt that it is as important to assess failure stories, as it
is to celebrate successes. Concluding the discussion on the issue, Tapan Bose
said that there were different sets of problems within the issue of
territorial/ non-territorial autonomy. The first set relates to divided
communities (like the Garos who are spread across Meghalaya, Assam and
Bangladesh), while the second set has to do with the creation of borders.
Commenting on Misra’s presentation, Samaddar wondered what could have
happened if the reorganisation of Assam had taken place in a different way,
where there could be two houses, one of the people and the other of the
nationalities. He added that this would mitigate the issue of who is to govern
and how the people ought to be governed, to a satisfactory level. Commenting on
this, Misra said that the nationality formation process in Assam is very fluid.
He pointed out that the expansion of Assamese nationalism has incorporated
sections of Muslim peasantry who came to the region as late as the middle of
the twentieth century. Under such conditions, he added, notions of
indigenousness itself become contested. Raising a question on the issue of
nationality formation in Assam, Samir Das said that the text of the Assam
Accord on the preservation of cultural identity had considerable difference in
the terminologies used in the English, as compared to the Bengali version. He
further added that while in the early 1980s Boro identity was linked to notions
of a comprehensive “Assam identity”, it remains a fact that in later years the
two were divorced. Sanjay Barbora remarked that the autonomy wrested by the
current Boro leaders is not an instance of justice based on restitution. It is
in fact a trade-off by certain sections that wish to undermine an ongoing
struggle for self-determination in Boroland. What the Boro case highlights is
the fact that one does not have a democratic framework in India that allows for
local level socio-political decisions to live together, to “filter up” to
decision-making bodies. This further takes away credibility from a process that
is heavily dependent on centralised decisions. Taking a cue from here, Samir
Das questioned the notion of autonomy “filtering up”. He asked what
consequences would there be if one took this to the extreme logical conclusion,
where the right to difference has to contend with the reality of multiple
identities. It is here, he felt, that the space for civil society becomes very
crucial.
Adding to the discussion, Bhupen
Sarma said that he felt that the Boro identity consciousness started on the
question of land and that is how it became a political articulation of the
common people. He further added that the indifference of Assamese civil society
to these issues and subsequent assumption that the Boro were supposed to
reflect concerns of the Assamese gentry sharpened the divisions between the
Boro and the Assamese. As a corollary he stated that in the case of the Boro
demands for autonomy, one also has to consider the plight of other plains
tribes such as the Mishings and the Rabhas. Responding to this observation,
Barbora stated that during a particular historical moment in the 1960s, all the
plains tribes had come together under the banner of the Plains Tribes Council
of Assam (PTCA), which today is considered to be the moment when the Boro
struggle was born. Shedding more light on the discussion, Misra pointed out
that while this is true, it is also worth mentioning that when one talks of
ethnic autonomy, one cannot leave out the cleavages within Boro polity and the
realities of demographic changes in the historically demarcated area of
Boroland.
April 11,
2003.
Second
Session
Speakers:
Surajit Mukhopadhyay and Achumbemo Kikon
Bhupen Sarma, of the Omeo Kumar Das
Institute of Development and Social Change, chaired the second session. The
topic during the session was “Other Experiences of Decentralisation in the
East and Northeast”. The first presentation was by Surajit Mukhopadhyay,
who spoke about “Panchayati-Raj in West Bengal and the Quality of
Resource Management”. He began by stating that Panchayati-Raj in
West Bengal was not necessarily related to the issue of autonomy, as the people
running the panchayats in West Bengal are in no way marginalised.
However, he said that one has to understand the issue in terms of
democratisation and decentralisation of power. This was where he located the
question and relevance of autonomy. Mukhopadhyay carried on to trace the
ascendancy of the rural population in democratic politics in West Bengal to the
coming of power of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI (M)] in 1977. He
further traced the decentralisation process to the 73rd Amendment,
which was further buttressed by the West Bengal Panchayat (Amendment)
Law of 1994. These legal “windows”, according to him raised the question of the
pros and cons pf development planning both from above and from below.
Furthermore, they opened out the possibilities of resources being raised at the
local level by panchayats. These measures, he stated, offered an
autonomous space by activating rural civil society by mobilising locally and involving
rural labour in government projects. These measures helped create local jobs
and as such, this process addressed the revitalisation of rural cooperatives.
He further went on to speak about the intimate linkages between the
cooperatives and the panchayat institutions and added that this linkage
resulted in the “easing out” of moneylenders from the rural landscape.
Mukhopadhyay further stated that the success of the cooperatives and its role
in implementing the tasks set by the panchayats have largely been made
possible by network of trust that has been created in the villages.
Speaking
about the Naga movement for self-determination, Achumbemo Kikon of the Naga
Students Federation, began by drawing attention to the colonial history of
enactment of laws such as the Inner-Line Permits, introduced by the British.
The interaction between the people of the plains and the Nagas who lived in the
hills was severely disrupted because of such laws and present conditions need
to be read in the context of this peculiar history. Kikon then traced the
formation and merger of the Naga Hills District with Assam during the colonial
period, drawing special focus on the memorandum submitted by the Naga Club to
the Simon Commission in 1918, which categorically marked out the desire for
independence among the Naga people. He further recalled the assurances made by
M.K. Gandhi to Naga leaders who had met him in July 1947. Gandhi, he said, had
assured the Nagas that if they sought to be independent then no force on earth
could dictate otherwise. Following Gandhi’s assurance and armed with the
conviction that they were doing the right thing, the Naga Club (having been
renamed as the Naga National Council) declared independence on August 14, 1947-
one day before India declared herself to be an independent nation. However, he
pointed out that the Naga desire for independence was never acknowledged by
India and instead the Naga people had to suffer state repression for many
years, to the extent that any chance of a meeting point for the Naga people and
Indian polity seemed impossible.
Kikon
then alluded to the role of the Indian Intelligence apparatus in splitting the
Naga struggle in 1957 by forming the Naga Peoples Convention, which he said had
no constituency within the Naga movement. The security apparatus headed by
people like B.N. Mullick were instrumental in formulating the agenda for the
“Sixteen Point Agreement”, as early as 1959. This “Agreement”, Kikon said,
pandered to an elite within Naga society and rewarded them with the state of
Nagaland in 1963. The present state of Nagaland, he added, is but a mere
fragment of what the Nagas claim to their ancestral lands. As an outcome of the
formation of the state of Nagaland, a section of the Naga resistance declared a
ceasefire in 1964 and negotiations continued well into 1967. Since no
settlement was arrived at, the war between the Indian state apparatus and the
Naga resistance restarted after 1967. This long war came to an impasse and in
1997 a ceasefire was declared between the government of India and the National
Socialist Council of Nagalim. Kikon then reminded the participants that the
question of autonomy should be read in the light of this history. He reiterated
that at no point in the long history of the Naga struggle was the issue of
autonomy ever in question, for the Naga people had always maintained that they
were independent. Any move to seek a just solution to the Indo-Naga conflict
has to take into consideration several crucial factors he stated. Firstly, he stated
that the creation of the state of Nagaland was a mere chimera that only
resulted in dividing the Nagas. Secondly, honourable modalities had to be
worked out at the earliest in order to extract resources from the
Naga-inhabited areas. Thirdly, and crucially, Naga areas had to be integrated
and restored to the Naga people.
Reacting to Mukhopadhyay’s
formulation on access to resources being a success story for the panchayat system
in West Bengal, Paula Banerjee raised the issue of whether the same degree of
access to resources was granted to women in rural West Bengal. Adding to
Banerjee’s intervention, Samir Das said that while the presence of women in the
panchayats was mandatory, the question of their actual empowerment was
quite another. As a corollary to Das’ point, Kumar Suresh added that one ought
to make a distinction between Panchayati-Raj as an institution of
governance and Panchayati-Raj as an institution of empowerment, thereby underlining
the inherent limitations of the institution to actually empower marginalised
and subaltern subjects. Intervening in the discussion, Ranabir Samaddar raised
a few pertinent questions. He asked if one could make any logical links between
“autonomy” and “decentralisation”, especially in the context of peasant
movements that occurred in West Bengal. Hence, he felt, the issue of
introducing institutions of Pachayati-Raj ought to be seen as a process
that emerged from the grassroots rather than as something that is handed down
from the top. Moreover, Samaddar pointed out that the functioning of Panchayats
in the fertile areas of Burdwan is considerably different from their role
and functioning in drier areas like Purulia and Bankura. He also questioned the
role loans and anti-poverty schemes in the light of the trustee institutions
entrusted to ensure their timely payment. He felt that this was more like
“policing” rather than “trust”.
Adding
to the discussion, Bhupen Sarma felt that the issue of land was not adequately
addressed in the Panchayat-Raj system, hence major questions of which
class of peasantry benefited remained unanswered. Moreover, he felt that there
was a greater need to assess the kind of devolution of financial powers to the Panchayats.
Responding to the questions, Mukhopadhyay clarified that the Bargadar movement
was important for energising the Panchayati-Raj movement in west Bengal.
Hence, he added, the issue of land plays a crucial role for the Panchayats. He
also pointed out that financial powers have to be devolved in the larger
context of policies. Mukhopadhyay also responded to Banerjee’s question on the
issue of women accessing powers within this system and said that even though
there are several “women-headed” Panchayats one could ask the valid
question as to whether this is mere “tokenism”. He felt that this was actually
a question of attitude and unless this was changed, one would be trapped within
the sphere of “tokenism”. He further pointed out that while the position of women
in West Bengal might be better than their counterparts in Bihar, the manner in
which women in Orissa have been able to mobilise the self-help groups has not
quite been replicated in West Bengal. He also acceded to Samaddar’s point that
this example was limited to the fertile rice-growing areas of West Bengal and
that there is a need for other kinds of political movements to get over the
differences and difficulties that exist within the present system.
Reacting
to Achumbemo Kikon’s presentation, Abdur Rauf asked if the Naga people who run
the current state of Nagaland agreed with the version of the struggle put
forward by Kikon to which the latter said that it was obvious that the elite
who run the Nagaland state could scarcely be expected to acknowledge this
history. Kumar Suresh then asked Kikon if it was possible to integrate all the
Naga areas in the present day context. Responding to this Kikon said that while
existing boundaries exist between different Naga people, such as the Mao (in
Manipur) and the Angami (in Nagaland), or the Konyak (in Nagaland) and the
Wancho (in Arunachal Pradesh), they are essentially one people, who speak a
common language and have a common aspiration for unity. Intervening in the
discussion, Misra first asked if the fact that the recent elections in
Nagaland, which was not boycotted by the Naga nationalists was a significant
event. He also wanted to know if the territorial issue was going to open up
difficult possibilities, as mapping itself is a colonial product. Adding to
these questions, Tapan Bose pointed out that the Naga case was a typical
product of the age of extension of frontiers for economic reasons during the
colonial period. He asked if it was worth “drawing more lines” when the focus
should be on how to live in peace.
Responding
to these questions and comments, Kikon said that the recently concluded
elections were to be seen in the light of the ceasefire event of 1997 after
which the Indian government hastily imposed an election upon the Naga people in
1998. Naga civil society asked all parties to postpone the elections and all
but the Congress agreed. This brought the Congress into power against the
wishes of the people. During this time the party came out with a controversial
booklet called the “Bedrock of Naga Society” which further alienated the people
from the governing party. Hence, even though the Naga nationalist armed groups
are not directly interested in elections, this time the people had the benefit
of choosing others from the fray and as a result the Congress was defeated.
Surajit
Mukhopadhyay then asked Kikon if he could envisage the status of non-Naga
people in the event of the formation of an independent state of Nagalim. Adding
to this, Paula Banerjee asked whether a future Naga state would simply
replicate the Indian state or evolve some governing and administrative
principles of its own. Barbora intervened in the course of the debate to point
out the importance of political and civic negotiations in the process of
formation of new nations. In the case of the Northeast, he felt that too much
was being said about the colonial past without assessing the impact of the
colonial present which did not allow people the space to have political
negotiations without the intervention of an external body. Adding to this
intervention, Kikon pointed out that if at all one can talk of the position of
other groups in a future Naga state, the other ethnic groups would be given all
the citizenship rights that can be given to them, although the emphasis would be
to preserve and promote the indigenous Naga way of administration and
governance that values peoples sovereignty above all else.
April 11,
2003.
Third
Session
Speaker:
Gurudas Das
Samir Kumar Das chaired the Third
Session. The topic for discussion was based on the paper entitled “Identity and
Autonomy in India’s North-East: The Constitutional Framework” by Gurudas Das.
Stating that the ‘right to self-determination’ manifests itself historically in
the formation of a ‘one-nation state’, the speaker then went on to locate the
principle of autonomy within the natural process of state formation. He said
that this desire for autonomy was manifest in the desire for people to exercise
their rights to difference from others. In order to accommodate pluralistic
diversities, Das felt, (some) nation-states have devised a federalist framework
of organisation. Such a framework, he believed, created a political space that
has a “built-in” elasticity for accommodating the diverse interests of
different homogenous population groups. Das believed that the constitutional
provisions for devolution of powers to the state government delimit the highest
level of autonomy that such groups can enjoy in India. However, he added that
aspirations of smaller population groups that cannot be classified within a
homogenous linguistic criterion were not similar and that their right to
self-determination was accommodated within the constitutional provisions of the
Fifth and Sixth Schedules.
Focusing on the importance of the
Sixth Schedule in the Northeast, Das also specified the kinds of legislative,
resource mobilisation and judicial powers that were incorporated within the
provisions. In the sphere of legislative powers, the District/ Regional
Councils (under the Sixth Schedule) is empowered to make laws related to land,
forest (other than reserved forests), water bodies, regulating shifting
cultivation and among a host of other things regulate usury in the villages. In
the sphere of resource mobilisation, he mentioned that the District/ regional
Councils had the power to assess and collect land revenues, besides being
empowered to levy taxes professions, trades, callings and employment, animals,
vehicles, boats, roads and other such sectors. The money collected, is credited
to a District/ Regional Fund, which is managed and guided by rules and
regulations set by the Governor. At the level of judicial powers, the Sixth
Schedule provides for a two-tier system of administration of justice at the
district/ regional level. At the village level, the village courts are
empowered to trial suits between and cases between parties belonging to the
Scheduled Tribes. The district/ regional council courts act as a court of
appeal of all suits and cases tried by village courts.
Focusing on the North East Areas
(Reorganisation) Act, 1971, Das mentioned that the powers of the autonomy
enjoyed by the district councils had been weakened (by the Act). Here, the laws
made by the newly constituted state legislatures are held in higher value that
that of the autonomous councils. He pointed out that this process had not been
witnessed in Meghalaya, where the territorial boundaries of the three district
councils (Garo, Khasi and Jaintia) added together, exhaust the territorial
boundary of the state. Das further laid an emphasis on the internal dynamics of
smaller tribal groups seeking autonomy, saying that it was not really prudent
to expect that constitutional federalism could look after their aspirations,
when the root of their problems lay in the internal dynamics of these (small)
groups.
Reacting to Gurudas Das’
presentation, Tapan Bose said that in his opinion, the fact that the governor
is the head of the state and that financial power of the Councils rests with
state government, meant that the autonomy provisions of the councils had been
eroded considerably in the initial moment of their inception. Furthermore, Bose
mentioned that identity politics in the Northeast has re-emerged in a very
problematic manner as a result of the way in which the aspirations of different
tribes were handled by the central and state governments. He pointed out that
identity was also an issue in Tamil Nadu and yet one did not see the government
of India come up with similar “special provisions”. Drawing attention to the
contradictions inherent in the processes and dynamics of the Sixth Schedule,
Samaddar said that a moment of negotiation also becomes an object of bargaining
and this itself changes the landscape of identity. On the one hand, he pointed
out to the reality of ruling/ administering and governing people by law and yet
on the other, one sees the realities of murder, killings and violations of the
constitution. Hence, he pointed out, that this contradiction exists in the
implementation of the Sixth Schedule itself. Intervening in the discussion,
Kumar Suresh pointed out that federalism provides a “space” for autonomy,
albeit within the institutional matrix.
Responding to the comments on his
paper, Gurudas Das pointed out that he was merely trying to focus on the legal
and constitutional framework and not on the manner in which the Autonomous
District Councils function. He also pointed out that the State’s sovereignty
looks omnipotent if seen from the inside, but then someone viewing it from the
outside would have serious questions about it. He likened the questions that
questioned the right of the State to intervene in the affairs of the community
to those that came from a flawed position that saw itself “outside” the state
practices. Critiquing this particular formulation, Tapan Bose mentioned that
whichever way one viewed the State and its claims of sovereignty, the fact
remained that the Autonomous District Councils are essentially ‘paternalistic
institutions’ that suffer from all the infirmities of paternalism. Elucidating
the point made by Bose, Gina Shangkam drew the participants’ attention to the
situation in Manipur, where she said that Autonomous Councils were functioning
in the hill areas. She questioned the autonomy exercised by the councils by
pointing out that it was largely due to their ineffectiveness that today people
are demanding a “union territory” status or a “state-within-a-state”.
April 12,
2003.
Fourth
Session
Speakers:
Abdur Rauf, Kumar Suresh and Sanjay Barbora (For Hebal Abel Koloy)
Subhas Chakrabarty chaired the
fourth session. The first paper to be presented was by Abdur Rauf and was
entitled “The Voice of Autonomy in the Publications of West Bengal Minority”.
Rauf began by stating that by minority, he was referring to religious
minorities, who do not demand any autonomy in the “political connotation of the
term”. He then went on to outline the different types of minorities within West
Bengal. The Buddhists, he said are among the smallest in number and are centred
on Calcutta. They also run an organisation called Bengal Buddhist Association,
which in turn publishes a quarterly magazine called Jagajjyoti. Analysing
the general contents of the magazine, Rauf mentioned that the general concerns
of the magazine dealt with the aspirations of the Buddhist community in matters
like personal law. Similarly, he also mentioned the publications of the
Christian community in West Bengal and said that periodicals like Mohama,
Nabayan and others reflect both a religious and a secular discourse within
the community. However, saying that he wished to speak about the largest
minority community within West Bengal, Rauf mentioned that he was keen on
detailing the kinds of divisions within the Muslim community in the state. He
mentioned that though 95% of the Muslim population in the state are Bengali
speaking, it is the 5% urban, Urdu speaking elites who play a dominant role in
articulating the aspirations of the Muslim community in West Bengal. He further
said that these urban elites control the six dailies that represent the Muslim
voice.
Rauf also
mentioned that the common Bengali speaking Muslims do not have access to the
“high brow” media and have to make their presence felt in the weeklies and
monthlies that are published from Kolkata and also from the provincial towns.
Analysing the contents of what the rural Muslim minority have to say in these
periodicals, Rauf outlined a series of issues such as unemployment, social
humiliation, and unjust harassments by the security and police that make the
Muslim minority feel that they are discriminated against. In response to these
fears and prejudices, sections of the community express the need for
reservations (affirmative action) in government jobs, educational institutions
and are also trying to bring in some reform into their living and social
environment. Adding that the community’s response also involved a systematic
repudiation of any symbol that can be associated with their Muslim identity.
