Afterword (2006) The Immoral Economy of Counter Insurgency in India
Afterword (2006) The Immoral Economy of Counter Insurgency in India
Afterword (2006) The Immoral Economy of Counter Insurgency in India
Nandini Sundar
They say that Salwa Judum is looking after the people but the fact is they are killing
people. Many have been packed into sacks and thrown into rivers. The Salwa Judum is
torturing innocent people. Many have been done to death by breaking their hands and legs.
Many others have been hanged upside down in water and made to drink. Women are made
to breastfeed the Salwa Judum people. They make people run and then kill them. We want
to say and write much more but our pen fails us here.
In April 2006, the Prime Minister of India declared that the Naxalites, as Maoist guerrilla
fighters in India are popularly called, represented the biggest security threat to the Indian
state. For a country which has long been fighting its own war on terror and where
discussions around terrorism routinely coalesce around the neighbouring state of Pakistan
and the Indian Muslim as the enemy within, the resurgent figure of the Naxalite represents
a new addition to the repertoire of enemies a beleaguered state must contend with in
defending its monopoly over violence. On the other hand, certain kinds of non-state
violence are not only supported but positively encouraged, often in the name of democracy
While this was evident in the Gujarat genocide of 2002, where the state government incited
violence against Muslims in the name of Gujarati pride and the anger of 5 crore
Gujaratis, it has become even more starkly obvious in the initiation of a so-called
district in the state of Chhattisgarh, locally christened the Salwa Judum.1 This vigilante
campaign, which started in 2005 shows little signs of stopping, two years later. As a
consequence, some 100,000 people, or nearly one-seventh of the districts population, have
been forcibly evacuated from their villages. Of these, 47,238 are officially in government
controlled Salwa Judum camps while the rest are in hiding in the forests or have fled to
neighbouring states. At least 540 and possibly over a thousand people have been killed by
the Salwa Judum, over 3000 houses have been burnt and stories of brutal gang rape by the
paramilitaries and vigilantes circulate as common knowledge.2 The Salwa Judum now
1 A literal translation of this Gondi term, is not the government preferred peace campaign,
but purification/pacification hunt. This imagery of vermin and extermination is also in
keeping with the term Naxalite infested areas commonly used by the government and the
media.
2 These figures are based on information collected from villagers in the form of personal
serves as a model of a local resistance group to be replicated elsewhere in the country,
Using the Salwa Judum as a site, this paper looks at the way in which statistics of killings
as compiled by the government have constructed the Naxalite problem in a particular way,
the uses of vigilantism to set up a new public-private partnership in creating insecurity, the
role of the media and state security laws in reproducing a particular normative order, and
I also raise the question (but do not necessarily have answers) of whether and how
ordinary notions of legality and culpability are affected by situations of plural sovereignty.
Sovereignty depends to a large degree on the capacity of non-state actors to assert their
authority (involving both legitimacy and power) against the lawful state. In a situation
where the Indian government was absent (whether by accident or on purpose) from large
swathes of the countryside, the extent to which a self-proclaimed parallel Maoist state
generated new and legitimate allegiances needs further investigation. The translation of
insurgency (from the governments point of view) into sacrifice (from the guerrilla
narratives as well as petitions given to the local CPI leader at a rally in June 2007.
3 Aware of the fact that Maoist strength lies not in their arms, but in the reach of their
ideology and the support they enjoy within the villages, in 2003-4, the Home Ministry
embarked on a policy of encouraging local resistance groups: The States have been
requested to explore the feasibility of appointing Special Police Officers (SPOs), Nagrik
Suraksha Samitis (NSSs) and Village Defence Committees (VDCs) in the villages affected by
Naxalism. These local groups are required to expose other misdeeds of the naxal outfits
and their leaders. This will help reduce the over ground support to the naxalites (Ministry of
Home Affairs Annual Report, 2003-204, para 3.145).
angle) involves, among other things, a different construction of patriotism. The increasing
resort to non-conventional wars and counterinsurgency may also fragment the self-
understanding of the military and the security forces, much of whose conventional battle
wisdom depends on the idea of a nation to be defended against the enemy without. As Julie
Taylor asks in the Argentinian context, to what nation do citizens owe their loyalty and is
this the nation that counterinsurgency forces defended4 When sovereignty is delegated
downwards by the state in the form of state sponsored vigilantism,5 and vigilante leaders
reconfiguration of state boundaries creates new questions for any theory of state
with the notion that in a neo-liberal order, militarist repression is the ultimate space where
the state can and should assert itself, precisely because its hold in economic and social
spheres is declining.6
I have chosen to use the phrase immoral economy to counter-pose the terror and
4 Julie Taylor, The Outlaw State and the Lone Rangers. In George Marcus ed., Perilous
States, 1993, University of Chicago Press, p. 300, 302.
5 The term delegated sovereignty is sometimes used in Rousseaus sense of a power that is
delegated upwards from the public. Here I use it in the opposite sense.
6 See David Harvey, A Brief History of Neo-liberalism, 2005, Oxford University Press, on the
connections between growing authoritarianism, police surveillance and the neo-liberal state.
In a longer term perspective, state failure to meet popular needs is often accompanied by
repression See James Scott, The Moral Economy of the Peasant: Rebellion and Subsistence in
South East Asia, 1976, Yale University Press, p. 219.
everyday peasant moral economy,7 the disruption of face-to-face relationships and shared
meanings as families are divided and their members forced to fight on different sides. I
wish also to mark the connections to the neo-liberal project of accumulation, the slow
dismantling of a developmental state in favour of a security state, and the vested interests
that develop in relief funds and security expenditure which makes war a desirable economic
prospect for some.8 And finally, I gesture to the liminality that war pushes morality
towards. What moral compass guides the Maoists when they retaliate brutally in shows of
counter-terror against vigilante violence, in what Sumanta Banerjee refers to as the old
disturbing tussle between the moral basis of revolutionary ideology and the practical
compulsions of revolutionary action.9 What are the professional ethics that guide or
should guide civil liberties or human rights groups in situations of unequal armed conflict
The Naxalite movement began in India in the late 1960s as a peasant struggle and
represented the revolutionary, armed stream of Indian Marxism. While the Indian state
managed to crush the movement in the 1970s, causing it to splinter into various small
factions (currently 34 by official estimates),1 0 in 2004, three of the parties united to form
the Communist Party of India (Maoist).1 1 The CPI (Maoist) is currently a significant
7 I am drawing here on Scott (1976); E.P.Thompson, The Moral Economy of the English
Crowd in the Eighteenth Century, in Customs in Common, 1993, The New Press.
