New Delhi, July 17 - There is no end to the struggle to save pieces of 'our land and the people who live on them, own them and till them', says social activist and the Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) pioneer Medha Patkar.
'It is all the same...Narmada, Singur, Nandigram and Lalgarh. The police come in khaki uniform, commit excesses and people suffer. But when it happened in Bengal, I found it difficult to believe. This cannot be possible in a state ruled by the Left Front government, I thought,' Patkar, 54, who has helped set up the National Alliance of People's Movement, told IANS.
'There is no progress in India, only loot being perpetuated in the name of progress. There is still so much happening in the Narmada Valley now,' said Patkar, who became a known face in the late 1980s while spearheading the NBA's movement against big dams along the Narmada river.
Based in Indore, Patkar was in the Lalgarh area of West Bengal recently to take stock of the situation. A tribal body supported by Maoists had made the area out of bounds for the state administration to protest police excesses, but the government's presence has been re-established there with the help of security forces.
'They call it a Naxal problem, but actually it's the people who are struggling for survival,' said Patkar, an award-winning activist, clad in a green cotton sari.
The social activist was in the capital for a day to launch a book titled, 'Nandigram Diaries', which chronicles the people's movement in Nandigram through the eyes of journalist Pushpraj, associated with the NBA.
Nandigram, again in West Bengal, was in the eye of a storm in the last two years after people protested the acquisition of farmland for industry and faced the might of the state.
Patkar said, 'For me the people of Nandigram who suffered - the women who were raped, the men who either fell to police bullets or were arrested or disappeared and the children who were rendered homeless - are more important.