Speaking about the constitutional
rights ensured to Dalits and their real, lived experiences in Bihar in his
paper entitled “Constitutional Provisions of Autonomy of the Dalits and the
Protection of Dalit Rights- The Experience of Bihar”, Kumar Suresh said that
the constitution offered self-rule as well as shared rule for minorities and
marginalised groups. In positioning Dalit political discourse within the
context of shared rule, Suresh discussed the fact that they are neither a
minority numerically, nor do they constitute an ethnic group who are spread
over a contiguous homeland. However, Dalit political discourse, taking
inspiration from the theoretical formulations of B.R. Ambedkar, saw itself
speaking as a societal minority within the dominant Hindu, caste system. Suresh
then went on to analyse the role of the affirmative action programmes that
transformed the dynamics of the Dalit movement from a discourse of
“minority-ism” (alpjan) to that of “majority-ism” (bahujan),
which in turn has resulted in the assertion to a Dalit claim “over” the
national space instead of a “secessionist” claim buttressed by alienation of
the Dalit community.
The existential situation of the
Dalit communities in Bihar, however, show that constitutional safeguards are
but one small step in the restructuring of society along egalitarian lines.
Suresh spoke of the dismal conditions that the Dalits lived in, in present-day
Bihar. When compared to their counterparts in West Bengal, the Dalits in Bihar
represent the unenviable section of people whose rights are perpetually violated.
Suresh spoke of the persistence of feudal relations in rural Bihar, which
placed landless Dalits on the lowest rung of the socio-political order. Hence,
upper-caste landlords often violate their right to dignity by denying them
access to structures of administration and control over resources. In recent
years a resurgence of Dalit pride has come about as a result of political
mobilisation by Naxal (Marxist- Leninist) groups. He added, that over
time the specifically caste dimension of the agrarian struggle in Bihar, has
largely resulted in strategic alliances between upper-caste landed gentry and
advanced backward-caste groups who have some land and resources. Most often
than not, these alliances are directed against the Dalits, who neither have
real access to political power, nor do they have access to wealth producing
capacities.
Sanjay Barbora read out hebal Abel
Koloy’s paper. Koloy gave a brief description of the socio-political
circumstances that gave rise to the formation of the Tripura Tribal Areas
Autonomous District Councils (TTAADC) in the state of Tripura in 1979. The
TTAADC covers as much as 68% of the total area of the state and has thirty (30)
members of whom the governor of the state directly appoints two (2) and the
rest are elected. Koloy cited lack of adequate infrastructure, geographical
isolation and ethnic problems as the main reasons for restricting the scope and
functioning of the TTAADC. He added that to carry out developmental activities,
the Council is dependent on the state government for the disbursement of funds.
The state government has been notoriously lax in disbursing the said funds and
this in turn has not helped the Council in being able to achieve its avowed
principles for protecting the rights and resources of the tribal people, let
alone allow for some form of genuine socio-economic development in the tribal
areas.
In order to have a properly
functioning Council for the indigenous peoples of Tripura, Koloy felt that it
was essential to begin with the basic tools of reform that the tribal people
had been keen on introducing. First, he felt that the Sixth Schedule should be
amended to allow for more financial powers to be devolved to the Councils.
Second, he felt that to protect the tribal communities in Tripura, additional
tools like the Inner-Line Permits, have to be considered for applicability in
the areas demarcated as Autonomous District Councils. Third, he also felt that
the Home Ministry ought to recommend direct grants from the Planning Commission
to the Councils. As his fourth point, Koloy suggested that the funds allotted
to the Rural Development departments of the state government, have to be in
turn reallocated to the TTAADC. Fifth, he said that the armed police be brought
under the control of the Council in the TTAADC areas, as they (the police) had
thus far subverted the rule of law and bypassed the authority of the Councils.
In conclusion, Koloy said that necessary powers should also be given to the
TTAADC in order to enable the Councils to undertake land reforms and cadastral
surveys in the areas covered by their jurisdiction.
Responding to Rauf’s paper, Ranabir
Samaddar felt that it was also essential to look closely into the manner in
which certain government constituted minority bodies worked, in order to have
proper understanding of the manner in which these bodies sought to cover-up the
real conditions of the minorities. He mentioned the case of the West Bengal
Minorities’ Commission. Surajit Mukhopadhyay then added that he felt that it
was self-defeating to speak of homogenous mindsets amongst the (religious)
minorities, as this would merely add to the discourse of the religious Right
that sees aggregated and uniform responses from those it labels as the
“dangerous other”. Intervening in the debate on the formation of religious
minorities within a larger nationality, Misra mentioned that in the case of
Assam it would be difficult to extrapolate a dynamic that excludes religious
minorities from the process of formation of a (sub) national identity. He
mentioned that many of the people who belong to a part of the “greater Assamese
nationality” today, are actually third, second or even first generation Muslim
migrants from undivided Bengal.
Seeking clarifications on Misra’s
claims, Samaddar asked if such a formulation could be valid even after macabre
episodes of violence like the one that took place in Nellie (1983). Adding to
Samaddar’s question, Samir Das added that despite the fact that many Assamese
Muslim persons took part in the Assam Agitation (of the 1980s), at some point,
they felt truly lost and betrayed by the growth of the dominant trend within
the movement that sought to isolate target groups on the basis of their
religion. Saying that while these events were true and real, Misra maintained
that Assamese national formation seems to have displayed greater tolerance and
restraint in accommodating so-called religious minorities that can be seen
elsewhere. Responding to Sammadar’s point about the functioning of minority
bodies set up by the government, Rauf agreed that their role was not to
document and redress the grievances of the minorities but to cover up the
existing inequalities and preserve a status-quo. He further sought to address
Mukhopadhyay’s note of caution by adding that while there is a case to be made
about speaking the same language as the Hindu Right, the fact that a certain
section of elite seek to “represent” the minorities is something that cannot be
wished away. Hence, he felt that the Muslim elites (in West Bengal) who speak
of the ‘Muslim Mind’ have very little in common with those they wish to be
interlocutors for. There exists a whole world outside this manipulative
dynamics that can be considered to be the civic spaces for the religious
minorities and the elite have very little access to that, he claimed.
April 12,
2003.
Fifth
Session
Speakers:
Aditi Bhaduri and Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury
Paula Banerjee chaired the fifth
session. Aditi Bhaduri presented her paper entitled “Can Autonomy Satisfy the Quest
for Independence? The experience of Palestine”. She began by citing the fact
that, the notion of political autonomy refers to the right for a community to
govern its own affair up to a certain level. In this context, she stated that
Palestinian aspirations envisage a sovereign state and the notion of
Palestinian autonomy is a temporary state that would (in the popular
imagination) lead to the creation of a sovereign state, alongside the state of
Israel. She located the present form of autonomy for the Palestinian people
within the framework of the Oslo Accords (1993); the Israeli- PLO Recognition
Agreement (1993) and the Declaration of Principles [Oslo I] also signed in
1993. She further mentioned that in the next six years, twelve more agreements
were negotiated between the Palestinians and the Israelis and an important
interim agreement was signed in 1995 (Oslo II).
Bhaduri felt that the Oslo processes
were flawed from the start, as they were not representative of the entire
political spectrum of Palestinian political mobilisation and resistance against
Israeli occupation. She noted that while the Oslo processes included Yasser
Arafat’s Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO), it was also true that this
formation was largely built by exiles and émigrés who had little knowledge
about the occupied territories. Assessing the gains and losses of the Oslo
Process, Bhaduri said that politically, Oslo resulted in giving the
Palestinians a “fragmented” kind of autonomy, although it broadened the
Palestinian self-governing authority in West Bank. Nevertheless, it resulted in
splitting Palestinian territories into three zones. The first comprised six
cities where the Palestinian Council retained control over internal and public
security and civil affairs. The second comprised much of the Palestinian towns
and villages in the West Bank where although the Council retained their
authority, the question of “security threats” gave the Israeli army powers that
could override the civilian authority. The third comprised the unpopulated
areas of the West Bank where the Jewish settlements were located and where
Israel retained sole security and civil control.
In addition, the Oslo process did
not give adequate thought to the economic conditions of the Palestinians when
the negotiations were in progress. In effect, Bhaduri stated, Israel controlled
economics, customs, taxes, movement of goods across borders, dictated what and
from whom the Palestinians could buy goods, while simultaneously searching for
new markets in the Arab world where sub-standard Israeli goods could be
“dumped”. Moreover, the Palestinian Authority could not offer any jobs to tens
of thousands of youth; hence they ended up working as wage earners in Israel.
In conclusion, Bhaduri said that the
Oslo Process and the current crises in South-West Asia show that autonomy
cannot be a substitute for independence, especially when stop-gap arrangements
fail to address the realities of deadlines and goals that have to be clearly
stated prior to the event of both parties (to the conflict) agreeing upon
something concrete. In the Palestinian territories, key issues were left out
and Israel retained the ability to influence the final status in any event of
dispute in the process of negotiating for autonomy. Furthermore, she added that
self-rule in the case of Palestinian Authority actually served to aid a few
corrupt leaders and left the Palestinian masses out of the picture. It reduced
the idea of self-governance to that of “policing for Israel”, she said.
Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury then
presented his paper entitled “International Legal Thinking on the Rights of the
Minorities”, where he began to trace the genesis of the discourse on minority
rights to sixteenth century Europe. He further stated that it wasn’t until the
formulation of the Article 27 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR) that even a modicum of protection was extended to
minorities within nation-states. He also pointed out that the thrust of Article
27 was to extend individual rights and treat its sum as that of the rights of a
“collective” minority. Therefore, rights of minorities appear in the form of
crucial interventions rather than as a comprehensive and uniform position
within international legal thinking.
Speaking at length about the role of
the UN Sub-commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of
Minorities in redefining the notions of rights for minorities, Ray Chaudhury
commented that the Sub-commission’s study paved the way for UNESCO’s ‘Convention
Against Discrimination in Education’ (1960). The Convention had, as part of its
text and recommendations, that national minorities be allowed to carry out
their own educational policy in each state, with the rider that the sovereignty
of the state not be challenged, nor the standard of education be lower than
that considered to be the “general standard”. Ray Chaudhury said that
considering these important legal landmarks, that two rights of minorities have
got explicit recognition in international law. They are (a) the right to exist
and (b) the right to be different from the majority people in the state
concerned. Looking at the manner in which minority rights appear within the
framework of these two broad rights, he traced the genesis of the right to
exist to the Genocide Convention of 1948 and made enforceable by post-
Nuremberg juridical concern to try “crimes against humanity”. The establishment
of international tribunals to try cases of massacres of minorities in former
Yugoslavia and Rwanda bear this out to an extent.
The right to be different, Ray
Chaudhury stated, has on the other hand now crystallised to a rule of
international law, to the extent that it is expressed in Article 27 of the
ICCPR. Going back to his earlier caveat on minority rights being viewed as a
sum total of individual rights, Ray Chaudhury asked of the possible
contradictions between the rights of an individual coming into conflict with
the dynamics of the rights of the minority as a “sum total”. Moreover, Article
27 does not address the issue of representation of minorities of same ethnic
origin in other states and in a sense, he stated, that Article 27 added little
to legal practice apart from guaranteeing equality, non-discrimination, freedom
of worship and freedom to assemble. Given the wide variance between legal
standards and actual applicability of law, Ray Chaudhury felt that minorities
often continue to be oppressed by majorities in nation states. Under such
conditions, he felt that Article 1(2) of the UN Charter offers the right to
self-determination, which is not the same as the right to secession. However,
this itself does not mean that international law recognises the right to secede
and Ray Chaudhury felt that there is ample empirical evidence to show that even
as the process of decolonisation came to close, it came into direct
confrontation with the right to confrontation. Viewing these developments as
inherently inimical to the development of a healthy, democratic (juridical)
environment for the protection of the rights of minorities, Ray Chaudhury
professed optimism that it is in the development of a theory of democratic
citizenship that minority rights may find their best answer.
Ranabir Samaddar asked Aditi Bhaduri
to share her personal experiences in the Occupied Territories, with the
participants. She said that her visit to the region was in winter and that
conditions had already become very bad for the Palestinian people. Check gates
and stripping were just measure of the presence of the security apparatus of
the Israeli state. On the other hand, life for ordinary Palestinians was made
worse by the fact that many of them actually had to go outside the Occupied
Territories for work. This meant that the security harassment was a daily
affair. Policing and surveillance were routine affairs and children especially
were traumatised by the constant presence of violence in the daily lives, she
added.
Commenting on Bhaduri’s description
of daily life in Palestine, Abdur Rauf added that an important dimension that
political violence is also a reality that one has to live with in the Occupied
Territories and this he said was cause for concern. He also wanted to know if
there was any way by which the vast array of international laws and conventions
could be used against those accused of genocide in states like India. He stated
that he was referring to the recent planned violence perpetrated against the
Muslim people in the state of Gujarat. Reiterating his considered position, Ray
Chaudhury replied that the fact that Conventions and the discourse of
International Law gave precedence to the absolute sovereign state, even as they
sought to protect the rights of minorities, presented the dilemma in stark
terms. He clarified that while technically it is possible to classify the
violence in specific terms within international law, it would be extremely
difficult to try these cases on the basis of international law, as many are not
mandatory and binding on member states.
At
this stage, Gautam Chakma replied that International Law is of a “higher order”
than existing domestic law and therefore it ought to apply naturally in cases
where there is a dispute that cannot be redressed by domestic law. Samaddar,
while appreciating Chakma’s position said that while such a condition may seem
logical to redress injustice also exercised caution in taking this position to
its logical conclusions. Pointing to the emergence of a uni-polar world, where
international law itself was being twisted, the idea of selectively using the
latter in a piece-meal manner could aggravate things further. He also said that
in many instances, international law falls far short of expected standards,
especially when related to labour, thereby encouraging more inequalities.
April 12,
2003.
Concluding
Session.
Speaker:
Sanjay Barbora
C. Joshua Thomas chaired the
concluding session where Sanjay Barbora presented a paper entitled
“Federalising Politics and Society: The Human Rights Dimension”. Barbora began
by saying that federalism is indeed a sign of political and democratic maturity
of societies. Even in the era of globalisation, the idea of democratic
federalism has begun to mitigate some instances of protracted conflicts as in
the Basque case, he mentioned. India’s experiences with federalism might seem to
suggest that the process is leading to further democratisation of society but
in reality, even the constitutionally granted forms of autonomy have not led to
democratisation in India. Focusing on the Northeast experience with federalism,
Barbora said that these were but cosmetic changes in a colonial structure
designed to keep people in a state of servility. He said that despite the
formation of several states from the erstwhile province of Assam the conflicts
over identity and control over resources remains a stark reminder that the
state’s methods are geared towards “controlling” rather than “resolving”
conflicts. He drew attention to various instances where autonomy or statehood
had been granted in the region to drive home this point.
He
said that the human rights movement in the region has always questioned the
idea of the existing model of federalist experimentation in India.
Majoritarianism is rooted in the fabric of Indian polity, especially in its
parliamentary manifestation. This contradicts the very notions of
representation, he added. Drawing further on this line of thought, he added
that the creation of endless numbers of states that have to depend on the
centralised state structure, only strengthens centralism and does not begin to
address autonomy in a sense where it (autonomy) can be said to deliver justice.
Barbora added that the existing constitutional safeguards might be likened to
sops that have been offered by a ruling elite to the indigenous people. These
provisions fall short of the international human rights standards; he felt and
added that they have not seen an epistemic change since their inception in the
nineteenth century. He reiterated that top-down efforts at extending autonomy,
which does not address the basic issues of justice and democracy would only
reduce the chances of peace in the Northeast region in particular and the
sub-continent as a whole.
Gurudas Das felt that it human
rights activists begin with the presupposition that the state is against the
people and contrary to this, India’s policy (especially in the Northeast) was
accommodative and geared towards the protection of tribal rights. He compared
the tribals in the Northeast with those in central India and felt that the
reason that the former are in a better position is because they have enjoyed a
degree of protection under a federal system. He also added that non-state
actors couldn’t manage society. At this point Barbora corrected Das, saying
that human rights organisations do not see the state as the enemy of the
people; instead they see the state as the legitimate authority that has to
promote and protect human rights. Reacting to the points raised by Das, Tapan
Bose pointed out that ethnicity in the Northeast is very different from that in
Central India. He said that in the Northeast, it is a political category and
has historically evolved in conditions very different from other places in
India. Hence, to equate the tribal from Madhya Pradesh and the Naga and then
point to the role of the state in preserving the latter’s identity, is a trifle
misleading and off the mark he felt. Bose felt that one needed to think beyond
the current impasse of hegemonic national concerns to something that
appreciates regional, more pluralistic concerns.
Samir Das then asked if autonomy was
simply a matter of constantly redrawing boundaries within the same Westphalian
system, where territory gets divided to absurd and unviable lengths. He further
posed a polemical question as to what would happen if all the ethnic groups in
the Northeast were to be given their autonomous homelands. Barbora felt that
autonomy was not just a matter of redrawing boundaries, where the logical end
could be hundreds of small territorial units. Instead, he stated that autonomy
ought to create institutions and structures that allow greater participation
and recognition of local political and cultural negotiations between peoples.
Such a system would allow for more democratic understanding of territories and
boundaries between regions, peoples and nations, he felt.
Author: Subhas Ranjan
Chakraborty
After the
cession of Darjeeling in 1835, General Lloyd and Dr. Chapman were sent to explore
the country and after receiving their report it was decided to adopt Darjeeling
as a sanitarium. In 1839 Dr. Campbell, the British resident in Nepal, was
appointed the Superintendent of Darjeeling.
Under his able guidance Darjeeling attracted an increasing number of
settlers from the neighboring states of Nepal, Sikkim and Bhutan as also from
the plains and the population grew to about 10,000 by 1849.[2]
Darjeeling
remained under the non-regulation scheme of administration before the passing
of the Indian Council’s Act of 1861.The Act abolished the distinction between
the regulation and non-regulation provinces and districts. An Act of 1870
restored the pre-1861 position and the governor-general and the Lt. Governor
were now empowered to legislate by means of executive order for the less
advanced districts. Darjeeling, under the act of 1870, was to be under the
non-regulated scheme. The Act XV of 1874 converted Darjeeling into a scheduled
district. Such districts were kept outside the purview of general laws
prevalent in the rest of the country. Such laws could be introduced either in
part or with modification with the consent of the Governor-general-in-Council
in consultation with or on the recommendation of the local authority. A large
number of acts relating to land-tenure, inheritance, transfer and sale of land
etc. were kept out of operation in the scheduled districts. Darjeeling now
shared this special status with four other districts of Bengal. This position
continued till 1919, when the Act of 1919 changed the nomenclature of
‘scheduled district’ to ‘backward tract’. Art. 52 A (2) of the Act stipulated
that the governor of the province under the direction of the Governor-General
would have their sole responsibility of administering such ‘backward tracts’.
