By Gurdarshan Singh Dhillon/Punjab University
Events in Punjab are being watched with interest and concern. Vast sections of the people in the State view the ‘new era of peace’ ushered in by the Government with grave misgivings and cynicism. Under the seeming quiet of the surface, there is acute frustration, abiding anguish and a deep sense of injustice and deprivation. A real messiah of peace would be a person who would feel the pulse of the people, whose heart would throb for Punjab, who would lift the pail of gloom from the traumatized state by healing the sores. Ignoble self-glorification and self-righteousness are no solution. They only deepen the wounds and widen the alienation.
The phenomenon of militancy in Punjab has been nothing but a reaction to the unjust policies of the Government. Political problems warrant timely political solutions, but unfortunately the government kept the issues hanging indefinitely and then started applying violent solutions, ignoring the fact that violence and vengeance are counterproductive. Rajni Kothari, the well-known political scientist rightly observed that when political problems are allowed to fester, government’s monopoly of violence is bound to be challenged by counter violence.
He noted that bullets. Cannon balls and rockets are not the answer to political problems. No regime can flourish on the negation of justice. Naked force alone cannot be the symbol of power and authority. It is only alien government that applies purely law and order measures to social or economic problems. For a democratic Government such steps cannot restore normalcy and peace. For, the forcible suppression of symptoms can only aggravate the disease. The need is to free the people from the terrible sense of oppression, and injustice. Unfortunately the entire apparatus of the government works on the law and order front only. It is the police who are the masters. If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail, said Abraham Maslow, an American psychologist A dispassionate analysis of the events in Punjab over the past few decades reveals that the crisis in the State has been compounded by the government’s failure to hammer out a fair and equitable solution to the legitimate economic, linguistic and territorial rights of the State. When vested interests and political expediency take the place of justice and truth, disputes, discords and dissensions take the place of peace, security and stability and lead to a chain of miseries.
The most important dimension to the multidimensional Punjab crisis is the economic dimension. Unrest in Punjab has been nothing but an embittered response against the unjust policies of the Government leading to economic erosion of the State. Economic cum political issues have been the root cause of the Punjab crisis. Only a month before the Blue Star action, Chandigarh was the scene of a massive nonviolent ‘camp in” by over 50,000 farmers. In an exemplary peaceful way these burly good humored rustics built a temporary township of thatched huts in the leafy residential suburb around the governor’s residence. The farmers were determined to see that the concerned officials should sit down across the table and talk business. It was no ghost of Khalistan, the CIA, or Pakistan buta straight forward demonstration by farmers big, medium and small. The governor was stranded in his house for a week. These were the same people who had supported the Akali struggle against the Center. But here they were talking about their bread and butter, matters, like the reduction of electricity, rated prices of agricultural inputs and many other issues concerning the welfare of the farmers. Unfortunately no heed has been paid to the genuine demands of these farmers. The recently held farmers rally at Chandigarh on July 9 has revealed that farmers, irrespective of their political, affiliation are still agitated and restive. No same government can afford to ignore the just demands of a hard working peasantry, contributing 65% to the food basket of the country. Oliver Goldsmith had once lamented that ‘a bold peasantry, a country’s pride, when once destroyed can never be supplied.”
Here, it is necessary to refer to the ill-conceived policies of the Government, concealed under the camouflage of nationalism and secularism. These policies have been communally biased, inconsistent and even discriminatory in their application to Punjab. It was nothing but knavery on the part of the Congress to rob Punjab of its riparian rights and economic wealth. A Punjabi farmer demanding more waters to irrigate his fields is dubbed as antinational, unpatriotic and communal. UN fortunately, all the Congress Chief Ministers of Punjab without any exception, have been shy of asking for a constitutional and just solution of the water and power problem. They have shown apathy towards the just socioeconomic demands of Punjab. Haryana Chief Ministers, on the other hand, have always been vociferous and articulate in pleading, the causes of their State, with no worry about damage to their secular and nationalistic credentials. It is the communal attitude of the Congress Leadership, projected as national interest, which is undermining the democratic foundations of our country.
Article extracted from this publication >> August 20, 1993