Sixty-two years ago, at the midnight of 14th August, 1947, Jawaharlal Nehru declared that finally India would redeem its tryst with destiny, and the country would awake to life and freedom. The Constituent Assembly, where he spoke these words, went on to draft a constitution which enshrined the fundamental rights of India’s citizens, including Article 21A, which guaranteed free and compulsory education to all children of the age of six to fourteen years. To support, and strengthen, this fundamental right, the Indian parliament passed the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009, commonly referred to as the Right to Education Act, with much fanfare. While the India of multinationals and multibillionaires seem to have gone ahead to fulfill its tryst with destiny, and successive governments claim to be building a “knowledge-based economy”, the adivasi and dalit children, inhabiting the regions of West Bengal, Jharkhand, Orissa, Chattisgarh and the other Indian states which are currently the site of the armed offensive by the state, called Operation Green Hunt, seemed to be headed towards another destiny. For, they are being denied their fundamental right to education, as their schools have been occupied by the security forces of the State.
Occupation of school buildings by paramilitary forces operating in areas of insurgency has been a practice that has been going on for a long time. In the adivasi-populated areas of eastern and central India, where state police and CRPF have been trying to suppress the Maoist-led insurgency and various popular movements against marauding corporations for the past decade and more, school buildings have always been a prime target for establishing camps for the armed forces. Operating in a terrain with which they are unfamiliar, and among a population that is hostile, facing adversaries enjoying widespread local support, the police/paramilitary forces inevitably selected school buildings, often the only pucca structure in the vicinity, to set up camps. And that spelt the end of education, and a life with dignity, for the local children. These areas, among the most disadvantaged in India, already have very few schools. And when these are taken over by the armed forces, the children have no option but to stop going to school. This has been happening for a long time, and in places like Lalgarh in West Midnapur district of West Bengal, you can hear horror stories from teenaged adivasi girls about how they were forced to drop out of their schools facing harassment and obscene gestures from jawans occupying their schools. Can a civilized society sacrifice the future of its children to the expediency of housing armed forces which are apparently there to clear the path of “development” for these same children? For a country which prides itself on its institutes of higher learning and the number of software engineers it produces, it is an abomination that schools for children, that too of the most marginalized section of its population, can be nonchalantly given over to the occupation of security forces.
There is nearly no reporting about this in the mainstream media and nearly no discussion among civil society. The Home Ministry often gives full-page advertisements (paid by taxpayers’ money) in newspapers blaming the Maoist rebels of blowing up school buildings, but maintains a silence about the occupation of schools by its own armed forces, which violates the Right to Education which the State guarantees to the people. The Maoist rebels have been known to attack school buildings being used as camps by the paramilitary forces, and have sometimes blown up some school building preemptively, to deny the armed forces a place to set up camps. However, it is the practice of the State to occupy schools (and also health centres) to set up armed camps which have made these the targets of rebel attacks. India is a signatory to a number of international conventions, including the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which explicitly forbids the misuse of school and hospital buildings in conflict situations such that they can become targets of attack. The Indian state’s action in occupying and converting these schools to armed camps violates these conventions and India’s own constitution, specifically the right of children to free and compulsory education.
Operation Green Hunt, which was launched by the Indian government in November 2009 purportedly to crush the Maoists and clear the path for “developmental” measures, has made the school occupations wider and worse. There have been no studies and nearly no information about the number of schools occupied by the paramilitary and police forces in the states where Operation Green Hunt is ongoing. Before that, in June 2009, when the joint central paramilitary and state police forces entered Lalgarh in West Bengal, they occupied 21 schools and one college in the four blocks (Binpur-1, Shalboni, Goaltore and Midnapur Sadar) in the West Midnapur district of West Bengal. As mentioned earlier, school occupations by police forces have always been a phenomenon in the jangalmahal region of West Bengal, and the vacation of all schools by police forces was one of the thirteen original demands of the Lalgarh movement.
The police had been forced out of their camps in the schools during the Lalgarh uprising, and therefore when they reentered Lalgarh, they reoccupied the schools. There were widespread protests by the local people against these school occupations. Parents, guardians, well wishers and children themselves made repeated requests to the district administration to withdraw the paramilitary forces from the school and immediately resume education but all the petitions fell on deaf ears.
On 13th July 2009, around 600 school students held a rally at Dharampur and handed a petition to the commandant of the camp set up in the local high school requesting that the 300 paramilitary personnel located in the camp be shifted elsewhere. Students of Gohamidanga high school gheraoed the camp set up in their school and demanded that the forces vacate it. In many cases, when children of various schools protested they were beaten up brutally. Similarly the request by the school administration of Bhimpur Santhal high school, made to the district magistrate, West Midnapur and SDO, Midnapur Sadar in letters dates 4th and 24th July 2009 to vacate the schools were similarly disregarded.
Finally, a public interest litigation (PIL) was filed in the Calcutta High Court, by the Paschim Medinipur Bhumij Kalyan Samiti, a community organization of adivasis from the Lalgarh area. In the submission to the court, the petitioners argued that “Gross violation of the fundamental right of the Petitioner as enshrined under Articles 14, 15(3), 21, 21A and 19(1) of the Constitution of India” was taking place as a result of the school occupations and “Non implementation of the provisions of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009” was resulting in the children of the area being deprived of education and also of the mid-day meal scheme. They prayed for “immediate direction upon the respondent authorities to take immediate affirmative action to resume education in all primary, secondary and higher secondary schools under the Binpur-I, Shalbani, Goaltore and Midnapore Sadar Blocks in West Midnapore and withdraw members of the law enforcements agencies from such schools”. As a result of this PIL, the high court ordered that ten of the schools being occupied be vacated within 30th December, 2009. The advocate general of West Bengal, appearing for the state, tried to contest the order, but the court refused to extend the deadline. Consequently, these schools were vacated by the joint forces, but still there are a number of schools which are being occupied.