The governor was also to decide if any law passed by the provincial legislature
was to have effect in such areas.
The
Government of India Act, 1935 changed the term’ backward tracts’ to ‘excluded’
and ‘partially excluded’ areas. Here again it was stipulated that: “ no act of
Federal legislature or of the provincial legislature shall apply to an excluded
area or a partially excluded area, unless the governor by public notification
so directs, and the governor in giving such a direction with respect to any act
may direct that the act shall in its application to that area … have effect
subject to such exceptions and modifications as he thinks fit.” In the case of
a partially excluded area the governor had to consult the council of ministers
but in the case of an excluded area his discretion was final. Darjeeling now
became a ‘partially excluded area’ within the province of Bengal. After
independence, Darjeeling continued to be a district of west Bengal, though
there was a demand for inclusion in Assam.
This brief
outline of the evolution of the administrative structure in the district of
Darjeeling provides enough evidence of the anxiety of the colonial
administration to preserve the separateness of Darjeeling and to emphasize
their distinction from the people of the plains. The ostensible reason was the
unique ethnic and linguistic character of the majority of settlers in
Darjeeling, though in reality British policy was inspired by strategic
considerations relating to a frontier district, However, their aspirations for
self-determination or at least self-government in the hills remained frustrated
as Darjeeling, by and large, remained outside the reforms introduced elsewhere.
Demands
for autonomy or, at least, some form of local self-government, gradually grew
in Darjeeling. In 1907, on behalf of
the hill people of the district of Darjeeling a memorandum was presented to the
British government demanding a separate administrative unit for the district.
It was a rather inchoate demand without the meaning and the content of the
‘separate administrative unit’ clearly delineated. It is, however, significant
that the separate identity of the ‘hill people’ was sought to be asserted
through a form of self-governance. The fact that the district, as a non-regulation
district, did enjoy a separate status was quite forgotten. It is possible to
see the memorandum as an expression of some unformatted aspirations of the
‘hill people’, but that such a separate identity was constructed and asserted
is significant for this study.
A more
formulated demand came in 1917 when a deputation of the representatives of the
hill people led by S.W.Laden La and Kharga bahadur Chhettri waited on Mr.
Montagu, the Secretary of State and Lord Chelmsford, the Viceroy. In the meeting they demanded a separate and
independent administrative unit comprising Darjeeling and the Dooars portion of
the Jalpaiguri district. There was even a suggestion of creating a North
eastern Frontier Province including Assam Dooars and hill territories to the
east of Bhutan.
The move
for the presentation of the memorandum was made by the Hillmen’s Assocation
(founded in 1917). It is interesting to note that the Kalimpong Samiti, the
Gorkhas under Bhimlal Dewan and the People’s Association, Darjeeling opposed the
exclusion of Darjeeling from Bengal. They also expressed the view that the
continuation of the scheduled district status would result in perpetual
backwardness of the district. Among the supporters of this view were Dr.
Parasmani Pradhan and Dal Bahadur Giri.
In 1929
the Hillmen’s Association submitted a memorandum to the Simon Commission
demanding; a) Darjeeling be taken out of the list of ‘backward districts’, b)
at least three seats in the provincial and central legislatures be reserved for
the hillmen of Darjeeling. The Hillmen’s Association seemed to have been
swaying between two ideas: to remain in Bengal with special safeguards or to
leave Bengal. In 1934 the Hillmen’s Association again submitted a memorandum to
Sir Samuel Hoare, the Secretary of State and Sir John Anderson, the Governor of
Bengal demanding both reforms and special safeguards. Later in 1935 the
Hillmen’s Association, under the signature of its president Laden La, submitted
another memorandum to the Secretary of State demanding the total exclusion of
the district from Bengal and its conversion into a separate administrative
unit, of the type of Coorg. These demands were not conceded and Darjeeling
continued to enjoy a special status within the province of Bengal. In 1942, in a memorandum to Lord
Pethick-Lawrence, the Secretary of State, the Hillmen’s Association demanded
Darjeeling’s separation from Bengal and its constitution as a separate
administrative unit under the governor-general with a Chief Commissioner at its
head.
D.S.Gurung,
though associated with the Hillmen’s Association, soon distanced himself from
the organisation. He opposed the idea
of separation from Bengal and instead put forward the demand for autonomy of
the district. He also wanted to mobilise the people for political action.
Gurung took the initiative to form an alternate political organisation and
convened a meeting of the representatives of various social service and
literary organisations and prominent individuals as the President of the Gurkha
Association. Gorkhas from other places
of the country also joined the convention. The convention took the decision to
form a political party- the All India
Gorkha League – with Gurung as its president and Randhir Subba as its
secretary. The original constitution of the party referred to Nepal as the
motherland of the Gorkhas, but in 1948 the clause was deleted. The AIGL sought
the protection of the culture and political rights of the Indian Gorkhas and of
the Nepali language and demanded recognition as citizens of India. It demanded
regional autonomy for Darjeeling within the framework of an Indian province
rather than separation.
.
D.S.Gurung
was elected to the Constituent Assembly, but after his death in 1948 his
brother filled up the resultant vacancy. Thus on the eve of independence the
AIGL became the focal point of Darjeeling politics so far as the demand for
autonomy was concerned.
After
independence, Darjeeling continued to be a province of West Bengal. The
question of a separate identity for Darjeeling had not been resolved. Indeed,
demands for autonomy gathered momentum. All the political parties agreed on the
need for autonomy, but the contours of such autonomy were not clearly defined.
It was left for the GNLF to launch a violent movement in the 1980s to
ultimately settle the issue, for the time being, at least.
The DGHC
Act ( Act XIII of 1988)[3]
provided the institutional framework for regional autonomy of Darjeeling. A separate Mahakuma Parishad was set up for
Siliguri, but the municipalities and the panchayat institutions in Darjeeling
were brought under the general supervision of the DGHC. The older Hill
Development Council and the District Planning and Coordiantion Committee were
also merged with the DGHC.
The DGHC
has a general council and an executive council. The general council consists of
28 elected and 14 nominated members. It is strange that a provision was made
for the nomination of one-third of the members. The nominated councillors may
include the MPs, MLAs and chairmen of the municipalities in the area. Members
of the S.C and S. T. and women may also be represented. An amendment of the Act
in 1994 provided for the nomination of three of such members by the Chairman.
This provision may have proved to be satisfactory for all concerned. Yet, one
suspects that it is a reflection of the anxiety of the state to exercise
effective control of the council through the principle of nomination. It may be
noted that such a provision is absent in the Tripura Autonomous Area Development
Council. The general council will elect a Chairman and Chief Executive
Councillor. The Chairman will nominate a vice-chairman and 13 executive
coucillors. The government from among the nominated councillors will nominate
two executive councillors. Mr. Ghising did express an apprehension that the
nomination of the executive councillors showed that the ‘state government is
hell bent to exercise control over the council from outside’. He called the
nominated members ‘watchdog of the state government’. The decisions were still
taken on the basis of consensus as far as practicable, according to Ghising.
The Chairman is virtually the chief minister of the hill areas of Darjeeling.
The
exercise of regional autonomy is dependent on the powers and functions of the
council as much as on the resources available to it. The act of 1988, as
amended up to 1994, transferred 20 subjects to the jurisdiction of the council.
Besides, the state government may by notification place under the control and
administration of the general council any other matter. The council shall also
be responsible for i) formulation of integrated development plans for the
district and ii) implementation of the programmes for the development of the
hill areas.
Initially,
the functioning of the council was not smooth as the chairman complained of ‘a
lack of political will and commitment on the part of the state government to
implement decentralisation at DGHC level’. He even submitted a memorandum to
the Union Home minister asking for the formation of Appraisal Committee
consisting of the representatives of the central and state governments and of
the DGHC to review the issue of transfer of power. The West Bengal government
denied this allegation and suggested that the difficulties in implementation
were caused by the lack of an adequate staff. A committee under the chief
secretary of the state was formed to ensure a smooth transfer of power. There
was indeed some reluctance on the part of the employees of the state government
to be transferred to the DGHC, but this problem was later largely sorted out.
Some of
these problems relating to personnel were addressed by the 1994 amendment. The
government will appoint a principal secretary in consultation with the
chairman. He will be the chief executive officer of the council. Other
secretaries will be made available to the DGHC by the state government. The
executive council may, with the approval of the government appoint officers and
employees for the functioning of the council. It was also empowered to frame
regulations relating to the conditions of service of these officers. The
council was given the power to make appointments of employees in the ‘C’ and
‘D’ categories. The state government would still be able to exercise some
control indirectly through the principal secretary who is an IAS officer of the
state cadre.
Adequate
financial resources are a sine qua non for effective functioning of the
council. There are three principal sources of finance: assigned revenue, shared
revenue and grants-in-aid. The last would mean state and central assistance.
The DGHC is also charged with the formulation and implementation of the
development plans for the areas under the jurisdiction of the council, often in
collaboration with the agencies of the state and central governments. The DGHC
fund is derived from the following sources: normal and special central
assistance, centrally sponsored schemes, central fund for tourism, state plan
assistance, development grants, employment generation funds, non-plan assistance,
salary and contingent grant of the state government, establishment fund
sponsored by the state government, locally accrued revenues from levy, tolls,
fees or rents, and sharing of royalties from forest etc. Since the DGHC can
hardly be expected to generate a significant amount of revenue from the sources
assigned to it, it had to depend largely on grants from the central and state
governments.
There had
not been a steady flow of fund from these sources initially. For example,
central assistance for tourism was not available between 1988 and 1991, but the
grant for the next three years had been 6 , 10 and 5 lakhs of rupees
respectively. Such grants were arbitrary and not based on the needs of tourism
in Darjeeling. Likewise, allocation under state plan varied from 15 crores for
1991-2 to 32 lakhs for 1992-3. There is also the problem of meeting the growing
non-plan expenditure. But this is a problem faced by the central and state
governments in India and is not unique to DGHC. Yet, finance proved to be the
major irritant in the relationship between the state government and the DGHC.
The state government on its part complained about the non-submission of
utilisation certificates. Auditing also proved to be a bone of contention.
These problems were gradually sorted out and something of anequilibrium exists
for the present. It is the perception of the state finances minister Dr. Asim
Dasgupta that finance does not pose a major problem now, Differences have been
settled and the flow of funds has been satisfactory. As a result the DGHC has
been able to pursue its development efforts.
Yet, some
basic problems remain. One of them is the perennial financial constraint. This
is likely to produce frequent conflicts. The DGHC does resent that two of the
most lucrative sources of revenue-tea and timber- remain outside its ambit.
Second, the relationship between the district administration and the DGHC also
remains somewhat undefined. Law and order is under the state and the district
magistrate is in charge of this. This is where the DGHC has no control. But as
the representative of the state government in the district, the DM exercises a
general supervisory authority and this might lead to clashes over jurisdiction.
Such dichotomy has been seen to be affecting the running of the tourism and
municipalities and panchayat departments. Third, “ Institutional arrangements
under the Act (of 1988) embodies elements drawn from constitutional provisions
of Autonomous state (Art 244A) and sixth schedule without any improvement whatsoever.
There exist a number of areas, which are not clearly defined…The Autonomous
district councils under the sixth schedule are vested with law making powers
subject to the assent of the governor, but such power has been denied to the
DGHC. In other words, DGHC remains as a contrived structure not with adequate
finances and functions”. Finally, there
was conflict over the holding of elections to the panchayats, but this was also
resolved, clearly revealing an willingness on the part of both the parties to
live and let live.
After more than a decade of functioning the DGHC, it may not be unfair
to suggest, has been able to overcome the hiccups and some sort of modus
vivendi between the state government and the council has been achieved. It
would have been natural for this experiment to take some time to acquire roots,
but given the political will to achieve this it would be realistic to expect it
to survive, even flourish. The long
quest for autonomy has met with success. The Gorkha identity and its association
with Darjeeling have been established by the name of the council. The three elections to the DGHC have
returned the GNLF members with an overwhelming majority. Between the national
and other regional parties, only CPIM has been able to retain some foothold in
the council. The united front of some other parties failed to dislodge the GNLF
in the last elections. Long-term success of the experiment would depend in the
ultimate analysis on the political will of all sides.
Autonomous Councils in Mizoram
It
may be recalled here that the Constitution of India had given almost unlimited
powers to the State Government in respect of local-self governing
institutions. It may establish or abolish
these institutions. The States had absolute authority over devolution of powers
and functions. This discretionary power has been used to centralize power at
almost all levels. The Seventy-third Amendment to the Constitution was to put
an end to this.
Hidayatullah
(1979) called the Fifth and Sixth Schedules “Constitutions within a
Constitution”. When the province of Assam was instituted in 1874, some parts
were administered under Scheduled District Act. These were the Backward Tracts which included Lushai
Hills (Mizoram), Naga Hills (Nagaland), Garo Hills, the North Cachar
Hills, the British portion of Khasi and
Jaintia Hislls, and Eastern Frontier Tracts of Lakhimpur, Balipara and Sadhyia.
The Backward Tracts were part of
larger entity called Excluded Areas. In course of time the term backward tracts was replaced by what was
considered colourless expression excluded
areas.
After
India’s Independence the Excluded Areas were to form Autonomous District and
Autonomous regions. Mizo Hills fell into this category and therefore under the
Sixth Schedule provision. The Sixth Schedule provision itself is very
elaborate, and has undergone tremendous changes since it was first enacted. The
Changes were made through Constitutional amendments, Parliamentary legislations,
Presidential Orders and Central Government Notifications. This paper tries to
highlight the situation after reorganization of Northeast India in 1972 and the
impact of the annulment of Mizo District Council. It is not the intention to
give an analysis of the working of the newly formed Autonomous Councils in the
southern corner of Mizoram.
II. Sixth Scheduled
The
Sixth Schedule divided Tribal Areas in Assam into Part A and Part B. Part A
included United Khasi and Jaintia Hills, Garo Hills, Lushai Hills, Naga Hills,
North Cachar Hills and Mikir Hills. Part B included North Eastern Frontier
Tract including Balipara Frontier Tract, Tirap frontier Tract, Abor Hills and
Misim Hills and the Naga Tribal Areas. But the Tribal Areas after 1972 reorganization
of Northeast India as described as Part I, Part II and Part III has been
drastically changed. Part I relates to the territories of Assam where as Part
II concerns the State of Meghalaya and Part III the State of Mizoram as follow:
Part I : (i) the North Cachar Hills District
(ii)the Mikir Hills.
Part II : (i)
the Khasi Hills District
(ii)the Jaintia Hills District and
(iii) the Garo Hills District
Part III : (i) the Pawi District
(ii) the Lakher District and
(iii) the Chakma District
The
names of the Pawi District, the Lakher District, and the Chakma District in
Mizoram came by the Mizoram District Council (Miscellaneous Provisions)
Order,1972. The name Mizo District was ommitted by the Government of Union territories
(Amendment)Act,1971 (83 of 1971). It therefore dissolved the Mizo District
Council and the Autonomous Regions in the southern corner of Mizoram became Autonomous Districts. The Government of Union Territories Act,1963 and the Sixth Schedule were
suitably amended.. Thus, in so far as Sixth Schedule is concerned, it now
strictly governs only, unless otherwise consitutionally amended, the areas
shown in Part I in Assam, Part II in Meghalaya and Part III in Mizoram.The constitutional
status of village councils in Aizawl District, Mamit, Kolasib, Serchhip and Champhai Districts are ill-defined.
The
District Councils and Regional Councils make laws, the topic of which are prescribed
in para 3 of the Schedule. The law when made has to be approved by the Governor
in order to have an effect whatsoever.
District Councils and regional Councils are empowered to constitute
village councils and village court. The village councils function to the
exclusion of any court in the State. The appelate power over these village
councils are with the District Councils and Regional Councils. No other Courts
except the High Court and the Supreme Court has any jurisdiction.
In
pursuance of paragraph 11 of the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution, The Lushai
District(Village Councils) Act, 1953 was passed and received the assent of the
Governor of Assam on November 19,1953, and subsequently published in the Assam
Gazette on December 9,1953. Section 1(2) of the Act states “it extends to the
Lushai Hills District except the areas under the jurisdiction of the
Pawi-Lakher Regional Council”. Section
23 of the Lushai Hills District (Village Councils)Act,1953 has given vast power
to the village councils to make rules. In addition to this power, the
Administration of Justice Rules, 1953 had given certain judicial functions to
the village councils. In exercise of the power conferred under paragraph 4 of
the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution, the Lushai Hills District, with the
approval of thye Governor of Assam, made the Lushai Hills Autonomous District
(Administration of Justice) Rules, 1953. Section 6 of the Rules conferred the
establishment of village courts. Under the Sixth Schedule, the District Councils
and the Regional Councils are empowered to establish, construct or manage
primary schools, dispensaries, markets, cattle ponds, ferries, fisheries,
roads, road transport and water-ways in the District. Thus, the District
Council as well as the village councils had been empowered to look after their
own affairs.
However,
this has been changed after the Assam reorganization(Meghalaya) Act,1969(55 of
1969). After the changes are notified by the President after consulting the
Governor of the concerned States, Governor makes the rules on all matters
including the transfer of appeal and proceedings. The village councils try only such suits and cases which are not
excluded from their jurisdiction by the
rules made by the Governor and any laws
made by the District Council or Regional Council is repugnant to any provision of law made by the State Legislature, the law or regulation or
rules made by the Councils to the extent of repugnancy will be void and the law
made by the Legislature will prevail in Meghalaya and Mizoram. The Governor, therefore, has the overriding power to
annul any Act or resolution of a District Council if it is likely , in his
opinion, to endanger the safety of India or is likely to prejudice public order
and may take such steps as he thinks necessary, and he may even resume all or any of the powers of the
Councils. Thus Roy Burman(1995) observes, “those who are aware of the
socio-political cross-currents in North east India know that the Sixth Schedule
in its present form has reached a road block in the harmonious functioning of
the State Government and the Autonomous District Councils”.
Under
the Sixth Schedule, the Autonomous District Council was the authority to design
the nature of devolution of power and degree of decentralization of power at
the village level. In Mizoram, Tribal
Areas as described in Table Part I, II, and III includes only the Chakma,
Lakher and Pawi Districts. Under the
circumstnaces, villages councils in
those areas under the erstwhile Mizo District Council have been have been under the supervision of Local
Administration Department of Government of Mizoram. In this way the State
Government is directly controlling the affairs of the village councils through
bureaucratic channel and State political channel.
