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At the mercy of Guruji
As politicians fiddle while Jharkhand hurtles out of control, hopes of a long-term turnaround for the beleaguered state have all but vanished into thin air
When, on November 15, 2000, the state of Jharkhand was carved out of nearly half of Bihar’s geographical territory, about a quarter of its population and all of its mineral wealth, the new entity had much going for it. Of the annual revenues of Rs 10,000 crore that Bihar generated at that point, Jharkhand got 65 per cent.
Having had a clear headstart in terms of industrial development thanks to initiatives in Ranchi, Jamshedpur, Bokaro and Dhanbad and being enviably rich in mineral and natural resources, Jharkhand had economic indices that were all positive. Observers predicted that the new state would prosper and Bihar would sink further into impoverishment.
Since then much water has flown down the Subarnarekha – the river got its name because legend has it that gold was once mined at its origin in a small village near Ranchi, the capital of Jharkhand. But a goldmine is the last thing the state can hope to strike given the ham-handed way it has been run all these years.
The hope and excitement have abated. Today, Jharkhand, as it begins its second bout of President’s rule in six months, is in danger of being written off as a failed experiment, a stinging riposte to those who argue in favour of smaller states.
Jharkhand has been in existence for a few months shy of a decade. Its progress report is abysmal. Stagnation has stalked it at every step, and the purpose for which the state was set up – improving the lot of the tribal communities that inhabit its forested areas – has not been served. Jharkhand is lost in the woods.
While Bihar, driven by a new-found political will, is in the process of scripting a remarkable turnaround story, Jharkhand languishes at the very bottom of the development index heap, unable to tide over the severe distortions of a political system controlled by those that are blinded by the thirst for power.
Is the repeated fractured electoral mandate that the people hand out the real bane of Jharkhand? “Don’t blame the voters,” says Shivanand Tiwari, JD (U) national spokesman and Rajya Sabha MP from Bihar. “It is a crisis of leadership in Jharkhand. The state does not have a credible political force that the people can trust and whole-heartedly support. It simply hasn’t emerged.”
Indeed, it is Jharkhand’s political leaders and administrators who have let the state down – very badly and repeatedly. The frequent body blows have left Jharkhand in a complete mess. There are no signs that might indicate that things are about to get better. More than half of Jharkhand’s population – around 27 per cent of which is tribal – live below the poverty line. Corruption is a norm, opportunism the guiding mantra. Shibu Soren, the man who led the movement for a separate Jharkhand for several decades, could have made the difference. But he found himself embroiled in a series of political scandals, including one that stemmed from a murder charge and another that was related to a bribes-for-votes deal in which Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) MPs were paid hefty sums to support the P.V. Narsimha Rao government at the Centre in a no-confidence motion in 1993.
Guruji, as Soren is known to his supporters, has lost ground owing to his unpredictable ways, both in the state and at the national level. He is but a pale shadow of the tribal rights crusader that he once was. As his son, Hemant Soren, jockeys for a position of strength in the state, the image of Jharkhand’s first family, pretty much like that of the state itself, is in dire need of refurbishment.
The result is that a state that was formed essentially to serve the interests of its indigenous communities is today in the grip of intense tribal disaffection. The political process has been hijacked by vested interests. The threat of Maoist violence hangs heavy over the state as the government barters away forest land to big industrial players that are looking to exploit Jharkhand’s huge reserves of iron, coal, bauxite, copper, mica and limestone, among other minerals.
Everything that could have gone wrong has gone wrong in Jharkhand. Large-scale industrialisation has led to extensive environmental degradation and rapid depletion of the state’s forest cover and water resources. Moreover, the growing avarice of the people in power has unleashed corrupt commercial and political practices, unbridled exploitation of the tribal communities and a process of slapdash urbanisation.
The anomalies have multiplied. The indigenous people of the state are now in a majority in only a handful of the 22 districts of Jharkhand. Dwindling water resources and botched-up irrigation projects have placed the tribals at the mercy of the elements. Even if the state does receive a good monsoon, no more than a single harvest a year is currently possible. For the rest of the year, the Adivasis, including women and children, are forced to work on daily wages in mines, quarries and civil projects in abominable circumstances.
It has been all downhill for Jharkhand because the state has never quite managed to wriggle out of its political limbo. The state is once again back to square one. After 11 months of President’s Rule last year, it went to the polls in the hope a getting a new government by Christmas. It did. On December 30, 2009, Soren took over as chief minister for the third time with support from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and JD(U).
