Old-timers are likely to see the
current prolonged spell of violence in West Bengal as a throwback
to the 1960s and 1970s when the state was in the throes of a
similar upheaval.
The protagonists, too, are mostly the same. In the earlier period,
the communists, including the Naxalites (Maoists), fought pitched
battles in the urban lanes and by-lanes and in the countryside
with home-made bombs and pipe-guns against their "class enemies",
represented mainly by the Congress. Today, it is again the
communists who are skirmishing with the Trinamool Congress,
comprising former Congressmen who broke away from the mother party
in 1997.
If it was relatively quiet during the Left Front's rule between
1977 and 2011, the reason was the political dominance of the
communists and the emasculation of the Congress. But the peace was
only on the surface. The intimidating cadre raj of the Left
ensured that resentment continued to simmer underground, leading
to an upsurge of popular anger which swept the comrades out of
power in the 2011 elections. The beneficiaries were the Trinamool
Congress and the Congress, which were allies at the time.
Since then, however, the state has known no peace. If Chief
Minister Mamata Banerjee had the visionary outlook of a statesman
and not continued to be a rabble-rouser as before, West Bengal
might have settled down to experience a period of political
stability and economic progress. The overwhelming public support
which she received would have enabled her to lead the state away
from the path of confrontation between rival parties which has
plagued its politics for so long.
Initially, it did seem that she was on the right track because she
said that her victory was for badal (change) and not badla
(revenge). But the poriborton (transformation) which she promised
turned out to be for the worse. First, her instincts of a street
fighter, which served her so well in her battles with the
communists, made her take on even her allies, leading to the
rupture with the Congress in the state and at the centre.
Perhaps aware of her inability to fulfil her promises, she then
began to regard every incident which reflected poorly on the
administration as a conspiracy against her. Hence her description
of a case of rape in Park Street as "sajano ghatona" (concocted
incident). Not only that, the summary transfer of a well-regarded
police officer, Damayanti Sen, who was diligently pursuing the
case, showed that she had taken a leaf out of the book of the Left
Front, which routinely used the police for partisan purposes.
This wasn't the only incident of bending the police to her will.
When the commissioner of Kolkata police, R.K. Pachnanda, went
after the Trinamool "activists" following an incident of violence
during which a police officer was shot dead, he was transferred.
The unambiguous message to the law-enforcing agencies was to let
the Trinamool cadres have their way. This perhaps explains why the
policemen present near Presidency University in Kolkata said that
they had no orders to intervene when hooligans carrying the
Trinamool flag vandalized the elite institution on Wednesday.
The provocation for the goons was the heckling of the chief
minister near the Planning Commission building in New Delhi on the
previous day by supporters of the Students Federation of India (SFI),
which is associated with the Communist Party of India-Marxist
(CPI-M). The SFI followers had gathered near the building to
protest against the death in police custody in Kolkata of a young
member of the organization. Tempers had been aggravated by the
unfortunate description of the tragic incident as a "petty" matter
by Mamata Banerjee.
Some in the Trinamool Congress, however, felt that the
demonstrators intended to kill her. This was a throwback to an
infamous incident in 1991 when Mamata Banerjee was severely
injured in an attack by CPI-M rowdies in the heart of Kolkata.
Since then, she has harboured the suspicion that the Marxists were
planning to kill her - a fear which she expressed in an interview
with the Washington Post, where she said conspiracies against her
were being hatched in "Hungary sometimes, sometimes Korea,
sometimes Venezuela".
It is evident from this peculiar allegation that she sees a threat
where none exists. This is probably what made her suspect a
looming danger in a cartoon posted on the internet by a professor
and his friend in Kolkata, which quoted a passage from the
Satyajit Ray film, Sonar Kella, about a character in the film who
"vanished". The two "offenders" had to spend some time in jail. So
did a farmer who asked her a question at a public meeting.
All these incidents - the death of a student, the heckling of
Mamata Banerjee, the vandalism at Presidency, the retaliatory
attacks on CPI(M) offices - as well as what happened earlier when
frequent clashes were reported between Trinamool supporters and
Marxists lend substance to Governor M.K. Narayanan's regret over
the prevailing "goondaism".
For the hapless people of the state, however, it is all too
distressingly familiar. Where the Marxists took the upper hand
before to spread terror, the Trinamool is running amok now.
Amulya Ganguli is a
political analyst. He can be reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com
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