Ashok Dhawale
The 50,000-strong statewide Adivasi
struggle at Wada in Palghar district on October 3-4, 2016 was a mass struggle
to remember and cherish. The earlier one lakh-strong two-day statewide peasant
siege under AIKS leadership at Nashik on March 29-30, 2016, on the four burning
issues of peasant loan-waiver, remunerative prices, drought relief and land
rights had brought the Chief Minister of Maharashtra to the negotiating table
and he had then conceded some important demands. He had promised that the
demands of Adivasi peasants would be implemented within three months. Although
six months had passed, nothing had moved on the ground.
Another grave problem came to the
forefront in Maharashtra in the last couple of months. That was the issue of
malnutrition-related deaths of children, an overwhelming majority of which were
in the Adivasi areas. The media reported that in the last two years 2014-15 and
2015-16, 9,049 children below the age of five years died due to malnutrition.
And in the first five months of 2016-17 alone, i.e. April to August, the number
of child deaths soared to the shocking figure of 9,563! The Tribal Development
Ministry and the Women and Child Development Ministry, both headed by BJP
ministers Vishnu Savra and Pankaja Munde, came in the eye of the storm.
NEW FORM OF STRUGGLE
That is why the AIKS state council
decided to renew the Adivasi struggle in a new form. The Tribal Development
Ministry is not only the designated nodal agency for the implementation of the
Forest Rights Act (FRA), but it also holds the key to all other tribal issues.
Hence it was resolved to lead a massive
gherao of the house of the Tribal
Development Minister at Wada to highlight these issues. Other mass fronts like
the AIDWA, DYFI, SFI and the AARM are active in the Adivasi areas. After mutual
consultation with them by the AIKS, they also decided to make this a united
mass action on their own demands.
Intensive preparations were made for
this struggle for the last two months. In districts like Thane-Palghar, Nashik,
Ahmednagar, Pune and others, large tehsil-level conventions of Adivasi
peasants, women, youth and students were held. They mobilised thousands of
people. Over one lakh leaflets were distributed. Hundreds of meetings were held
in villages and hamlets.
The memorandum of demands was
submitted to the Minister by the AIKS at his Wada home well in advance on
September 22, with a request that he consults all concerned departments and be
prepared with a positive response on October 3. He had agreed to it.
UNPRECEDENTED MAHAGHERAO
As a result of all this preparation,
on October 3, 2016, over 50,000 Adivasi peasants, women, youth and students
from all over Maharashtra under the joint leadership of the AIKS, AIDWA, DYFI,
SFI and AARM held an unprecedented gherao agitation outside Tribal Development
Minister Vishnu Savra's house at the Sub Divisional centre of Wada in Palghar
district.
The biggest share of the mobilisation
was from the two citadels of the movement in Thane-Palghar and Nashik
districts. There was good representation from districts like Ahmednagar, Pune,
Nandurbar, Yavatmal, Buldhana, Nanded, Sangli, Satara and Kolhapur. While the
peasant mass was preponderant, there were also thousands of women, youth and
students. As was decided, the SFI first led an independent march, and then
joined the huge mass that followed.
The huge march of over 50,000 people
began from the Wada office of the AIKS and came to the pivotal Khandeshwari
Naka. From there it marched towards the minister’s house. There was massive
police bandobast with police vans,
armed officers and a riot squad, which stopped the mass 200 metres away from
the minister’s house. The atmosphere was full of tension.
The huge and militant mass
nevertheless broke the heavy police cordon with determination and reached the
lane to the minister’s house. Fearing this mass protest, the BJP minister fled
his hometown Wada the previous night on October 2, claiming that he had to
attend the cabinet meeting at Aurangabad on October 4. This was in spite of him
committing to an AIKS delegation on September 22 that he would be there in Wada
on October 3 with all concerned officials.
MASSIVE PUBLIC MEETING
The leadership of the mass fronts
refused to budge and the gherao
continued, with a massive public meeting and speeches by the leaders condemning
the callous neo-liberal policies and poisonous communal conspiracies of the
BJP-led governments at the state and Centre. The speakers concentrated on the
burning issues of the Adivasis in particular, and of all sections of the
working people in general, and emphasised that unity, struggle, organisation
and political awareness were the four keys to future advance.
Among those who led this action were
AIKS national Joint Secretaries Dr Ashok Dhawale and Vijoo Krishnan, AIKS
former State President J P Gavit (MLA), CITU former State President Narasayya
Adam (ex-MLA), CITU State General Secretary M H Shaikh, AIKS State President
Kisan Gujar and State General Secretary Dr Ajit Nawale, veteran AIKS leaders L
B Dhangar and Lahanu Kom (ex-MP), AIDWA State President Mariam Dhawale, DYFI
State President Sunil Dhanwa and State General Secretary Preethy Sekhar, SFI
State President Mohan Jadhav and State General Secretary Datta Chavan, AIKS
state office bearers Barkya Mangat, Ratan Budhar, Radka Kalangda, Savliram
Pawar, Sunil Malusare, Irfan Shaikh, Dada Raipure, Arjun Adey and Umesh
Deshmukh, AIKS state council members Namdev Bhangre, Adv Natha Shingade, Dr
Amol Waghmare, Narsing Vasave, Chandrashekhar Sidam, Anil Gaikwad, Jitendra
Chopde and Subhash Nikam, AIDWA state office bearers Lahani Dauda, Prachi Hatiwlekar,
Heena Vanga and Tai Bendar, DYFI state office bearers Vansha Dumada, Ramdas
Sutar and Kiran Gahala, SFI state office bearers Balaji Kaletwad, Manjushree
Kabade, Sunil Rathod, Rohidas Jadhav, Somnath Nirmal, Vilas Sable and Kavita
Vare. Many of these are state committee members of the AARM.