A crisis was triggered when the Jharkhand chief minister voted in favour of the Congress in a cut motion in the Lok Sabha in April. The BJP withdrew support. But sensing an opportunity of heading the Jharkhand government on a rotational basis, the party decided to get into negotiations with the JMM. A deal was struck. The two parties agreed to form a government, with BJP taking first strike and then vacating the CM’s post 28 months on for the JMM. But when push came to shove, Soren refused to step aside. The deal fell through. With no party in a position to form an alternative government, Jharkhand is under central rule once again. Plagued by greedy self-serving politicians, corporate entities out to dip into the state’s mineral reserves and make a killing and mounting tribal unrest, the state is fast hurtling out of control. “It is really shameful that Jharkhand can't a government that lasts,” says social activist and student leader Uday Shankar Ojha. “This is a complete travesty of democracy.”
Jharkhand has seen seven governments rise and fall in less than ten years and now an eighth attempt to cobble together a new dispensation has also come unstuck. Says veteran journalist Hari Narayan Singh: “The greed for power among politicians has become so overwhelming that expecting real development to happen would be asking for too much. The men who lead Jharkhand are terribly myopic – all that they are interested in is the reins of power so that they can siphon off public money for themselves and their parties.”
It is free-for-all season in Jharkhand. Where else could an Independent MLA turned chief minister, the son of a Ho Adivasi mine worker and himself a one-time welder, have spirited away Rs 4,000 crore and buy mines for himself and his cronies in Liberia and Thailand?
Former Jharkhand chief minister Madhu Koda may now be cooling his heels in a jail along with four of his one-time Cabinet colleagues, but the grab-whatever-you-can-while-you-can spirit that he represented continues to make its presence felt in the corridors of power in Jharkhand. Over 100 MoUs have been signed for industrial and mining projects in Jharkhand and there is no way of knowing with any degree of certitude whose pockets are being lined in the bargain although the needle of suspicion does point to the men who call the shots – the ruling establishment and the bureaucracy.
Bihar JD(U) leader Shivanand Tiwari is aghast at the plight of Jharkhand. “No state in India can claim to be as rich in resources as Jharkhand, but show me one state that is worse off than Jharkhand today. Who would have ever imagined that Jharkhand would come to such a pass? The people’s hopes have been completely dashed,” he says.
Says academician and Rajya Sabha member Ram Dayal Munda: “Ten years certainly isn’t a long time in the life of a state. Jharkhand is going through a difficult phase and this is not be the end of its woes. Worse might be up ahead. The trouble is that the political leadership here does not seem to have the will to do something about changing things for the better.”
The brief history of the state of Jharkhand is littered with broken dreams, squandered promises and shattered hopes because its politicians have never been able to rise above their petty interests. They have proven to be a bunch of opportunists who simply cannot see beyond their own noses – and coffers. The state has repeatedly been witness to the sorry spectacle of horse-trading of the most shameful kind, quick-fix coalitions forged to serve narrow political ends and brazen embezzlement of public money. The state bleeds in every which way. In the nine and a half years of its existence, Maoist violence has taken a toll of the lives of nearly 3,000 police personnel and others, including two legislators. But in the five months of Shibu Soren’s third tenure as chief minister, Jharkhand saw a marked lull in Maoist depredations.
The JMM supremo’s Maoist sympathies are well known – he gave party tickets to six Maoists in the last Assembly elections and is alleged to have won his own seat with the help of the extremist elements in the state. Now that he is out of the saddle, there are fears that Jharkhand will be hit by a renewed spurt in Maoist violence.
The people are at the end of their tether. Corruption is almost a stated official policy in Jharkhand – it gets worse by the day even as the bureaucracy – which, too, has its hands in the till – continues to be completely unresponsive to the grievances of the people. The Jharkhand populace has nobody to turn to for succour. Since the founding of Jharkhand, Maoists have forced parts of the state to observe 700 days of bandh, which adds up to a total of almost two years.
Hari Narayan Singh holds the national political parties equally responsible for the state of affairs in the state. “The national parties haven’t been able to go beyond politics in Jharkhand. As a result, things have floundered here without let,” he laments.
