Printer Friendly Version Nandigram: Perfect Example Of Disempowering 
Empowered WomenBy Nisha Biswas17 March, 2015
Countercurrents.orgNandigram, a rural area with two community development 
blocks in Haldia subdivision of Purba Medinipur, is not known as such but is 
the name of historic resistance - struggle and the win of its people against 
the forcible acquisition of 10,000 acre land by the West Bengal government for 
proposed Chemical hub between 2007 to 2010. Since then Nandigram is inspiration 
for many agrarian and anti- land acquisition struggles. It was mainly due to 
Nandigram that the then UPA government was compelled to change SEZ and Land 
Acquisition Acts. The movement took the steam out of the more than three 
decades CPI(M) rule and TMC won the state assembly election in 2011 with 
unprecedented majority.  Women of Nandigram played a key role in its resistance 
movement. They were in the forefront. Supriya Jana lost her precious life in 
indiscriminate firing by police. As many as 17 women were raped, many were 
molested and around a hundred were injured. Women like, twice gang raped Radha 
Rani Ari, Tapasi Das whose thigh was almost sawed and had uterus hit when 
police opened fire on unarmed women and children and who still lives in 
perpetual pain, Swarnmoyee Das whole left elbow was so badly injured that it 
still remains badly injured, elderly Narmda Shee became the face of the 
Nandigram movement.Their courage, energy and never dying attitude inspired 
many. It was the time to dream, time to hope, time to empower, time to live and 
time to die. They went all over the country to tell their tales. The then 
opposition party chief Ms Mamata Banerjee supported them and shrewdly snatched 
the credit. People of Nandigram in general and women in particular thought that 
she would bring the change that they had dared to dream. Riding on the waves of 
Singur and Nandigram movements she snatched power from CPI(M) and became Chief 
Minister of West Bengal on May 20, 2011.A seven-member team of Women Against 
Sexual Violence and State Repression, West Bengal (WSS, WB) visited Nandigram 
4days ahead of observation of “Martyr’s Day”, observed on 14th March of each 
year to commemorate the historic struggle of Nandigram against land 
acquisition, this year. What the team saw was terrible saddening and 
disturbing. That these women who were once the powerful leaders are today not 
only distressed but are also disempowered. Now, they are nowhere in the 
leadership of Bhumi Uchhed Pratirodh Committee (BUPC), formed at the time of 
struggle. They are not even invited for BUPC meetings or on March 14 to observe 
Martyr’s Day. The leadership of BUPC did not know what happened to the cases 
that they filed against police and ruling party goons. On the other hand, in 
December 2013 CBI has instituted case against more than 30 men and women, 
including women who were severely injured/ raped for inciting violence and 
attacking the police and the CBI’s request for permission to initiate criminal 
proceeding against some police officials is still lying with the state 
government. The women, who not only suffered rape, bullet wounds and state 
terror but had remained in the fore front of the heroic struggle against 
forcible land acquisition, and were subsequently instrumental in unseating Left 
Front from power, have today been completely edged out of the political 
space.Women like Tapasi Das and Swarnmoyee, who needed prolonged treatment and 
support for the disability caused by bullet injuries were left to fend for them 
selves. None of the women was awarded or given any job in recognition of their 
contribution to the movement. In rare cases men of the family are given some 
temporary job with Metro Rail, but women were just forgotten. Tapasi Das, who 
lives in continuous pain and is bed ridden for most of the time, is not 
provided any medical or emotional support. Local MP gives her Rs 1500.00 per 
month, out of which the courier pockets a hundred rupees, is not sufficient for 
her travelling to doctor’s chamber. Her family finances do not permit to 
consult a specialist. A grand hospital built in the memory of martyrs and to 
take care of medical needs of the locality, is a picture of grim dereliction 
and waste. Main gates remained locked and the watchman’s assertion of doctor 
visiting once or twice a month remains questionable. Radha Rani Ari, who 
travelled all over the country with Ms. Banerjee to narrate the barbaric sexual 
atrocities inflicted on her, recalls how in the run-up of assembly election she 
was much sought after by the present ruling party. Now that the TMC party of Ms 
Banerjee is firmly in power, she has been carelessly abandoned. She says “My 
body was like a property that would get votes” and that now very often she 
contemplates suicide. Angur Das, who was raped along with her two daughters, 
one married with two kids and the other unmarried at that time, is today a grim 
picture of neglect. She remembers the promise that marrying her daughter was 
party’s responsibility. Her all the three sons work in UP in a carpet factory. 
Elder daughter Kabita was not allowed to return to her marital home after this 
incident. Younger daughter Ganga’s well – being hangs on the thin thread of 
payment/nonpayment of hefty dowry agreed. Only three out of sixteen raped have 
received compensation of Rs 2.00 lakh. Brute force of male domination has 
silenced women. All the rape accused, like Badal Garu, Kalia Garu, Rabin Das, 
etc., have retuned to their homes after spending years of exile to escape 
public wrath. Rumor is their rehabilitation has taken place after negotiation 
with BUPC (male) leadership. Garu clan lives in radha Rani’s area and is 
next-door neighbors of Angur Das. It makes women further insecure and adds to 
the reasons of their depression. These men are devoid of any remorse, and with 
the support of BUPC to whose leadership they had paid hefty fine, causes fear 
in these women. On confrontation, BUPC leaders tell them, “What is your 
problem?” They are not ready to understand that their problem is not only 
justice is not done; they are being humiliated every day. Even neighbours are 
now pointing fingers at the rape survivors.Being the battleground that changed 
the political scenario of West Bengal and have caused major policy changes, 
Nandigram remains the very picture of neglect. Roads are the same picture of 
rejection, agriculture still remains single crop, ponds are not renovated and 
canals are yet to be dug, causing men-folk to migrate in search of work. Even 
MNREGA work is erratic. Nandigram today is a sad picture of rejection. Women, 
who were the integral part of the movement and were at the forefront of the 
anti-acquistion stir that eventually catapulted the Trinamool Congress into 
power in West Bengal are now confined to their homes and are subjected to all 
kind of oppression.  Nisha Biswas is an activist based in Kolkata.
  

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