III. Autonomy
The
Indian masses had been subjected to
ruthless exploitation by the
imperial rulers and their Indian allies. This
seem to have been continued even after India’s Independence because of a
policy of centralization followed by the framers of the Constitution and subsequently by the ruling
elites in Independent India. Many
studies shave revealed this fact. The
only way to end this according to Ghosh
(2000:2) is “when every villager recognizes his own strength and becomes
conscious that he is the maker of his own destiny”.The need for a decentralized
polity based on democratic principle was recommended by Mahatma Gandhi. For
him, it concerns empowerment of the people at the grass-root level. Mahatma
gandhi, thus, built a philosophical foundation for restructuring the Indian
polity on the principle of decentralization and democracy.
However,
what we have in India is observed by Kothari (1988:188) as “ a half-hearted
democratic framework, a centrally monitored
federal structure, an all-India offialdom, that overpowers
representative bodies at all levels and centralizes relations between them and
a highly centralized party hierarchy”.
As such panchayats which came
into being as a sonsequence of Balwantrai Mehta Committee report did not
survive except in Gujarat and Maharasthra. The panchayat movement got new
momemtum after Ashoka Mehta Committee report in 1978. But except in West Bengal, they again did not survive. Experiences all over
India have shown that the States are reluctant
to encourage to panchayat institutions. The State Government instead
tends to expand its bureaucratic
netrwork. Thus, the bureaucracy, controlled from the State capital, occupied
administrative space. This is the situation existing today in Mizoram.
Ther
village councils in Mizoram used to enjoy a somewhat high autonomy in village
administration including judicial matters before the dissolution of Mizo
District Council. However, the situation changed drastically with the emergence
of Union Territory of Mizoram in 1971
ans subsequent statehood in 1987, and the revocation of Mizo District Council.
Bureaucrats, as State agents, have feree play in the functioning of the village
councils. Local Administration Department and other functional departments are
infiltrating in the affairs of the the village councils. Village Council
members are complaining that the State Government, through its bureaucratic representatives has given them
more responsibilities than they can handle, and without attendant powers and authority.
The
functioning of village councils in Mizoram
is, thus, a very peculiar one. It is different from Panchayati Raj
institutions elsewhere in India and it is a variation of village councils under
Sixth Schedule provisions. Withour the intermediary channel of the District
Council or Zilla Parishad, it has lost its autonomy and viability. If
Panchayati Raj institutions are considered
agencies of the State Government especially in regard to regulatory
functions, village councils in Mizoram are truly agencies of the State
Government at the level of developmental functions and to a lesser degree also
at the level of regulatory functions. The State Government can dissolve village
councils at any time without consulting the rural people.
Before
abolition of cheifship, the traditional sanction of the chief’s proprietory
right was made explicit by the flesh-tax given to the chief even by members of otrher villages. Such traditional sanction, strictly observed
by the people, illuminates the territorial proprietorship of the village
land by the Chiefs.. The chief kept the
communal nature of the village land intact.
The village councils under the Sixth Schedule provisions guided by the
Autonomous District Copuncil, inherited the proprietory rights of the traditional
chiefs. But the termination of Mizo District Council and the intrioduction of
different land control and land use policies
by the State Government gradually favour individual ownership of land,
and the village councils virtually lost their autonomy and authority on land, and there is nothing much it can do about it.
The land which came into the market find its way in the hands of town dwellers
who have the purchasing power.
All these indicate the level of supervision and
control of the State Government in the functioning of village councils. In order to meet the hrowing aspirations of
the people for autonomy and democratic functioning, structural changes
in the institutional arrangement is called for.
The
relevance of the existing Sixth Schedule provisions for the hill areas of
Northeast India is very much
questionable. The needed institutional arrangement will have to somehow combine
autonomy in regulatory functions as provided initially in the Sixth Schedule
provisions and autonomy in developmental functions as provided in the
Seventy-Third Constitutional Amendment. This probably could be a model for many
other States as well.
References:
1.Ghosh,
Buddhadeb, 200 Panchayati Raj: Evolution
of the Concept, New Delhi: Institute of Social Sciences.
2.Hidayatullah,
M., 1979 The Fifth and the Sixth
Schedules to the Constitution of India,Guwahati: Ashok Publishing House
3.Kothari,
Rajni, 1988 State Against
Democracy;Humane Governance, New Delhi: Ajanta Publications.
4.Roy
Burman, B.K., 1995 Panchayati Raj and Tribals, New Delhi:
Institute if Social Sciences
Federalising Politics and Society: The
Human Rights Dimension
“…Things fall apart,
The Centre cannot hold”
-William Butler Yeats
For a change,
William Butler Yeats’ own mysticism reveals what is now a universal phenomenon
in the politics of creation of modern, post-colonial nation-states. In our
rather short history as a contested post-colonial society, the citizens of
India have at different points in time echoed the Irish poet’s lines, in
Nagamese, Assamese, Kashmiri, Tamil and a host of other tongues-some that are
comprehensible to the structures of power and some that are bewilderingly
incomprehensible. In the fifty-odd years of its existence as a nation, India
has presented itself to be a “federal nation” to the world. States, divided
every now and then on ethnic and/ or linguistic lines seem to give one the
impression that perhaps India is a place where structures of democratisation and
federalisation are in place and that all is well.
Unfortunately
that is not the case. In a country that is supposedly a federation of state,
the extent of centralisation of control over resources is enormous. The whole
political structure is aligned towards the reduction of autonomy for subjects
of the state- especially those situated in the “frontiers” of the nation.[4]
Some scholars have gone to the extent of terming India’s federal structure as a
kind of “cosmetic federalism” that precludes the option of renegotiation of
existing structures (Baruah 2000).[5]
That, is the truth and in many ways, the façade behind which this state makes
claims of being a democracy.
The
erstwhile province of Assam, itself a colonial structure par excellence, was
the almost the training ground for testing the magnitude of experimentation
with federalising society in a post-colonial situation without really having
changed the relations between the centres of power and those at the margins. As
such, the colonial province was reorganised several times in the 1960s and
1970s to seemingly accommodate ethno-nationalist assertions for tribal
homelands. Observers see this in two possible combinations. Some see this as
pandering to ethnic mobilisation while others see it as the “just” outcome of
legitimate demands by people.
There is a
small question of technicality that throws the whole formulation into a
tailspin. If indeed the Indian state were so dispensed, i.e. to hand out
homelands at the drop of the proverbial hat, then one has to find plausible
answers as to why there is so much violence attached to the process. More
centrally, why does the creation of tribal states and homelands not reduce the
events of conflicts? As a corollary to this question, one may also ask as to
what are the mechanisms that assure parity to the subalterns in the frontiers?
If one
looks at the formation of states like Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya one sees
a common pattern emerge in terms of the dynamics of power and powerlessness and
state responses to the same. In all three instances, cultural differences from
mainstream societies are offered as the basic tools for mobilisation by a
section of society within the areas in question. However, there is a sub-text
to this articulation. The hills of Northeast India had suffered immense
economic losses and remained underdeveloped due to colonial intervention. This
condition was central to the creation of frontiers. Hence, the contradictions
of a social structure such as this is often articulated within a cultural
discourse and sporadically raise the thorny political and economic dimension of
impoverishment and marginalisation. The state’s responses are in themselves
managerial and their capacity to mitigate the antagonistic relations is
somewhat bizarre.
Consider the fact that the creation of the
state of Nagaland came after close to a decade of brutal military actions
against Naga citizens. The Naga nation itself was dismembered and parcelled out
in the end and the conflict continued. What then, was the creation of the state
of Nagaland all about? Was this what Naga nationalists were struggling for?
More importantly, does the creation of the state of Nagaland add substantial
autonomy in matters related to resource allocation and political participation,
to the Naga people? Consider the formation of the state of Mizoram and the
story is almost identical though in reverse order. The Mizo famine and the
subsequent secessionist struggle, culminating in the celebrated peace accord is
a well-rehearsed story. What is often conveniently forgotten in the reminiscing
is the fact that the Mizo struggle promised much to all the Kuki-Chin peoples
who resided in the southern tip of the Arakan Yoma ranges. While the state of
Mizoram is celebrated as an “island of peace” in the region, one has to only
look at the un-kept promises of other Kuki-Chin people who live in the
neighbouring states of Assam, Manipur and Twipra. The state of perpetual siege
and turmoil in these areas, following development induced displacement, may then
be seen as the price that a people have to pay for peace. Meghalaya was perhaps
the most painless instance of the creation of a state on the basis of the
demands of its indigenous populace. Three decades down the line and this
experience has not lived up to its promises and the demands for an absolutist
solution articulated in terms of rights for the indigenous peoples of the state
are threatening to overtake the political discourse.
On
each count there are problems in the manner in which the state has responded,
as also the consequences of the experiments with federalisation of civil
society. For the sake of a more focused discussion the problems are stated
thus:
·
Political Federalism: Extension of statehood to the various ethno-national
movements do not ipso-facto allow for greater political participation for the
people of the state itself. The very nature of Indian parliamentary politics is
unashamedly “majoritarian” and precludes the devolution of powers of the
parliament. It is also important to remember that creation of a state is an act
of parliament. Therefore, the indigenous people of the region, who barely
contribute more than 30 members of parliament, can hardly be considered to be
“represented” as such.
·
The Politics of Statehood: As mentioned earlier, the whole structure of granting
statehood depends on a majority in parliament. Therefore, statehood politics is
articulated towards convincing three hundred odd members from the most
populated states in the sub-continent that the demand for an ethnic homeland is
justified has to be couched in a language that they will understand. Therefore,
statehood politics take on the language of majoritarian discourses thereby
adding to this discourse- rather than questioning it.
·
The Persistence of colonial structures: The constitutional safeguards that are offered as sops to
the indigenous peoples (invariably following events of conflict) fall short of
the guarantees assured to indigenous peoples in the international human rights
regime, whose discourse the Indian state has contributed to in terms of the
signing of protocols and covenants. The existing structures have not really
seen epistemic changes since their inception in the late nineteenth century.
The economic, social and cultural deprivation and marginalisation therefore
continue due to the lack of any regenerative and progressive engagement with
the existing structures.
Federalisation
of civic and political structures is of immense importance for any society.
Progressive regimes ensure that this process is not a mere mockery of the
spirit of empowerment at the economic, social and political levels. The
extension of power to govern to marginalised groups can be the basis upon which
one can speak of a future for the peoples of the Northeast. There is urgency in
the human rights movement to ensure that this process starts from the people,
who have suffered more than five decades of militarisation. Any “top-down”
effort will invariably have to contend with the prophecy of yet another Irish
poet/ mystic/ nationalist:
“…They
think they have pacified Ireland, but the fools…little do they know that while
we cradle these graves, Ireland un-free, shall never be at peace”
-Padraig
Pearse, 1914.
(Speaking at the funeral of yet another Irish
revolutionary, O’Donovan Rossa)
Formation Of Nagaland State And The Quality Of
Autonomy
Author: Achumbemo Kikon
‘a nation
can never be free when un-free nations surrounds her’
For
administrative convenience, the British established Naga Hills District in the
year 1866, which later on merged with Assam in 1874. It should be understood
that the British desperately tried their best to bring the whole Naga
Territories under their domain but due to stiff resistance by the Nagas they
could not succeed in their attempt to subjugate the Naga People. Nevertheless,
the British could somehow manage to establish sizeable portions of the Naga
Hills District approximately 10% of the total area of the Naga territory. In
1880 under the Frontier Tracts Regulation II, Naga areas, which the British
could not conquer were kept as backward area. With the passage of time they
discovered the uniqueness of the Naga way of life and slowly realized that
Nagas are a race which is very different from the rest of the world as the
purest form of democracy is being practiced by the Nagas. Interestingly, the
term ‘backward’ was later on modified under the Govt. of India Act 1935 and
renamed it as excluded and partially excluded areas (which came into effect on
1 April 1937).
With the
formation of Naga Club in 1918, the Nagas position was consolidated whereby the
Naga Club represents the sentiments and voices of its people. To assert its
inalienable right to live independently without any outside interference and
domination, a memorandum was submitted in 1929 to the Simon Commission stating
that, ‘Naga areas be left out of the proposed reform scheme’.
Prior to
Indian independence an agreement called the 9th point Akbar-Hydari
agreement was signed which guaranteed the Nagas rights to determine its own
destiny after ten years. However, the Indian nation which came into being on 15th
August 1947 claim that they cannot execute an agreement which has been
inherited from the British administration.
Left with
no option the Nagas declared its independence on 14th August 1947
(one day ahead of Indian independence) under the banner of Naga National
Council. Ignoring the sentiments and aspirations of the Nagas, the Indian Govt.
adopted repressive policies and suppressed the Nagas with its military
strength. Therefore, to prove to the world that Nagas desire for an independent
homeland is genuine and un-compromisable a Naga plebiscite was conducted on 16
May 1951 whereby 99.9% voted to reassert its position to remain free from all
sorts of domination. This was followed by boycotting the 1952 and 1957 Indian
general election.
The
visit of the first Indian Prime Minister Mr. Jawaharlal Nehru and Burmese
Premier Mr. U Nu in Kohima in 1953 was infact the finest opportunity for the
Nagas, Indians and Burmese to address the contentious issue of arbitrary
division of the Naga territory and random demarcations of the boundaries by the
colonial administration. Unfortunately, for reason best known to the Indian
authorities, Nagas were denied of the
opportunity to make either a statement nor submit a Representation to express
its feelings and aspirations wherefore, the Naga people walked out to register
its protest against the denial of the opportunity. Indeed, it was due to the
repressive measures of the Indian Govt. and the Armies which has compelled the
Nagas to take up arms to defend its freedom and resist the occupational forces.
There was
fierce fighting between the Naga resistance group and the Indian armies and the
whole situation went out of human control as tension mounted. In order to
subside the conflict a group of people were handpicked by the Indian
intelligence bureau and formed the ‘Naga Peoples Convention’ (NPC). Basically
the intention of forming the NPC was to mediate between the Naga resistance
group and the Indian Govt. to bring them to the negotiating table.
Unfortunately, the members of the NPC went beyond their assignment and later on
turned into negotiators. In 1959, the convention drafted 16 points and
submitted to the Indian Govt. in the form of Memorandum. Basing on this
memorandum the present State of Nagaland was born as the 16th State of the
Indian Union. It is to be noted that the present State of Nagaland was never
created out of any agreement nor with the expressed consent of the Naga People
as a whole and the Naga resistance group in particular. Therefore, it can never
be termed as 16-point agreement; it is precisely a demand by few vested
interested people with instigation by the Indian intelligence. With the
creation of the State, an Article 371 (a) was incorporated in the Indian
Constitution to safeguard the religious, traditional, customary practices of
the Naga people so also to protect the natural resources. However, in reality
these provisions are never implemented. In fact, the creation of the State has
increases the burden of India as Crores of rupees, which has been pumped-in for
developmental projects, has been siphoned off by few individuals who are at the
helms of affairs. And it is this group of individuals who are interested to
keep this conflict going so that the central Govt. continues to send money in
the guise of law and order, insurgency related fund and peace activities. The
Indian intelligence bureau are the major share-holders in all this related
funds and this amounts are never audited in any form.
The
creation of the State has divided the Naga homeland forcing them to
disintegrate the land and the people as the rest of the Nagas were kept under
the State of Manipur, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and the major chunk of the Naga
territory lays in Burma. Nagas does not enjoy any special autonomy out of the
creation of the State rather it only aggravated the grave situation that has
been created due to forced occupation of our land. To us, the Autonomy within the Indian Constitution does
not arise and it is not applicable at all in the Naga context as it is not what
we have struggled and fought for. In our context, Autonomy means and implies
complete withdrawals of the ‘Occupational Forces’ and leaves the Nagas alone to
decide its own destiny.
The
on-going peace process vis-à-vis political talks between the Govt. of India and
the Naga Representatives needs to be strengthened by every right thinking
individuals/groups as will as by every peace loving people. We also admit that,
our movement has inspired our neighbours and many struggling group in this part
of the region to assert their rights for self-determination. We are hopeful
that an honourable settlement to the Naga Issue will be an inspiration too for
our neighbours to resolve their issues peacefully. Nevertheless, this can be
possible and realized only through the co-operation and support of everyone
including the Indian Civil Societies.
Identity
And Autonomy In India’s North-East: The Constitutional Framework
The aspiration of a population to determine its own destiny by itself
has long been recognized by nations and legitimized by the traversed history of
human civilization. The doctrine of right to self-determination is an
acknowledgement of this aspiration. The urge for self-determination arises out
of historically evolved distinct identities of different population groups that
gave birth to different socio-economic formations. The fullest manifestation of
this ‘right to self-determination’ may be observed in the formation of ‘one nation-one state’. The coincidence of
national boundary to that of state boundary in such cases precludes the
problems of autonomist demands arising out of multiple identities. However, the
natural process of state formation, where state emerges at the end of the
tunnel of tribe-nation continuum, has been hindered due to the empire building
projects of the forces of imperialism.
The struggle against imperialism has led to the replication of '‘modern
state structure'’in transitory social spaces. The processes of adoption and
adaptation of the modern state structure mainly followed the principles of
territoriality rather than the identity boundary. In most cases, anti-imperialist
struggles galvanized a social space cutting across identity boundaries and
aspired to replace the local imperial territorial boundary with an independent
state boundary. Thus emerged the states with many nationalities
incontradistinction with ‘one nation-one state’. While the former, i.e., states with many
nationalities/sub-national socio-economic formations, in the parlance of
political theory, is often referred to as ‘state-nation’, the latter ,i.e., one
nation-one state, is labeled as ‘nation-state’. It is the first category of
states, where pulls and pressures of pluralism are more pronounced.
In order to accommodate the pluralistic diversities, the state-nations
have devised a federalist framework of organization. This framework has created
a political space having built-in elasticity for accommodating the diverse
interests of different homogeneous population groups. The federalist framework,
thus, limits the extent of the right to self-determination of the population
groups having distinctive identities. The constitutional provisions for
devolution of powers to the state governments delimit the highest level of
autonomy that these groups can enjoy in India. The unit-state-structure, having
all the three organs—executive, legislature and judiciary, like
union-state-structure, provide enough political space for the sustenance and
growth of group-specific socio-economic and cultural goals. Although the
adoption of linguistic criterion for the identification of groups for
federalist solution to the problem of right to self-determination has largely
fulfilled the aspirations of distinctive large population groups, the same
could not be applied in case of the smaller groups as well as groups whose
identities are in flux. In order to accommodate their right to
self-determination a generic identity has been conceived of under the
nomenclature of ‘Scheduled Tribe’ and a political space has been reserved for
them under the constitutional provisions of Fifth and Sixth Schedules.
Identity
and Autonomy: The Fifth Schedule
The fifth Schedule is meant to protect the interest of the smaller
tribal population groups who are placed within the larger unit-state-structure.