All the four men who have held the chief minister’s post in the state – Babulal Marandi, Shibu Soren, Arjun Munda and Madhu Koda – are from tribal communities. After the latest Assembly election, the BJP did toy with the idea of propping up a non-tribal politician – either senior party leader Yashwant Sinha or Jharkhand deputy chief minister Raghubar Das – as the leader of the state government, but was eventually compelled to stick to the tried and tested Arjun Munda. But with Soren and his overly ambitious son, Hemant, putting the spanner in the BJP’s works, the proposed coalition based on a power-sharing arrangement proved a non-starter.
“It is important for the big national parties to come forward and play a constructive role in building Jharkhand,” says Harivansh, chief editor of Prabhat Khabar. “For democracy and the process of development to take proper roots here, the rule of law has to be re-established.”
The worsening Jharkhand scenario has obviously given the state’s intelligentsia, or whatever is left of it, no cause for cheer. Ram Dayal Munda blames the situation on the fact that Jharkhand hasn’t still been able to cut its “umbilical cord” with Bihar. “I feel that Jharkhand never quite managed to break away in the real sense from the mother state,” he explains. “It is still very much under Bihar’s shadow. Bihar is beginning to move on but Jharkhand is unfortunately still trapped in a time warp.”
Intellectuals in the state point to the fact that much of the state’s woes might have stemmed from the fact that the tribal leadership has failed to carve out its own identity. They have chosen to mimic the discredited political ways of the outsiders (locally referred to as diku) who constitute nearly 70 per cent of Jharkhand’s population.
Says Harivansh: “On the parameters of administration and development, Jharkhand has been a complete disaster. No wonder the state is now looking for its eighth chief minister in a period of less than ten years.”
The search for stability is still very much on, but hope is clearly on the wane. Jharkhand came into being nearly ten years ago on Adivasi icon and freedom fighter Birsa Munda’s birth anniversary. Both the legend and his dream have all but been forgotten.
For more articles, Click on IIPM Article.
Source : IIPM Editorial, 2010.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
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Social Networking Sites have become advertising shops
At the mercy of Guruji
As politicians fiddle while Jharkhand hurtles out of control, hopes of a long-term turnaround for the beleaguered state have all but vanished into thin air
When, on November 15, 2000, the state of Jharkhand was carved out of nearly half of Bihar’s geographical territory, about a quarter of its population and all of its mineral wealth, the new entity had much going for it. Of the annual revenues of Rs 10,000 crore that Bihar generated at that point, Jharkhand got 65 per cent.
Having had a clear headstart in terms of industrial development thanks to initiatives in Ranchi, Jamshedpur, Bokaro and Dhanbad and being enviably rich in mineral and natural resources, Jharkhand had economic indices that were all positive. Observers predicted that the new state would prosper and Bihar would sink further into impoverishment.
Since then much water has flown down the Subarnarekha – the river got its name because legend has it that gold was once mined at its origin in a small village near Ranchi, the capital of Jharkhand. But a goldmine is the last thing the state can hope to strike given the ham-handed way it has been run all these years.
The hope and excitement have abated. Today, Jharkhand, as it begins its second bout of President’s rule in six months, is in danger of being written off as a failed experiment, a stinging riposte to those who argue in favour of smaller states.
Jharkhand has been in existence for a few months shy of a decade. Its progress report is abysmal. Stagnation has stalked it at every step, and the purpose for which the state was set up – improving the lot of the tribal communities that inhabit its forested areas – has not been served. Jharkhand is lost in the woods.
While Bihar, driven by a new-found political will, is in the process of scripting a remarkable turnaround story, Jharkhand languishes at the very bottom of the development index heap, unable to tide over the severe distortions of a political system controlled by those that are blinded by the thirst for power.
Is the repeated fractured electoral mandate that the people hand out the real bane of Jharkhand? “Don’t blame the voters,” says Shivanand Tiwari, JD (U) national spokesman and Rajya Sabha MP from Bihar. “It is a crisis of leadership in Jharkhand. The state does not have a credible political force that the people can trust and whole-heartedly support. It simply hasn’t emerged.”
