The administration, especially the police, was asked to step aside and remain mute spectators to hundreds of well-armed CPI(M) cadres running riot in Nandigram for six days.
The operation to liberate Nandigram and re-establish the CPI(M)'s grip there started in the middle of last week and was, by all accounts, a well-plannedaffair that had the blessings of the party's top leadership. The administration, especially the police, was asked to step aside and remain mute spectators to hundreds of well-armed CPI(M) cadres running riot in Nandigram for six days till Sunday.
Even a stinging rebuke from Governor Gopalkrishna Gandhi asking the state government to act failed to move the powers that be at Writers' Building. The CRPF, which was sent following a request from the state government, arrived on Saturday, but is yet to deployed in the trouble-torn and traumatizedvillages, as I write this piece at 8:50 PM.
In fact, five companies of the para-military force, led by its IG Subhas Goswami and DIG Alok Raj, had to face barricades put up by the 'red cadres' at two places in the 30 km journey from Tamluk to Nandigram town. They'll remain stationed at Nandigram police station on Monday evening and will fan out to the villages only from Tuesday morning.
The whole area remained out of bounds for media persons ever since the CPI(M)'s operation began and it was only on Monday, after the party had been successful in re-establishing its total control in the area, that scribes were allowed in. But not before we witnessed a fair bit of"red terror", perhaps to serve as an ominous reminder about the CPI(M)'s"power" to us. The Outlook team, one of the first to enter Nandigram after its"re-capture", was caught in many CPI(M) processions and in one along Debipur village, cadres burst countrymade bombs in front of us to demonstrate their"power". The party's local committee secretary, Tilak Roy, however told usthat the bombs were "firecrackers left over from Diwali" and asked us not to write about such "celebrations" by his "enthusiastic party workers".Perhaps it was this "enthusiasm" which was responsible for a TV cameraperson having her camera and mobile phone snatched when she went to cover theransacking of the Trinamool Congress office by the CPI(M) cadre on Sunday.
But with the BUPC resisting all efforts by the state administration to re-settle the displaced in their respective villages, and putting up stiff and often impossible conditions for such return, the ground became ripe for the CPI(M) to initiate 'direct action'. They did so with full and brutal force, importing sophisticated arms and sharp-shooters as well as leaders of the party's'killer squads' from neighbouring districts.
Though the official death toll is four, local persons say they saw scores of dead bodies, all of which have been removed and burnt or buried by the CPI(M). There is truth in theseallegations--on Saturday, 13 CPI(M) activists, including two persons who were wanted by the CBI for their role in the killings of Trinamool Congress workers in Choto Angaria a few years ago, were nabbed by locals while they were removing some injured from Nandigram.
For five days, while the CPI(M)'s 'killer squads' went on the rampage, the police kept themselves confined to their barracks. District Superintendent of Police S.S.Panda said his men were "scared" to venture into the killing fields of Nandigram and were awaiting the arrival of the CRPF. Which was just a lame excuse for inaction and a shameful ploy to give the CPI(M) squads a free hand to complete their task. But the non-deployment of the CRPF immediately after the force's arrival in Calcutta on Saturday has raised doubts over the state government real motive.
"Now, everything is peaceful here. We've established our total control and have rid our village of the BUPC's terror," boasted CPI(M) branch secretary Sudarshan Maity who had, only minutes ago, accused us of being "Trinamool agents" who needed to be taught a lesson.
But the calm that envelopes Jambari village is an elusive one. Before the CPI(M) activists arrived on the scene, many villagers, speaking in whispers, told us about the 'red terror' they had been liberated from eleven months agothat will again haunt them from now on. They spoke of the CPI(M)'s atrocities, high-handedness and total control over all aspects of their lives till January this year when trouble broke out and the newly-formed BUPC drove out the CPI(M) from their villages and their lives.
The state administration has re-established control over Nandigram again now. But it did so riding piggyback on theCPI(M)'s extra-constitutional medieval warfare way. This is where it has erred. Sinned would be a better word. But then, the distinction between the party (the CPIM) and the government had long ago blurred in West Bengal.