You have blood
on your hands, sir.
You need to make amends
Arundhati Roy's Letter
To The CM of Kerala
To
The Chief Minister
Government of Kerala
Thiruvananthapuram
27th February 2003
Dear Sir,
There are some moments in
the life of a society when something happens to put its moral fibre
on public display. This is one such moment.
The Muthanga atrocity will
go down in Keralas history as a governments attempt to decimate
an extraordinary and historical struggle for justice by the poorest,
most oppressed community in Kerala. It will go down in history because,
unlike most struggles in Kerala, it is not a petty, cynical
fight between political parties jockeying for power. It is the real
fight of the truly powerless against the powerful. It is the stuff of
which myths are made.
I visited the Muthanga sanctuary
(partly used as a eucalyptus plantation for Grasims Gwalior Rayons
factory, which has recently been closed) where the Kerala Police opened
fire on hundreds of adivasis. I visited the Sultan Bathery hospital
where the wounded have been admitted. I visited some adivasi settlements
close to the sanctuary. I also visited the Calicut jail and met C.K.
Janu and Geethanandan, both of whom are recovering after having been
badly beaten by the police. Apart from this I spoke with several eyewitnesses
to the firing.
For the Kerala Police to
open fire on a group of hundreds of people including women, children,
old people and infants is an act that has few parallels in recent history.
The event that comes to mind is Jallianwallah Bagh. According to eyewitness
accounts the official death toll of two is completely untrue. The people
I spoke to reported a much higher toll. Had they belonged to any other
community that mattered to mainstream political parties, the manner
in which the crisis and its fallout were handled would have been quite
different.
There is absolutely no justification
or excuse for what happened. Even the police version of being provoked
by a 'hostage' crisis is not a justification. To open fire like that
with no attempt to negotiate shows a deep lack of respect for human
life -- not just adivasi lives, but also the lives of the policeman
and the forest official who were taken hostage. It is not the way governments
in the past have dealt with kidnappings and hijackings by real militants.
While those who killed the policeman must certainly be punished, you
cannot hold all the people present there -- or the Adivasi Gothra Mahasabha
or indeed the entire adivasi community -- responsible for that act.
Survivors who I spoke to
in hospital were less traumatised by their own injuries than by the
fact that many of their family members including small children had
gone missing. I met a man whose child had fallen from his arms when
he was brought down by a police lathi and has been missing since then.
There are others, women and old people missing. It is not known whether
they are dead, or alive or hiding, hurt and hungry in the sanctuary.
A week has passed and no
effort has been made to draw up lists of the missing and crosscheck
them with jail and hospital records and reassure those who are rigid
with grief and uncertainty about their loved ones. Can you even bear
to think how you would feel in their place?
Meanwhile the police is terrorising
adivasis in the region. Policemen enter settlements and arbitrarily
arrest the men folk, beating them and dragging them away. Their families
have no idea what has become of them. When we approached the villages
we found ghost-settlements with only a few frightened women and children.
The men who remained all ran away. It took a lot to persuade them that
we were not government officials or police-informers. Clearly the intention
is to stamp out the struggle completely. By visiting this kind of vicious
reprisal on the whole community, the government hopes that people will
blame their leaders for putting them on the path that lead to such terrible
times for them. It is a ruthless political game by accomplished players.
Journalists and cameramen
have been threatened and intimidated. After the firing they were denied
access to the interiors of the sanctuary where people went to hide.
For fifteen hours after the firing the place was closed to the media.
Nobody knows what really happened during that period. In an attempt
to terrorise members of civil society who may have any sympathies with
the adivasis, the police have arrested a DIET (District Institute for
Educational Training) lecturer K.K. Surendran. He was tortured in custody
and reports say that he has a ruptured ear drum. At the moment he is
being held in Kannur jail.
The result of this police-raj
is that adivasis are too frightened to go to work. People are frightened
to employ them. In effect, they are starving to death in their villages
-- their ration cards have been burnt in the carnage. This is an exacerbation
of the situation that led them to fight for the return of their alienated
lands in the first place.
This is to urge you to immediately
release people who have been held on baseless charges and see that they
are able to return safely to their villages. Most have lost all their
worldly possessions -- they have no food, no vessels to carry water,
and no clothes to wear. (People and well-wishers had to take them clothes
in jail). Everything has been burned and destroyed by the police in
their 'action'.
Forgotten in the reportage
about the carnage and its aftermath is the fact that this confrontation
was the outcome of yet another cynical promise by the Government of
Kerala to provide land to 53,000 adivasi families by the end of December
2002. It was another link in the chain of 28 years of unforgivable manipulation.
Ours is a nation built on the jagged shards of politicians broken
promises.
You have blood on your hands,
sir. You need to make amends. And quickly.
Yours truly,
(Signed)
Arundhati Roy
P.S: A small observation:
In its eagerness to restore the Eucalyptus plantation to its pristine
condition, apart from killing human beings, between bouts of firing
the police squadron had a picnic lunch. The plastic cups and plates
scattered on the eco-sensitive battlefield tell a story.
This one meal by the guardians of the State produced more non- biodegradable
waste than the homes and worldly possessions of one thousand adivasis
families.
Arundhati Roy
U 18 Green Park
New Delhi