8 See also Caroline Nordstorm, Shadows of War, 2004, University of California Press.
9 Sumanta Banerjee, Indian Maoism Cry of Alienation in Everyday Life. Paper presented
at a workshop on Everyday Life and Maoism, Longridge, 19-20 September 2007.
political force across several states, especially in rural areas where state services have been
inadequate or absent. Their support comes from sections of Indias poorest population,
especially amongst indigenous peoples. They have also engaged in some major military
actions breaking open jails, looting ammunition depots, and detaining passenger trains,
apart from attempted assassinations of prominent politicians. The Maoists are estimated to
have 7,300 weapons for 10,500 armed cadre nationwide, a 25,000 peoples militia and
50,000 members in village level units.1 2 According to police sources they also have AK-
series assault rifles, carbines, 7.62 mm self-loading rifles, grenade launchers, mines,
improvised explosive devices and mortars, and are manufacturing their own weapons.1 3
Till recently, official pronouncements on the Naxalites located the movement largely in a
socio-economic context, as not merely a law and order problem, but one born out of a
development deficit.1 4 In the last three or four years, however, in what Huysmans calls the
describe social relations but changes them into security relations,1 5 the Indian government
has converted the Naxalite problem almost exclusively into a security issue, with an
effective police response overriding all other solutions.1 6 Even normal development and
administrative processes are securitised for instance in the use of the Border Roads
Organisation traditionally deployed in frontier areas to build roads in the heart of India, and
moments when great masses of men are suddenly and forcibly torn from their means of
subsistence, and hurled as free and unattached proletarians on the labour-market, a time
when conquest, enslavement, robbery, murder, briefly force, play the great part in
accumulation.1 8 A large number of agreements have been signed between the government
injustice among the exploited segments of the population and seek to offer an alternative
system of governance which promises emancipation of these segments, Ministry of Home
Affairs, Status Paper on the Naxal Problem, Internal Security Division, 18-5-2006, p. 1
(henceforth MHA, 2006).
15 Huysmans, J. Security! What do you mean? From concept to thick signifier. European
Journal of International Relations 1998, 4 (2), 226-255, p. 232.
16 For the police, effectiveness means huge expenditure, for instance, on mine-protected
vehicles, helicopters, the fortification of police stations etc., rather than simply greater
professionalism and courteous treatment of the public. This, despite the fact that police
behaviour and contempt for villagers is a major cause of support for Naxalism.
17 Even the forest rights act, a product of sustained democratic struggle, was passed in large
measure due to the need to counter Naxalism in forest areas.
and private companies to exploit the mineral resources that areas currently under Maoist
influence possess. Whose security is being protected is perhaps nowhere more visible than
in the government concern that Maoists will target the special economic zones (SEZs),
However, the actual violence by the Naxalites belies the threat they supposedly pose in
military terms. Even in Chhattisgarh, the state worst affected by Naxalite violence, the
figures prior to the current counter-insurgency offensive show that they did not require the
sixteen companies of special armed police that were sent there in 1998,2 0 or the 10
battalions of paramilitary forces that are currently posted there. While Naxalite killings have
18 Karl Marx, Capital Vol I, 1983 [1887]), p. 669; Harvey, 2005, p. 160-165, summarises
accumulation by dispossession in terms of four main features: privatisation and
redistribution upwards.
19 The government and industry see Special Economic Zones, which take over huge tracts of
agricultural land, offer significant tax concessions to corporate houses, and deny regular
labour laws, as the new vehicles of Indias economic growth. On the other hand, peoples
movements see them as the prime symbol of dispossession, as the culmination of the growing
neo-liberal trend away from the earlier ideals of socialist economic development across
society premised on land to the tiller, unionisation, and large-scale employment. As one of
Indias national newspapers, The Hindu reported (June 17, 2007), basing itself on security
experts: left wing extremism, which has spread across 15 states, now threatens to turn the
special economic zones (SEZs) concept into a new conflict ground and potential agenda for
its cadres. Inputs with internal security experts suggest that displacement of the local
population, especially tribals, has been viewed by the Maoists as conditions suiting the
Judum, and hence cannot be used as a causal justification for the counterinsurgency.
(Bastar,
Dantewada,
Kanker)
civilians
CG
State Assembly
At an all-India level, the number of deaths in Maoist related incidents has varied from 482
20 Peoples March, January 1999. Peoples March is a magazine which carries Maoist views.
21 Prakash Singh, Force, August 2007: 36.
The overwhelming focus on Naxalite violence also conceals more than it illuminates about
the nature of Indian democracy. When the two ruling parties, the Congress and the BJP,
have each been responsible for the deaths of thousands of citizens,2 2 where the number of
murders annually in Uttar Pradesh (not known for Naxalism) exceeds 7,000 underpinned
by a flourishing business in small-arms and country made guns used by local dons and
their hirelings, and where 25,000 cases are registered annually on average for crimes
against the Scheduled Castes,2 3 it is clear that violence or killings alone cannot account for
crime that the Maoists are accused of, and which is distinctly problematic since it inserts
placed alongside other parallel systems of informal taxes which routinely operate without
government censure. Regular levies extracted by forest and police staff to facilitate illegal
tree felling or tin mining are routine in mineral-rich and forested states like Chhattisgarh.
