When men dread to contest two women have dared to be
candidates
By Sarada Lahangir
Malkangiri16 Aug 2014
Malkangiri16 Aug 2014
Posted 26-Apr-2014
Vol 5 Issue 17
Vol 5 Issue 17
In 2009, I had toured the Maoist insurgency marked villages
in the region where the three states of Odisha, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand
converge, and saw widespread destitution.
The tribals there were bereft of a regular source of income,
had no basic health facilities, and had access only to very poor educational
infrastructure. The roads linking the various villages were so decrepit that
they were just notional.
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AAP candidate Soni Sori in Bastar is keen on bringing about a
positive change in the lives of the tribals (Photos: WFS)
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It is in such circumstance that I remember meeting Sahria
Devi, 60, a widow belonging to the Birhor tribe of Hindiyankalan, a
drought-stricken village in the Chatra district of Jharkhand.
She was busy making ‘soops’ (winnows) and hardly looked up,
but the trauma of having lost three members of her family to starvation a few
months earlier was apparent on her face.
Her remaining family – three sons, two daughters-in-law, two
small grandsons – was surviving by collecting and selling honey and wood from
the forest and selling the ‘soops’ she made at seven rupees a piece.
The family was entitled to an Antyodaya ration card that
would have given them 35 kilos of grain at highly discounted prices, but Sahria
had been unable to get the card despite pleading for one before local leaders.
This time around when I visited the region, I could not help
but recall Sahria’s plight. The place had hardly changed much – villages still
did not have electricity; procuring safe drinking water was a challenge and the
closest hospital had no doctors. But what was most apparent was that the locals
were still living in fear, caught in the crossfire between the Maoists and
government forces.
The threat of Maoist violence was real – Umakant, CPI
(Maoist), secretary in the Bansadhara-Ghumasar-Nagabali division of Odisha, had
in a taped message even asked people to boycott the elections because it was an
empty exercise.
All three states had reported casualties to Maoist-driven
violence in 2013. While Jharkhand saw 383 such incidents in which 150 civilians
and security personnel were killed; there were 353 such cases in Chhattisgarh
leading to 110 deaths; while Odisha witnessed 101 cases of violence in which 35
people had lost their lives.
This disturbed situation dissuaded many candidates from
campaigning in the areas where the Maoists had a presence.
Jhina Hikkaka, who had been abducted by Maoists in March
2012, contested from the Koraput Lok Sabha seat on a Biju Janata Dal (BJD)
ticket this time, and avoided visiting places like Narayanpatna and Bandhugaon,
although they fall in his constituency, for fear of experiencing the terror all
over again.
But there were other candidates – including two courageous
women – who did not allow fear to come in the way of their electioneering.
Soni Sori, who contested from the Bastar Lok Sabha seat this
time on an Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) ticket, even refused security. “Why do I need
security to meet my people? It is my birthplace and I think there is no threat
to me when I am here with them,” she told me when I caught up with her.
Soni, a resident of Jabeli village in Dantewada district,
Chhattisgarh, was arrested in 2011 by the state police for allegedly being a
conduit in the transfer of funds from the Essar Group to the Maoists. She was
granted permanent bail by the Supreme Court in February 2014 and has always
maintained that she was a victim of the excesses of the security forces and the
state.
“I always have been branded a Maoist sympathiser by the
state, but I don’t care. I am working for the benefit of the poor,” she said,
ruing the fact that Bastar has been turned into a battlefield with innumerable
tribals being killed for no fault of theirs.
“Our children are carrying guns. I want to give them pens, I
want to educate them. Tribals in Bastar are living in great pain and
deprivation. I want to bring about a positive change in their lives. I want to
give them voice,” said Soni.
Another woman activist and award winning journalist, Dayamani
Barla from Jharkhand, also embraced electoral politics this time. She contested
for Jharkhand’s Khunti Lok Sabha seat as an AAP candidate.
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Barla (in yellow sari) campaigned on the slogan, “this is not
politics but a movement; this is not an election but a challenge. Cast your
vote and get your rights'
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In 2012, this activist, well known as the ‘iron lady of
Jharkhand’, spent 69 days in Ranchi’s Birsa Munda jail after being accused of
leading 400 Oraon tribal farmers in Nagri to protest against their fertile,
multi-crop land being handed over to build the campuses of elite institutes
like the Indian Institute of Management, Ranchi, and the National Law
University.
Barla campaigned on the slogan, “Rajniti Nahi, Andolan Hai.
Chunav Nahi Chunouti Hai. Vote Do, Hak Lo” (this is not politics but a
movement; this is not an election but a challenge. Cast your vote and get your
rights). Unlike many of her counterparts in the fray, Barla ventured into the
most inaccessible terrain, whether it was high up in the hills or deep in the
forests.
“My fight is for my people; my fight is to get rights over
jal, jungle and jameen (water, forest and land). My fight is for the tribal
cause and the implementation of laws. I don’t want to make big promises but I
want to ensure rights and social security for all tribals who have only got
more and more marginalised over the years,” said Barla.
Like Soni, she is not worried about the Maoist threat. “As
long as my tribal people are with me I don’t have to fear. It is not my fight
but the fight of each and every poor tribal man and woman who is struggling to
get a square meal every day,” she elaborated.
As Alok Prakash Putul, a senior journalist based in
Chhattisgarh pointed out, participating in elections in Maoist areas is a huge
challenge. But two strong women faced up to this challenge this time and
together symbolised an alternative, more people-centred, politics. - Women's
Feature Service
- See more at:
http://www.theweekendleader.com/Culture/1873/women-candidates.html#sthash.SXfwWcNq.dpuf
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