Delhi Action Committee
Against Kaziranga Police Killings, Assam
After
the BJP came to power in Assam in May 2016, the state government has
unleashed a reign of terror to execute its fascistic agendas. Within 2 months
into power, the government opened fire and killed a 25 year old man
Mintu Deuri, during a protest organized in Raha against the transfer of
the site for a proposed AIIMS in the state on 15th July 2016.
Now on 19 September 2016, just 34 days after the Raha incident, the
police has again opened fire and killed two people - Anjuma Khatun and
Fakhruddin, at a demonstration led by the Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti
(KMSS) and All Assam Minority Students' Union (AAMSU) at Banderdubi
revenue village near the Kaziranga National Park. The protestors were
demanding resettlement and adequate compensation against an eviction
drive carried out by the mandate of the Gauhati High Court order dated 9 October 2015 which was supposed to happen two days later,
i.e. on 21 September 2016 but had been preponed to avoid protests. The
villagers, belonging mainly to the Muslim community of erstwhile East
Bengal origin, have been residing in the village for more than half a
century.
Out
of the 198 displaced families from Banderdubi, around 40 have moved in
with their relatives and the rest have been compelled to seek shelter in
Baghmari, a nearby village under the open skies. The Deputy
Commissioner of Nagaon has not yet allowed any relief measures to reach
them. It must be mentioned here that the 7 Hindu families that lived in
the village were informed before and were reportedly asked to move into
safe places before the commencement of the forceful eviction drive,
which highlights the communal agenda of the state administration. One of
the most powerful ministers in the Assam government, Himanta Biswa
Sarma, posted on his official Facebook page after the eviction drive
that the new government would never compromise on "Jati, Mati, and Bheti"
[Nationality, Land, and Home], a rhetoric of the homeland creating a
paranoia against the Muslim inhabitants of erstwhile East Bengal origin,
with which the BJP came to power. Thus in a true fascistic form, the
repression has been accompanied with a parallel mobilisational drive,
pitting one section of the society against another. Through electronic,
print and social media, gross misinformation and falsehood has been
consciously spread and we are told, this is a struggle to recover the
Assamese nation from the outsiders – the Bangladeshis.
During
the hearing of the case, the Advocate-General acknowledged and
supported the contention of the applicants that as per the revenue
records, Banderdubi and Deochur
Chang are two villages that have been declared as revenue village by
the government (in 1961) and therefore are not part of the Kaziranga
National Park which makes the eviction of any villager from the said
areas illegal (GHC Order, pp. 21). However the Gauhati High Court
ordered fast eviction of inhabitants in the second, third, fifth and
sixth additions of the Kaziranga National Park (GHC Order, pp. 36-37). Reportedly a total of 198 families from Banderdubi, 160 from Deochur Chang and 12 from Palkhowa were evicted in this drive. These
villages have been in those areas even before official recognition of
Kaziranga Wildlife Sanctuary as a National Park, it's inhabitants are
not encroachers but revenue-paying villagers.According to records these villages (Banderdubi and Deochur Chang) came into existence in 1951 and the government granted patta (land
entitlements) in 1961. The names of the villagers were inserted into
the voters' list in 1965 for the assembly election, and a government
school was established there in 1966. On the other hand, Kaziranga was
declared as a National Park by the central government on 11 February
1974.
Section
144 had already been in place in the said areas since Saturday, 17th of
September. It must be mentioned here that the villagers were willing to
abide by the Gauhati High Court order and evict the land voluntarily
for the cause of conservation of the national park but were simply
demanding resettlement and adequate compensation and enough time to
comply with the court's order. In the consequent clash between the
police and the local people, the police blatantly resorted to extreme
brutality, first with tear gas and then with live bullets. Apart from
the casualties, five more people have been severely injured.
The
rapidity and force with which the current government has deployed its
fascistic agenda by using state mechanisms must be read as clear signs
of impending trouble for the already much troubled people of Assam. The
targeted and brazen use of police force to kill citizens in order to
craft a 'nation' and society as per its skewed wishes may soon turn into
an irretrievable situation. As in other parts of the country, the Assam
government has been acquiring land to serve the interests of the big
capital or pursue its 'developmental' policies but it has no patience to
listen to toiling people when it comes to their requirements for
livelihood. And to repeat an age long political cliché, nowhere in the
rest of India, or the national media have we seen any reactions or
responses to this incident.
In any case, why is it legitimate to kill, even if he or she is a Bangladeshi?
We demand:
1.
Immediate action against the concerned security and state officials who
approved the decision to open fire on unarmed and peaceful protestors.
2. Immediate compensation and rehabilitation of all the evicted people of these villages.
3.
An unconditional apology by the Chief Minister and the Home Minister of
Assam to the people of these villagers and the country.
4.
The Government of Assam must ensure and guarantee the safety and human
rights of all people, irrespective of caste, creed, sex and religion, as
laid out by the Constitution of the Union of India.
We also intend to:
1.
Submit a petition to the National Human Rights Commission appealing
that a show-cause notice be served to the Government of Assam asking for
the rationale behind the live bullet firing upon protestors.
Sd/-
Biswajit
Bora, Shalim M. Hussain, Jyotirmoy Talukdar, Sukruta Alluri, Bonojit
Hussain, Mayur Chetia, Nayan Jyoti , Lokesh, Kislay Gonsalvez, Amrapali
Basumatary, Usman Jawed, Apoorva Gautam.