State facilitation of private accumulation stretches all the way down from the Supreme
Court, where a Chief Justice was recently accused by senior advocates of helping mall
developers at the expense of thousands of small shopkeepers, factory owners, and ordinary
citizens, to sweetheart deals between politicians and corporates over disinvested public
22 2733 people officially died in Delhi in the anti-Sikh pogroms of 1984 (see
www.carnage84.com/official/ahooja/ahooja.htm), and 1254 in the anti-Muslim pogroms of
Gujarat 2002 (Answer in Parliament provided by Minister of State for Home, August 2005).
23 The Hindu, 13 September 2003. See also
http://www.neoncarrot.co.uk/h_aboutindia/various_crime
sector enterprises to government doctors and teachers who, by their failure to work, push
Much of the discourse around Naxalism in India today is akin to what Stuart Hall et al,
When the official reaction to a person, group of persons or series of events is out of
all proportion to the actual threat offered, when experts in the form of police
chiefs, the judiciary, politicians and editors perceive the threat in all but identical
terms, and appear to talk with one voice of rates, diagnoses, prognoses and
solutions, when the media representations universally stress sudden and dramatic
increases (in numbers involved or events) and novelty above and beyond that
What is then at stake is the governments image of being firm and taking action; action
which may have no direct relevance or efficiency in tackling the problem at hand. The
the threat posed by Naxalites to the status quo. It is also a function of the security
and forces. Under a Security Related Expenditure scheme, states are compensated by the
federal government for any anti-Naxalite expenses including that on local resistance
24 Stuart Hall et al, 1978, Policing the Crises: Mugging, the State and Law and Order, New
York, HM Publishers, p.16.
groups opening the way for many cash-strapped states to project a greater threat from
This is not to say, however, that the Maoists do not see armed challenge as the only serious
alternative to the state.2 6 The Maoist fetishisation of militarism is connected to their goal of
capturing state power through armed struggle, and establishing, in a slogan commonly
attributed to them, Lal Qila par Lal Jhanda (Red flag on the Red Fort).2 7 The
projections of them as a military threat make it difficult for independent observers to insist
that both sides go beyond the logic of war. While the government brands any critic of its
counterinsurgency policies as pro-Maoist, and have even jailed the General Secretary of the
Peoples Union for Civil Liberties, Dr. Binayak Sen, on charges of being a Naxalite
supporter, the Maoists have declared that those who criticise their acts of violence are
ultimately apologists for the oppressors, in spite of their good intentions and sincere
attitude.2 8
In part the intensity of state warfare against the Naxalites in Bastar is explained by its status
as a potentially liberated zone for the Maoists, a stronghold which they had established
over twenty years and where they had established the rudiments of a peoples
government (janatana sarkar). Gaining access for the police in previously no-go areas
Initially the Maoists worked in the form of armed squads consisting of 56 members
each, crossing over from neighbouring states and taking up particular cases of exploitation
such as the non-payment of minimum wages, teacher absenteeism, demands for bribes
by policemen and foresters. On occasion, the houses of village leaders who cheated on
development schemes were looted and cash and guns seized. Individual killings were
justified as feudal obstacles who were burnt in the revolutionary fires of the peoples
struggle or cruel landlords who died a dogs death at the hands of people.2 9 . Most
cases in the police records were eventually filed away since the police could not trace the
accused. Villagers were often arrested for harbouring Naxalites.3 0 Despite this, and despite
significant rewards for individual Naxalite leaders, a police document on Bastar notes that
29 P. Shankar, Yeh Jungle Hamara Hai, 1999, New Vistas Publications, p. 16. Although
some outsiders and some local headmen have acquired large amounts of land, standard
narratives of landlords and rich peasants must be read here in the light of the low
productivity of land.
30 V.P. Patel, Tribal Unrest and Adventures of Naxalites, Studies in Development
Anthropology, 1986, p. 18
informers were hard to come by.3 1 Perhaps some of this may have been due to fear of
Maoist vengeance, but an equally large part is undoubtedly due to the support they had
among villagers.
Mass organizations, the most prominent among which were the Dandakaranya Adivasi
Adivasi Mahila Sangathan (KAMS), (Revolutionary Womens Union) took up issues such
as compensation and relief for famine, demands for greater medical and educational
facilities, and higher rates for NTFP, especially tendu leaves (Diospyros melanoxylon),
which are used to roll cigarettes, and which are a major source of cash income in the
area.3 2 At the village level, these organizations are colloquially called sanghams, and every
village where the Maoists were active had a sangham of 1012 members. In some places,
they overthrew the traditional leadership like the village headman and priest, whereas
elsewhere, the traditional leaders continued to decide on rituals, festivals etc, while
Sangham meetings would be held 2-3 times a month, and much less frequently, the
villagers would be called to the forests to meet a visiting armed squad.3 3 However, the
Naxalite leaders and the contractors the sanghams would come in only to relay the rates
Maoist literature claims that they engaged in considerable development work over the last
twenty years, including creating schools, clinics, ponds, cattle detention yards, and
orchards through the self-efforts of the villagers3 5 ; though at least some of this appears to
have come at the cost of utilizing government schemes that might have generated
employment, including the building of roads.3 6 The KAMS is said to have taken up issues
of bigamy and forced marriages, and women are active in the squads.3 7 Video footage
aired on television channels shows that they drew huge crowds to their demonstrations,
and to performances of their cultural troupe, Chetna Natya Manch,3 8 though what sort of
For most villagers I met, however, the major outcome of the Maoist presence, apart from
the higher rates for tendu, was the redistribution of land and grain, and in the early years,
34 Interview with villagers, July 2007.
35 NPP, pp. 49-51, 53.
36 While the Maoists claim to have opposed the laying of only those roads and railway lines
that are meant for looting the wealth from the region and for enemy troop movement.
(Ganapathi, EPW, 2007), in at least one case, villagers reported to the Human Rights Forum
(2006) that the Maoists had dug up roads to prevent the police coming there.
