Issues that have shown the West Bengal chief minister in poor light
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That thumping endorsement, curiously, catalysed events in such a way that the faultlines began to show. The first point of discord was Singur: his popularity recently confirmed, Buddhadeb was emboldened to push a contentious acquisition of prime farmland for a Tata project. Things came to a head by December, and a motley array of opposition forces began coalescing—Trinamul, Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind (JUH), unattached dissenters like Medha Patkar and Mahasweta Devi. Even as Singur simmered, January saw the next explosion: Nandigram, an idyllic pocket of east Midnapur, a five-and-a-half hour drive from Calcutta. The issue was the same: land, that scarce resource, this time to be acquired from farmers for a chemical hub to be developed by an Indonesian firm. The opposition this time was concerted: the nascent coalition of Singur bloomed into a full-fledged phalanx, the Bhoomi Uchhed Protirodh Committee. Sundry forces—Maoist groups, Trinamul, JUH—physically took over the entire block, evicting CPI(M) supporters. The first big blot on Buddhadeb's tactics came as cadres attempted a re-entry in March on the back of a police action that left 24 killed.
The charge of using state machinery in partisan ways was to stick to him more tenaciously: in November, two months after the bad press had goaded him into shifting the project, armed CPI(M) men "recaptured" Nandigram.
The spiral of violence led to CRPF deployment, the governor talking upbraiding language (allegedly out of turn) , and the final shame: the spectre of Calcutta's citizenry, students and intellectuals taking to the streets.
For the CPI(M), with its invincible election machine, violence is part of a day's work—after all, it matured in the crucible of the bloodiest of decades, the 1970s, when Congress governments eliminated thousands of young Naxals. Hanan Mollah, eight-term Lok Sabha MP, told Outlook candidly, "Look, we never claimed to be Gandhians. When people attack us, we resist. Over 3,000 of our workers were living in refugee camps and were desperate to return to their homes and a normal life. When they met with armed resistance, what did you expect them to do? Toss rosogullas at their opponents?"
Worse, the violence appears to have been pre-planned. In its run-up, the All India Minority Forum (a minor, Congress-backed body) and a much larger Muslim body called the Furfura Sharif Muzadeedia Anath Foundation had been organising roadblocks across Bengal to protest against the "recapture" of Nandigram. Till then, these protests had been free of violence. On November 21, however, things took an ugly turn after police clashed with those who had blocked Ripon Street to allow an ambulance carrying a critically ill woman to pass through.
So much so, party leaders are reluctant to lay the entire blame at Buddhadeb's door, though they feel Jyoti Basu would have handled the situation better. "Jyoti babu is the oldest man in our party with the youngest mind, and it is a modern mind," a party senior told Outlook. "He is an embodiment of democratic values. Don't forget, he came through the struggle—he was not just India's longest-serving CM, but probably also the longest-serving opposition leader in a state legislature." Of Buddhadeb, he merely says, "The results of the 2006 assembly elections turned his head and made him arrogant."
It's a view endorsed by civil servants who have observed both men closely. Basu is considered a far superior crisis manager. As an ias officer put it, "In some ways, he may be more ruthless, but he is also cool-headed." Comparing him with Buddhadeb, he goes on to say, "Basu is like a reservoir accepting all the information and advice given and then taking the tough decisions. Buddhadeb, on the other hand, has very poor judgement and has surrounded himself with poor advisors and sycophants. He is a bad political manager and doesn't even have the late Anil Biswas—who did the political management—to help him."
Birbhum MP Ramachandra Dome, however, says it is unfair to compare Basu and Buddhadeb. "After the 2006 elections," he says, "our government's priorities and thrust areas changed. The purchasing capacity of rural Bengal, thanks to our reforms in that sector, has grown to Rs 21,000 crore, but with agriculture nationally in distress and employment in decline in these parts, we needed to create alternate job avenues in industry. This is a transition phase and Buddhadeb babu is the CM now. It is naturally a difficult phase. We all have to collectively work to change the mindset of the people. It is wrong to pin the blame on Buddhadeb—ours is a collective leadership."
Brave words, but can they counter those of Alexander Pope, whom a civil servant quotes: "Of all the causes that conspire to blind/Man's erring judgement and misguide the mind/What the weak head with strongest bias rules/Is Pride the never failing vice of fools." Will that be Buddhadeb's political epitaph?
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