It provides a limited platform by way of formation of ‘Tribes Advisory
Council’, which can articulate the aspirations of their respective communities
so that these issues are taken care of while framing the laws pertaining to
their welfare and advancement. Neither the Council has any executive power nor
does it enjoy any legislative or judicial powers in administering the justice
within the scheduled areas. The legislative power is vested in the hands of the
Governor and the Council has a duty to advise him on his desire. The Governor
is empowered to apply his discretion regarding the applicability of any law
passed by the parliament or state legislature in the scheduled areas. In
consultation with the ‘tribes advisory Council’, he can make laws for the
scheduled areas (i) prohibiting or
restricting transfer of land, (ii) regulating the allotment of land, and (iii)
regulating the money lending business. The President should assent to all these
regulations.
Thus, the Fifth Schedule envisaged protecting the tribal interests,
albeit in a limited scale, without assigning any concrete right to self-determination.
As far as the question of preservation of identity is concerned, protection of
tribal homeland, by way of creation of scheduled areas, is considered to be the
key towards this end.
Identity
and Autonomy: The Sixth Schedule
The degree of autonomy under the Sixth Schedule is far larger than that
of the Fifth Schedule. In fact, the Sixth Schedule provides some sort of
‘proto-state-structure’ to the areas under its jurisdiction. It has been
suitably designed to take care of the autonomy aspirations of the smaller
tribal groups in the north eastern states of India. The Schedule provides for
autonomous District Council as well as Regional Council having powers on all
the three vital areas of autonomy viz., executive, legislative and judicial.
Legislative
power
The District Council\Regional Council is empowered to make laws, for
areas under its jurisdiction, relating to (i) land, (ii) forest (other than
reserved forest), (iii) water bodies (for the purpose of agriculture), (iv)
regulation of shifting cultivation, (v) village or town committees, (vi)
village or town administration, (vii) appointment or succession of chiefs or
headmen, (viii) inheritance of property, (ix) marriage and divorce, and (x)
social customs.
Apart from these, the District Council can manage and make laws in
order to regulate the money lending as well as trading activities of the
non-residents\non-tribals. It is also empowered to make laws relating to
primary education, dispensaries, markets, cattle pounds, ferries, fisheries,
roads, road transport and waterways in the district.
Resource-Mobilization
powers
The District Council/Regional Council has the power to assess and
collect land revenues.
It enjoys the power to levy and collect taxes on land and buildings as well
as tolls on persons. The District Council is also empowered to levy and collect
taxes on (i) professions, (ii) trades, (iii) callings and employment, (iv)
animals, (v) vehicles, (vi) boats, (vii) entry of goods int6o a market for
sale, (viii) tolls on passengers and goods carried in ferries, (ix) the
maintenance of schools, (x) dispensaries, and (xi) roads. Apart from these, the
District Council is entitled to get a share of royalties accruing to the state
annually on account of extraction of minerals. All the revenues collected in
course of the administration of a district/region are credited to a
District/Regional Fund. The management of this Fund is guided by rules and
regulations set by the Governor.
Judicial
Powers
The Sixth Schedule provides for a two-tier system of administration of
justice at the district/regional level. At the village level, the village
council/village court is empowered to trial suits and cases between the parties
all of whom belong to schedule tribes. At the district/regional level,
district/regional council/court is empowered to act as a court of appeal in
respect of all suits and cases triable by a village council/court.
The Sixth Schedule, thus, has created a space for the tribal
communities of north east India where they can enjoy autonomy in ordering their
respective social fields in accordance with historically evolved group
specificities. The degree of autonomy provided to district/regional councils in
terms of devolution of executive, legislative and judicial powers enables these
institutions to protect the economic and identity interests of the tribal
population groups.
Identity
and Autonomy: State vs District Council
All the matters on which district council is empowered to make laws are
also enumerated in the State List. In order to ensure the autonomy of the
district/regional council, the Sixth Schedule provides that no act of the state
legislature shall apply to any autonomous district/region unless the district
council adopts and approves the same.
Apart from the matters on which the district council has legislative
power, Governor has the discretionary power in deciding whether the laws made
by the state legislature on other matters will be directly applicable to the
autonomous districts/regions or not. Even the applicability of the laws made by
the parliament in these areas are also put under the discretion of the
Governor, in case of Assam, and President, in case of other north eastern
states. Thus, the district/regional councils have been provided with effective
shield so that larger bodies cannot undermine their autonomy.
Thus, as far as the Indian constitutional framework is concerned, both
the state and district council derive their power directly from the
constitution. The district/regional councils are in no way subordinate to the
state. They are coordinate bodies having distinct operational sphere and
separate constituency of population to deal with. This horizontal authority
structure is, however, integrated vertically through the practice of governance
that has been developed along side the constitutional practices. In view of the
narrow resource base, district councils are mostly depended on grants-in-aid.
The central grants-in-aid for them is routed through the state government. This
mechanism provides a leverage which is being often used toe the district
councils the line of the state governments. It is this financial dependence and
the use of this dependency that remain as a major bone of contention in the
relation between the district council and the state governments. In fact, the movements seeking replacement
of the district councils by autonomous states are largely the expressions of
frustrations arising out of this dependency relation.
Autonomy
and the North Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971
The North Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971, has, inter alia,
weakened the autonomy of the district councils of Meghalaya. While the Act
has created the state of Meghalaya out of the erstwhile districts of Garo, Khasi
and Jaintia Hills of Assam, it has accompanied with a substitution in the
provision of the Sixth Schedule, which has empowered the state legislature to
make laws on matters, which constituted the domain of exclusive interest of the
district councils. Moreover, if any provision of law made by the district
council is repugnant to that of the state legislature, then the law made by the
district council shall, to the extent of repugnancy, be void and the law made
by the legislature shall prevail. This constitutional provision has largely
weakened the relevance of the institution of district council in Meghalaya.
However, this provision has not been extended to other north eastern states
where the Sixth Schedule is applicable. This has been made applicable in
Meghalaya, perhaps, because of the fact that the territorial boundaries of the
three district councils added together almost exhaust the territorial boundary
of the state, and hence little is left under the command of the state which can
be used in advancing the collective welfare of the people.
Identity
and Autonomy: The Socio-political Dynamics
The process of identity formation among the smaller tribal population
groups in north eastern India is still continuing. In some cases generic
identities are paving the way for the emergence of specific identities. The
process of fission is bringing new identities into the fore and powerful
movements are being launched to assert themselves. In most cases, these
movements demand accommodation within the framework of the Sixth Schedule.
Apart from these, autonomy movements are also arising out of assertion by the
hitherto dormant identities. The empowerment of one group of people encourages
the others to press for autonomy. Thus, the dynamics of identity formation and
the demand for autonomy are interlinked. Although the federalist framework of
the Indian constitution is flexible enough to accommodate the demand for right
to self-determination of the smaller tribal population groups in the north
eastern region, the problem lays with the real-politik of decision making. It
is, indeed, a hard choice between opening up of the Pandora’s box and
recognizing the legitimacy of right to self-determination.
Besides grappling with these entry-level identity movements, the Indian
federal structure is also under stress from movements seeking higher level of
autonomy. In north east, this may be discerned from the demands for shifting
the accommodation from the Fifth to the Sixth Schedule, and then from the Sixth
Schedule to unit-state-structure.
The problem of administering justice to these demands does not lay with
the federalist framework of Indian constitution, but partly with the internal
social dynamics of the groups themselves whose identities are still in flux ,
and partly with the dilemma of real-politik decision-making by the
practitioners of power politics.
Conclusion
The smallness of the size of tribal population groups asserting for
self identity, the smallness of the territory of their homeland, competing
nature of territorial claims, shifting nature of group loyalty coupled with
ambitious nature of autonomy demands—all stand on the way of their attainment
of right to self-determination. The identity movements, therefore, need to come
into terms with the bulky nature of the institutions of autonomy. If some of
these issues can be sorted out, the gap between the constitutional provisions
and the problem of getting accommodation therein will be, to some extend,
smoothened. Moreover, if the dependency syndrome that exists in the
relationship between the two autonomous institutions, viz., state and district
council, is addressed properly, the aspirations for higher level of autonomy,
which is difficult to justify at times given the smaller size of the
constituency of the movement, may be contained. A juridical means, if made
available, as an alternative to political means, for the attainment of
autonomy, this will, no doubt, take care of the gross violation of the human
rights that occur in the process of legitimisation of the right to
self-determination.
Constitutional Provisions of Autonomy of
the Dalits and the Protection
of Dalit Rights - The Experience of Bihar
The
establishment of a democratic political order in India after independence was a
major achievement because it was based on the premise of inclusion of all and exclusion of none. But this premise of
inclusion was not intended to be homogenizing and assimilative. It was rather
accommodative. The effort was made to reconcile the identity of the new
"nation state" with the autonomy of the groups and communities.
Though the reconciliation between the two contradictory demands have not been a
happy experience over the five decades of constitutional engineering and
complex institutional matrix, it has left space for reconstructing the agenda
of autonomy for group and communities. How can autonomy guaranteed
constitutionally or otherwise be actualised for a just plural society and
federal polity remains a major problematic. If different ethno-linguistic
groups and minority communities claim for autonomy and self-governing rights,
these fall well within the constitutional and federal dispensation of self-rule combined with shared rule. However this federal
principle of self-rule and shared rule applies only in the case of federal
autonomy to the territorially organized groups and communities. In case of
territorially dispersed groups and communities as in case of certain religious
communities or dalits autonomy presupposes a different meaning and context. In
this case autonomy primarily gets restricted to the function of identity
maintenance of the community, protection of certain rights guaranteed by the
constitution and representation and participation in the socio-economic and
political life of society as equal partners without any prejudice and
discrimination. It is the second context in which the discourse on autonomy in
case of the dalits be positioned. The dalits do not constitute a minority group
in terms of numerical inferiority nor do they constitute an ethnic group in
etymological terms for they do not have demand/claim over a territory as their
exclusive homeland. It is the aspect of discrimination and exclusion from
socio-economic and political life that situates dalits as a minority group. Dr.
B.R. Ambedkar, as a leader of the dalit community had set out his claims of
dalits as a minority group before the Simon Commission. He observed, "
…We claim
that we must be treated as a distinct minority, separate from the Hindu
community. Our minority character has been hitherto concealed by our inclusion
in the Hindu community, but as a matter of fact there is really no link between
the depressed classes and the Hindu community…. The untouchables and touchables
may have grown and may form a part of one culture or religion but, if,
therefore, they were to be considered to be parts of the same 'society' then
the term 'society' will lose all its meaning and this will give rise to
confusion … Though the caste and the outcaste belong to one culture they belong
to different societies … it would be a … foolish to say that because they have
grown up as a part of the Hindu culture the caste and the outcaste make up one
society".
Ambedkar's
apprehension, observation and claim as set out in his above deposition before
the Simon Commission constituted a major item of Constituent Assembly Debates in
India. The minority character of the ex-untouchables and tribal groups on
account of their exclusion and systemic discrimination was recognized by the
Constituent Assembly and they were, after a throughful consideration, accorded
a status of a political minority. An elaborate constitutional provisions were
made relating to their autonomy, protection and rights. The affirmative action programme was
envisioned as a means of their inclusion in the 'national mainstream'. They
were, thus, not only given an array of rights but also recognized as district
group for preferential treatment. Infact, the democratic dispensation and
protective discrimination policy have substantially changed the language of
dalit discourse over the last fifty years. The language of current discourse
doesn't start with a claim of minority identity but with a claim of majority
as evidenced in the discourse of Bahujan Samaj Party, though it is more of
symbolic appearance than of the actual content. And, therefore, there is a
dynamic shift from a self-definition of Alpjan
(minority) to Bahujan (majority).
This is precisely the context that locating dalits in the discourse of nation
and minorities appears to be a complex problematic. The gradual change in the
nomenclature of ex-untouchables of India from Panchama-Achut to Harijan to
Scheduled Caste and to dalit speaks not only of their growing presence in the
'nation' and their assertiveness in the 'mainstream' but also the complex
articulation of their identity. The constructed identity of dalit and its
articulation has its own dialectics of being 'within' and 'beyond' the Nation.
If at one level their claims pertain to the nation and its resources on account
of arithmetic calculus of population, at another level the feeling of exclusion
from the society and state generates a sense of alienation resulting into a
feeling of being beyond the 'nation'. This dialectical relationship between the
dalit as a community and nation doesn't transcend Ambedkar's arguments before
the Simon Commission almost over the last seven decades. And in this sense
dalit articulation is a complex but dynamic one.
The
concern of the present paper is not to enter into the discourse of minority
characterisation of the dalits but to reflect on the dalit situation vis-à-vis
the constitutional provision for their autonomy, protection and rights.
Therefore, the paper makes a modest attempt to recapitulate the constitutional
provisions relating to autonomy and rights to the dalits. It also unravels the
incongruity between the constitutional provisions and actual situation of the
dalits. For grasping the actual operational dynamics of the constitutional
provisions and policies of the state Bihar has been taken as a case though the
Bihar experience has its own specificity, the existing empirical situation in
case of dalits can broadly be generalised in other case of approximity.
The Preamble of the Constitution best reflects the vision and
intentions of its founding fathers as it establishes equality, justice and
liberty as the cardinal principles in regulating the society and state in India
and maintaining the unity and integrity of the nation. It judiciously combines the two basic values
of equality and justice. The
nondiscrimination principle of citizenship rights included in the category of
fundamental rights ensures equality before law and equal protection of law,
equality of opportunity and equal liberty.
The provision of protective discrimination combined with the clauses of
group rights, affirmative action and preferential treatment establishes the
values of social justice in favour of
deprived groups and communities.
The Constitution ensured equality of opportunity to all irrespective of
caste, gender, religion, and one's social location. It provided opportunity to equal access in the public
domain. It was a major achievement of
the dispensation of democratic political order in independent India. However, the formal disjunction between
one's social location and opening up of the opportunity structure in public
political domain did not guarantee the equifinality and social justice to the
deprived groups of society. In the case
of Indian society, which is defined by structured inequality, the social
location of individuals and groups has a strong bearing on his/her
circumstances and consequent unequal excess to opportunity structure of the
public domain. Since social location of individuals has been a major source of
privileges and deprivations and determinant of individual circumstances in
India, the deliverance of social and economic justice cannot be based only on
the principle of merit and equality of opportunity in the public domain.
This logic of social, economic and political life was well considered
by the framers of the Constitution of India.
And therefore, the Constitution of India made specific provisions for
autonomy, rights and protection of dalits along with the generic clauses of
equality and liberty guaranteed to every citizen in India. Whereas the Articles
14, 15 (1) and 16(1) of the Constitution exclusively establish the equality
principle, Articles 15(4) and 16(4) incorporate the principle of social
justice. If Article 14 proclaims
equality before law and equal protection of law, Article 15(1) prohibits
discrimination on grounds of race, caste, sex, religion or place of birth. The
Article 16(1) further provides equality of opportunity to all. The protective discrimination clauses of
Article 15(4) and 16(4) become decisive with regard to protection of rights of
socially and economically deprived groups of the hierarchical system. These Articles follow the difference
principle leading to social justice.
Article 15(4) says,
"Nothing in this Article shall prevent the State from making any
special provision for the advancement of any socially and educationally
backward classes of citizens or for the Schedule Caste and Scheduled
Tribes". Article 16(4) makes
provision that "Nothing in this Article shall prevent the State from
making any special provision for the reservation of appointments or posts in
favour of any backward class of citizens which, in the opinion of the State is
not adequately represented in the services under the State". Both the provisions in the Constitution,
however limited in scope, provide condition for the constitutional protection
of the rights of the dalits.
Alongwith these protective discrimination clauses in the Constitution,
the Directive Principles of the State Policy may be considered as mechanism of
realizing the goal of social justice and social transformation in the direction
of just society, especially to the details.
Articles 38 and 46 among others, specifically aim at securing social justice
to the deprived sections of population. Article 38 reads that, (i) "the
State shall strive to promote the welfare of the people by securing and
protecting as effectively as it may a social order in which justice, social,
economic and political shall inform all the institutions of the national
life", (ii) "the State shall, in particular, strive to minimise the
inequalities in income, and endeavour to eliminate inequalities in status,
facilities and opportunities, not only amongst individuals but also amongst the
groups of people residing in different areas or engaged in different
vocations". Article 46 clearly
directs the State that "the State shall promote with special care the
educational and economic interests of the weaker sections of the people, and,
in particular of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes, and shall
protect them from social injustice and all forms of exploitation".
Apart from these two Articles of the Directive Principles of State
Policy, other Articles of the Constitution which include Articles 330, 332,
335, 338, 340, 341 and 342 specifically advance the goal of realising social
justice to details in independent India. These constitutional provisions have
been made after a thoughtful consideration by the members of the Constituent
Assembly who were quite conscious and aware about the dynamics of
socio-economic order of Indian society.
Since caste has been the major identity marker and a source of
inequality, the constitutional goal of social justice has been channelised
through the category of castes (barring tribes and other groups identified for
the protective discrimination). The constitution has recognised the cumulative
deprivation of large sections of the population generally referred as details
who have been systematically discriminated on the basis of caste distinction.
The protective discrimination shield thus, been provided to the dalits who have
either been excluded from the caste hierarchy of the Varna system or have been
lowly placed. Their exclusion and low placement has resulted into cumulative inequality.
The protective discrimination policy aims at minimizing the inequality of
socio-economic order and opportunities in public life. And thus providing the
dalits opportunity to participate in the socio-economic and political life of
the country as equal partners. Social justice is an integral part of the
constitutional provision relating to dalit rights. The protective
discrimination policies ensure the recognition and representation of dalits in
the structure of governance. The Article 17 of the Constitution exclusively
deals with abolition of untouchability. The subsequent Acts and laws prohibit
untouchability and social discrimination. The welfare measure and the policies
of the state have been designed in the direction of advancing the goal of social
justice to the dalits. However, the gap exists between the constitutionally
guaranteed rights and the actual dalit situation. This condition exists in
every parts of the country but with a different proportion. An analysis of
Bihar experience may be indicative of the incongruity between constitutional
design and actual situation.
In
real situation of socio-economic life, dalits in Bihar are far behind the other
groups of the population. The practice of untouchability and maintaining of
ritual distance has not disappeared from the public life in rural areas. Most
of the cases relating to them are not reported, but this does not ensure the
realisation of the civil rights of these groups. Segregation in residential
pattern, predominant occupational pattern, high incidence of poverty and
non-ownership/marginal ownership of land are some of the indicators of their
perpetual backwardness. Atrocities against dalits are still alarming.
