---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Nityanand Jayaraman <[email protected]>

Today an all women fact finding team comprising of activist friends
like Madhumitta Dutta, Shweta Narayan (from our Collective in Besant
Nagar) and 6 other women were attacked on their way to Narayanpatna,
Orissa, where a democratic tribal movement led by the Chasi Mulia
Adivasi Sangh is being brutally supressed by the police at the behest
of local liquor mafia, landlords and mining companies. This team had
gone to Narayanpatna to bring out the real state of affairs,
particularly regarding the spate of rapes and molestations of women by
the Orissa Police, CRPF and the dreaded Cobra battalions. The local
media has actively tried to hide the truth, branding the peaceful
Chasi Mulia Adivasi Sangh as a maoist outfit.

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>From the Press conference: Update at 9 December, 2009. 2.45 p.m.

The 9 women fact-finding team just concluded a press conference at
Parvathipuram, Vijayanagaram District, Andhra Pradesh. Here's the
narrative of the day's happenings as told by Shweta Narayan and
Madhumita Dutta to Nityanand Jayaraman over phone:

At 10 a.m., the All India Women's Fact Finding Team consisting of 9
women reached Narayanpatna Police Station and requested to meet the
Station In-charge.

1. Sudha Bhardwaj, Advocate, Chhattisgarh
2. Mamata Dash, Delhi
3. Madhumita Dutta, Chennai
4. Shweta Narayan, Chennai
5. Rumita Kundu, Bhubaneswar
6. Pramila, Bhubaneswar
7. Kusum Karnik, Bhubaneswar
8. Ramani, New Democracy, Orissa
9. Durga, Chhattisgarh

We were told that the policeman was busy, and were asked to come in
the evening. The person questioning us asked us for names and mobile
phone numbers and names of organisations. We gave all of that. We
noticed quite a number of uniformed policemen, and many people in
plainclothes. None of the people in uniform (we assume they were
policemen) had any name tags. We asked one of them who the people in
plainclothes were, and were told that they were all policemen. We
asked the man how many police were there in this area, and he said
more than 2000 police. One striking thing is that none of the many
people gathered there were adivasi.

About 20 adivasi men were huddled, squatting inside the police station
premises. We asked the police man near us who they were, and were told
that the adivasis were former activists of the Chasi Mulia Adivasi
Sangh, who had come to surrender. This has been happening for a few
days now, and many newspapers are reporting this.

By this time, the crowd of so-called plainclothes police were getting
restless. We heard people commenting saying: "Ab aa rahen hain. Jab
hamarey gaon jal rahe the, tho kahaan the?" (When our farms were being
burnt, where were you? Now they show up.)

Madhumita felt the situation was looking troublesome, and suggested we
leave. As we were stepping out of the police station, our driver was
cordoned off and was being questioned in a very hostile manner and
being threatened. We heard someone saying that he is a regular to
these parts, and they enquired as to his antecedents.

We somehow managed to extricate the driver. One of the policemen in
plainclothes, who we saw inside the police station premises, was
taking photographs, and he said "Maaro Inko." (Beat these people up).
That is when more than 200 people surged ahead. The driver was being
slapped repeatedly. Madhu and 75-year old Kusum Karnik tried to
intervene and that is when one man went for Madhu's throat. Kusum was
hurt too.

Rumita Kundu was verbally abused inside the police station. One man
crudely said that all these women had come to sleep with the men
there. Mamta Dash was hit on her back, and abused. One man attempted
to strangle madhu. When she moved to save herself, her jaw was
injured. All this happened inside the police station premises.

The driver was the one that was being assaulted most, and we did all
we could to extricate him and board our vehicle. By this time, the
vehicle was being broken. The rear windscreen was broken. With great
difficulty, we fled the area driving towards Bandhugaon. We were
followed by the plainclothesmen who claimed to be police on bikes.
Somewhere between Bandhugaon Police Station and the village itself, we
were stopped by two men in plainclothes. They said they were police,
and they demanded to see the driver's license. As he was enquiring,
about 20 people gathered there. But nothing untoward happened here. We
were scared nevertheless.

>From there, we proceeded to Kottulpetta. Even before we got to this
village, news seemed to have reached them about our visit. A road
blockade had been organised, with a bullock cart blocking the road.
There were no oxen. The people there, again all non-tribals, pulled
out the driver and started assaulting him. They tried to pull down
another male colleague of ours, Mr. Poru Chandra Sahu. and tried to
beat them up. We intervened, and that's when Kusum didi, the 75-year
old activist, was hurt on her head. We were there for more than 15
minutes. More violence. More damage to the vehicle. More slaps for the
driver. Our friends outside had been notified almost as soon as
problems began, and phone calls must have been pouring into the
Collector and SP's office.

By this time, two bikes carrying one of the plainclothes "policemen"
who had taken our names in Narayanpatna, and another plainclothes guy
who was tall and burly, reached there and asked the youth to disperse.

We reached Bondapalli, the border village within Andhra Pradesh.
Almost in no time, a jeep load of Andhra Pradesh police along with
plainclothes youth (young boys) armed with rifles and bullets arrived
on the scene. They demanded to know who we were. We were treated more
like criminals than victims, and our vehicle was searched. Only after
Madhu spoke to the SP of Vijayanagar, and the DGP were we allowed to
go. The police who stopped us immediately changed the tune, and
offered to help us with medical assistance etc.

Our experience with armed youth and police has left us clearly
terrified, and convinced that the situation created by the police in
Narayanpatna and this part of Orissa is extremely vitiated. We have
the following concerns and demands which we conveyed to the media at a
press conference in Parvathipuram, Vijayanagarm District, Andhra
Pradesh.

Concerns:
1. The scenario of terror that we witnessed, and were subject to shows
the kind of tense situation prevailing in the Narayanpatna area post
November 20, 2009's police firings in Narayanpatna.
2. There is no access for people to get in and out of the villages in
Narayanpatna, with all routes blocked by armed goons.
3. There is no way to get information about what is happening inside,
and no means of verifying the very disturbing accounts we are getting
about abuses, molestations and violence against adivasi people.
4. The number of plainclothesmen who claimed they were police, and the
comfort with which people outside the Narayanpatna police station were
interacting with the police, and reacting to one policeman's
instruction to beat us up, suggests that there may be some truth to
reports that there is a Salwa Judum style Shanthi Samiti in this area
as well. This may either be sponsored or working in close complicity
with the police and state.
4. If the Fact Finding team of prominent women has been treated with
such violence, it is clear that there is absolutely no room for
dissent inside the villages.
5. All the people who attacked us were non-tribals.

Demands:
1. The officers at the Police Station should be suspended to create an
impartial stituation and enable the carrying out of investigations
into the firing of 20 November, 2009, and the subsequent reports of
atrocities against tribal people.
2. The SP Koraput should be suspended.
3. The Government should constitute a high-level independent
investigation team and not depend on the police, who are clearly
biased, and are using the language of terror and violence to suppress
dissent.

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