The
past few weeks have witnessed an extraordinary frenzy
of media attacks on the Left – and in particular,
on the Left Front government in the state of West
Bengal. These attacks have been so sharp, so abusive
and so based on partial or total distortion of facts,
that they may even be unprecedented in the history
of independent India. And the attacks are coming not
only from the mainstream media which is now well-known
for its anti-Left propensities, but from non-mainstream
and relatively new sources such as internet blogs.
So what exactly is going on?
The focus of all this is the relatively small block
of Nandigram in East Medinipur district of West Bengal,
which has now been a political hotspot for about a
year. The protest against the possibility of land
acquisition for a chemical hub in the early months
of 2007 turned violent, forcing the local peasants
and workers associated with the ruling party (the
CPIM) out of their homes.
The protest was led by the Bhumi Ucched Pratirodh
Committee (BUPC) a motley combination consisting not
only of some local people, but also outsiders especially
from the opposition Trinamul Congress and some Maoist
groups including from Jharkhand. Even after the state
government had retracted, promised that the chemical
hub would be located elsewhere and that there would
be no land acquisition in Nandigram, the protests
continued, apparently inexplicably, and the peasants
who had been displaced by the January violence were
unable to return to their homes.
The effort by the state government to bring these
people back to their homes led to the shocking and
deplorable incident in mid-March, involving an incident
of police firing which killed several people. Shaken
by that incident, the state government withdrew police
from that area, effectively allowing it to become
a "liberated zone" with road blocks, barricades and
even land mines preventing the entry of the state
administration and not even allowing basic public
health services to be provided within the area. Meanwhile
more than 3000 refugees continued to live in makeshift
camps without access to their own homes, fields, or
means of livelihood.
Yet all this time, when there were thousands of displaced
people living in distress, there was no attention
at all from the national media, and certainly no concern
from any national politicians other than those from
the Left parties. Throughout this period, the media
did not ask any of these basic questions: Why is this
protest still going on when all the demands were met
by early March? Why are the displaced residents not
being allowed back into their homes? Why is the state
administration not being allowed to enter? Who is
leading and orchestrating this, and what are their
real aims, given that the sufferers on both sides
are poor peasants and labourers?
In early November, the displaced peasants once more
sought to return. This time they were able to do so,
and clearly violence ensued, involving both sides.
It is certainly correct to criticise the police for
doing nothing – but nothing is also what they had
done in January when the BUPC first violently threw
out those villagers, and nothing is what they had
done (with the exception of the tragic incident in
March) over these past nine months as the BUPC established
control based on physical force over the area.
The state government in West Bengal repeatedly requested
the CRPF to come in to restore order in the area in
October, and there is no doubt that if these forces
had arrived in time, instead of after it was all over,
much violence would have been avoided and many lives
would have been saved. Yet the media has not noted
this fact. Instead it has been deeply critical only
of the last incident, rather than criticising the
ineffectiveness of the police over this entire period
and the late deployment of the CRPF.
But these notable silences are nothing compared to
the shrill hysteria that has accompanied the reportage
of the recent events. There are two features that
must be noted: the gross and even malicious distortion
of facts that has accompanied the completely one-sided
media coverage; and the false and extremely dangerous
analogies that have been made comparing this to the
Gujarat genocide in 2002.
The extent of the distortion of facts is startling
even to those who have grown weary and cynical about
the role of the media. Take only one example. In a
programme on 12 November 2007, a national television
channel showed horrifying images of a villager being
shot at in cold blood, followed by images of a dead
body being wrapped in polythene sheets by a few people
in what appeared to be an attempt to dispose of the
body secretly. The commentary announced that CPI(M)
cadres were responsible for these gruesome acts, and
proceeded to ask the viewers "Does the CPIM have blood
on its hands?" (The answer emerging from the sms poll
was overwhelmingly "yes", which is unsurprising given
the images and attribution.)
