 |
|
DONS AT WORK: With the mafia shouldering the responsibility
of modernising the infrastructure there is little cheer for Bihar
|
At the inauguration
ceremony for a railway project that included a Rs 650 crore rail bridge
near Patna recently, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee remarked that
Bihar no longer belonged to the bimaru group. It had become, he said,
a jujharu (fighters') state. The prime minister's optimistic observation
on the state's development in the 12 years of Laloo Prasad Yadav-Rabri
Devi rule could be true only in a perverse sense. From prestigious Central
projects to petty local enterprises, an increasing number of business
activities in Bihar is being hijacked by the political mafia which has
turned the state into a veritable battlefield where muscle and money are
the deciding factors. In a sense, the only business flourishing in Bihar
today is e-business-but of the kind no dotcomer would recognise. It's
the business of extortion and involves kidnapping for ransom, collecting
rangdari "tax" (protection money) and forcibly clinching government
tenders.
 |
|
DERAILED: Vajpayee humourously referred to Bihar's 'fighting'
qualities at a recent function
|
Among the worst-affected projects is the prime minister's Golden Quadrilateral
(GG) in the Sasaram-Mohania belt of central Bihar. "The people here
demand sub-contracts at gunpoint," says R. Prasad, deputy general
manager of Punj Lloyd, the firm constructing the arterial 45-km road link
in the Delhi-Kolkata-Chennai-Mumbai-Delhi circuit with Korean multinational
LGEC. "We have no option but to hire private gunmen for protection."
| States
|
  |
|
ROLL
OF DISHONOUR
|
 |
| With the creation of Jharkhand,
Bihar has suffered a revenue loss of Rs 3,500 crore. Per capita
income came down from Rs 5,134 to Rs 4,500.
49.64 per cent of the population lives below the poverty-line.
There are around 1,000 gangs operating under various dons.
A large section of the over 40 lakh unemployed graduates
in the state goes to dons for "employment".
Upper caste criminal-turned-legislators like Suraj Bhan
and Munna Shukla have even syndicated their money-spinning
extortion and kidnapping business.
The annual turnover from extortion and kidnapping alone
is estimated at Rs 75 crore. This is in addition to the transport
and construction contracts that the dons control.
Paying capacity in rural areas being low, gangs resort to
group kidnapping, demanding Rs 5,000 to Rs 15,000 per head
as ransom.
On average, five vehicles such as goods-laden trucks are
looted on Bihar's highways every day.
|
|
Unfortunately, much of the mess is of the state legislators' making.
For instance, the GG fiasco began when don Sunil Pandey, a Samata Party
MLA doing time in the Sasaram jail, brandished his guns and demanded protection
money and contracts in return for not disrupting the prime minister's
project. He succeeded and was reportedly awarded a Rs 24 crore contract
to supply sand and boulders. This encouraged his rival Ram Bachan Yadav,
the uncrowned king of Kaimur, to step in. Soon other criminals lined up,
including MLAs Suraj Bhan (from inside Patna's Beur jail) and Suresh Pasi
(recently released after serving seven years on criminal charges).
What followed was a series of threats, culminating in a bomb explosion
at the main gate of LGEC's office near Kudra in Mohania. Coming at a time
when the kidnapping of two engineers of the National Powergrid Corporation
project in neighbouring Kasauli and the killing of a Korean engineer in
Bodhgaya were making news, this caused widespread panic and an exodus
of trained manpower.
Director-General of Bihar Police R.R. Prasad feels that companies are
partly to blame as they appease the big dons to silence smaller ones.
"The big dons then turn Frankenstein," he says. The people also
resent the companies for ignoring local labour. "The road project
created hopes of jobs but the political mafia hijacked everything,"
says Gopal Singh of the CPI(ML).
Besides the GG, the railways' modernisation work between Mokamah and
Punpun near Patna is also under threat. On the eve of the inauguration
of a rail bridge in Patna, extortionists demanded a hefty rangdari tax
from the Fatua-Islampur railway project, underscoring their message by
torching four tractors and firing 200 rounds in the air. Now companies
hesitate to respond to tenders for railway projects for fear of attracting
the dons' attention. "Unfortunately, the writ of the Laloo-Rabri
Government does not prevail anywhere," says Union Railway Minister
Nitish Kumar.
 |
|
MAN POWER: The number of people abducted for ransom is on
the rise
|
What does prevail is the parallel rule of the dons. On March 6-7, former
MLA Umesh Paswan (BJP), Jagannath Pandey, farmer-brother of powerful RJD
leader Baidyanath Pandey and Ramashray Prasad Singh, a practising doctor,
were abducted from Begusarai. Ajay Kumar, president of the Indian Medical
Association (Bihar chapter), reveals that in the past 15 months, 15 doctors
were kidnapped. While experienced criminals target Central development
projects, affluent professionals and farmers, the amateurs settle for
traders, sometimes schoolteachers. Their modus operandi is similar. A
rangdari tax is sought, often through a notice known as purzi. Those who
choose to ignore the purzi are duly "dealt with". Most pay up
without the police knowing about it.
Not that firs would make a difference. In fact, the reason for the bizarre
situation in Bihar has been identified as the complete breakdown of the
law and order machinery. And that in turn is a direct fallout of poor
governance. Starved of funds, the Government has virtually ground to a
halt as far as development activities are concerned. Rural youth, once
employed under these projects, now idle and frustrated, turn to the czars
of crime to make a living of sorts. It easier too since high-risk crimes
like dacoity, theft and murder have given way to extortion and kidnapping,
less risky but with equally high returns.
It is only occasionally that the Bihar Government faces the music. On
March 18, with Laloo presiding in the Assembly, Leader of the Opposition
Sushil Kumar Modi lambasted the RJD Government for almost 30 minutes,
reeling out damning figures. "After the bifurcation of state, the
crime industry got a new dimension," he said. "Nobody is safe."
Ironically, on the same day 28 years ago, Laloo, as president of the Patna
University Students Union, had begun a movement with Modi, the then union
general secretary, against corruption and misrule under the Congress.
Today, the Government's apathy is telling on the state's economic health.
The boom in Bihar's inimitable brand of e-business is causing a rapid
flight of both human resources and business investments from the state.
Added to this, many industries, mines and forests are now in Jharkhand.
The per capita income in Bihar which remained stagnant at Rs 5,134, the
lowest in the country, for a long time has gone down further after the
division to Rs 4,500. Half the population (49.64 per cent) lives below
the poverty line. In the absence of economic activity, the credit-deposit
ratio is the lowest in India at 21:31. But that, as social researcher
Shaibal Gupta of the Asian Development Research Institute says, is the
"Bihari model of economy". A vicious circle where a stagnant
economy only spawns a parallel, crime-driven one.
|