Monday, April 6, 2015

Fast and furious

Thought for the day
"After all is said and done, more is said than done"
-          Aesop (Greek, 620-560BC)
Word for the day
Malarkey (n)
Speech or writing designed to obscure, mislead, or impress;
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Imagine if there was 24*7 media to report Gandhi vs. Subhash, Nehru vs. RML/Kriplani, Indira vs. Syndicate, Morarji vs. Jagjivan Ram, and Rajiv vs. V. P. Singh.
Kejriwal vs. PB/YY would have looked like a non-event in that case.

Fast and furious

In a refreshing 8 day break from routine activities, I travelled to tribal areas of Central India covering 12 districts of Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Jharkhand. During my discover India trip in summer of 2013 I had to skip these areas due to Naxalite attack on local Congress leaders.
Along with the teams of Equal India Foundation and couple of more NGOs, I traversed through the interior most areas in Bhandara, Gondia, Seoni, Mandla, Bilaspur, Korba, Sitapur, Gumla and Ranchi belts.
The larger objective was to assess the mood of tribal people over recent legal changes regarding land acquisition and mine & mineral development policies. However, I spent some time assessing the economic, social, cultural and political changes taking place in the area.
I would like to briefly share my observations and findings with the readers.
*         The tribal populace in general is poorly informed (mostly misinformed) about the recent changes in laws relating to land acquisition and mines & mineral development.
*         The socio-economic changes that are taking place in these areas are much faster and furious as compared to the changes taking place in urbanized areas.
*         The conflict between generations regarding preservation of environment, culture and traditions is rising much faster.
*         Politically BJP has definitely lost some ground in MP and Chhattisgarh. The ground is fertile for AAP kind of political movement in these states. Especially in Chhattisgarh, where tribal population outnumbers the non-tribal urban population, the existing strong NGO network could be easily exploited to set up a political organizational very fast. Congress still appears to be de-motivated, though Vyampam scam has provided some fuel to local leadership.
*         Bihar elections are not just about Bihar for both BJP and Congress.
Extreme confusion prevails over legal changes
Insofar as the latest changes on land acquisition law and law relating to mine & mineral development, the local population is poorly and mostly mis-informed. A large number of functionaries of political parties, administration, and various NGOs operating in the area are campaigning aggressively but not in an objective manner. The information campaign is mostly motivated and colored with vested interests.
The people, mostly poor (extremely) & illiterate are disillusioned and are feeling lost between contradictory claims and counter claims. Interestingly, Most of them refuse to believe that no money may actually flow into bank accounts.
The detailed findings and suggestions on this aspect will be presented in a report being prepared by the concerned NGOs, that I will be happy to share with my readers in due course.
The brief points worth noting in this regard are however as follows:
(a) The local populace in general is not at all against industrialization. The younger generation in fact is enthusiastic about the prospects of better employment opportunities near home.
(b) The colonial model of resource exploitation adopted so far is the primary cause of worry.
(c)  The governments and the civil society functionaries have mostly failed in protecting the interests of local populace in their negotiation with industrialists and project developers.
Socio-economic changes - fast and furious
The most interesting observation during this trip was the furiousness of the socio-economic changes that are taking place in the tribal milieu. I found the rate of change much faster than metro cities.
In these areas, the consumption pattern, communication, jargon, daily schedule, commitment towards families, environment, traditions, culture etc. all are changing at perhaps the fastest rate in history.
(a) The people are definitely much more aware about the "civilized" world outside their forest.
(b) The effects of better connectivity, electricity and mobility are conspicuous.
(c)  The younger generation is constantly at conflict with the older generation on the questions of loyalty and devotion to the "Forest God" and tribal traditions.
(d) Besides, mobile phone, Maggi, pasta, detergent, mosquito repellent, biscuit, fried snacks, tea, cigarette, scented hair oil, fairness cream, nylon/polyester, denim, condoms, tooth brush, deodorants, pirated DVDs could be found abundantly in use in villages situated 5-7kms away even from the kuccha MNREGA road.
(e)  The use of plastic and thermacol containers and plates in place of earthen pots and banana leaves is rising at ominous pace.
(f)   The thatched roof is giving way to tin sheets. This is increasing the average temperature through reflection of sun rays, and endangering the small and soft vegetation that holds the soil tight in the surrounding areas. Similar development in hill areas has been cited as one of the primary reasons for rise in instances of landslides.
(g) Through repatriation of money and merchandise from the immigrants, the barter economy is metamorphosing into a market economy, to the detriment of local artisans and cottage industry.
(h)  Social infrastructure is still in shambles. Health and education infrastructure is mostly limited to primary level. The quality of teachers and health workers is pathetic.
Generation X is moving out and bringing in changes
We have previously seen this in Punjab, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala etc. where the young people just wanted to move abroad. At whatever cost.
The tribal areas of Central India are witnessing the same phenomenon. The youth, who is exposed to city life, just want to move out, at whatever cost. Lack of education and skills mostly lands them in exploitive jobs like construction labor, domestic help etc. in metro cities.
The wealth transfer through repatriation of money by these immigrants is accelerating and ushering vital changes in villages. The government is mostly absent in this endeavor.
An interesting finding here is that unlike Punjab and Andhra Pradesh where the father was a rich land lord and the child wanted to emigrate abroad, here the father is poor and helpless guy and the child is trying to make his life better.
In Punjab and Andhra Pradesh the parents were not dependent on the emigrated child and therefore could live life at their own terms.
Here the child wants to dictate terms. This is giving rise to conflict. Industry and politicians are seeing this conflict as an opportunity and want to push through their motivated agenda. This would have not be possible if the Generation X was as loyal and devoted to the nature and environment as the previous generations have been.
Politics - BJP weaker, opportunity for AAP type movement
Lastly, I tried to assess the impact of recent allegations over state leadership of BJP in Chhattisgarh and MP.
In both states anti incumbency seems to be setting in fast. The mishandling of various allegations of scams by the state governments has added to the anti BJP mood.
However, fortunately for BJP the elections are not around the corner and the principal opposition Congress is still in declining phase. BJP therefore has ample opportunity to set the things in order.
The general feeling amongst learned people in the area is that if BJP losses in Bihar, whether due to opposition uniting against it or due to infighting amongst its local leadership, it will reflect badly in all three central states (MP. Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand).
A poor show by Congress, though expected, might pave way for yet another non-BJP non-Congress front at national level thereby making revival of Congress even more challenging.
Chhattisgrah and Jharkhand have a unusually large civil society setup. A large number of NGOs supported by local and foreign funds operate in the states. Most of these NGOs have a natural left leaning, though right wing RSS affiliates also have material and reputed presence in the area.
Creating an AAP kind of movement in these states would not be difficult. In fact it could be done much faster than Delhi.
It would be interesting to see if a local Kejriwal emerges in next three years.
Trivia
As per media reports the conscience of the nation is deeply hurt by the racist remarks made by BJP minister from Bihar.
In my view this racism is deep rooted in our society. The proof is that "fairness cream" is one of the fastest growing cosmetic product in both male and female categories!
The BJP top leadership has warned its elected representatives to mind their language while talking in public, but no one dare told anyone not to have racial, casteist and religious prejudices.
The protesting Congress dealt with Shriprakash Jaiswal and Beni Prasad Verma in similar fashion last year and Abhijit Mukherjee in 2010.
JDU has defended Sharad Yadav only recently.
The list is endless and so is the malice.

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