37 Shankar 1999, pp. 100-105.
38 Peoples March 7(1) January 2006, p. 12, IPL, 2005, p. 18, Sahara Samay and CNN-IBN
programs.
39 The one message that got across is that people should keep the police at bay, and live a life
independent of government. Interview with villagers, July 2007.
reclamation of land from the forests, since fear of the Naxalites kept forest and police staff
away. In one village, groups of households (5-6) had been formed to cultivate collectively.
While the produce was shared according to the amount of land owned, the main advantage
for the poor was access to plough oxen. In other villages, the Maoists had set aside some
common land to be collectively cultivated by the villagers. Part of the harvest was stored to
feed visiting squads so that they wouldnt be a burden on individual households, while part
of it was given on easy loan terms to the poor, or simply distributed free. The Maoists also
the locals; insulating people from the consumerism of the wider system and keeping people
away from the small crumbs of the developmental state in order to inculcate a complete
clarity about democracy, appears to have been ultimately an impossible task. Sondi Mula, a
young man who worked in a local NGO asked resentfully why it was that adivasis were
forbidden to engage in NTFP trade while the traders were allowed to do so, and why
watching TV and spending on weddings was bad. Not being able to stand for elections or
vote also seems to have been a sore point for some, and those who did stand for local
elections were forced to resign.4 0 Some sangham members may have exceeded their
authority and become coercive. Said Mula, before it was their rule. Now those who were
oppressed by the Sangham have the police with them and they are taking revenge. Yet,
Salwa Judum once it had started with village headmen, traders and some rich peasants,
especially from castes higher up in the local caste hierarchy, preferring to go into camp
rather than resist the Salwa Judum. The bulk of the Maoist base came from the Gonds, the
majority group in the area. However, there are people of all castes on both sides.
Explaining the development of vigilantism from among the same class, and even among the
same families, requires attention to the excess of the moment and the dynamics of violence.
As Stephan Feuchtwang has pointed out, Maoism is as much a project of class formation,
the class power of the traders and non-tribal emigrants over the Maoist base, as well as a
counterinsurgency efforts of the Indian government in the 1960s, scholars have written of
individualism.4 2
June 4t h 2005 in the villages around Kutru in the west of Dantewada district.4 3 Regardless
of what provided the immediate spark, or who initiated the movement on the ground, its
authorship almost certainly lies with the state government or even the Ministry of Home
Affairs. In Leviathan, Hobbes makes a distinction between the actor, the one who
represents, and the author, he that owns the words and actions of the actor. When the
authority is evident, says Hobbes, the covenant obliges the author, not the actor. Yet
43 In one version provided by residents at Kutru camp, the movement started with sangham
members from Karkeli village looting a truck ferrying rice to a CRPF (paramilitary) camp.
The police then arrested and beat up all the adults of Karkeli, releasing them only on
condition that they hand over the Maoist leaders, which they subsequently did. A local
Maoist leader, however, attributed it to meetings held by Mahendra Karma, the Congress
Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) and leader of the opposition in the state
assembly, in areas outside their struggle zone. Mahendra Karma himself has taken varied
stands on the issue in an interview he gave the Independent Citizens Initiative, he claimed
responsibility for initiating the Salwa Judum, placing it in the lineage of an earlier, albeit
short-lived movement he had led against the Naxalites in 1989-91, called the Jan Jagran
Abhiyan (Peoples Awakening Movement). In later interviews, however, he has claimed that
he merely helped to give the rudderless movement leadership (Force, August 2007) The
District administrator, K.R. Pisda, while claiming that the movement was self-initiated, in
response to frequent Maoist strike calls on tendu patta and blockades on road construction,
also proudly showed an all-India civil liberties team a document he had prepared on how to
conduct the campaign. Mahendra Karma, he said, was merely there for the publicity it gave
him. A video-documentary prepared at police behest, takes the history of the Salwa Judum
back to January 2005, when Operation Salwa Judum was initiated.
44 Both the ICTY or the ICJ have addressed this in Prosecutor v. Tadic and United States of
America v. Iran (Iran Hostages case) by noting that financing, supporting or even endorsing
the actions of independent military organisations or acts of violence, made states liable for
A work proposal for the Jan Jagran Abhiyan (Salwa Judum) drawn up by the District
plan, including identifying friendly and enemy villages, distributing bows and arrows to
people to help them fight, dividing the entire area into clusters and permanently resettling
villages next to police stations.4 5 Since the rules by which government operates hinder it
from acting unlawfully, he suggests jettisoning the rules and modelling government on the
guerrillas instead:
At each cluster level, one village defence squad should be formed. If we look at
Naxalite organisation, they have one dalam or squad over every 75-80 villages. The
Naxalites have erected this structure after 25 years experience. We need to learn from
this. If we want to destroy the Naxalites totally, we will have to adopt their strategies,
or else we will not be successful. However many police forces we get, we will find
they are inadequate. From where will we get so many forces that we can station them
in every village or cluster? Ultimately we will have to take the help of the villagers. We
should also think of how to get the village youth and the village headmen involved in
this. For this we too, will have to form village defence squads like the Naxalites. For
this SPOs and trustworthy people from the village defence committees will have to be
given licenses and guns. Such a squad of 15-20 armed villagers and 50-60 villagers
their actions, even if they have not actually issued instructions for particular acts.
45 Interview with K.R. Pisda, 28.1105; Naxaliyo ke khilaf Aam Janata ka Jan Jagran Abhiyan
Varsh 2005, Abhiyan ko Safal Banane ke liye Karya Yojana, Zilla Dakshin Bastar
Dantewada (henceforth Collectors Work Proposal), p. 3; MHA 2006, p. 9-10
with bows and arrows should patrol the villages in their areas for 3-4 months
continuously. They should be given wireless sets to be in touch with the police at all
Whatever the governments intentions, many youth signed up to become Special Police
Officers (SPOs) thinking it was just another government job or simply because
everyone else was joining. It is not uncommon to find one brother with the Maoists and
another with the Salwa Judum as an SPO. When people are singled out or killed by SPOs
for being Maoist supporters, a large part of the resentment is because everyone in the area
had had some contact with the Maoists, including Salwa Judum leaders. For many of the
SPO youth, barely adult, getting access to weapons was important, and camp evenings are
spent comparing manhood stories on how many people each SPO had killed.4 7 At the
same time, these SPOs serve as cannon fodder for the government, lacking the kind of
insurance a regular policeman gets, or comparable salaries. Forced to take on the role of
guides or guard the outer perimeter of camps, they are easy prey to Maoist counter-attacks.