Yet it turns out that the news channel had absolutely
no evidence to back its claim that this footage was
of CPIM cadres. This became evident in an interview
telecast later that night, with the photo-journalist
who had shot the footage. In fact, it has been suggested
that the circumstantial evidence is that it may actually
have been BUPC activists engaging in these ghastly
acts. This did not stop the channel from repeatedly
showing this footage as example of the horrific violence
unleashed by the CPI(M) on innocents in the area.
In general TV channels have been replaying a few images,
some of them even from the incident of March rather
than November, to drive home this point of violence
by the CPIM.
This is not to say that there has not been violence
in the area or that it should not be condemned. Obviously,
there has been violence, especially since lives have
been lost (at least 27 of whom were Left Front supporters)
and there was clearly a breakdown of law and order
in that area for the past nine months. All incidents
of violence since January must be fully probed and
the perpetrators must be brought to justice. But it
is important to recognise that there has been violence
on both sides, in a conflict that was no more about
land acquisition at all but was essentially about
destabilising the government through controlling that
particular area, and that the poor local peasants
have been pawns in this cynical game.
The apparently intentional distortion of facts by
the media has been accompanied by extremely biased
commentary in the press, in which all sorts of wild
allegations have been made and analogies have been
drawn that can only be described as both completely
wrong and deeply irresponsible. The most dramatic
of these is the comparison that is being made between
these events and the communal violence in Gujarat
in 2002.
It should be obvious to the meanest intelligence (although
it is apparently not so for the more deliberately
cynical or the more currently hysterical observers)
that there is absolutely no way the two situations
can be compared. First of all, the violence in Nandigram
was not communal but fundamentally a political struggle
between groups. Even though cynical attempts have
been made to introduce a communal flavour into the
events, especially recently, it should be remembered
that West Bengal has an exemplary record of communal
harmony over the past three decades when many other
states have faced communal violence of different sorts.
Secondly, in Gujarat what occurred was the attack
on innocent Muslims across the state supposedly "in
revenge" for the Godhra train fire, which not only
involved deaths of thousands of people but also forced
displacement of the minority community into camps
and subsequent ghettoisation. All this was aided and
abetted by instruments of the state government, in
a state which has an unfortunate history of communal
violence and also a systematic build-up of anti-minority
sentiment.
In contrast, in Nandigram it was actually the supporters
of the Left Front government who were forced to live
in refugee camps for the past nine months, who have
only now been allowed into their homes. Of course,
there was displacement again in early November, this
time of BUPC supporters, when those earlier displaced
returned forcibly. But at the time of writing, almost
all the people who had fled their homes in early November
have returned to their homes, and the aim is to ensure
that everyone is allowed to live peacefully in their
own homes without displacement.
But then the question must be: why is such a ridiculous
comparison being made at all, when it is so evident
that there is no similarity? While the motivations
for such a comparison may not be clear, the results
of making it certainly are. This comparison serves
to muddy the waters significantly, creating great
confusion about what is to be opposed and where. It
even serves to legitimise the pogrom and continued
suppression of minorities in Gujarat, by implying
that such things happen in other places. It makes
a mockery of determined secular opposition and divides
the secular forces so comprehensively that even Mr.
Narendra Modi could not have wished for a more satisfactory
outcome. So it is more than just foolish – it is deeply
dangerous.
One last question still remains in the mind: why is
the media currently so particularly fierce, so determinedly
anti-Left and so blatantly partisan to the extent
of even blocking out the truth when their own correspondents
might accidentally provide it? Here again, the answer
is fairly obvious. The establishment in the country,
as well as the media that supports it and is heavily
financed by internal and external capital, has been
smarting at the inability to push through the Indo-US
nuclear deal. This could be stopped so far only because
of the opposition of the Left parties, and so the
current media attack also reflects rage at being so
constrained and the desire to damage the Left so that
it cannot provide such a concerted opposition to the
deal in future.
So once again, while motives of the various attackers
of the organised Left may not be clear, the implications
of the current frenzy of criticism are only too clear.
It damages the Left and reduces its ability to mobilise
against an international alliance that is clearly
in the interests of imperialism. The only hope, unfortunately,
is that the media ultimately matter much less to the
politics of the country than they think they do.
Decemeber 5, 2007.
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