Educational backwardness is another important issue of dalits. They are far behind
the general population in terms of literacy rate, and enrolment ratio but very
high in drop-out rate. Their representation in government services and
educational institutions is still not very significant. These aspects of
socio-economic life of the dalits speak about their actual situation. As
compared to West Bengal in the eastern part of India, dalits are worst
sufferers in Bihar. There is perpetual violation of rights to live with
dignity, strive for socio-economic equality and participate in socio-economic
and political life of society as co-partners not as sub-ordinates or subjugated
people. Atrocities against dalits are alarmingly high. From 1977 onwards the
incidence of crime against dalits, despite the prevailing laws and
constitutional provisions have been rising. As per the Report of the
Commissions for Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribes; 681 in 1977, 1911 in
1978, 2457 in 1979, 1890 in 1980; and 10873 from 1981-1986 cases of crime
against dalits were reported from Bihar. Whereas from the year 1992 to 1997
about 1885 cases of crime against dalits have recorded by the CID Department of
the Government of Bihar. How much authentic and appropriate are the figures of
crime against dalits is difficult to say because in majority of the cases crimes
are either not reported or recorded. The major atrocities cases, however, are
recorded due to their visibility and official recognition. The major factors
behind the atrocities against dalits account for the question of land
distribution, minimum wages, working hours, social dignity of the dalit women
folk etc. Almost a complete match between economic deprivation and social
oppression characterises the dalit situation in Bihar. In fact, Dalits in Bihar are interfaced with compounded
and complex problem. On the one hand
they are the victims of overall backwardness of economy and relative closure of
the opportunity structure and on the other they are subjected to both economic
exploitation and social oppression. The
agenda of democratic nation-building and social transformation in
post-independent India has largely failed in the case of dalit. Consequently there is erosion of faith in
the state and its apparatus. Atrocities
against dalits and their exploitation and oppression have led them to a new
kind of assertion which does not take only a democratic channel to express the
grievances but resort to violence. The mobilisation of dalits under the banners
of different naxal groups is significant in this regard which cannot be simply
explained in class terms. It has more
to do with the question of social dignity than to mere economic
exploitation. Of course, the economic
issues have been important in the naxalite movement. But the main concern of the dalit and their support to naxal
movement has revolved around the resistance to the feudal social oppression,
opposition to the sexual abuse of their womenfolk and a sense of identity. Initially the main issues of dalit
mobilisation were economic, relating especially to the distribution of
government land, minimum wages, working hours etc. but beneath these there has
been a strong urge for social dignity and a rightful place in society. Disillusionment from the state and the
minimal\negligible chances of participation in the political processes have
added more and more dimensions to the mobilisation of dalits around the
ideology of naxalism. Despite the limitations and drawbacks of the naxal
movements and their violent mode of expression they have been successful in
mobilising a large section of dalits in south-central districts of Bihar (one
of the states/provinces of India) which include Gaya, Jehanabad, Nawada,
Aurangabad, Bhojpur and Patna. In these
districts the dalits have suffered worst atrocities and organised violence
perpetrated both by the upper castes and the upper backward castes. But naxal mobilisation has instilled a new
sense of confidence, new assertiveness, a sense of defiance to the feudal
oppression, and a group based organised retaliation of the dalits. The womenfolk now feel secured. The incidents of sexual abuses have largely
been reduced not due to the effectiveness of the state but due to the coercive
presence of naxal groups, and their retaliatory violence. The constant fights of the dalits for their
dignity (Izzat) have been translated into a reality. Now the upper
castes not only maintain restrain in their social behaviour vis-a-vis dalits
but also enter into rapprochement with them in terms of enhancement in their
wages, reduction in working hours, and extending dignity to their womenfolk.
However, this is one dimension of the reality of dalit
articulation. In many other cases the
upper castes have not been able to reconcile with the changing reality. They still want to maintain their feudal
domination over the oppressed. The formation
of caste based senas (caste armies) in case of Bihar is a manifestion of this
fact. The Brahmarshi Sena, Savarna
Liberation Front and now Ranvir Sena of Bhumihars, Kuer Sena of Rajputs, Lorik
Sena of Yadavas, Bhumi-Sena of Kurmis are some of the caste senas which have
been operated at one time or the other. The passive support of the state cannot
be denied in the cases of mass massacres of dalits by the upper castes or their
senas in different areas of south central Bihar. These senas have been instrumental in perpetrating organised
violence against the dalits during the last two decades. In the early seventies and eighties, the
upwardly mobile backward castes and intermediary castes had been equally responsible
for violence against the dalits. The
reason has been the contradictions of rural socio-economic order in Bihar. Whereas the upper backward castes - Yadavas,
Kurmis and Koeris - have been the major beneficiaries of post-independent
socio-economic transformation, the dalits have remained deprived and exploited
on all accounts. Therefore, the contradictions between the upper backward
castes and dalits have been more prominent in case of Bihar. This is attested by the fact that one of the
first major violence against dalits was organised by the Kurmis in Belchi in
1977. And throughout the existence of
naxalism both the upper castes and the advanced backward castes have worked
together against the dalit interests. It is only the decade of the nineties that
the backward castes and dalits have come together around the common agenda of
'social justice'. Though the alliances
of the upper backward castes and the dalits can not be seen as a stable pattern
due to the persisting contradictions, these alliances have tremendous impact on
the power structure of north-Indian society. The electoral politics has also
been instrumental in instilling a new sense of confidence during the last one
decade. Dalits have, of course, not been major beneficiary in terms of economic
gains during this period but their social dignity has been restored. In this regard Laloo Yadav's contributions
cannot be undermined, who brought the dalits into active electoral
politics. Now dalits have also started
taking part in the political process.
In many areas they have been able to cast their votes which has resulted
into instilling a sense of being important. Even in this regard the role-played
by the naxal groups - CPI (ML) - Party Unity, CPI (ML)-Liberation, MKKS, MCC
have been significant. Initially none
of these groups favoured their participation in politics but in due course many
of them have also started taking part in the election process. Their participation, in one form or the
other, has led to the presence of dalits in arena of politics in Bihar.
However, the rights of the dalits as human being remain yet to be realised in
the case of Bihar. Needless to add the non implementation of welfare measures,
land reform deficiencies and over all backwardness of the dalits are the major
indicators of the violation of the rights.
International Legal Thinking on the Rights
of the Minorities
Author:
Sabyasachi Basu Ray Choudhury
The
question of minority rights has received considerable attention in
international legal discourse in recent times. Since the 16th century,
treaties were being drafted by the European rulers, which guaranteed to
minorities within their domain the enjoyment of their traditional religious
rights. For instance, the Treaty of
Westphalia, the first treaty to recognize sovereignty of the modern
nation-states, granted religious freedom to the German Protestants on the same
terms as the Roman Catholics. But, it was not until the formulation of Article
27 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) that
even a modicum of protection was extended by international treaty.
According
to Article 27, “In those states in which ethnic, religious or linguistic
minorities exist, persons belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the
right, in community with the other members of their group, to enjoy their own
cultures, to profess and practice their own religion, or to use their own
language.” It should be noted that, “persons” rather than the minorities to
which they belong, are the subject of this Article. Here minority rights have
almost been treated as individual rights writ large. In this sense, the
minority rights are the sum total of the rights of religious or cultural
tolerance enjoyed by individual “persons” or individual “members” of the group
concerned. Therefore, it becomes a collective right exercisable on behalf of
all members either by the group leader, or by any one member as the
representative of the others in the group. In this context, one may also look
at a definition of a minority provided by Francesco Caportini, the UN (United
Nations) Special Rapporteur in the Sub-commission on the Prevention of
Discrimination and the Protection of Minorities, in 1977, in a report, which
views a minority as a “group numerically inferior to the rest of the population
of the state – possess ethnic, religious or linguistic characters differing
from those of the rest of the rest of the population and slow, if only
implicitly, a sense of solidarity, directed towards preserving their culture,
traditions, religion or language.”
The UN
Sub-commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities
initiated a study on discrimination in education, and in due course it was
decided to ask the UNESCO to consider the possibility of drafting and adopting
a convention on the subject. Accordingly, the General Conference of the UNESCO
adopted the Convention Against Discrimination in Education on December 14,
1960, and it came into force on May 22, 1962. Article 5(c) of this Convention
says: “It is essential to recognize the right of members of national minorities
to carry on their own educational activities, including the maintenance of
schools and, depending on the educational policy of each state, the use of the
teaching of their own language, provided however:
(i)
That this right is not exercised in a manner which
prevents the members of these minorities from understanding the culture and
language of the community as a whole and from participating in its activities,
or which prejudices national sovereignty;
(ii)
That the standard of education is not lower than the
general standard laid down or approved by the competent authorities; and
(iii)
That attendance in schools is optional.”
Considering
these, it would be clear that, over the years, two major rights of minorities
have got explicit recognition in international law. One is the right to exist
and the other is the right to be different in their existence from the majority
of the people in the state concerned.
The right
to exist has primarily been derived from the Genocide Convention of 1948. This
right is enforceable according to the post-Nuremberg theory of a somewhat
universal jurisdiction to try “crimes against humanity”. This has been
reinforced by the establishment of international tribunals to punish the
offenders in genocide in Rwanda and former Yugoslavia although it assures a
protection against deliberate steps taken by the state to “destroy in whole or
in part” a national, ethnic, racial or religious group. Therefore, it can
hardly protect such peoples against wanton destruction of the environment or
culture that sustains them. This also cannot protect such peoples against acts
intended to prevent them from “thriving or developing”. It also does not
provide redress against a state, which may “accidentally” or “inadvertently” extinguishes
a group by neglect or by creating conditions, lead to the dissolution of the
group by death or departure from the state concerned.
Nevertheless,
the right to exist is considered to be a basic right which protects the people
belonging to minority groups against ethnic cleansing by threatening
persecution of the perpetrators, if they can be captured, and by inviting the
intervention of other states, if breached on a large scale on the basis of the
“humanitarian necessity” principle as applied recently in Kosovo. However, such
breaches, at some point, might give rise to a right of secession. We shall come
to that later.
On the
other hand, the right to be different has now crystallized into a rule of
international law, to the extent that it is expressed in Article 27 of the
ICCPR. But a sensitive question is involved in this context: what happens when
the minority rights under Article 27 come into conflict with individual rights.
A humanitarian perspective would suggest that the cultural traditions, which
infringe basic human rights, could not be defended. After all, the minorities
are as capable of breaching human rights as the majorities. Therefore, many
would argue that Article 27 could not be considered as a general licence for
the minorities to maintain cruel and discriminatory practices.
Moreover,
Article 27 does not include any right to representation in communicating with
minorities or majorities of the same ethnic origin in other states, or even to
enjoy affirmative action programmes. In that sense, Article 27 has added little
in practice apart from guaranteeing equality, non-discrimination, freedom of
worship and freedom to assemble to the individuals and groups of individuals.
This is again qualified by reference to “reasonable needs of the State” to
strike a fair balance in its allocation of resources. And the States find it
uneasy to admit to the existence of minorities as any such concession will
encourage demands for autonomy, and in the long run, may encourage separatist
claims. For example, France refused to be bound by Article 27, as “there are no
minorities in Greater France”. If one accepts that position taken by France,
then the peoples of Papeete, who rioted in protest against the pollution of
their culture and environment by the French nuclear tests at Mururoa Atoll, are
not entitled to protest under Article 27 because of the stand taken by France.
So far as
the indigenous peoples are concerned, Article 27 has been used to help clear
away two major roadblocks to their freedom: the traditional doctrines that
conquest extinguishes native land claims, and that treaties signed after
surrender have continuing validity. It may be mentioned here that, the
international legal experts are now more and more inclined to regard the
indigenous peoples as one class of minority group with a claim for fair
treatment from the state and a majority of settler descendants around.
Let us now
come back to the questions of autonomy and the right of self-determination. It
may appear that the independence for ethnic minorities has been promised by
international legal principles, particularly through Article 1 of the ICCPR of
1966, which announces that: “All Peoples have the right to self-determination.
By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely
pursue their economic, social and cultural development.” But, minorities may
not be considered as peoples. “Peoples” refers to “all” inhabitants of “each”
existing state, and the guarantee denotes little more than the right of the population
of every sovereign state to determine their own form of government without
interference from other states. It becomes clearer when one goes through
Article 1(2) of the UN Charter, which declares the purpose of the UN.
According to
this Article, one of the purposes of this international organization is “To
develop friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principles of
equal rights and self-determination of peoples, and to take appropriate
measures to strengthen universal peace.” Here, “self-determination” does not
entail the right to be independent, or even to vote for independence. As
Rosalyn Higgins puts it: “International law provides no right of secession in
the name of self-determination.” At best, the right to self-determination
connotes the right of all citizens to participate in the political process, but
this gives power to majorities and not to minorities.
Therefore,
a majority may continue to oppress a minority. In such a situation, although
secession may be geographically obvious and politically convenient, the UN
Charter is clearly against any change to the territorial integrity or political
independence of its member states, other than by peaceful agreement. It may be
noted that, throughout the period of de-colonization, the right of peoples to
reject the imperial rule, by free vote for independence at a UN-monitored
plebiscite, was much an article of faith. The ICJ described it as having an erga omnes character. But as the process
of de-colonization came to a close, the application of the principle of
self-determination came in direct confrontation with the principle of state
sovereignty. In fact, in 1995, the ICJ refused to adjudicate the clearest
possible case of a breach of the right to self-determination when Indonesia
invaded East Timor. There has also been a considerable hesitation in applying
the doctrine to other cases, for example to 5 million Palestinian Arabs or even
to those 2.5 million Palestinians who live in Golan Heights and the West Bank,
annexed by Israel through military conquest in 1967.
Through
the UN Charter, the right of self-determination has implied the right of
peoples of a territory to decide the status of their homeland through a free
and fair election for independent statehood, integration to another state, or
through some form of political association with another state like autonomy
with it. But its exercise must not involve changes to existing frontiers, other
than by agreement between the states concerned. Since states rarely concede
territory, an early and sensible resolution of disputes is almost out of
question and the dispute usually takes the form of ethnic violence.
When the
Arbitration Commission set up by the EC Conference on Yugoslavia was to decide
the fate of that dissolving state according to the principles of
self-determination, it said that the wishes of the minorities must be denied
because they would require border changes opposed by Croatia and Serbia. The
Commission refused to carve a Bosnian Serb republic out of the Serb-dominated
areas of Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia. Therefore, as Diane Orentlicher has
pointed out: “Through this legal alchemy, international law could claim to
preserve a principle that had acquired a potent symbolic power while simultaneously
depriving that principle of its power to threaten established states’
‘territorial boundaries’.” In other words, international law advances not so
much by justice as by state practice. As territorial integrity is in the
self-interest of each state, boundaries have virtually become shibboleths.
But,
in recent times, the debate over minority rights have merged with the debate
over the virtues and practices of democratic citizenship – a debate that has
been developing independently over the last decade. Let us look at a regional
initiative in this regard. The Council of Europe (CE) concluded a Framework
Convention for the Protection of National Minorities in 1995. This framework
treaty is not yet in legal force. It contains no special monitoring mechanism
apart from an unspecified role for the CE’s Committee of Members. It is
interesting to note that, this treaty, rather than endorsing assimilation of
all groups into one homogeneous society, endorses the preservation of national
minorities. It urges to accommodate the national minorities through public
policies on language, state services etc. although the national minorities have
not been defined in the treaty.
Therefore,
as indicated earlier, apart from the right to exist and the right to be
different, the minority groups have very little scope to be ensured of their
rights like the majority communities in the contemporary world. So far as the
question of autonomy is concerned, this, along with the right of
self-determination, may be enjoyed within the given structure of the modern
state system evolved since the Treaty of Westphalia. In other words, the issue
of state sovereignty reigns supreme over the rights discourse in contemporary
international legal system. Perhaps the minority groups across the globe may
find some relief through the development of a theory of democratic citizenship
in near future.
Can autonomy satisfy the quest for independence? The experiences of Palestine
Author: Aditi Bhaduri
The term "political autonomy" refers to the right for a community to govern its own affairs, up to a certain level. A nation with political autonomy is only allowed control of local issues, such as education, law enforcement, justice, or community services.
In this context it should be clear that Palestinian aspirations envisage a sovereign and independent state and Palestinian autonomy was just a temporary arrangement leading to that independent state, existing alongside Israel. Thus “autonomy” was not the actual aspiration of the Palestinian state.
Palestinian autonomy was the result of the Oslo Accords signed in 1993 - the Israeli-PLO Recognition Agreement of September 9-10 1993 and the Declaration of Principles (DOP) (Oslo I) of September 13 1993. Over the next six years, 12 agreements were negotiated. The Interim Agreement signed between Israel and the Palestinians in September 1995 became known as Oslo II.
The autonomy was to be a 5 year confidence building process “to establish a Palestinian Interim Self-government Authority, the elected Council (the “Council”), for the Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, for a transitional period not exceeding five years, leading to a permanent settlement based on security council Resolutions 242 and 338.” 1
The breakdown of negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority (PA), the outbreak of the second Intifadah in 2000 and the reoccupation of Palestinian territories by Israeli forces reflect the failure of the Oslo process and of Palestinian autonomy.
Why did the Oslo process fail?
The Oslo process was flawed from the start. While most of the world saw Yasser Arafat, the Chairman of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation as “Mr. Palestine”, he did not, in fact, represent the Palestinian people. Faisal Husseini’s team representing the Palestinians at the Madrid talks was considered to be more representative of Palestinians as they lived in and came from the Palestinians territories. Arafat’s group, on the other hand, had been operating from outside of the territories for almost 20 years and were not seen to be reflecting “will of the people of the soil”. Neither was he popular with the Palestinian refugee population outside of Palestine because of past records.
The “Oslo team”, therefore, seemed to have bypassed the “Madrid team”, entering into secret negotiations and concluding accords with Israel, for its own political survival. The Oslo accords were seen as a great betrayal as Arafat conceded all the territories ceded to the Palestinian state by the UN Resolution 181 of 1948, which Feisal Hussieni’s team was trying to negotiate for, and settled only for the lands occupied by Israel in 1967.
Next, Arafat left out key issues from within the framework of Oslo. These were Jerusalem, Palestinian refugees, borders of a future Palestinian state and Jewish settlements that had mushroomed illegally in the West Bank and Gaza strip, ever since Israel occupied them in 1967.
There was wide spread resentment amongst Palestinians both in the territories and in the Diaspora since the Oslo process was initiated and helped strengthen militant groups like Hamas and Islamic Jihad. These had already started functioning in the Gaza Strip since the 1980s, encouraged by Israel as a counterforce to the PLO.
What did Oslo process bring the Palestinians?
Politically:
Oslo resulted in a fragmented kind of autonomy. Providing for a phased transfer of land under Palestinian rule it resulted in “a gradualism, which was not always incremental.” 2
In September 1993 a Palestinian Authority (PA) was established over most of Gaza and parts of the West Bank (Jericho).
The main object of Oslo II was to broaden Palestinian self-government in the West Bank by means of an elected self-governing authority – the Palestinian council. With the establishment of the Council the Israeli military government was withdrawn and the Civil Administration dissolved.
The territories were split into three:
Area A comprised the six cities of Jenin, Nablus, Tulkarem, Kalkilya, Ramallah, Bethlehem and Hebron (with some special arrangements) where the bulk of the Palestinian population in the West Bank was concentrated. Here the Council had full responsibility for internal security and public order, as well as for civil affairs.