When these schools were vacated by the security forces, people went in and found a nightmare scenario of classrooms having been used as kitchens and lavatories, wooden tables and benches having been cut up to be used as firewood and walls littered with pornographic graffiti. Many of the schools were left with unpaid electricity bills ranging into tens of thousands of rupees, which the government refused to pay. Most schools have not yet recovered from these burdens of the occupation.
The situation is even worse in neighbouring Jharkhand state, which is also a major theatre for operation Green Hunt. In a letter to the home minister P. Chidambaram, Gladson Dungdung of the Jharkhand Indigeneous Peoples’ Forum, pointed out that 48 permanent and 40 temporary camps of the Jharkhand armed police (JAP) and the paramilitary Central reserve police force (CRPF) have been established in occupied school buildings. The letter requested the home minster, who promises to bring development to the adivasis to “kindly take necessary steps to vacant the schools immediately and also ensure that the Security Forces do not occupy any school in future so that the right to education of children of those villages can be ensured.” No response from the home minister has been forthcoming.
It is important for the people of India and the world to know that school buildings are being occupied in India by security forces as a part of standard operating procedure in the war being waged by the Indian state against its own indigenous population. As a result of this, children, belonging to the most disadvantaged sections of its population, are being deprived of their fundamental right to education and of a future of dignity. For the first time, we provide a list of the schools that were occupied in West Bengal and a list of schools that are still occupied in Jharkhand (http://sanhati.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/lists chools1.pdf). The list of occupied schools in Jharkhand was painstakingly prepared by Gladson Dungdung and Stan Swamy, human rights activists based in Jharkhand. The list of schools in West Bengal was prepared by the author with help from members of the Paschim Medinipur Bhumij Kalyan Samiti, the Peoples’ Committee against Police atrocities, and Human Rights Law Network, Kolkata. The author wishes to thank and acknowledge all the people who helped in preparing these lists. We hope that all democratic minded people and organizations would publicize this information and would collect similar information from the other states such as Chattisgarh and Orissa, bearing the brunt Operation Green Hunt, and unite in protest so that the Indian state is not able to doom the adivasi children to a future of darkness.
In the first half of 2010, the school occupations in Lalgarh entered a new phase. Unable to gain an upper hand over the peoples’ struggle in Lalgarh, and to combat the Maoist insurgency, the joint state and central security forces took the recourse of closely coordinating their activities with that of armed cadres of the ruling CPI(M), whose entry into the area was facilitated by the same forces. Since then, Lalgarh and adjoining areas of jangalmahal have been ravaged by the armed gangs of the ruling CPI(M), protected and patronized by state forces. Organized in a paramilitary manner, on the lines of the notorious Salwa Judum of Chattisgarh, and housed in numerous camps dotting the entire jangalmahal region, the armed CPI(M) cadres, called locally as harmads, have been raiding villages, burning and looting houses, killing people, raping women and working closely with the joint forces in tracking down and killing leaders of the PCAPA, all in the name of regaining lost territory in the Lalgarh area. Recruited from areas such as Keshpur and Garbeta and also Jharkhand, and under the direction of senior CPI(M) leaders, in the last few months they have styled themselves as “Mao daman sena” (Maoist suppression army). In the recent past, they are widely believed to have been involved in the Sonamukhi rapes, in the Jnaneshwari Express derailment and the killing of Umakanta Mahato, a leader of the PCAPA. Though numerous statements regarding the presence of these armed camps in the area have been made, including by the Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee, the home minister P Chiambaram, the governor of West Bengal M K Narayanan and in a report by the Intelligence Bureau of the central government, the West Bengal government has flatly denied the existence of such camps. A week before, a group of reporters who had gone to the area to investigate the presence of these camps, were beaten up and their cameras destroyed by CPI(M) harmads.
Here for the first time we make public the list of harmad camps in jangalmahal, as on 5th August, 2010 (http://sanhati.com/articles /2716/). More such camps have been set up in the last one month, as the harmads have advanced deeper into the area, and hundreds of people have fled from their villages. As the list shows, most of the camps have been set up in primary schools and in other government buildings including panchayat offices and Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) centres. Many of the schools that had been vacated by the paramilitary forces have been reoccupied by the harmads, in some cases aided and abetted by school teachers and headmasters, owing allegiance to the CPI(M)-controlled teachers’ organization. These camps are fortified structures, in many cases protected by piles of sandbags, and lighted by diesel generators. The harmads located in these schools-turned-bunkers are wreaking havoc in the surrounding villages, indiscriminately beating up people, looting and eating up peoples’ livestock and forcing women from every family in the village to cook food for them in the camps, where they are subjected to every sort of indignity. It is obvious that education has long ago ceased in these schools.
In many cases the harmad camps have been set up adjoining the base camps of the security forces. It is quite clear that the West Bengal government is blatantly allowing the use of government infrastructure, and worse, educational institutions, for furthering the nefarious and destructive activities of the ruling CPI(M) party, and the harmads are being accorded protection and impunity by the joint state and central forces. That this is destroying the futures of a large number of children, from the most marginalized and exploited section of our society, seems to be of no concern to either the state or central governments.