FrontLine

2007 Nandigram protest

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ON March 14, 2007, 14 villagers, including two women, were killed in police firing at Nandigram, a sleepy fishing village in West Bengal’s Purba Medinipur district. The villagers were protesting against rumours of land acquisitio­n by the Left Front government to set up a chemical hub. The killing sparked off a violent agitation that lasted over one and a half years and hastened the end of the Left Front’s rule in the State. It also had far-reaching implicatio­ns as far as government policy for land acquisitio­n was concerned. Such a long-drawn resistance by ordinary villagers against the might of a State government has seldom been witnessed in India.

In the 2006 Assembly election, the Left Front, riding high on Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattachar­jee’s promise of industrial resurgence, returned to power for its seventh consecutiv­e term with 235 out of the 294 seats. The opposition led by Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress was all but decimated. The police firing at Nandigram dramatical­ly changed the political dynamics. The issue of forcible land acquisitio­n took centre stage in Bengal politics. Mamata Banerjee had already taken up the cause of the farmers of Singur in Hooghly district, who were protesting against their land being taken away for the establishm­ent of the Tata Motors Small Car Project, and had sat on a historic 26-day hunger strike in Kolkata in December 2006.

In Nandigram, under the Trinamool’s leadership, the Bhumi Uchhed Pratirodh (Land Eviction Resistance) Committee (BUPC) was set up, supported by the Socialist Unity Centre of India, the Jamait-i-ulema-e-hind, and naxalite forces. CPI(M) supporters and their families were driven out, and there was an attempt to create a “liberated zone”. BUPC activists destroyed roads and access to bridges, dug culverts, and set up roadblocks to prevent any entry into the region under their control.

At the same time, the Singur protest was raging, and in October 2008 the Tatas decided to move their project out of West Bengal, much to the humiliatio­n of the State government. The parallel protests at Singur and Nandigram, coupled with Maoist activities in the Jangalmaha­l region (the contiguous forested areas of Bankura, Paschim Medinipur, Jhargam and Purulia districts) overwhelme­d the ruling party, leading to its defeat in the 2011 election.

 ?? ?? MAMATA BANERJEE
MAMATA BANERJEE

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