Area B comprised Palestinian towns and villages in the West Bank, having some 65% of Palestinian population and some Jewish settlements. Here the Council had full civil authority and was in charge of maintaining public order. Israel, however, “had overriding security authority to safeguard its citizens and to combat terrorism and this responsibility shall take precedence over the Palestinian responsibility for public order.”3
Area C comprised the unpopulated areas of the West Bank having the bulk of the Jewish settlements in the territories, and strategically important to Israel, which retained sole security and civil control.
In actual fact such arrangement effectively split the territories into what is politically fashionable to call “Bantustans” – clusters of Palestinian populated territories, encircled by Jewish settlements complete with military outposts for the Israeli army to guard the settlements, and bypass roads connecting the settlement to Israel proper and which Palestinians cannot drive on. Apartheid was consolidated by giving Israel the opportunity to effectively create more “facts on the ground” (expand the Jewish settlements and increase the Jewish population in the West Bank, and military outposts for “security”).
Thus, Palestinian autonomy did not extend to all the Palestinian territories.
Jerusalem, the most emotive issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was left for “final status negotiations.” Palestinians had no control on the city which the Palestinians view as the capital of their future state. Confiscation of land and IDs of Jerusalemites continued, demolition of “unpermitted” houses remained unabated. It was said that it was easier for a Gazan to travel to USA than to Jerusalem.
Movement from one area to the other area became extremely restricted for Palestinians, a restriction which did not exist while the West Bank and Gaza strip were under total Israeli occupation.
Check points were installed at the entrance and exit of towns and cities in Area A which were manned by Israeli soldiers. For the sake of security for Israeli citizens Palestinians had to go through a stringent security check before they were allowed to enter Israel or territories under Areas “B” and “C” from those under Area “A”.
“At the infamous Erez checkpoint, established in 1994, workers line up from 1 a.m. in order to pass, from 3 a.m., through 5 Palestinian and Israeli screening stations into Israel……. When there is total closure there is no movement at all…….” 4
“Total closure” refers to the new punitive measure introduced by Israel after the establishment of Palestinian autonomy. This was blockade and closures of Palestinian cities and towns to deal with Palestinian violence aimed at Israeli citizens, termed “collective punishment” by Palestinians. A closure in Gaza confined almost 1 million people to the 147 square mile strip, with no exit to Israel, to Egypt or to the West Bank. “Thus, “Oslo” and “the peace process (became) synonomous with mass internment and suffocating constriction.” 5
The powers itself in the PA’s hands were mostly nominal and decorative. Gaza, where Palestinian autonomy started functioning was one of the poorest and most densely populated places in the world, a hotbed of militancy. Yitzak Rabin had once said “If only it would sink into the sea”, and its transfer to Palestinian rule was a headache that Israel had rid itself of.
The PA, therefore, seemed to have settled for a “Palestinian Versailles” at Oslo, doing Israel’s bidding for its personal ambitions. Life proved to be more difficult for Palestinians under their new found autonomy than it had been under Israeli occupation.
The PA’s rule also proved to be increasingly autocratic,
high-handed, unaccountable and corrupt.
“… Arafat set the tone of his military rule by staffing his
government largely with PLO exiles from Tunis and other places. From the
outset, a tension has existed between PLO staff coming from outside the
territories and political leaders of the territories; …” 6
Elections were not really democratic as the PA stifled the
opposition's ability to communicate with the public.
Human Rights Watch documented serious human rights
violations by the PA : arbitrary arrest, detention without charge or trial,
torture, grossly unfair trials and deaths in custody. In many cases these
violations occurred in the aftermath of anti-Israeli violence, and reflected in
part U.S. and Israeli pressure on the PA to crack down on militant Palestinian
groups. The PA extradited Palestinians, suspected by Israel of terrorist
activities, to Israel and this seemed like the ultimate betrayal in the eyes of
the local population
“A … point worth highlighting about Oslo II is the way it cemented Palestinian commitment to Israel’s security, …… during Israel’s continued occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. … 61 new Israeli military bases were to be established in the West Bank,…” 7
A vivid example of total commitment to Israel’s security and
disregard for Palestinian rights, could be seen in the events that took place
in Hebron, a city divided between 400 Jewish settlers and 120,000 Palestinians
in the wake of the Ibrahimi Mosque massacre.
In 1994, Baruch Goldstein, a Jewish fanatic entered the Tomb of the
Patriarchs, (Ibrahimi Mosque), a site holy to both Jews and Muslims, during
Friday Muslim prayers and opened fire on Palestinians inside. 29 Palestinians died and several others were
wounded, the direct consequence was a 2 week curfew that was imposed on the
120,000 Palestinians residents of the city, while the 400 settlers were free to
move around!
On the other hand, security arrangements between both sides
also facilitated extradition from Israel or identification and tracking down by
Israeli intelligence those Palestinians, who posed a political threat to the
Palestinian Authority.
Freedom of speech was strictly clamped down on. Books by people like Edward Said was banned
in the territories. Opposition was
stifled. The PA’s style of govt. seemed to be an “imported style” of government,
an extension of Israeli policy, now executed by
Palestinians. Security arrangements were seen to
serve only the security of Israel and the Palestinian authority.
Economically:
The Paris protocol, signed in April 1994, established the
interim-period economic relations between Israel and the PA. It established the
“customs union” model, which is marked by the absence of economic borders
between members of the union. “The
practical effect ……… was preservation of the economic relations that had
existed until then, i.e. a Palestinian economy integrated in and dependent on
the Israeli economy.” 8
Israel controlled economics, customs, taxes, movement of
good across borders, dictated what and from whom Palestinians could buy goods,
while simultaneously searching for newer markets themselves in the Arab
world. Mediocre Israeli good were sold
to the Palestinians at double or triple times the original price. Palestinian
economy was geared towards imports from Israel. Israel had the right to
unilaterally establish and change taxes imposed on imported goods.
The PA had to accept this model as Israel made its
acceptance a condition for continuing to allow Palestinians to work in Israel,
at a time when the PA was unable to provide employment in the autonomous areas
to the tens of thousands of Palestinians working in Israel.
The implementation of projects which needed land were
delayed and held up as Israel continued confiscating more and more Palestinian
land.
“The Paris Agreement, the economic protocol written after Oslo…..imposed almost total dependence on Israel.” 9
For its part, the Palestinian authority also indulged in
economic corruption. Palestinian expatriate capital put many small local
entrepreneurs out of business and were seen to be in league with the PA, who
welcomed them back to the territories under its jurisdiction. Corruption
flourished at the highest levels. In
1997 a report generated by the Palestinian Council "found that $326
million of the Palestinian Authority's $800 million annual budget had been
squandered through corruption and mismanagement." 10
“The per-capita income of Gazans may have fallen nearly 40
percent since the Oslo accords were signed in September 1993 but members of
Arafat's inner circle have enriched themselves through corruption.”11
The European Union, one of the largest donors of aid to the
PA, refused to give any more aid to it directly, instead, insisting on giving
it directly to approved projects or organizations implementing them.
However, one of the greatest factors that was responsible
for the failure of Palestinian experiment with autonomy was the lack of
political will on the part of Israel.
While the Oslo accords were based on “land for peace deal” – on UNSC 226
and 338 – the withdrawal of Israel from territories occupied by it in 1967,
Israel continued to expand Jewish settlements, illegal under international law,
and build new ones. Of course, not a single settlement that existed prior to
Oslo was evacuated. This was a direct violation of the spirit of Oslo, but
since much in the Accords was not stated clearly but implied, there was no
violation of the “letter of Oslo.” Israel argued that no clause in the Accords
explicitly called for a halt to settlement activities or the dismantling of
settlements that already existed prior to Oslo, as the issue of settlements for
left for “final status negotiations.”
Deadlines were not fixed and this gave Israel the
possibility of procrastinating, at every available opportunity, the fulfillment
of its obligations. Transfer of
territory and funds to the PA, release of Palestinian prisoners were routinely
delayed. While Oslo II specified that
Israeli troops were to withdraw from Palestinian territories in three phases
starting in October 1996 and ending by October 1997, the territorial extend of
the areas from which Israel was to withdraw by the completion of the third
redeployment was not clearly specified.
The second redeployment was delayed to the extent that it
was completed only in March 21, 2000.
The third redeployment, of course, has still to start. Instead of moving on to final status
negotiations summits had to be convened to deal with outstanding issues.
All the above only went on to fuel Palestinian angst and
frustration, as much as at Israel, so too at the Palestinian Authority. It generated admiration and support for
groups like Hamas, and Palestinian Jihad, which refused to accept the
legitimacy of both the state of Israel and of the PA and were seen to be
cleaner and more dedicated to the Palestinian cause. Armed attacks by Palestinians against Israelis, both in the
territories and inside Israel increased.
After each attack, Israel responded with closures of the territories
under Palestinian autonomy and the result was that Palestinians, most of whom
worked in Israel or on the Jewish settlements went without work for days. Living standards amongst Palestinians
continued to fall while the authorities lived lavish lives. The “land for peace” deal turned into a
“peace for peace” one.
“In practice, the Oslo agreements were founded on a neo-colonialist basis, on a life of dependence of one on the other for ever………it assumed ………that, when there will finally be peace ……, there will still be a situation of dependence, of a structured lack of equality between the two entities.” 7 (Shlomo Ben-Ami, A Place for All, Tel Aviv, 1998.)
Prior to the Oslo process the Palestinians had to suffer the yoke of Israeli occupation, after Oslo, they had to suffer the twin yoke of Israeli occupation as well as PA autocracy and corruption.
The Lessons of Oslo:
- Key issues were kept out of the accords for final status negotiations, which gave Israel the scope to create “facts on the ground” and to try unilaterally to influence the outcome of final status negotiations in its favor.
- Autonomy can never be a substitute for independence. Deadlines, goals should have been clearly stated and met.
- Self rule in itself is not enough. A corrupt and autocratic self-rule cannot be a satisfactory substitute for colonial rule or occupation.
- A healthy opposition, democratic society could have contained militancy and extremism in Palestinian society. Palestinian militancy is aimed not only at Israel but also at the Palestinian Authority.
- Occupation cannot be continued through the hands of the occupied under the guise of “autonomy”, as Israel sought to do. It sooner or later boomerangs, as it has in this case.
The result is the new phase of violence and insecurity that Israel is facing, leading to its economic downslide and political isolation.
The violence that the Palestinians resorted to in September 2000 was aggravated by Israel’s famously disproportionate reprisals. This has given Israel the excuse to disregard every clause of the Oslo Accords and finally reoccupy all the Palestinian territories. But security and peace still eludes it as Palestinian militancy, with intermittent lulls, continues. Thus, both the Israelis and Palestinians have been drawn, for the last three years, into the bloodiest confrontation that the century old conflict has witnessed.
References:
1. Declarations of Principles on Interim Self-government Arrangements, Article I, Washington DC, 13 September, 1993.
2. Bhaduri Aditi, Lessons to learn : Conversation with Hanan Ashrawi, The Sunday Statesman, Accent (Kolkata/New Delhi), 26 March 2002.
3. The Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West bank and the Gaza Strip, Article XIII, Washington DC, 28 September, 1995.
4. Leon Dan, Gaza: The Human Dimension, Palestine-Israel Journal of Politics, Economoics and Culture, vol. VII, No.1&2, Review Essay, Jerusalem 2000.
5. Hass Amira, Drinking the Sea at Gaza: Days and Nights in a Land Under Siege, Metropolitan Books, New York, 1999.
6. Leiter Kenneth C.W., Life Under the Palestinian Authority, Middle East Quarterly Review, Philadelphia, September, 1998.
7. Hijab Nadia, Limitations fot eh Oslo Accords, Essay presented at talks at Brecht Forum, New York Marxist School, February 2001.
8. Btselem, Israeli Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, The Palestinian Economy since the Oslo Accords, http://www.btselem.org, 2000.
9. Shlomo Ben ami, a Place for All, Tel Aviv, 1998.
10. Los Angeles Times, August 1, 1997.
11. Leiter Kenneth C.W., Life Under the Palestinian Authority, Middle East Quarterly Review, Philadelphia, September, 1998.
12. Shlomo Ben ami, a Place for All, Tel Aviv, 1998.
Democratisation
of power, its dispersal away from historically created centres and empowering
the local is the main focus of the panchayat experiment in West Bengal. The
idea when first mooted, was to give the members of the various village
communities a certain modicum of agency long denied by the centralised
bureaucracy of a state that had found little time to change the colonial
administration and its accompanying spirit of a top down development strategy.
The 73rd Amendment provided the legal window that this political
spirit needed and in West Bengal this was further buttressed by the West Bengal
Panchayat (Amendment) law of 1994.
At
the ground level this radicalising thrust of politics translated itself into
the setting up of various local bodies like the ‘gram shabha’, the ‘gram
sansad’ and beneficiary committees which were entrusted with the task of
articulating the demands and aspirations of the villages. More importantly
these bodies were seen as contributing to ‘people’s planning’ and marking a
distinct shift away from the overtly centralising tendencies in matters of
planning. This leads directly on to the question of resources being raised and
managed at the local level by the panchayats in keeping with the wishes of the
local populace as well as the question of autonomy. Autonomy can be
conceptualised as the institutional arrangement of space that would allow the
local initiative to operate without being stifled by the centres of power that
are distant from the theatre of action. Panchayats ideally operate within this
autonomous space and therefore for the success of the local government this is
crucial as is the question of substantiveness of resources that are made
available to these bodies.
The question of resources, without which no plans can be
made, is usually seen as centred around capital, technologies and natural
stocks. The resources that are social are usually hidden and implicit. By
social I mean that which is constructed in and around human agency, discourses
that do not necessarily depend only upon technicist resolutions but privilege
human initiative and knowledge. More importantly these largely ignored
alternatives have in their own ways shown the importance and ability of society
to animate technology, capital and such other inert resources. In the running
of the panchayats the harnessing of the local populace, that is the empowerment
of the local, has unearthed this hitherto untapped resource.
One
important consequence of asking locals to decide for themselves can be seen in
the activating of civil society institutions – the political parties, mass
organisations (and the fronts), local clubs and voluntary organisations. I
would like to argue that this political initiative has unleashed the key
element needed in the management of resources in the rural areas. This has had
its impact in managing other resources like labour, skill, land, irrigation
facilities, cottage / small-scale industries that are within the ambit of the
panchayats. Recently in several panchayats animal husbandry, poultry farming
etc. are being seen as resources that would be beneficial for the economic
development of the local populace.
As
an example let me cite the manner in which the available labour in a particular
rural area is sought to be used. (The methodology of such utilisation of labour
/ skill is however pre-determined by the panchayat ministry.) If there are 400
workers available and if they can on an average work for 275 days in a year
then the total labour power accessible is taken to be 400 X 275 or 110,000
man-days. This computation allows the gram sabha members to calculate
productivity and the optimal utilisation of labour availability. Labour power
not being harnessed for crop cultivation is then diverted to other activities
like cleaning of water bodies, building roads or the making of compost pits.
The management of labour is in these cases linked with the several developmental
programmes like the Jawahar Gram Samridhi Yojna (JGSY), the Indira Awas Yojana
(IAY), Integrated Children’s Development Scheme (ICDS), etc.
Our
research in areas of South Bengal, notably Burdwan shows how the gram
panchayats have been managing resources that it has access to. In a village
named Natu, in 1994-95 through utilisation of labour not engaged in paddy
cultivation, about 100 man-days were created through construction activities.
In 1998- 99 through canal cleaning / dredging activities about 700 man-days
were moreover created. This ability of the local people to create additional
jobs has a larger implication for the rural people. A survey in a village
called Kadigacha shows that in 1980-81 46.84% of the households were below the
poverty line (BPL) whereas in 2001 the figure dropped to 9.65%. In 1980-81 the
job availability figures (in man-days) was 12,250 whereas in 2000-01 this was
18,500.
The
wider ramifications of this increase in jobs and by implication income, is
reflected in the manner of the increase in literacy in that village. In 1981
30.25% of the village population was literate in contrast to the Burdwan
district figure of 42.43% and West Bengal figure of 40.94%. In 1992 when
Burdwan district claimed 100% literacy 70.25% of the villagers in Kadigacha
were literate and in 2001 the figure was 80.20%.
One
of the most interesting experiments in management of resources undertaken by
the panchayats is to be found within the co-operative movement. The
co-operatives institutionally combine in themselves the economically embedded
rationale of accounting as well as the more politically driven ideas of
resource utilisation and development practices. The Panchayat Department of the
Government of West Bengal had in a directive issued in 2001 asked the
panchayats to create and run co-operatives for the development of industrial
and agricultural produce where such co-operatives are absent.
The
importance of the co-operatives in managing and developing resources in the
rural areas of West Bengal takes on added significance when one recognises the
fact that such co-operatives were disintegrating due to factors like lack of
earnestness on the part of the office-bearers of the co-ops and the failure to
recover loans advanced to the members. This created a lack of confidence in the
co-operative as an institution and a virtual paralysis of the entire co-op
credit structure in the state.
The
turn around in the fortunes of the co-ops was made possible by the political
control that the CPI (M) in particular and the Left Front in general could
generate post 1977. The Krishak Sabha (the peasant front of the CPI and later
the CPI (M)) had always seen the co-ops as an instrument of struggle against
the influence of the moneylenders and other vested interests in the villages.
After the Left Front’s victory in 1977 there was a conscious effort on the part
of the CPI (M) to control the decision making bodies of the district co-ops and
use it as a complementary institutional support to the larger concerns of the peasant
movement.
Having
secured the co-ops politically and directed them to the tasks set by larger
political considerations - for example the mobilisation of landless and
marginal farmers- the Kisan Sabha, the panchayats and the party acted in
concert to manage the problems of development through the co-ops. In many cases
the co-ops had as the Chairman of the Board of Directors the pradhan of the
local panchayat.
The
turnaround in political fortunes meant an equally important turnaround in the
fortunes of the co-operatives, especially in terms of managing resources and
financing schemes that the panchayats would take up. In a study conducted in
1991, we found that nearly the Burdwan Central Co-operative Bank Ltd funded 50%
of the District Credit Plan Target. The political move to decentralise
administration and empower the panchayats to reflect the aspirations of the
local populace has its parallel experience in the co-operatives whose board of
directors are elected from among the local populace. Thus an intimate
connection between the panchayats (the local government) and the co-operatives
(a socio-economic institution) has developed in relation to the demands of
resource generation and mobilisation in the rural areas.
The
success of the co-ops and its role in implementing the tasks set by the
panchayats have been largely made possible by the network of trust that has
been created in the villages. This has made it possible for the co-ops to
deliver the goods demanded of them – an example of which is the better loan
recovery that is evident since the early 1980s. In other words, the quality of
resource management is dependent on a happy coming together of institutions and
people, in this case made possible by providing the communities with the
wherewithal necessary to implement the several schemes that is taken up at the
village level.
