Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Report, statement on the repressive situation in Jangalmahal



September 18, 2011
Activists arrested in Jangalmahal
a report by Partho Sarathi Ray
Reports coming out from the Jangalmahal area of West Bengal describe an alarming situation, where indiscriminate arrests by the joint state and central security forces and atrocities by the Bhairav Bahini, the newly formed organization of Trinamool Congress goons are happenning rampantly. They are again trying to make the Jangalmahal into a no-go zone, following on the footsteps of the previous Left Front government and the harmads of the CPI(M). On 16th September, it came to be known that four people, Somprakash Chakraborty, son of jailed Maoist spokesperson Gour Chakraborty, Prasenjit Chakraborti, a senior producer of a Bengali news channel, Nitai Das, a member of the student organization USDF and Nityananda Thakur, who had gone to Belpahari on a fact-finding mission had been picked up by the joint forces from Patharchaki village where they had gone to meet the family members of those who had been arrested during the Lalgarh movement. The police consistently denied arresting them, which raised fears that the police might try to kill them in a false encounter, as the police is well known to do. However, it has just been known that they have been to Jharkhand and have been shown arrrested from Chakulia of East Singhbhum district. There are reports coming out from Jharkhand police that they are being interrogated at the Mathiabandhi outpost and they might be falsely implicated in the Sunil Mahato murder case.

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Sanhati statement on the repressive situation in Jangalmahal
We strongly condemn the recent arrests of activists by the central and state government joint security forces in the Jangalmahal region of West Bengal and express our deep concern at the renewed attempt by the state government to prevent access to this area. In the space of the last two weeks two such incidents have taken place: first the arrest in Belpahari of Arun Chakrabarty, an activist associated with the Bandi Mukti Committee and two medical students on 7th August while they were collecting data on adivasis who are imprisoned under various political charges in West Bengal prisons and then that of Dr. Siddhartha Gupta and Abhijnan Sarkar on 14th August while they were returning from attending a medical camp at Patharchakri village. Incidentally, Siddhartha Gupta and Abhijnan Sarkar, who had treated 140 poor adivasi patients in the medical camp the previous day, have been charged under Sec. 151 of the CrPC which is purportedly to “prevent the commission of cognizable offences”.
It is a matter of grave concern that the newly elected government in West Bengal led by the Trinamool Congress is walking in this path, in spite of its pre-poll promises of withdrawal of joint forces from Jangalmahal and normalizing the situation there, release of political prisoners and stopping terrorizing by the state . The brutal repression by the joint forces and the CPI(M) harmads on the people of Jangalmahal while Sec. 144 was promulgated there for a period of nearly two years, and access to all citizens was blocked, is well known. It is quite apparent that the government of Mamata Banerjee is following in their footsteps, surely with the active encouragement of the central home ministry led by P. Chidambaram. Furthermore, Mamata Banerjee’s recent announcement at a public meeting in Jhargram about her intention to recruit thousands of adivasi youth as “special police constables” is very ominous as it is clearly an attempt to start a Salwa Judum like force in the adivasi areas of West Bengal, disregarding the well known atrocities by the Salwa Judum in Chattisgarh and the recent judgment by the Supreme Court declaring any such arming of a section of the population completely unconstitutional. This is clearly a nefarious scheme in the name of bringing employment and development to the adivasis of jangalmahal. At the same time, there are reports that the Trinamool Congress is building its own private gangs in the area, emulating the example of theHarmad Bahini, and giving them equally ominous names, such as Bhairav Bahini (terrible force) At the same time, even after four months of coming to power, no efforts are being made to release the hundreds of adivasi men and women who had been arrested during the course of the joint forces operation in Jangalmahal and who are languishing in jail till date.
We strongly condemn all moves by the Trinamool Congress government in West Bengal to intensify the oppression on the people of Jangalmahal and demand that unhindered access to the area should be allowed to all people; the joint forces, whose occupation of the area has marked a dark phase in our history, be immediately withdrawn; any plan to create state or quasi-state vigilante forces be cancelled; and all political prisoners, including the hundreds of adivasis arrested from the Jangalmahal area, be immediately released.