While the government insists and a faithful media replays their line that the villagers
fled out of fear of Maoist retaliation for having dared to participate in a movement against
them, villagers across the district say they were coerced into camp, and then taken on Salwa
Judum processions elsewhere. A letter written by villagers who are now refugees begins
by saying: Two years ago, the headmen (mukhia) of our village and neighbouring
villages who had joined the Salwa Judum came and threatened us that if we did not leave
46 Collectors Work Proposal on the Jan Jagran Abhiyan, 2005, pg. 25 (emphasis mine).
47 I was told this by the brother of an SPO who was subsequently killed on a Maoist ambush.
our villages and join the Salwa Judum camps in Geedam, then the police, SPOs, Naga
forces and Salwa Judum would jointly kill us. Therefore, all of us out of fear, left our
homes and came to the Salwa Judum camp established in Geedam bazaar. While some
villages stayed put, promising to attend Salwa Judum meetings whenever called, others
were burnt out of their houses. Several have tried to creep back from camps to their own
villages, only to be repeatedly attacked by the Salwa Judum, on the logic that either youre
in camp or youre with the Maoists. Konta sub-division, where the Salwa Judum came
Many villagers fled into the forests, hiding whatever stocks of grain they could, but several
reported that the Salwa Judum found and burnt those too. When food in the forest finished,
many of them were then forced to emigrate to the neighbouring state of Andhra Pradesh,
where the chilli harvest has traditionally created a demand for labour. But even there, they
live in mortal fear of being found and forced to return by the Salwa Judum, pretending
instead that they had come in earlier waves of migration looking for land.
The widespread arson by the Salwa Judum serves a number of purposes burning
peoples houses not only constitutes economic punishment, but it ensures that they cant
return and must stay in camps. People were never rich to begin with and the list of their
losses makes pitiable reading. For example in village Tolampalli, Kosaki Karma who was
hit with a belt and whose wife was raped, for allegedly giving rice to Naxalites, lost five
sacks of paddy, five kg of rice, five kg of oil, 4 aluminium pots, 4 plates and 3 spoons,
48 Villagers use the same grammar to describe pestilence as something which moves
unbidden.
brick tiles worth Rs 1500, 2 pigs, all other things in the home and Rs. 5000 in cash. Many
villages report that their entire livestock, their major form of investment goats, pigs,
poultry, cattle had been plundered or eaten on the spot by the Salwa Judum. The Naga
In any situation, getting accounts of rapes is difficult and even where petitions mention
mass rapes 25 women raped in village BP, 20 raped in village PB, 19 raped in village
KG, and so on, we are rarely told their names. In one village, I was told of two young
women who had had the misfortune to be in the village when the Salwa Judum attacked.
One had been ill, and the other had stayed to take care of her, and they were therefore
unable to flee with the others to the forest when they heard the Salwa Judum was on its
way. They were both raped and then arrested, their hut cut short and dressed in Maoist
uniforms for public viewership. The father of another girl who had been similarly raped
and arrested the previous year had paid a lawyer Rs. 10,000 to have her freed, but with no
luck. Many of the so-called Naxalite inmates of Jagdalpur jail both men and women -
have no idea why they are there, and no way of letting their families know where they are.
Young women, old men, the physically and mentally infirm are inevitably easy targets
like Koda Harma of village Malanpalli, who was mad and did not run away, and was
thrown alive into his burning hut; or old man Badda of village Vechapad, who was
conscripted by the SPOs to carry the poultry they had looted and then carelessly killed by
the river en route. Despite running for their lives, however, the other villagers always
return, searching for the abandoned bodies for days if necessary, and ensuring they get a
decent burial.
In many places, the villagers have regrouped with the Maoists, helping them to carry out
attacks on camps or kill individual SPOs.4 9 However, large parts of the district suffer from
an economic blockade by the government weekly markets no longer function, and even
where they do, villagers from so-called Maoist villages are not allowed to access them;
health and educational services are with-held from these areas. Paramilitaries comb through
villages, and occupy civilians spaces like school buildings, and the Maoists have in turn
blasted these buildings. While the government has ostensibly shifted all the schools to
camps, many of the children are missing. One school teacher said that every night the
population of children in the camp hostel varied by a hundred, since parents deposited them
in the hostel when the combing got intense and later took them back.
Not all policemen enjoy their work. On the bus to Dantewada, a co-passenger who had
been in the police briefly, told me that he left because his life had been miserable. The
force looks attractive from the outside, but its not what you think it is. There are constant
encounters. In three months last summer we shot 60-70 people on patrol in Bijapur.
49 According to Peoples March, The revolutionary masses of DK, while taking up counter
offensive operations did not neglect measures either for self defense or production work.
People of many villages have set up sentry posts along the four corners of their village to
maintain a twenty four hour vigil. Some others constructed temporary shelters in deep forest
pockets. People removed all their grain, livestock, money and other valuables to safe dumps
in the forest. They are continuing their agricultural activities under the protection of the
peoples militia and other wings of the PLGA. It will not be an exaggeration to say that
almost each and every village from Kotrapal to Kunta have become bastions of mass
resistance. Peoples March, January 2007, 8 (1): 14.