It was very significant that the huge
mass remained unperturbed in spite of heavy rains on the night of October 3.
Throughout the night, the people were held spellbound by a programme of
revolutionary songs on the one hand, and traditional tribal dances on the
other. Volunteers of the Thane-Palghar district and Wada tehsil made excellent
arrangements to provide cooked food to thousands of participants on the night
of October 3. Activists from all tehsils brought bags of rice collected from
the people. The CITU Thane-Palghar district conference held recently gave a
clarion call to all its worker members to contribute Rs 100 each for this
peasant struggle.
GOVERNMENT RELENTS
Under the relentless pressure of this
action, the Minister finally directed the Maharashtra Tribal Commissioner Rajiv
Jadhav to rush to Wada on October 3 night and the delegation had a five-hour
long discussion with him and other officials from 10.30 pm to 3.30 am. The
State Tribal Commissioner gave positive assurances on many burning demands of the
struggle. Further, the Minister gave a letter the same day, setting up a
special meeting at Mantralaya in Mumbai with all the concerned officials on
October 7 to discuss and decide on the demands.
In view of this, the gherao and road blockade stir was
suspended at 5 am on October 4 with a massive public meeting of thousands of
people. The meeting was presided over by AIKS State President Kisan Gujar.
Vilas Sable (SFI), Ramdas Sutar (DYFI), Mariam Dhawale (AIDWA) and Dr Ajit
Nawale (AIKS) reported on the positive discussions with the State Tribal
Commissioner and about the ensuing meeting with the minister on October 7. Dr
Ashok Dhawale (AIKS), in the concluding speech, warmly congratulated the
thousands of participants, summed up the gains of this struggle and placed the
tasks for future advance.
The Wada gherao and road blockade continued for 16 hours with thousands of
people. All highways from Wada leading to Mumbai, Thane, Bhiwandi, Palghar,
Dahanu, Talasari, Surat, Jawhar and Nashik were completely blocked for 16 hours
as a result of this mass struggle.
MAJOR DEMANDS CONCEDED BY GOVT.
On October 7, as agreed upon, a high-powered
meeting of the delegation was held with the Tribal Development minister Vishnu
Savra and concerned officials in Mantralaya. They included secretaries of half a
dozen departments and half a dozen district collectors of tribal districts. The
negotiations continued for full five hours from 11.30 am to 4.30 pm until
concrete decisions were taken on the major demands. Briefly, the areas in which
these decisions were taken were as follows: 1. Concrete steps to ensure
stringent implementation of the Forest Rights Act (FRA) within the next six
months; 2. A series of immediate steps to curb the severe malnutrition in the
tribal districts; 3. Steps towards vesting the massive amount of temple lands
and varkas lands (lands that are in the possession of, and are being
tilled by Adivasi peasants for decades, but which are still in the names of the
former landlords who had earlier usurped them from the Adivasis by hook or crook,
and who were driven away at the time of the famed Adivasi Revolt) in the names
of the tillers; 4. Decision to reimburse within four months the large amounts
that thousands of peasants who have leveled their lands have spent, as per the padkai
scheme of the government; 5. Several steps to improve the deplorable condition
of the Adivasi hostels and ashram schools in the state. 6. Steps to improve the
public distribution system (PDS) and to curb corruption; 7. Stringent
implementation of the MNREGA in the tribal districts.
The 19-member
AIKS-CITU-AIDWA-DYFI-SFI delegation comprised J P Gavit (MLA), Narasayya Adam (ex-MLA),
Dr Ashok Dhawale, Kisan Gujar, Dr Ajit Nawale, Mariam Dhawale, Barkya Mangat,
Ratan Budhar, Irfan Shaikh, Umesh Deshmukh, Adv Natha Shingade, Dr Amol
Waghmare, Namdev Bhangre, Lahani Dauda, Sunil Dhanwa, Vansha Dumada, Sunil
Rathod, Kavita Vare and Vilas Sable. After the successful conclusion of the talks,
J P Gavit, MLA, reported about the victory of the struggle and the gains made
to the press in Mantralaya.
NEED FOR VIGILANCE AND FOLLOW-UP
It has been decided to propagate this
victory in the Adivasi districts by means of leaflets, public meetings and
rallies in the weeks ahead. At the same time, the need for vigilance and
effective follow-up of this struggle with the state and local government
authorities has been stressed.
The AIKS state workshop that will be
held on October 24-25, 2016, will take appropriate decisions on this, and also
on intensifying peasant struggles on their burning issues in the vast non-tribal
areas. This state workshop will aim to make a great success of the AIKS
nationwide jathas (two of which will pass through the two ends of Maharashtra)
and will also plan to mobilise 10,000 peasants from Maharashtra for the AIKS
Delhi Rally on November 24, 2016.
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