The Return To Muthanga
-
An Affidavit
By C.K Janu
and M. Geethanandan
08 July, 2003
The Adivasi
(tribal) decision is to return to Muthanga. The triabal had become victims
of untold brutalities. Yet there is no other way but to return. And
the Adivasis have been made refugees in their homeland. There are the
spirits of the dead in the forestlands of Muthanga. Not only Jogi, but
also the bodies and souls of all
those who had lived here as one with nature have merged irrevocably
with thesoil. None can separate them now. Anyone who enters Muthanga
can see thescattered coins in front of the Sacred Temple at Thakarappady.
There is also a splintered bamboo there. This was the hundi1 of the
Adivasis, smashed by the police officers and the goondas as though it
was some part of the weaponry of the Adivasis. No one would pick up
the coins. These coins representing the beliefs and dreams would still
be there when they return
.
Those Who See the Theyyam
.
and Those Who Hear Also
2-3 January
2003: Adivasis who commenced their journey from various villages from
different parts of Wayanad district belonging to different communities
assemble at Pulithookky and Thiruvannur colonies. Pulithookky is a colony
ravaged by hunger deaths. Pulithookky has been in the news in full glare.
Those who reached Pulithookky the aged, the ailing, the women,
the youth, those who stopped their formal studies, the infants
came for a new life. They came with sacks full of miseries, the thudi3,
the household and agricultural instruments, materials to construct their
homes, the whicker and oil to light the lamp at the temple at Ambukuthy
.
a line of thousands of refugees going to their ancestral lands. Those
who returned to Muthanga conversed with the spirits of the mountains
with ease, as though they got back their freedom that they lost centuries
ago. They, the Paniya, the Adiya, the Bettakuruma, the Kaattunayaka,
the Kurichia etc, belonging to all the tribes of Wayanad, woke up their
gods in
unison. Even before going to Muthanga, they had woken up their gods
and got their permission. They did not need to consider any other force
beyond this, and definitely not that of the state.
The Remnants of Muthanga
Muthanga is
a protected area under state laws. Entry without permission is punishable.
None except the wildlife and the officers can enter. But none of the
laws could protect Muthanga. Only the remnants of the ravaged nature
remain there. Parched fields, dried up mountain streams, the eucalyptus
trees that suck
out the last of the water sources, open empty land for kilometers, the
desperately thirsty roaming elephants
. The only thing that had
survived the ravages in Muthanga from centuries ago was the temples
of Adivasis. These symbols of belief
the belief in the immense
power of nature stood somehow firmly rooted. Just two decades ago, Muthanga
was a place of rich biodiversity. Swampy lands, numerous streams, wild
trees, diverse wild life and Adivasi tribes symbiotically related to
nature. By the 1980s the forests were wiped clean of the vegetation
for the Birlas. Eucalyptus trees were planted. 77 square kilometers
of Muthanga range was completely wiped out. The Adivasis were also evicted.
This forest land was earlier taken over by the government from private
landlords. The Adivasis should have been protected in these lands by
law. But instead, the majority was evicted. Only 10 Adivasi hamlets
and about 250 non-Adivasi families were permitted to remain in Muthanga
range. Many of those
who had gone to Muthanga were those who had ancestral claims.
The Destruction of Biodiversity
Officially,
the interpretation is that Muthanga is part of Nilgiri Biosphere and
fall within the core of Bandipur Reserve. What replaced
the evicted tribal gods? Bandipur of Karnataka; Mudumalai of Tamilnadu;
Muthanga Range, Tholpatti
Range and Sultan Batheri Range of Wayanad District; Nagarhole of Karnataka;
Silent valley of Kerala
all fall within the Nilgiri Biosphere.
More than 3000 diverse species make these areas qualify as a protected
area. Disregarding the importance of the biosphere, the biodiversity
was completely wiped out in
Muthanga Range that was vested forests. After the complete destruction
of the nature in Muthanga, this area was recommended by the State to
the Centre for consideration to be brought under the category of protected
area. There are no
natural forests in Karadimunda (1,304.93 hectares), Maragatha (2,055
hectares), Thottamoola (1,961.68 hectares) and Noolpuzha (2,017 hectares)
of Muthanga Range. Muthanga had become uninhabitable on a permanent
basis for any wild life.
More than 8,000 acres of land is completely barren. The Adivasis had
put up their homes in this barren land.