Indeed, it is Jharkhand’s political leaders and administrators who have let the state down – very badly and repeatedly. The frequent body blows have left Jharkhand in a complete mess. There are no signs that might indicate that things are about to get better. More than half of Jharkhand’s population – around 27 per cent of which is tribal – live below the poverty line. Corruption is a norm, opportunism the guiding mantra. Shibu Soren, the man who led the movement for a separate Jharkhand for several decades, could have made the difference. But he found himself embroiled in a series of political scandals, including one that stemmed from a murder charge and another that was related to a bribes-for-votes deal in which Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) MPs were paid hefty sums to support the P.V. Narsimha Rao government at the Centre in a no-confidence motion in 1993.
Guruji, as Soren is known to his supporters, has lost ground owing to his unpredictable ways, both in the state and at the national level. He is but a pale shadow of the tribal rights crusader that he once was. As his son, Hemant Soren, jockeys for a position of strength in the state, the image of Jharkhand’s first family, pretty much like that of the state itself, is in dire need of refurbishment.
The result is that a state that was formed essentially to serve the interests of its indigenous communities is today in the grip of intense tribal disaffection. The political process has been hijacked by vested interests. The threat of Maoist violence hangs heavy over the state as the government barters away forest land to big industrial players that are looking to exploit Jharkhand’s huge reserves of iron, coal, bauxite, copper, mica and limestone, among other minerals.
Everything that could have gone wrong has gone wrong in Jharkhand. Large-scale industrialisation has led to extensive environmental degradation and rapid depletion of the state’s forest cover and water resources. Moreover, the growing avarice of the people in power has unleashed corrupt commercial and political practices, unbridled exploitation of the tribal communities and a process of slapdash urbanisation.
The anomalies have multiplied. The indigenous people of the state are now in a majority in only a handful of the 22 districts of Jharkhand. Dwindling water resources and botched-up irrigation projects have placed the tribals at the mercy of the elements. Even if the state does receive a good monsoon, no more than a single harvest a year is currently possible. For the rest of the year, the Adivasis, including women and children, are forced to work on daily wages in mines, quarries and civil projects in abominable circumstances.
It has been all downhill for Jharkhand because the state has never quite managed to wriggle out of its political limbo. The state is once again back to square one. After 11 months of President’s Rule last year, it went to the polls in the hope a getting a new government by Christmas. It did. On December 30, 2009, Soren took over as chief minister for the third time with support from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and JD(U).
A crisis was triggered when the Jharkhand chief minister voted in favour of the Congress in a cut motion in the Lok Sabha in April. The BJP withdrew support. But sensing an opportunity of heading the Jharkhand government on a rotational basis, the party decided to get into negotiations with the JMM. A deal was struck. The two parties agreed to form a government, with BJP taking first strike and then vacating the CM’s post 28 months on for the JMM. But when push came to shove, Soren refused to step aside. The deal fell through. With no party in a position to form an alternative government, Jharkhand is under central rule once again. Plagued by greedy self-serving politicians, corporate entities out to dip into the state’s mineral reserves and make a killing and mounting tribal unrest, the state is fast hurtling out of control. “It is really shameful that Jharkhand can't a government that lasts,” says social activist and student leader Uday Shankar Ojha. “This is a complete travesty of democracy.”
Jharkhand has seen seven governments rise and fall in less than ten years and now an eighth attempt to cobble together a new dispensation has also come unstuck. Says veteran journalist Hari Narayan Singh: “The greed for power among politicians has become so overwhelming that expecting real development to happen would be asking for too much. The men who lead Jharkhand are terribly myopic – all that they are interested in is the reins of power so that they can siphon off public money for themselves and their parties.”
It is free-for-all season in Jharkhand. Where else could an Independent MLA turned chief minister, the son of a Ho Adivasi mine worker and himself a one-time welder, have spirited away Rs 4,000 crore and buy mines for himself and his cronies in Liberia and Thailand?
Former Jharkhand chief minister Madhu Koda may now be cooling his heels in a jail along with four of his one-time Cabinet colleagues, but the grab-whatever-you-can-while-you-can spirit that he represented continues to make its presence felt in the corridors of power in Jharkhand. Over 100 MoUs have been signed for industrial and mining projects in Jharkhand and there is no way of knowing with any degree of certitude whose pockets are being lined in the bargain although the needle of suspicion does point to the men who call the shots – the ruling establishment and the bureaucracy.
Bihar JD(U) leader Shivanand Tiwari is aghast at the plight of Jharkhand. “No state in India can claim to be as rich in resources as Jharkhand, but show me one state that is worse off than Jharkhand today. Who would have ever imagined that Jharkhand would come to such a pass? The people’s hopes have been completely dashed,” he says.
