A tale of two cameras

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

It is odd that of the two times my camera was seized, it is the Maoists who behaved the way a responsible govt would, writes Nandini Sundar.

Nandini Sundar

Two years ago, during the Lok Sabha elections, I happened to visit the village in Bastar where I had done fieldwork 12 years ago. My intention was to catch up with all the changes that come over a village with time. I was alarmed, however, by something I had not seen in the area before—the frequent drone of helicopters, and a visible paramilitary presence.

There were four of us, including an independent film-maker and a Gondi-speaking guide, who decided to investigate the impact of the Maoist election call. Apart from a couple of roadside polling agents and some BJP and Congress flags, there was nothing to suggest it was election day. As we turned off the main road in Dantewada, even the party flags disappeared. Of the three notified booths we passed, not one was open.

By late afternoon we reached a village school. The slogans scrawled in English read: “Boycott elections. Voting gets you nowhere.” As we stood there photographing the empty ‘booth’, youthful Maoists surrounded us. They told us to wait till the headman gave us permission to film. He never arrived and the youths grew increasingly threatening. Finally we were told to leave our camera behind for the squad to decide. 

We decided it was pointless reporting the incident to the police. Surprisingly, a month or so later, the filmmaker got his camera back with an offer of money in case it was spoilt and a letter of apology from a Maoist spokesperson. The delay, the letter said, was because of the difficult conditions under which the Maoists operated. 

Two years later, I was back in Dantewada, on an independent citizens’ initiative to document the government-sponsored ‘Salwa Judum’ campaign. The Salwa Judum, as one leader told us, involves civilians and security forces jointly going to villages and “explaining” to its inhabitants why they must join the anti-Naxalite movement.

As a young activist separately admitted, “explaining” involved burning houses or entire villages, looting grain and slaughtering livestock, rounding up people and bringing them into ‘camps’, basically strategic hamlets. Either you’re with us or against us, they say. According to government figures, 644 out of 1,153 villages or nearly 56 per cent were involved in the Salwa Judum.

In the camps, villagers are the rank and file. The leaders are often non-tribal thekedars, surrounded by gun-toting, lathi-carrying special police officers. Since the camps hardly provide subsistence and the Salwa Judum gives licence to loot, displaced villagers have been criminalised by desperation. When they go back to their villages, they run the risk of retaliatory attacks by Maoists.

I spoke to several widows whose husbands had been brutally killed by Maoist co-villagers. They were sad, hopeless, defeated, holding on to their passbooks without knowing how much compensation they had or what they could do with it. They wanted neither the Naxalites nor the Salwa Judum, they wanted peace and they wanted to go home.

We tried to cross the Indrawati one morning to visit villages on ‘the other side’.  Our efforts to find a boatman met with obdurate refusal and deep suspicion. That night, we were stopped outside Bhairamgarh thana by a Salwa Judum mob demanding to know why we had been trying to cross the river to the ‘Maoist’ side.

Our bags were searched and the driver’s green pants became a ‘Naxalite uniform’. A team member, the eminent historian Ramachandra Guha, was branded a Naxalite and a ‘witness’ appeared who claimed to have seen him at a Maoist meeting the week before.

The thanedar was drunk and Salwa Judum activists were in complete control. No one wanted to read our letter of authorisation from the Home Secretary. Even the SP’s call on our behalf was reluctantly taken. Finally, somehow, the local Salwa Judum leader let us go. But not before demanding my camera. Scared for our lives, we handed it over and fled.

The Dantewada Collector refused to intercede and claimed that the phone lines were down. But half-an-hour later when we met him, he knew all about our ‘Naxalite connections’. A week later, the Collector still claimed the phone lines were down.

I'm not sure I’ll ever try and take photographs in Bastar again. But it is odd that of the two times my camera was seized, it is the Maoists—and not the civil administration—who behaved the way a responsible government would.

The writer teaches at the Delhi School of Economics.