Were all these Naxalites, I asked? Of course not, he said. None of them were
Naxalites. Sometimes an SPO would point out someone and tell us to shoot, sometimes we
shot simply because the villager was running away and refused to stop when we called
out. Did you record these deaths somewhere, I asked. Now it was his turn to be
shocked: Our jobs would be in trouble if we did. We left the bodies in the jungles. We
weapon.5 0
Life in the camps is only marginally better than life in the jungles. People lie around
vacantly, with nothing to do, easy recruits for the Hindu chauvinist organisation, the RSS.
Ironically for a BJP controlled state which is trying to enact a law against Christian
conversion, at least a hundred lives have been saved for Christ by Christian evangelicals
working in two camps under the protection of the staunchly Christian Naga and Mizo
paramilitaries. While the government periodically announces its plans to convert these
There is a sad sameness to counterinsurgency efforts across the world, whether Guatemala,
into transitional camps and then model villages or strategic hamlets, the creation and arming
bodies of villagers but are completely run by the army or security forces, and the hunt for
While one history of the Salwa Judum places it within the context of a standard counter-
insurgency tactic directed against communist guerillas, the version lately preferred by the
Maoists and a number of human rights activists is that the Salwa Judum is part of a
ground clearing exercise for industry and mining.5 2 The Dandakaranya region, and
Dantewada district in particular, are said to have 18% of Indias iron ore deposits, along
with large reserves of graphite ore, limestone, uranium and other minerals. They point to
the coincidence that the Chhattisgarh government signed an agreement with both the Tata
and Essar groups to invest in steel plants in Bastar and Dantewada on the same day that
Salwa Judum started, June 4t h 2005. Both MoUs (memorandum of understanding) were
initially kept secret. Both the Tata steel plant at Lohandiguda, for which the company is
trying to acquire some 2161 ha, and the Essar Steel plant at Bhansi for which Essar wants
900 ha have been strongly opposed by villagers who will lose their lands to the project.
Under PESA 1996, a special law for scheduled areas (areas dominated by indigenous
people or adivasis), the government is required to gain the consent of the villagers. In both
cases, villages were forced to give their consent at gunpoint. Both the plants, however,
51 Victoria Sanford, 2003, Buried Secrets, Truth and Human Rights in Guatemala, NY:
Palgrave Macmillan. See also, Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, 1998, Vigilantes in
the Phillipines, New York: LCHR 1998; David Kowalewski, Vigilante Counterinsurgency
and Human Rights in the Phillipines: A Statistical Analysis, Human Rights Quarterly 12
(1990): 246-264; The Pentagon Papers, Gravel Edition, Boston, Beacon Press, 1971, p. 128;
P. Sundarayya Telengana Peoples Struggle and its Lessons. 1972, New Delhi: Foundation
Books.
52 See, e.g., Ilina Sen, Ground Clearing with Salwa Judum, Himal Southasian, November
2006: 42-44.
have the support of non-tribal emigrants, who see the prospect of business expanding and
While nationwide the anxiety about Maoists is connected to SEZs, the connections in
Bastar seem too quickly drawn. Of course, there are links in the person of Mahendra
Karma, who leads the Salwa Judum and who is acting as an agent for both Tata and Essar
in acquiring land, and in the fact that Essar is funding the permanent resettlement of
villages. However, both the large steel plants proposed for this region are in villages where
people have not been forcibly evacuated and elsewhere in the country, displacement is
taking place without strategic hamletting. Maoist influence had not reached Lohandiguda,
and protests against both plants are currently being led not by the Maoists, but by the
The real connections perhaps lie in the silence that now surrounds whatever happens in the
region and the atmosphere of impunity that has been created. Now that villages have been
emptied, there is a great deal of smaller scale prospecting and felling that goes unchecked.
In a government guesthouse on the Andhra side of the border, waiting to cross over to
Chhattisgarh, I met a businessman from Andhra Pradesh who had just acquired 3 ha of
land for a granite quarry in a village, all of whose inhabitants had been moved to camp.
While their permission was required under PESA, they were no longer there to give it. He
said he sniffed opportunity at times of conflict, when competition was low - his company
had acquired some 100 ha in different villages in small lots and under different names to
siphoning of essential commodities and so on. Some Salwa Judum camp leaders have,
within the space of a year or two, built themselves palatial houses. And then there is also
the thriving police industry of rewards and honours for fake encounters (otherwise
supporters.
Media Complicity
The degree to which the Chhattisgarh government has been able to marshal popular consent
to its worldview, and to blank out the scale of state terror is remarkable. What the
newspapers report is only a total count of deaths and violent attacks, mostly by the Maoists
and some killings of Maoist guerrillas by the police or CRPF creating the impression of
endless one-sided violence and just deserts. The hundreds of murders and forced
disappearances perpetrated by the security forces and vigilantes do not figure at all in
official reports and barely even in media coverage.5 4 The one-sided coverage sets up a
structure of emotion where the gruesome Maoist attacks on SPOs and camps exercise a
53 Nitin Mahajan, Chhattisgarh police fudged data to project win against Naxals. Indian
Express, April 24, 2007.
54 The foreign press, e.g. The Guardian, New York Times and BBC were quicker to pick up
the story of Salwa Judum than the Indian national press, which took almost a year to visit
Dantewada. However, their reporting has focussed mostly on the anachronism of Maoist
guerrilla struggle and the contrast between the poverty of Indias villages and its phenomenal
urban economic growth, a convenient stick with which to keep down Indias international
pretensions, as if inequality was a phenomena only of the third world.
strong hold on popular imagination, without a parallel revulsion being created towards state
violence.5 5 News coverage of the Maoists is, however, a double-edged sword for the
While some of the silence on state repression might be explained by the fact that Salwa
Judum activists and the paramilitary make it difficult for independent observers to visit
villages and investigate incidents of violence, it does not account for the media refusal to
carry Maoist press releases including visual evidence of burnt houses and dead people,
which is hard to invent. The Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act 2005, which banned
the CPI (Maoist) and its front organizations, as well as Salwa Judum attacks on local
journalists who tried to report objectively5 7 may have made reporting more dangerous, but
does not account for the degree of self-censorship practised. Perhaps some of the money
spent on anti-Naxalite propaganda finds its way into the willing hands of corrupt
journalists.5 8 But beyond all this, as Stuart Hall et al, point out, the media is structurally
55 For media coverage of violence in which their governments are involved, see Daniel C.
Hallin, 1994,We Keep America on Top of the World: Television Journalism and the Public
Sphere, London, Routledge; Edward Said, 1981, Covering Islam: How the media and the
experts determine how we see the rest of the world, New York, Pantheon Books; Siddharth
Varadarajan, 2003, Weapons of Mass Deception: Iraq and the American Media, India
International Centre Quarterly 30 (1): 131-141.