Experience of Autonomous District Council in the North East India
with special reference to Tripura State
The
Tripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District Council (TTAADC) was set up in 1979
under the 7th schedule to the Constitution of India. The Council
came under the purview of the sixth Schedule with effect from 1st
April 1985 by 49th amendment to the Constitution of India. The areas
of the TTAADC is about 7,132,56 Sq.km. which covers about 68 % of the total
area of the state i,e,10,491,69 Sq.km. There are 30 members in the TTAADC out
of which 2 members are nominated by the Governor while 28 members are directly
elected through Adult suffrage but it is to be mentioned here that 3 seats are
unreserved out of 30 seats and in the
unreserved seats even non-tribal can contest too.
The
main purpose of forming the Autonomous District Council under the Sixth
Schedule to the Constitution of India is to protect and safeguard the tribal communities in respect of lands,
forests, social customs and practices. In order to achieve these aims the
Constitution has given ample powers to the tribal people to form their District
Council with Autonomous powers to make laws on various subjects applicable to
them as enshrined in the 6th Schedule to the Constitution of India. The Sixth
schedule was based on the recommendations of the Sub-Committee on the tribal
and excluded areas of Assam(Bordoloi Sub-Committee) set up by the Advisory
Committee of the Constituent Assembly.
Lack
of adequate infrastructure, geographical isolation and the ethnic problem have
severely restricted socio-economic development of the ADC areas. The percentage
of people living below poverty line in TTAADC area is much higher than the
state average of 73.58 %.The economy is agrarian basically substance agriculture, mostly based on
jhumming(shifting cultivation).Since the area included in the District Council
is very backward and undeveloped, it requires mobilization of large resources
to promote economic upliftment of the people residing in the area. To execute
the various schemes/programmes as chalked out by the District Council adequate
financial support is necessary. For this purpose, the District Council is
entirely dependent on the plan fund made available by the State Govt. One of
the factors which put the Council in a very tight financial position was that
the Council had not been able to devote sufficient funds out of their own
resources for welfare and development programmes though the District Council
under the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution of India has been vested with
certain powers as enumerated thereon, which mainly relate to local development such
as primary schools, social education centres, markets, cottage industries,
village roads etc. In order to cover the expenditure the Council has to depend
on the grants-in-aid given by the State Govt. and the shares of royalties as per the paragraph 9 of the Sixth
Schedule. In this respect the Council has to approach the State Govt. for
financial aid to meet their budget deficit. The Council has been experiencing
serious financial constraint as the State sometimes do not sent money in time
and this is more so when there is political differences between the District
Council and the State. One of the major contributing factors towards the
stagnation in the economy of the TTAADC
was the lack of any major development activities by the Council. The District Council
wanted that the State Govt.of Tripura should provide sufficient fund to enable
the Council to take up suitable developmental schemes.The State Govt. on the
other hand, expected the District
Council to meet the finances for development, at least partly from their
own resources. Although the Council has to depend on the shares of royalties
collected by the State Govt. but it may be noted that the payment of shares
were not in time. The State Govt. instead of paying the Council’s dues
regularly, adopted the policy of deducting the Council’s shares for other
purposes. This has put the Council in financial hardship. As a newly
constituted District Council the collection of revenue is yet to begin.
According to the Executive decision of the State Govt.(share of
taxes),depending on the assessment of the actual amount of taxes collected from
the ADC areas, a fixed percentage of the total tax collection by the State
would be assigned to the District Council as follows:
The District Council receives fund from the
State Govt. under three sources namely:
1. Plan
fund
2. Share
of Taxes
3. Transfer
of funds from various departments of the State Govt.
For
Administrative supervision, the TTAADC has created the following Infrastructure of its own:
Sl.No. Infrastructure Number
1. Zonal Office 4
2. Sub-Zonal Office 34
3. Engineering Division 3
4. Engineering Sub-Division 12
5. School Inspectorates 17
6. Circle Office of
Education 64
7. Inspectorate of Social
Education 3
8. Education Sector Office 34
To
run these offices the TTAADC has appointed about 8,000 staffs in different categories
including 3,286 transferred staffs of Education Deptt.of State Govt.on
deputation till date.
The
District Council in the true sense of the term, is the instrument by which the
tribal people can restrain people from other State to settle in the Autonomous
areas. But because of some vested interests the Sixth schedule has failed to
fulfill the political aspirations of the tribal people of Tripura. In fact, the
provisions contained in the sixth schedule are for protecting the tribal
interests but the Council as an Institution is not fully responsible for
safeguarding the customs and traditions of the tribal people. It seems that
members of the Council devote their time and thought to development work rather
than enactment of laws for the protection of land and the codification etc. In
all aspects the failure of the District Council was because of political
pressure, lack of leadership and common infightings among the members of
various political parties, misusing of powers and misusing the funds of the
Council. However, the Council members do not appear to have realized that with
the formation of TTAADC the status of the TTAADC has been reduced more or less
to that of a Municipal Board. Thus the working of the Sixth schedule is
defective and has failed to satisfy the aspirations of the tribal people in
Tripura as a whole.
In
view of the above statement the members of the Council felt that there should
be a suitable amendment of the Sixth schedule to the Constitution. They also
pointed out some of the issues to be considered for proper functioning of the
TTAADC.
References:
When
it is described as ‘voices of autonomy in the publications of West Bengal
Minority’ the terminology used here may be misguiding. If by minority we mean
Muslims, Christians or Buddhists, it should be noted that they do not demand any
‘autonomy’ in the political connotation of this term. Although it is true that
they have aspiration for some special rights to protect their socio-economic
and political interest and to preserve their religio-cultural identity.
Buddhists
of West Bengal are a very small minority in number. Still they are in the
position to assert their existence at least in Kolkata. They have a large
temple in central Kolkata and adjacent with that they maintain centre for
religio-cultural activities. There they run an organisation called ‘Buddha
Dharmankur Sabha’ or The Bengal Buddhist Association. On behalf of this
organisation they do publish a bilingual (English & Bengali) quarterly
magazine of quality called ‘Jagajjyoti’. Mainly through this magazine Buddhists
of Bengal ventilate their urge to unite themselves and also their aspirations
to highlight their socio-cultural and political identity. In the personal
matter or in the family affair they do not want to be governed by the Hindu
law. They demand their own Personal Law. The Christians of West Bengal are a
numerically larger Minority than the Buddhists of this state. They do play a
very significant role in the educational scenario of this state through some
excellent educational institutions organised and managed by them. Almost all of
their educational centres are adjacent with the big and beautiful churches.
Centring these churches they do publish several literatures mostly to preach
their religious message. Other than the church literature Bengali Christians of
West Bengal publish some periodicals in Bengali a few of which carry high
literacy standard. Such as ‘Mohana’ and ‘Nabayan’ are to be mentioned with
reverence. Some of the other periodicals are ‘Bangla Herald’, ‘Jiban o Bani’,
‘Prasanga Alochana’, ‘Prohari’ etc mostly monthly or quarterly.
In
these periodicals and magazines Bengali Christians pronounce their anxiety
about their security in the all-India perspective particularly in the situation
created by Hindu fundamentalist organisations in the north, northwest and
central India. In West Bengal also they have local resentments regarding the
safety of their Church property. In most cases Churches have very much
lucrative prime land real estate property. Sometimes local goons with the
political backing become aggressive to grab the portions of these lucrative
real estates. Christians of this state are very much worried with this type of
grabbing tendency. And they ventilate their worries through periodicals and
other literatures of their own.
Actually
the Buddhists and the Christians Minority of West Bengal deserve separate
attention. To avoid the lengthiness of the paper I want to concentrate only on
the largest Minority i.e. the Muslims of West Bengal, particularly on the
Bengali speaking Muslims.
The
Muslims are nearly about one fourth of the total West Bengal population. Among
the around two crore Muslims of this state ninety five percent are Bengali
speaking. And the rest are Urdu speaking. But in the political scenario of the
state Urdu speaking play the dominant role in comparison with the Bengali
speaking Muslims. Reason is obvious Urdu speaking Muslims are mostly urban
people. They do live in some particular areas of Kolkata and suburbs in the
different ghettos. This type of living condition has some advantages. In any
issue related to the socio-political and religious repercussion hurting the
sentiment of the Muslims they can assert themselves in a very organised
fashion. Moreover they have six dailies in their hand to ventilate their
grievances and to motivate their people to come out with the loud protest.
In
comparison with them Bengali speaking Muslims are scattered; they are mostly
rural people. So in the socio-economic political religious issues, which affect
their interest, their reaction in most cases is very much delayed and feeble in
nature. They have not a single daily newspaper of their own which can speak for
them. The newly developed elites of this community are bound to keep themselves
satisfied either with the English dailies or Bengali dailies not organised,
managed or published by them. In these dailies sometimes Bengali Muslim elites
express their thoughts but with strains, keeping anxiety in their mind that
their standpoint may not be entertained or may be misunderstood. A few of them aligned
themselves with the Hindu elites ignoring the interest or the real self of the
Muslims pretending to be ultra secular. Naturally in their own society they
become condemned. They do not represent the Muslims mind in the mainstream
media managed by the non-Muslims.
In
West Bengal other than some weekly news cum views papers, some monthly
magazines and some occasional periodicals there does not exist any large-scale
media managed by the Bengali speaking Muslims. In their mostly below standard
weeklies and other Periodicals they feel free to express their own self. Here
names of some prominent Weeklies published from Kolkata may be mentioned such
as ‘Natun Goti’; ‘Kalam’ and ‘Mijan’. These three weeklies maintain regularity
in their publications. Other than these three there are several Weeklies
Monthlies, which carry news cum views, published from Kolkata and Mofussil
towns. Occasional periodicals published by the West Bengal Bengali speaking
Muslims are huge in number. The names of a few of them are mentioned here:
‘Aahvan’, ‘Sachetan’, ‘Pragati’, ‘Ikra’, ‘Natun Saogat’, ‘Al Habil’, ‘Naba
Pallab’, ‘Apanjan’, ‘Alor Doot’, etc.
In
these Weeklies, Monthlies and other occasional periodicals the questions of
discrimination in the field of employment, social humiliation, unjust
harassment by the security authorities in the different pretext, come up time
and again. Muslims feel discriminated wherever they seek government employment
or bank loans for self-employment. They voice their disagreement on the qualification
question. They put the counter question how much qualifications are required to
get job of a bearer or peon, i.e. job of class four employee. Why in this job
also Muslims numbers are so few? Reason is simple, the discriminatory or
communal attitude of the concerned authority. As an antidote to this
discriminatory attitude a section of Muslims are demanding reservation to
ensure at least a little portion of Government jobs for the economically weaker
section of their community.
They
demand reservation in the educational institutions also. In the standard
schools and colleges their children get chances to be admitted in a very few
cases. For backward social and family environmental background generally their
children initially do not develop enough competence to get chances to be
admitted in the schools, colleges and universities of quality. So to give
chances to their children to attain better efficiency availing the better
learning opportunities in the relatively better educational institutions Muslims
demand reservation.
The
social humiliation is also a burning question, which comes up in the discussion
in their own publications by the Muslims. In the several occasions in the
predominantly majority community gathering even educated Muslims do not feel
free after revelation of their religious identity. Sometimes it is revealed by
the use of their vocabularies like ‘Pani’, ‘Abba’, ‘Amma’, ‘Chacha’, ‘fufu’,
‘khala’ etc, which signify that they belong to the Muslim community. In the
public places sometimes this type of revealation creates embarrassing situation
for the Muslims. Those Muslims who are not willing to conceal their identity
wear the typical dress of long Punjabi, Pajama and topi having beard with
shaven moustache nowadays often become object of taunts and abuses in the
public places. Their urgent mission in the government offices and other offices
also often confront with the unnecessary harassments. These are the incidents
of social humiliation Muslims resent in the publications run by them.
They
also resent unjust harassments by the different security authorities in their
medias. This phenomenon has been increased in the recent time after the rising
much ado about terrorism and ISI activities in West Bengal being the bordering
state. The police and other security authorities are implicating many innocent
Muslims in the plea that they are having relation with the terrorist activities
or ISI agents. In most of the cases ultimately they do prove nothing. But these
communally biased security people are not willing to take extra precaution
before implicating some innocent Muslims taking lesson from the experiences of
past failures. They just harass them on the basis of hypothetical suspicion.
These are the incidents, which are often resented in the publications run by
the Muslims.
At
the end the incident of the unjust harassment of different private madrasas
only on the basis of hypothetical suspicion must be mentioned. It is commonly
believed that at least some of the private madrasas indulge in so called jehadi
thinking and terrorist activities. But till now not a single madrasa has been
found to be declared as guilty for indulging these activities. Still a section
of majority community believe, government is restraining itself to take action
against any madrasa in the fear of losing Muslims votes. Muslims are very much
perturbed with this type of propaganda. They consider it as a motivated attack
on their private madrasa education system in the design to destroy their
identity as Muslim. A great section of Muslims consider their private madrasa
education system a means to sustain their religious identity. Running after the
modern education for all of the children of the society they are not willing to
destroy their identity. That is the reason they are eagerly expressing their
desire to blend the modern education with the Islamic education. In this
direction they have already developed several standard educational institutions
having declared aforesaid objectives. Now they are urging the concerned authority
to give minority status to those institutions, along with that they demand the
same status to the government recognised madrasas also. These particular views
reflected in the West Bengal Muslims publications may be termed as voice of
autonomy indeed.
Section
Three
[List
of Participants]
Paula
BANERJEE Sanjay
BARBORA
GD-273, Sector- III, Salt Lake City North Eastern Social
Research
Kolkata
– 700 091 Centre,
Kharghuli Road
Phone:
23347222/23218222 Guwahati
- 781004
E-mail:
paulaban@cal.vsnl.net.in Phone:
0361-2602819 (r)
0361-2631960
(o)
Mobile:
0-9864038759
E-mail:
xonzoi@hotmail.com
Aditi
BHADURI Prodip
Kumar BOSE
49B,
Southern Avenue 363,
Parnasree Pally
Kolkata
– 700 029 Kolkata
– 700 060
Phone:
2466-1706 Phone:
24627252/24512482
Mobile: 9830244549 Email:
prodipbose@hotmail.com
E-mail:
aditi_cal@yahoo.com pkbose@vsnl.net
Tapan
Kumar BOSE Gautam
CHAKMA
B-10,
Green Park University
of Tripura
New
Delhi – 110 016 Suryamaninagar
– 799130
Phone:
011-26867694 Tripura
West, Tripura
E-mail: tbose@safhr.org Phone:
0381-2324459
E-mail: gchakma@yahoo.com
Subhas Ranjan CHAKRABORTY Khesheli
Z. CHISHI
BB-45,
Salt Lake City Post
Box- 160
Kolkata-
700 064 Kohima
Phone:
23379786 Nagaland
Email:
subhasranjan@rediffmail.com Phone:
0370-2223319
Sabyasachi
Basu Ray Chowdhury Samir
Kumar DAS
DA-87 Salt Lake City, Flat-
B3, 6/8, Central Park
Kolkata – 700 064 Kolkata-
700 032
Phone:
23373732 Phone:
24254023/23438755
Mobile:
9830229434 Mobile:
9830210265
Email:
sbrc@vsnl.com Email:
skdas17@rediffmail.com
Gurudas
DAS Ashok
Kumar GIRI
Deparment
of Economics GD-273,
Sector – III, Salt Lake City
North
Eastern Hill University Kolkata
– 700 091
Shillong-
14 Phone:
23347222/23218222
Phone:
2233856 (r), 2231631 (o)
E-mil:
gurudas_das@yahoo.co.in
Achumbemo
KIKON Udayon
MISRA
Naga
Club Building Dibrugarh
University
Kohima
- 797001, Nagaland Dibrugrah
– 786004, Assam
Phone:
0370-2244535 Phone:
0373-2370213
Email:
npmhr1@usa.net Email:
udayon_misra@yahoo.com
Ayan
MUKHERJEE Surajit
C. MUKHOPADHYAY
28/A, Mohendra Bose Lane FE-331,
Sector- III, Salt Lake City
Kolkata
– 700 003 Kolkata
– 700 106
Phone:
25309541/25551523 Phone:
23215277
Email:
ayan_india@vsnl.net Email:
surajitm@tathy.com
Abdur RAUF Ranabir
SAMADDAR
7, Mehar
Ali Road SAFHR,
Patan Dhoka
Kolkata –
700 017 Lalitpur,
Nepal
Phone:
22478391 Phone:
977-1-5541026 (o)
Email: arauf88@hotamil.com Email:
ranabir@safhr.org
Gina
SHANGKHAM Bhupen
SARMAH
Broadway Complex OKD,
Institute of Social Change
Senapati – 795106, Manipur and
Development
Phone:
03878-222099 K,
K, Bhatta Road
977-1-5544828
(r) Chenikuthi,
Guwahati-3, Assam
Email: nagawomen@yahoo.co.in Phone:
0361-2458088 (r)
Mobile:
0-9864038580
E-mail:
bsarmah@hotamil.com
Malini SUR Kumar
SURESH
16-C, Karnaphuli Off
Add: Centre for Federal Studies
Garden
City, Kakrail Jamia
Hamdard
Dhaka-
1000 New
Delhi – 110 062
Phone: 0088019365269 Res
Add: J-204, Neelpadam Kunj
E-mail: malini_sur@yahoo.co.in Vaishali,
Gaziabad- 201010
sur@ssrc.org Phone:
11-11-26059674, Ext. 5889 (o)
11-11-26059688,
Ext. 5889 (o)
11-0120-2778095
(r)
11-0120-2778095
(r)
Email:
kumar_suresh45@hotmail.com
David
SYIEMLIEH C.
Joshua THOMAS
History
Department ICSSR-NERC
NEHU Nongthymmai
Shillong Shillong
– 793014
Phone: 0384-2550189(o) Phone:
0364-2231173 (o),
0384-2221345 (r) 0364-2501817
(r)
E-mail: syiemlieh@hotmail.com Email:
icssnerc@sancharnet.in
[1] G.B. Pant, cited in the Constituent Assembly Debates- Vol. VII, p. 865.
[2] Omalley,op.cit. p22
[3] DGHC Act ( Act XIII of 1988), Corrected up to 1.1.97. Hill Affairs Department, Government of west Bengal
[4] One is referring to the geographical frontiers of the modern nation-state, which is the subject of this paper. However, one is acutely aware of the fact that the nation-building process in India has created an elite core that mimes the dominant ethnic, caste and class character and creates a series of frontiers between those who are desirable and those that need to be excluded. The elaborate system of “gating” in upmarket localities of cities such as Delhi is a prime example of how frontiers are created by dismembering notions of citizenship by other considerations like property, security and wealth. This paper is aware of this phenomenon but wishes to focus on what has happened in the process of harnessing regions and peoples living in the margins of feudal empires into the post-colonial nation.
[5] Sanjib Bauah, 2000