Naxalite in Bihar: Rich Grab Land with Govt Help
![]() |
Gandhi's arrest at Champaran. Pic credit India TodayNK SINGH
Champaran
– here Mahatma Gandhi started his first mass movement. Land inequality is
sharper in Betiah area because of land erosion by the Gandak river. The problem
begins from both ends; either land has been eroded or a new piece has come out
of the belly of the river because of the change in its course.
Usually,
the latter type of land is forcibly occupied by big landlords. If a landless
peasant (who had probably lost his land in erosion) tries to get a piece,
officials backed by landlords act against him.
An
enormous number of applications from landless peasants and sharecroppers are
pending in Government offices, demanding Government land. But bureaucrats are
indifferent. But farms of big people are opening daily on the Government land called “Kaiser-e-Hind Zamin”.
Naxalite
or no Naxalite, Champaran, which consists of 40 per cent landless peasants
cannot remain peaceful for ever.
In
Lakhaura police station the main problem is seizure of land by the village
moneylenders. Seventy percent of the land has slipped into the hands of the
moneylenders, who are gradually turning into landlords.
In
regard to settlement of cultivable waste land belonging to the Government, it
is known that 70 percent of it goes to big landlords.
So,
it happened one day. A crowd, suspected to be Naxalites, attacked the
Commissioner of Tirhut division who was on a tour of the area. Police opened
fire, killing one person.
Thousands
of acres of such cultivable waste land are available, but due to an ‘unwritten
agreement’ between bureaucrats and big landlords, land distribution is in
abeyance.
The
Left parties had started a movement for distribution of 1,100 acres of land
among landless peasants in Rajahwa-Rajhi area. About a thousand agricultural
workers occupied a piece of waste land, but instead of land settlement to them,
200 are facing prosecution in courts.
Monopoly
of land
A
handful of persons sometimes have monopoly of land in Betiah area. Bilaspur Estate, which tops the list, uses tractors and other modern machinery for
farming. Then there are owners of sugar factories, who have occupied 40,000
acres of land during the last five years.
In
Darbhanga district the police have announced awards for capturing fifty so
called Naxalites. A Mahant in Bishol village near Jainagar, who owns 700 bighas
of land, has instituted several cases in court against his share-croppers.
60-70 persons were arrested.
There
is violence. The Mahant of Rajnagar owns 800 acres of land. Earlier this year,
he sent armed men to look after his crops. One share-cropper was killed in a
scuffle. In Tegachha village under Kusheshwar Asthan block, a mob of 500
carrying red flags looted crops last year.
Students
of geography know that Kosi is the river of sorrow in Bihar. Students of
political science should know that Kosi is an area where worst forms of
exploitation are practised.
The
Santhals of Busanhi village in Saharsa are up in arms demanding “land to the
tillers”. In Dhanchonha village there was a firing. One person was killed, 15
injured.
In
the rural areas of Purnea district share-croppers and agriculture workers live
a life of insecurity under the dark shadow of landlords and bureaucrats. Purnea
courts have 4,500 cases registered against share-croppers.
In
1968, when the non-Congress UF Government tried to make an amendment in the
share-croppers’ law, lakhs of them were evicted by landlords.
Nakshatra
Malakar, the Robin Hood of Bihar
In
Purnea people talk about Nakshatra Malakar, the Robin Hood of Bihar. Noted Hindi
writer Phanishwar Nath Renu had even used him as a character in his famous
novel, Maila Aanchal.
Malakar,
a member of the CPI, has spent 12 years in British and Congress jails. For as
long as 22 years, Nachatra has proved to be a headache for the ‘law and order’
authorities.
It
is said that he has never committed any dacoity for his own gain. In the
villages of Kosi area, you can hear folk songs about him. He is the most
powerful peasant leader in the area.
Khagaria
is one of the main Naxalite centres in Bihar. BK Azad, the Che Guevara-style
Naxalite, lives nearby. A businessman of Khagaria owns a farm at village
Ramunia, five miles away. Last December, an armed mob of about 500 peasants,
most of them his share-cropper, looted the harvested paddy and fertilizers from
his farm.
In
Nathnagar near Bhalgalpur, a large number of landless peasants have pitched red
flags on cultivable waste land and started ploughing it. In nearby Gauripur
village, 100 tribals armed with bow and arrows, forcible harvested standing
crops in about 40 bighas of land, last year.
Ranchi
is full of Naxalism, but no Naxalite. The only activity of Naxalites in Ranchi
is now fixing wall posters.
(Concluded)
Excerpts
from Patriot, 14 October 1969. This is the second part of the article. The
first part was published on 11 October 1969.
|
Comments
Post a Comment
Thanks for your comment. It will be published shortly.