The Thirsty Elephants
It is a small
wild river that divides the Bandipur Reserve of Karnataka and Mudumalai
Reserve of Tamilnadu from Muthanga Range. This wild river called Maamana
Allam (Chelithodu) was the traditional water source for the elephants
and other wild life of Bandipur Reserve. Years before, this small wild
river had
completely dried up along with the destruction of the forests and establishment
of eucalyptus plantations. With the loss of all water sources, the river
is but a few kilometer stretch of white sand. The painful attempts of
the elephants to dig holes in the sand in the dried up river bed searching
desperately for water is a constant sight. This presents the other side
of the saga of the disrupted
lives of Adivasis. The elephants searching for water source wander around
crossing the Muthanga Range to Noolpuzha located east of NH 212. This
was not because Noolpuzha was the traditional water source of the elephants.
Muthanga did not also have a regular elephant path. The elephants now
have no other
alternative. But Noolpuzha, located east of Muthanga, is also drying
up. The water of Noolpuzha has also been dammed just below at the edge
of the Wild Life Sanctuary Office. The water is pumped out to the Sultan
Batheri town as well as to other panchayats and this is a cause for
the destruction of Noolpuzha. The forest and wild life officials ensures
the protection of the Nilgiri Biosphere in this manner.
The Abode of Mafias
Most of the
biodiversity of Muthanga has been sucked out by the parallel economic
system of progress in Sultan Batheri, Kalloor and Naykatty area. A mafia
power base has been created here years ago. The elephant tusks and sandalwood
from Bandipur area were regularly transported with ease through the
forest path adjacent to the Muthanga Forest Check Post. It was indeed
Ponkuzhi, Thakarappady and Muthanga that constituted the free base of
the poachers and the liquor mafia. The establishment of the sandalwood
factory here was taking into consideration this possibility of links
with the mafias. With the reduction in sandalwood, elephant tusks and
trees, they became the implementers of foreign funded projects. Many
became respectable. A strong coalition of forest contractors, professional
environmentalists and forest officials soon emerged.
Projects worth crores such as Elephant 2000 project, the water conservation
project at Thakarappady, electric fencing project etc were implemented
here. The forest-wild life officials are not far away when it came to
providing protection to those who hunt down herds of deers which are
then parceled off, while 4 or 5 domesticated elephants are used farcically
to deceive the tourists. The basic problems of the wild life that come
to Muthanga are ignored even as crores are lost. The task of reviving
the wild forest stream that separates the Bandipur
Reserve from Muthanga Range is quietly covered up by the forest-wild
life officials. The Adivasi Gothra Mahasabha established the check posts
on the pathway that skirted the official forest check post at the point
where this pathway joined the NH 212. It may be recollected that it
was the nature lovers
of Wayanad District who had actively protested and succeeded to forestall
the demand to erect check posts beyond Muthanga at Ponkuzhi. They had
then raised the issue of protection of elephants to subvert this as
they did this time too. Both, the Adivasis and elephants, are the victims
of these pests who cart away the finance capital.
The State that Lost All Moral Rights and
The Preparation
for Self Rule
The coalition
fronts did not believe in the rule of law. Neither do they recognize
Adivasis and Dalits as citizens. The rulers had flung to the winds the
Article 244 of the Indian Constitution, the restoration of alienated
land act of 1975, the 1974 vested forest act where half of the vested
forests thus taken over was to be given to the Adivasis and numerous
court orders with utter
contempt. And the latest in this saga was when the agreement of 16 October
2001 of the government with the Dalit-Adivasi Samara Samithy was ignored.
The Adivasis who returned to Muthanga commenced implementing each of
the provisions
of the agreement one by one and began a life where all the civil rights
are protected in an ideal manner. It was the beginning of integrating
the diversity of the various tribes and commencement of a village life
capable of self-rule. The tribal life recreated through the numerous
gram sabha meetings were wonderfully transformed in the forestlands
of Ambukuthy, Thakarappady and
Ponkuzhi through the collective will power and labour. The rhythm that
the tribal communities lost was reestablished through the protection
of the forests, putting up huts and preparation of the lands for cultivation.
Besides the establishment of three schools for the children, a public
distribution center, an initiative for health care in the preparatory
stage and a special project for the protection of wild life and environment,
the Muthanga area became totally liquor free. Check posts were established
by the Adivasis to demarcate the lines clearly to prevent the encroachment
tendencies of the general public. This was
to focus the attention against those who wished to come to the neighborhood
of their lives. The proud bearers of the bows and arrows stood guard
a symbol of the pride of tribal life. But the celebration of
the slaves of their existence was not tolerable to the owners of wealth.
The Chief Minister Antony, the Forest
Minister Sudhakaran and others understood the proclamation of self-rule
in Muthanga as a challenge to the State. The Speaker of the law making
Assembly proclaimed aloud that the Adivasis should be shot dead, despite
the fact that the Adivasis did not do anything that could be construed
as criminal.
