Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Surge in tribal support key to victory for Jmm-led alliance

- Abhishek Jha and Vijdan Mohammad Kawoosa

In Raghubar Das, BJP had picked Jharkhand’s first non-tribal CM​ This may have led to a loss of ST support for party

NEWDELHI:THE Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has won 25 assembly constituen­cies (ACS) in Jharkhand, 12 less than what it won in the 2014 assembly elections, which it contested in an alliance with the All Jharkhand Students’ Union Party (AJSU)​ The Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (Jmm)-led alliance, which also includes the Congress and the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), has won 47 ACS, 22 more than what these parties won in 2014​ To be sure, the JMM contested alone in the 2014 elections​

An analysis by regions shows that the biggest reason for the BJP’S political reversal is a surge in support for the JMM alliance in Scheduled Tribe (ST) dominated regions of the state​

The Trivedi Centre for Political Data (TCPD) database classifies Jharkhand into five regions: Palamu, North Chotanagpu­r, South Chotanagpu­r, Kolhan, and Santhal Parganas​ These regions have 9, 25, 15, 14 and 18 ACS respective­ly​ North Chotanagpu­r and Palamu have the lowest share of ST population​ South Chotanagpu­r and Kolhan have the highest share of ST population​

It is in the St-majority regions that the BJP has suffered the biggest decline in its seat share and contested vote share​ (See Chart 1)

Of the 47 ACS which the JMM and Congress have won, over 2/3rd (68%) have come from districts which have a more than 28% ST population, the median ST population in the state’s districts​ The BJP has been able to win just 12% of ACS (5 of its 25) in these districts​

The state of Jharkhand was carved out of Bihar in 2000 after a decades-long struggle for a separate tribal homeland​

Since then, the state always had a tribal chief minister, but after the 2014 general election, the BJP bucked the trend by picking Raghubar Das — a nontribal, other backward class (OBC) face — as the chief minister​

This was part of a strategy by the party of not picking the chief minister from the dominant community in various other states, Maharashtr­a and Haryana in particular​

Monday’s assembly election results indicated the dominant tribal population didn’t take kindly to Das’ appointmen­t​ (See Chart 2)

The results also show that the BJP did not gain much from passing the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, or CAA, which was cleared a day before the third phase of polling​ (See Chart 3)

Experts said two important developmen­ts connected to the emotive issue of land troubled the tribespeop­le and turned them against the BJP​

Jharkhand Tribal Advisory Council (TAC) member Ratan Tirkey said the Raghubar Das government’s attempt to amend the two laws -- the Chotanagpu­r Tenancy (CNT-1908) and the Santhal Pargana Tenancy (SPT1949) Act -- triggered tribal unrest​

The state government amended the two laws on November 23, 2016 after they were passed in the assembly​ The amendment was meant to empower the government to use agricultur­al land for non-agricultur­al purposes​

Opposition parties as well as tribal bodies strongly opposed the move, which also opened internal dissent within the BJP, where several ministers and legislator­s raised their voice against the decision​

Jharkhand governor Draupadi Murmu returned the bill in June 2017​

After this, the government proposed to amend the Right to Fair Compensati­on and Transparen­cy in Land Acquisitio­n, Rehabilita­tion and Resettleme­nt Act, 2013, (Land Acquisitio­n Act, 2013) and sought exemption from undertakin­g mandatory social impact assessment (SIA) study before acquiring land for public purposes​ The amendment was cleared in December 2017​

“These two land issues made a major impact in the minds of tribal people​ It inflicted a fear among the tribals that their lands will be grabbed if the Raghubar Das government remained in power,” said Udarkant Singh Munda, an tribal rights activist​

Many people in the tribal belt admitted that the government helped develop roads, bring electricit­y and bolster social welfare schemes​

But they also reported an overwhelmi­ng fear of their land being taken away​

“We receiving many things such as toilet, LPG gas and electricit­y​ But, we were offered these freebies only to grab our land​” said Somnath Hansda, 45, of Ghoribad in Dumka district​

Ram Prasad Pahan, a villager of Sigdi village in Ranchi’s Tamar block, said, “We were promised grants under state and Centre-sponsored schemes​ But, very few farmers from this area have received grants, despite facing drought this year​ So, we had decided to go for alternativ­e party this election​”

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 ?? PTI ?? Jharkhand Mukti Morcha working president Hemant Soren rides a bicycle at his residence in Ranchi on Monday​
PTI Jharkhand Mukti Morcha working president Hemant Soren rides a bicycle at his residence in Ranchi on Monday​

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