Author: Amarnath Tewary
Publication: BBC News
Date: May 29, 2007
URL: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6697559.stm
Maoist rebels in the eastern Indian state
of Jharkhand have been growing opium poppies to fund their operations in the
region, officials say.
The rebels have a presence in 18 of the 22
districts in Jharkhand.
The Maoists say they are fighting for more
rights for indigenous people in at least five states, including neighbouring
Bihar, which has a reputation as India's most lawless state.
What began as small scale poppy cultivation
in the remote areas of Chatra and Katkamsandi in Hazaribagh district two years
ago has now flourished into a booming activity spread over some 20,000 acres
of land in over 300 villages.
Officials reckon that opium worth millions
of rupees is traded during the five-month poppy growing season which begins
in the region in October.
The police say that the Maoists are not only
growing poppy, but also extorting "taxes" from farmers and opium
traders.
'Flourishing'
"Maoists here are into poppy cultivation.
This year, they have done poppy farming in my district on an experimental
basis. But the situation is getting serious every year elsewhere," the
police chief of Hazaribagh district, Pravin Singh, told the BBC.
In Chatra, one of the worst affected districts,
officials say opium trading run and aided by the rebels is flourishing.
"Poppy cultivation has become a new raging
trend among the farmers in the rebel affected areas of Jharkhand. It's become
a booming business for the rebels," state intelligence officer Gariban
Paswan said.
Mr Paswan has recently submitted a report
on rampant poppy growing and the role of the Maoists in the trade in Chatra
to the state government.
I met Nirpendu Mahto, a rebel, in the village
of Patthalgadda who said he had been growing poppy with fellow cadres for
the past two years.
"We grow poppy as it brings us good returns
and we need ready money to run our organisation. We do not force villagers
to grow poppy, but we do motivate them and protect them from the police and
greedy traders," he said.
"The police dare not visit these areas.
It is the safest zone for poppy cultivation."
'High returns'
One rebel I spoke to said the returns from
poppy cultivation were handsome.
Dipendra Dangi of Patthalgadda said a kilogram
of poppy fetches anything between 20,000 ($476) and 25,000 ($595) in the market
on an outlay of between 300 ($7) and 400 ($9) rupees on poppy seeds.
Such high returns have expectedly brought
prosperity to the poppy growing areas, with concrete houses springing up in
many villages, and many buying cars and motorcycles.
One poppy growing area, Patthalgadda, alone
had eight cars and 150 motorcycles, according to a resident, Duryodhan Mahato.
In January, the police raided some villages
in the area to arrest poppy growers but could not make any headway in the
face of fierce resistance by the residents.
"The situation is quite alarming,"
superintendent of police A Natarajan said.
He said he had submitted a report to the government
pointing out that the Maoists were not only growing poppy themselves, but
also forcing other farmers to grow the plant.
The police in Hazaribagh have arrested about
20 people this year for growing poppies, but it is unclear whether they include
any rebels. Now they have sought the assistance of the federal Narcotics Control
Bureau to tackle the problem.
Maoists operate in 182 districts in India,
mainly in the states of Jharkhand, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Madhya
Pradesh, Maharashtra and West Bengal.