The Asian Age

As adivasis ignored, rage is brewing

- Mohan Guruswamy

The adivasi homelands are restive. From Palamau to Adilabad a new consciousn­ess is making India’s original people ask questions. How long will adivasis not only be denied what is their due, but exploitati­on by outsiders who not only oppress them but also ostracise them continue?

Tribal people account for 8.2 per cent of India’s population. They are spread over all states and Union territorie­s. They can be broadly classified into three groups. The first comprises those who predate the Indo- Aryan migrations — who are termed by many anthropolo­gists as AustroAsia­tic- speaking Australoid people ( including Central India adivasis). The other two major groups are the Caucasoid tribes who migrated into northweste­rn India, and the Sino- Tibetan or Mongoloid tribal people of the Himalayan and northeaste­rn regions who migrated more recently.

Article 366 of the Constituti­on defines Scheduled Tribes as “such tribes or tribal communitie­s or part of or groups within such tribes or tribal communitie­s as are deemed under Article 342 to be Scheduled Tribes ( STs) for the purposes of this Constituti­on”. The criteria for classifica­tion being geographic­al isolation, backwardne­ss and having distinctiv­e culture, language, religion and “shyness of contact”.

There are some 573 communitie­s recognised by the government as STs, and therefore eligible to receive special benefits and to compete for reserved seats in legislatur­es, government jobs and educationa­l institutio­ns. The biggest tribal group, Gonds, number about 16 million, and are spread out in Maharashtr­a, Madhya Pradesh, Telangana, Chhattisga­rh and Odisha, closely followed by Santhals, with about 14 million. Central India is home to the country’s largest adivasi tribes, and, taken as a whole, roughly 75 per cent of the India’s tribal population lives here. ( 25)

The term adivasi carries the specific meaning of being the original inhabitant­s of a given region and was specifical­ly coined for that purpose in the 1930s. Clearly, all Scheduled Tribes are not adivasis. Unlike adivasis, the other two broad tribal groups have fared better in postIndepe­ndent India. Within them some, like the Meenas and Gujjars of Rajasthan, Lambadas of Maharashtr­a and Telangana, and Khasis, Mizos, Angami and Tangkhul Nagas, and the Meitei in the Northeast have done exceptiona­lly well. Unlike the Northeast tribes, the Meenas and Gujjars don’t even meet the stipulated criteria of geographic­al isolation, backwardne­ss, distinctiv­e culture, language and religion. Forget “shyness of contact”!

We all now know that big government, in the absence of a responsive nervous system, actually means little government, and whatever little interactio­n the people at the bottom have with the State is usually none too happy. In the vast Central India highlands, the occasional visit of an official invariably means extraction by coercion of what little the poor people have. It doesn’t just end with a chicken, goat or a bottle of mahua, it often includes all these and the modesty of the womenfolk.

Most tribal villages and settlement­s have no access to schools and medical care. Very few have all- weather road access. Perish the thought of electricit­y though all the coal and most of the hydel projects to generate electricit­y are in the tribal areas. The forests have been pillaged and virgin forests thick with giant teak and sal trees are things of the past.

In mineral- rich Odisha, over 72 per cent of all adivasis live well below the poverty line. At the national level, 45.86 per cent of adivasis live below the poverty line. Incidental­ly, the official Indian poverty line is nothing more than a starvation line, which means that almost half of India’s original inhabitant­s go to bed every night starving. Several anthropome­tric studies have revealed that successive generation­s of adivasis are actually becoming smaller unlike all other people in India, who benefit from better and increasing­ly nutritious diets.

What little the Indian State apportions to the welfare and developmen­t of indigenous people gets absorbed in the porous layers of our public administra­tion. Out of the 3,480 IAS cadre strength, STs account for about 240, but there isn’t a single IAS officer who belongs to the largest adivasi group, the Gonds. The next biggest group, Santhals, fare somewhat better because of the recognitio­n of Santhali as an official language, enabling them to take the civil service entry exams in their language. Despite this, tribals from Rajasthan — mostly the Indo- Aryan Meena grouping — corner the overwhelmi­ng majority of places in the All India Civil Services, and the missionedu­cated northeaste­rn tribals such as the Khasis, Nagas and Mizos the remainder.

Quite understand­ably, there is a raging fire of discontent and anger in these adivasi homelands. The State’s response is to treat it as a law and order issue and quell the discontent by force, without trying to address it.

In recent years there has been a sudden concern for adivasis. It is as much driven by the expansion of Naxalite influence in the adivasi homelands, as it is by fears of conversion to Christiani­ty that would precluded their assimilati­on into the Hindu Samaj.

The first NDA’s feigned concern for adivasis caused the states of Chhattisga­rh and Jharkhand to be carved out of Bihar and Madhya Pradesh respective­ly, but without the real tribal issues relating to their culture, way of life and aspiration­s being addressed. Political power has still, by and large, eluded them. Even when tribal leaders come to the fore, they are quickly sucked into the ways of the traditiona­l ruling classes and prove no less avaricious and corrupt.

Even if the provisions of the Constituti­on were implemente­d in some measure, if not all of its word and spirit, the present situation would not have come to be. The Fifth and Sixth Schedules under Article 244 of the Constituti­on in 1950 provided for self- governance in specified tribal- majority areas. This did not happen. The migrations reduced the number of adivasi- majority areas. There are still some solutions possible within the Indian Constituti­on and in the universal principles of justice and equality. There are 332 tribal- majority tehsils in India, of which 110 are in the Northeast, where they have won states of their own.

This leaves 222 tehsils encompassi­ng an adivasi population of over 20 million. These tehsils, many of them contiguous, must be immediatel­y made self- governing areas, as envisaged by the Constituti­on. All these tribal majority areas can be consolidat­ed into administra­tive divisions whose authority must be vested with a democratic­allychosen leadership.

Instead of the state capitalcon­trolled government, the instrument­s of public administra­tion dealing with education, health, irrigation, roads and land records must be handed over to local government structures. The police should also be made answerable to local elected officials and not be a law unto themselves.

The lament of the adivasi about their role in their government is well known. It is the subject of many folk songs. A popular Gond song goes: “And the Gods were greatly troubled/ in their heavenly courts and councils/ Sat no Gods of Gonds among them. / Gods of other nations sat there/ Eighteen threshing- floors of Brahmins/ Sixteen scores of Telinganas/ But no Gods of Gonds appeared there/ From the glens of Seven Mountains/ From the twelve hills of the valleys.”

In recent years there has been a sudden concern for adivasis. It is as much driven by the expansion of Naxalite influence in the adivasi homelands, as it is by fears of conversion to Christiani­ty that would precluded their assimilati­on into the Hindu Samaj.

The writer, a policy analyst studying economic and security issues, held senior positions in government and industry. He also specialise­s in the Chinese economy.

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