While
many would oppose the use of force, it could still be argued that
the financial viability of these systems does depend upon repayment,
and so it is not unreasonable for public institutions to demand recovery
of dues. But this is where the politics of the entire operation becomes
so evident, for the much larger dues which remain unpaid by large
industrialists in the Chhattisgarh region not only are being ignored,
but are even in some cases forgiven.
This
was clearly brought out during the course of a demonstration by members
of the Chhattisgarhi Mukti Morcha and their supporters in the Capital
in late July. Among the many important demands that were raised, was
the crucial one that the application of the laws of the land should
be directed to the rich and powerful interests as much as to ordinary
citizens. This is especially necessary in the cases of recovery of
loan repayment and power dues, because the total amount owed by all
the small peasants and workers of the region would be only a small
fraction of the individual dues of some important industrialists.
According
to CMM sources, the outstanding dues of just a few important industrialists
and companies amount to more than Rs. 500 crore, which is many hundreds
of times the total amount that is owed by all the agriculturalists
of the region put together. Thus, in terms of bad loans, the following
payments are still said to be pending : more than Rs. 37 crore from
Hari Khetawat of Bhilai Wires Ltd.; over Rs. 65 crore from Nemchand
Shri Shrimal, owner of K. N. Oil Mill in Mahasmand; over Rs. 140 crore
owed by Kailashpati Kedia of Kedia Castle Dellon Co., which has apparently
"vanished" from the balance sheets. There are said to be
more than Rs. 200 crore in terms of income tax arrears owed to the
government by B. R. Jain and Surendra Jain of Bhilai Engineering Corporation.
An
even more striking case is evident in the case of electricity dues.
The Ambuja Cement Factory of Baloda Bazaar is said to owe more than
Rs. 34 crore to the State Electricity Board. Of this, it was claimed
that Rs. 17 crore has been "forgiven" by the state government
of Madhya Pradesh. It this is true, it is certainly worth delving
into the reasons why this company has been singled out for this favour,
which at one stroke has lost the state government many times what
it can hope to retrieve through forcibly extracting loan repayment
from poor farmers.
Of
course, the problem is not specific or confined to Madhya Pradesh
- it reflects a much larger tendency evident all over India and at
the Central level as well, of blatantly favouring certain rich and
powerful elite groups and allowing them to milk the public exchequer
through non-payment of dues to public institutions. The irony is that
it is these same privileged groups, who are major beneficiaries of
the public system at the cost of ordinary citizens, who then lead
the attack against not only the smaller beneficiaries but against
the public system as a whole.
The
solution to this does not lie in privatisation, but in the greater
accountability of the public system to ordinary citizens, so that
the powerful few with access to decision makers at the top in government,
can stop swindling the rest of us.