Andrew Buncombe, Independent, Thursday 11 October 2012
www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/peasants-revolt-rural-india-marches-on-delhi-for-rights-to-live-off-the-land-8206050.html
They marched in lines — noisy yet disciplined, footsore but determined.
At one point, the marchers and their green and white banners stretched
for more than two miles.
Tens of thousands of India’s poorest citizens are on a march to Delhi to
demand the government to give them land on which to live and from which
to earn a livelihood. They insist it is a fundamental right and that
they will besiege the capital unless their demands are met.
“We don’t have any land. I’m here today because we are landless,” said
Ram Pyari Bai, a 60-year-old woman, her grey hair tied back beneath a
red-and-white scarf. “I voted for the government and now the government
should give me land and water to drink.”
Across the developing world, clashes between the landless and the
authorities are increasingly common. From Indonesia to Brazil, to Burma
and Thailand, land-rights activists have been harassed, jailed and
murdered. Almost every week, a new confrontation takes place as more
people are displaced from their land for industrial projects, mining or
else slum “rehabilitation”.
There are fewer places where the plight of the landless is more pressing
than in India, where more than 70 per cent of the population still
relies on agriculture.
After India gained independence in 1947, the authorities did enact some
reforms, unlike in Pakistan where feudal landowners remain commonplace.
But activists estimate that today more than 20 per cent of the
population is without land. It is a situation that is resulting in
conflicts as well as vast mass migration to overburdened cities. The
situation is further complicated because land reform is an issue for
both the federal and state governments.
Earlier this year, a group of security experts and former bureaucrats
told a conference in Delhi that land reform could halt the spread of
Maoist-inspired rebels, who have increasingly taken a grip in the most
remote parts of the country. The march to Delhi has been organised by an
activist group, Ekta Parishad (“Unity Forum”), and its founder Rajagopal
P V. The aim of the non-violent movement is to force the government to
enact comprehensive reform and help the most marginalised within
society. It insists there is plenty of land available to meet its demand.
“When people say there is no land for the poor, why is it that when Tata
or Vedanta or any other big company says they want land, they can find
5,000 or 10,000 acres in 15 minutes,” said Rajagopal, sitting beneath a
yellow awning as marchers took a break for lunch. “Why is there no land
for the poor, but land for the rich?”
Without land of her own, said Ram Pyari Bai, who had come from a village
in Madhya Pradesh, she was obliged to work on other people’s acres. She
laboured for eight hours a day and in exchange received a 5kg bag of
wheat or 100 rupees (£1.18). If her family — two sons and a husband who
could no longer see — were particularly hungry she took the wheat, but
if there were things she needed to buy she opted for the cash. She and
her family lived in a shack made of twigs and plastic sheeting.
Her situation was not unusual. Also among the estimated 45,000 marchers
was Sanju Devi, a 40-year-old woman who had travelled from Bodh Gaya in
Bihar for the march. Mrs Devi, who has three children, said she and her
husband worked land belonging to other people. In exchange she received
2.5kg of wheat while her husband earned 3kg. They were never given the
option of being paid in cash.
The Indian authorities have suggested they intend to respond to the
marchers’ demands, perhaps as early as today. Whether they are prepared
to meet all the demands — including around one-10th of a hectare to
build a house for all those without land — is unclear, but reports in
India’s media said the government will agree to land reforms within six
months and a new land census. The Rural Affairs Minister, Jairam Ramesh,
indicated to reporters earlier this week that some sort of deal could be
announced in Agra, saying: “The nation will get happy news from the city
of the Taj Mahal.”
Khet Singh, a gap-toothed farmer from Madhya Pradesh, was also among the
marchers who set off from the town of Gwalior at the beginning of
October. He was unsure of his age and when asked, he stroked a white
beard and replied: “You tell me.”
Mr Singh said he had neither land nor a house and that his sons had
moved to the city of Nagpur in search of work. He said as he had got
older, the occasions on which he was hired to work in other people’s
fields had become increasingly rare.
He was lucky if he received two meals a day. “My true prayer is that
today we are going to get our demands and that they will listen to us,”
he said, adding: “If the government does not give us land then I might
as well hang myself.”