Says academician and Rajya Sabha member Ram Dayal Munda: “Ten years certainly isn’t a long time in the life of a state. Jharkhand is going through a difficult phase and this is not be the end of its woes. Worse might be up ahead. The trouble is that the political leadership here does not seem to have the will to do something about changing things for the better.”
The brief history of the state of Jharkhand is littered with broken dreams, squandered promises and shattered hopes because its politicians have never been able to rise above their petty interests. They have proven to be a bunch of opportunists who simply cannot see beyond their own noses – and coffers. The state has repeatedly been witness to the sorry spectacle of horse-trading of the most shameful kind, quick-fix coalitions forged to serve narrow political ends and brazen embezzlement of public money. The state bleeds in every which way. In the nine and a half years of its existence, Maoist violence has taken a toll of the lives of nearly 3,000 police personnel and others, including two legislators. But in the five months of Shibu Soren’s third tenure as chief minister, Jharkhand saw a marked lull in Maoist depredations.
The JMM supremo’s Maoist sympathies are well known – he gave party tickets to six Maoists in the last Assembly elections and is alleged to have won his own seat with the help of the extremist elements in the state. Now that he is out of the saddle, there are fears that Jharkhand will be hit by a renewed spurt in Maoist violence.
The people are at the end of their tether. Corruption is almost a stated official policy in Jharkhand – it gets worse by the day even as the bureaucracy – which, too, has its hands in the till – continues to be completely unresponsive to the grievances of the people. The Jharkhand populace has nobody to turn to for succour. Since the founding of Jharkhand, Maoists have forced parts of the state to observe 700 days of bandh, which adds up to a total of almost two years.
Hari Narayan Singh holds the national political parties equally responsible for the state of affairs in the state. “The national parties haven’t been able to go beyond politics in Jharkhand. As a result, things have floundered here without let,” he laments.
All the four men who have held the chief minister’s post in the state – Babulal Marandi, Shibu Soren, Arjun Munda and Madhu Koda – are from tribal communities. After the latest Assembly election, the BJP did toy with the idea of propping up a non-tribal politician – either senior party leader Yashwant Sinha or Jharkhand deputy chief minister Raghubar Das – as the leader of the state government, but was eventually compelled to stick to the tried and tested Arjun Munda. But with Soren and his overly ambitious son, Hemant, putting the spanner in the BJP’s works, the proposed coalition based on a power-sharing arrangement proved a non-starter.
“It is important for the big national parties to come forward and play a constructive role in building Jharkhand,” says Harivansh, chief editor of Prabhat Khabar. “For democracy and the process of development to take proper roots here, the rule of law has to be re-established.”
The worsening Jharkhand scenario has obviously given the state’s intelligentsia, or whatever is left of it, no cause for cheer. Ram Dayal Munda blames the situation on the fact that Jharkhand hasn’t still been able to cut its “umbilical cord” with Bihar. “I feel that Jharkhand never quite managed to break away in the real sense from the mother state,” he explains. “It is still very much under Bihar’s shadow. Bihar is beginning to move on but Jharkhand is unfortunately still trapped in a time warp.”
Intellectuals in the state point to the fact that much of the state’s woes might have stemmed from the fact that the tribal leadership has failed to carve out its own identity. They have chosen to mimic the discredited political ways of the outsiders (locally referred to as diku) who constitute nearly 70 per cent of Jharkhand’s population.
Says Harivansh: “On the parameters of administration and development, Jharkhand has been a complete disaster. No wonder the state is now looking for its eighth chief minister in a period of less than ten years.”
The search for stability is still very much on, but hope is clearly on the wane. Jharkhand came into being nearly ten years ago on Adivasi icon and freedom fighter Birsa Munda’s birth anniversary. Both the legend and his dream have all but been forgotten.
For more articles, Click on IIPM Article.
Source : IIPM Editorial, 2010.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
Run after passion and not money, says Arindam Chaudhuri
IIPM BBA MBA B-School: Rabindranath Tagore Peace Prize To Irom Chanu Sharmila
IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri: The New Age Woman
Award Conferred To Irom Chanu Sharmila By IIPM
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm - Planman Consulting
IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of India
Planman Consulting: The sister concern of IIPM
Planman Consulting
Social Networking Sites have become advertising shops