Re-establishing Law and Order
The Adivasi
villages are currently discussing the 1996 Panchayat Raj (Extension
to the Scheduled Areas Act) the new legislation related to the
Panchayat Raj Act. The prevention of land alienation, the restoration
of illegally alienated lands, ownership of minor forest produce, the
right to ban liquor, control of
local institutions, control over money lending, control over local market,
command over resources and planning for local development are all intended
to make the villages self-reliant. The law on this was passed by the
Indian parliament in 1996. The Muthanga struggle arena was the cry for
establishing
social justice and rights over resources within the parameters of this
law.
The Denial of Right to Act
The whites believed
that the blacks did not have souls. There are the university academics
who believe that Adivasis lack the capacity to act on their own as do
those intellectuals who are in touch with the forest department. There
are those in Kerala who think that the Adivasis are vanavasis
like the elephant, the leopard and the wild buffalo. The foreigners,
foreign loan
providing agencies, the developmentalists who are the favourites of
funding projects, pure environmentalists, Hindutvavadis all share
this opinion viewed from different corners though. All their intensions
are to protect the wild life and forests by bringing the tribals outside
the forests and into the mainstream. The fundamental basis of their
love for environment is their hatred to their brethren. Their development
projects have till date neither saved wild life, nature or human beings.
The remains both the wiped out hills of Muthanga and the displaced
Adivasis from Muthanga are proof of this development. Their last
word is the AHADS4 model. In the ultimate analysis, only the crores
from foreign loans that reach their hands are the prime moving force
for human action. They forget that this is very much the key element
that reproduces the criminal mafia
culture in Kerala. There was immense potential for action in the collectivity
of tribal life. Nature could be recreated. It is only that they should
not be denied the opportunity to recover the rhythm of life. They tried
this in Muthanga.
The Racist Face of State Terror
17 February
2003: As far as the accomplishment of the organized brute force of power,
there is no other parallel in the history of Kerala as that took place
in Muthanga. It came as a wild forest fire. The mafia gangs, protected
by the administration and the police, set fire to the northern part
of the Muthanga Wild Life Sanctuary. Hundreds of Adivasis would have
been burnt to ashes in the long war against the fire that lasted for
hours. No administrative official demanded of the Adivasis even to leave
the place to save their own lives. The strategy of war adopted by the
State/mafia alliance failed though. The mafia gang who set fire to the
forests, along with the officials, fell into the hands
of Adivasis. Even then the Adivasis demanded that the law be enforced.
The criminals were produced in front of the magistrate in full view
of the masses. The criminals were taken over by the State but then the
government set free the mafia gang. The State, which has lost all sense
of decency, could not but unleash its terrorist face. A war with racial
overtones was unleashed on 19
February in Muthanga.
The Criminal Tribes
The hundreds
of Adivasis...from infants to women
.who were brutally attacked
were locked up in prisons as accused in 7 criminal cases. Hundreds of
cases have been registered across Kerala against Adivasis for demanding
a place in their land of their birth. Branding Adivasis as criminals
was but the age-old
tradition of the British. The surrender drama of the forest looters
was enacted in an organized manner after which they were set free from
the cases. And of course the forest department is carrying out the responsibility
to protect the forests in many parts of Kerala. And they
have been writing newer scripts in branding the Adivasis as the accused.
Just as the American State searched for evidence of chemical weapons
in Iraq, the Antony government was searching for evidences of links
to PWG, LTTE etc. All that they could get were the coins that lay scattered,
broken vessels and thudis. What was burnt down was a culture of a people.
There has been attempts from different quarters to paint those areas
in red colour with stories of extremism areas where for many
years now those socially segregated from Keralas political map,
especially the Adivasis and Dalits, have dared act. The professional
human rights activists, journalists,
the leadership in the ruling political system etc have done this.
These are but
modern tactics for racial isolation. At last they propagated that there
were special intellectual centers to direct the Adivasis
to wrong paths. The intention behind these was to ensure the destruction
of the emergence of a new socio-political force from amongst the Adivasis
and its transformation to a new
force of renaissance. It is not possible to eliminate a process of renaissance
through force of arms or false propaganda. The sections of people who
attain consciousness of their own will some day find a place of their
own in a democratic society. All peoples who are denied the rights to
resources, social
justice and self-rule will gain self-confidence from such struggles.
C.K Janu
Chairperson
Adivasi Gothra Mahasabha
Vyapara Bhawan
Mananthavady Post
Wayanad District
Kerala
India 670 645
E-mail: [email protected]
[Translated from the original Malayalam titled Muthangayilekkulla
Thirichhupokku Oru Sathyavangmoolam released on 31 May
2003]