56 This is one of the reasons advanced by the Collector for advocating controls on the media.
Collectors work proposal, p. 25.
57 See articles on www.cgnet.in re Afzal khan and Kamlesh Paikra.
58 MHA 2006, p. 6-10 provides for expenditure on propaganda. Several Chhattisgarh
journalists were flown to the region in state helicopters, in the local version of embedded
journalism.
poised to reproduce the states viewpoint, despite its self-definition of being independent
and objective.5 9
Media dependence on accredited, and regular news sources, and the relationship between
beat reporters and the police this creates, leads to a situation in which the police are the
primary definers of crime news. Their primary definition sets the limit for all subsequent
discussion by framing what the problem is.6 0 Despite the numerous opinion pieces
criticizing the Salwa Judum, news reports carrying a far greater appearance of facticity
routinely reproduce and iteratively inscribe the governments description of the Salwa
Decontextualized presentation also plays a critical role in reproducing the status quo,
providing no background to explain the rise of Maoism in the area. Even when the media
makes good reporting, while villager-turning-violent to defend her or his rights, is less
appealing to the credit ratings. Except of course, when it serves the media to focus on the
threat posed by Indias red corridor. The Maoists have provided their own guided tours
59 Stuart Hall et al, 1978; see also Herbert Gans, Decoding Whats News, 1980, Vintage
Books.
60 Ibid, pp. 59, 69.
61 See for instance, Rediffnews, 28 September 2006 Naxals had stepped up attacks against
villagers after the launch of Salwa Judum (peace campaign) with the participation of the
local population,. or the Times of India, 30 October 2006, where again they uncritically
reproduce the phrase Salwa Judum (peoples movement against Naxals). These are fairly
typical.
to reporters who invariably highlight the rivers they crossed and the long treks they took
in the forests to reach the Naxalite stronghold, building up a picture of a romantic but
anachronistic gang of men and women. When 60,000 people marched in Dantewada,
walking 200 km and several days in November 2006 to demand an end to Salwa Judum
and dialogue with the Maoists, it did not make national news, since they did it peacefully
and stories coming out of Naxalite areas must have blood and gore.
Till recently, Maoists or the issues they represented - impoverishment and exploitation -
were within the political framework of the Indian state. Increasingly, however, the
Naxalites are getting externalised and rendered unintelligible. As Huysmans argues, the
issue is not just the capacity of the state to meet daily threats to security, which in the
Naxalite case, it could perhaps have done through efficient policing and intelligence
gathering, but its power to provide ontological security by ordering society: This
requires that those elements which cannot be classified, which are ambivalent, and thus
have a capacity to render problematic this ontological function of the state system, have to
be eliminated, possibly through enemy construction.6 2 Adivasis and dalits who refuse to
lie down and await their trickle, be patient when their Constitutional rights are violated
with impunity, or engage in private petitioning which is the acceptable mode of electoral
democracy, and who take to armed struggle instead, are clearly bad victims.
The role of the media in shielding the Chhattisgarh state government, and the right wing
Bharatiya Janata Party more specifically, becomes glaringly obvious when placed against
government in Singur and Nandigram in West Bengal. But what is more worrying is the
degree to which human rights groups, and the entire spectrum of the independent left in
India ranging from the Narmada Bachao Andolan to various NGOs are so easily
influenced by media coverage, and their silence on Chhattisgarh compared to their vocal
protest in West Bengal. To be sure, both for the media and the independent left, the
betrayal by the Parliamentary left is far more newsworthy than ongoing violations by the
BJP. Yet, there are other reasons too, which I shall discuss in the next section.
For nearly three months after Salwa Judum started, no human rights organisation visited
the area. Subsequently, there have been several fact-finding reports by civil liberties
organisations and independent groups from different parts of the country, but their findings
have been comprehensively ignored by the government.6 3 Every independent institution set
up under the Constitution to protect peoples rights has refused to take action including
the National Commission for Human Rights and the National Commission for Scheduled
Tribes. In response to the widespread reports of rape, The National Commission for
Women visited for a day. In conversations with senior members of the government, like the
63 Open Letter from the CPI to the Prime Minister, 16.11.2005; PUCL, PUDR et al, April
2006, When the State Makes War on its own Citizens, 2006; Independent Citizens Initiative,
July 2006, War in the Heart of India (henceforth ICI 2006); Asian Centre for Human Rights,
February 2006 The Adivasis of Chhattisgarh: Victims of the Naxalite Movement and Salwa
Judum Campaign (henceforth ACHR 2006), CAVOW, December 2006, Salwa Judum and
Violence on Women in Dantewara; Human Rights Forum, December 2006, Death,
Displacement and Deprivation in Dantewara, and several articles on www.cgnet.in
Home Minister or the National Security Advisor, they have acted amazed that the state
government would want to burn peoples homes, although at least one faction of the
Congress under former Chief Minister Ajit Jogi has publicly condemned the Salwa Judum,
along with the Minister for Tribal Welfare. This refusal to act on the growing evidence of
human rights violations suggests that in matters involving Naxalites, the internal security
division of the Home Ministry calls the shots over other soft ministries.
