The ruling faction of the CPI(M) wants to liberalize the state’s economy. The Tata small car factory in Singur and the chemical hub in Nandigram are a part of that enterprise. The opposition, indeedCPI(M)’s own allies, refuse that drive. In between these two poles we hear a series of arguments:Let the villagers who are losing or giving up land (depending on who’s speaking) be properly compensated first, or open up the locked out jute mills and promote cottage and small scale industry instead of inviting big business, find mono-crop land instead of multi-cropterritory...and so on. This clamor of voices, more intense and confused today after the latest Nandigram tragedy has made the West Bengal public-political sphere our own tower of Babel.
On March 14th a large contingent of 4,000 policemen — the figures change withthe narrative — were dispatched to Nandigram ostensibly to repatriate some locals who also happen to be affiliated to theCPI(M). The state government’s argument, given to the public, it should be noted, only after the police was met with a belligerent brigade of villagers (and others), was that Nandigram had become an independent zone within the state. No sovereign government, it was argued, could tolerate such a challenge to its authority. Television cameras captured the scenes of intense firing, bloodshed, and deaths that occurred when the police force was confronted with villagers,many of whom, it was quite clear, were heavily armed. The injuries, deaths, and suffering have been untold. The local hospitals in Tamluk, where the injured were taken, had no medical supplies or doctors to attend to the suffering.