While the silence by the state is painful but not surprising, what is far more interesting is
the failure of civil society organisations to take up the issue on the scale required. Much of
this can of course be blamed on the media, but even this needs to be further explained in
terms of the lack of the appropriate kind of organisations to feed the media. Nandigram and
the Gujarat genocide of 2002 both became front page news, in part because they were
located next to major cities with concentrations of journalists (Ahmedabad and Calcutta), in
part because of the presence of middle class local activists, in part because the issue was
correspondents there since it is a new state; in an unprecedented show of unity, both the
It may be, as Agamben writes, that in the state of exception marked by the force of law, a
situation where law is suspended but simultaneously enforced, the options for those at the
receiving end of enforcement get progressively reduced to civil war and revolutionary
violence.6 4 Civil liberties may become irrelevant in this context, since they are claimed
against a legitimate state. But contra Agamben, this is not a situation where human
action..has shed every relation to law but one which maintains a practical relation to the
Culpability
where armed conflict took place between the government and guerrillas, the Commission
for Historical Clarification found that the army was responsible for ninety-three percent of
the human rights violations and the guerrillas for three percent. The guerrillas apologized
publicly but the army did not.6 5 One may ask, on the one hand, by what standards these
violations were judged and whether the balance includes years of exploitation; and yet on
the other hand, a formal judicial system which allowed for retaliatory violence would be
undercutting its own raison detre. Both sides in an armed conflict are responsible for
While a truth and reconciliation process seems to many, in the light of experiences
elsewhere, the only serious chance for peace, there is also the danger that it may amount to
impunity for some. Past experience in India with prosecuting those who orchestrated the
large-scale murders of Sikhs in 1984, or Muslims in 2002, or any one of the numerous
Maoists are reluctant to forgive: For outsiders, they have said, responding to a question
on the killing of special police officers (SPOs), who have been sucked into a war not of
their own making, the SPOs might appear as poor adivasis, but to the masses of adivasis
who had borne the brunt of their cruel attacks, the hardcore among the SPOs are even more
dangerous and brutal than the police.6 6 In the peoples courts held by the Maoists, this
principle of individual responsibility has been upheld in the death penalties meted out to
individuals. There seems little hope, in this kind of situation, where both Maoist and state
notions of justice are based on retribution, to go back to the indigenous system of justice in
Vigilante led counterinsurgency, in which ordinary people are mobilised in civilian self-
defense patrols, has several uses for the state, and not only because it displaces direct
culpability onto a section of the victims themselves. A weakened state structure, says
Gramsci, is like a flagging army; the commandosi.e. the private armed organizations
enter the field and they have two tasks: to make use of illegal means, while the State
appears to remain within legality, and thus to reorganize the State itself.6 7 Across India -
in the North-East, Kashmir, and Andhra Pradesh - renegade militants under the charming
names of SULFA (surrendered ULFA), Ikhwan (Brotherhood) or Green Tigers and the
Kakatiya Cobras are invited by the police to kill their former comrades. Of the
approximately 109 groups in the North-east Sanjib Baruah write, Not all armed groups are
66 Ganapathi, 2007, p. 71
67 Antonio Gramsci, Selections from the Prison Notebooks, 1971, ed. Quintin Hoare and
Geoffrey Nowell Smith, International Publishers, p. 232.
rebels. For instance, many locals believe that some of them have come into being at the
confirm such charges, warfare between rival militias especially following ceasefire
agreements signed by a militia faction and the security forces sometimes neatly serves
The state simultaneously, however, asserts its monopoly on legitimate violence and thus its
claims to state-ness (cf Weber) by asking insurgent groups to hand over their arms and
asserting that it will not negotiate with them unless they give up violence. What we see
here in the governments support for vigilantism, is not an abdication of the claim to being
a legitimate state, but an expansion of options or greater market choice in the use of
violence. In the Indian case, the private armed organisations co-exist alongside a million-
strong army, several well-equipped paramilitary forces and a regular police force to deal
with any violations or militancy by the victims. They act together, the state and the non-
state, the police and their agents, with the latter visibly degenerate but the police often no
less so, with a repertoire ranging from extra-judicial killings and torture to routine rent-
seeking.
states of exception, this tendency is enhanced, as when the top police chief of
Chhattisgarh says that the only problem in the governments war against the Maoists is that
the people support the Maoists. As Huysmans says: rather than a technique of mediating
the gap between an existing people and political elite, representation becomes a technique
through which the leaders call into being a people.6 9 What remains then, is the mystical
state, a Hegelian ethical being. But unlike the mediating associations that Hegel
envisaged, which would provide spaces for the individual within the state,7 0 at such times
Much of this is in keeping with the networked practices of neo-liberalism, where the state
exclusion.7 1 The agreement the Indian state brokers, however, is not even necessarily to a
shared ideology, but to a share in the spoils from those defeated, a mercenary arrangement
69 J. Huysmans, Minding Exceptions: the Politics of Insecurity and Liberal Democracy,
Contemporary Political Theory, 2004, 3, 321-341, p. 333.
p. 333)I am reminded here of Brechts poem, The Solution: After the uprising of the 17th
June, The Secretary of the Writers Union, had leaflets distributed in the Stalinallee, Stating
that the people had forfeited the confidence of the government, And could win it back only
by redoubled efforts. Would it not be easier in that case for the government, to dissolve the
people and elect another? Brecht, Poems 1913-1956, p. 440.
70 Hegel, Philosophy of Right, 1977, Oxford University Press.
71 Mark Duffield, Global Governance and the New Wars: The Merging of Development and
Security, 2001, Zed Books; see also A.Gupta, and A. Sharma, Globalisation and Postcolonial
States. In Current Anthropology, 2006, 47, 2, pp. 277-304.
of immediate advantage. And the people with whom it makes these arrangements are often
those whom it sought first to destroy, inviting political movements to feed upon
themselves. In the process, citizens at large lose their voice, becoming faceless ciphers
clutching their insecurities to their naked selves, for they no longer have a state to turn to,
that thin cloak of legality that liberal democracy afforded. And civil society, too, loses its
innocence.