Category Archives: The Struggle for the City

Mike Davis: The new ecology of war

http://housingstruggles.wordpress.com/2009/01/09/mike-davis-the-new-ecology-of-war/

Eurozine, 7 January 2009
The new ecology of war

An interview with Mike Davis by Mattias Hagberg

“Global epidemics and global terrorism are two problems that principally emanated from the slums. When one talks about ‘failed states’ one often means ‘failed cities’, such as Gaza, Sadr City or the slums of Port-au-Prince.” Urban theorist Mike Davis talks in interview about the evolution of the neoliberal city.

“The future of warfare lies in the streets, sewers, high-rise buildings, industrial parks, and the sprawl of houses, shacks, and shelters that form the broken cities of our world. We will fight elsewhere, but not so often, rarely as reluctantly, and never so brutally. Our recent military history is punctuated with city names – Tuzla, Mogadishu, Los Angeles, Beirut, Panama City, Hue, Saigon, Santo Domingo – but these encounters have been but a prologue, with the real drama still to come.”
Major Ralph Peters, US Army

The camera is shaking. The focus is poorly adjusted. Some seconds pass before you can tell what the film depicts.

Then the focus is sharpened. At once, the scenario becomes uncomfortably clear: the man half-lying on the ground; the group of policemen surrounding him with truncheons in their hands. Then the beating begins. The kicks. The assault goes on for a minute and a half.

It is three minutes past midnight on the 3 March 1991. When the film stops, Rodney King is lying motionless on the ground.

Slightly more than a year later, on 29 April 1992, the four policemen who assaulted King are cleared of all charges by a unanimous jury. That same day, Los Angeles erupts in violent riots, the most brutal in US history. Riots lasting six days. Entire blocks are burned down, more than 50 people are killed and thousands are injured. Not until the National Guard seizes the streets of Los Angeles does the violence come to an end.

Two years earlier, in 1990, the then fairly unknown historian and urban theorist Mike Davis published his analysis of the history and future of Los Angeles, City of Quartz. His excavation of social and ethnic tensions in Los Angeles suddenly seemed prophetic. In a stroke, Davis was transformed into an internationally established and esteemed social critic, his books and articles gaining readers far beyond the academic world.

Now, I am sitting in his kitchen in a small villa in central San Diego. Scratching away on his grey beard, he takes some vigorous sips of coffee and points out that the riots are still an open wound in the history of Los Angeles. Instead of trying to find explanations, most people in power have tried to forget.

“All we got was a story of police brutality which triggered the black community in Los Angeles to violence. But that is just a small part of the truth. It wasn’t primarily African Americans who were looting stores and starting fires around the city. If you look at the arrests made by the police it appears that principally Latin Americans were responsible for the riots. And a closer look at the causes shows a web of explanations where police brutality is only one background among others.”

Mike Davis emphasises the poverty that affected great parts of the population of Southern California when the economy entered a deep crisis at the beginning of the 1990s. Particularly hit were Latin American immigrants, people who during the 1980s had already experienced sinking wages and more limited options in life.

“The upheaval should really be described as a postmodern bread riot. Clear warning signals were apparent the months preceding. There is a photo which more than anything describes what was about to happen. Three days prior to Christmas eve, the Los Angeles Times published a picture showing thousands of Latin American families lining up outside a soup kitchen Downtown.”

Los Angeles is a patchwork of different worlds. This is not a melting pot – rather a map of the global power order, divided up according to the same ethnic divisions. On the way from my hotel in Santa Monica to meet Davis, I exit the highway and drive through the Watts district. The poverty is so palpable that I am taken by surprise. This black part of town appears to be entirely disconnected from the rest of the world. Hardly any shops at all. No restaurants. Just old houses in various stages of ruin. This is the third world immersed in the first, a sprawl with thousands of inhabitants plagued by unemployment, gang crime and a shortage of public resources. There are only two options for this district of Los Angeles, I think: implosion or explosion, ruin or revolt.

If one reads the statistics, the road to ruin seems already determined. In districts such as Watts, a veritable civil war has been going on since the 1980s. The youth are killing each other to such an extent that war is the only applicable word.

Some hours later, I ask Davis precisely this: implosion or explosion? His answer is clear: both.

“Los Angeles will in all likelihood experience new disruptions. If the economy keeps falling at the current rate, it is just a matter of time before the city explodes in new riots. At the same time, it is obvious that districts such as Watts and Compton are in the process of destroying themselves. Even if gang violence has decreased somewhat over the past couple of years, it is still at a level as to be compared to war.”

But, he concedes, it is important to broaden one’s scope and place the development of these districts in a much larger perspective. From a pile of books, he pulls out one of his latest – Planet of Slums – and says that today one can identify four tendencies in the evolution of cities.

First, we have an urban growth that is detached from economic growth. Cities, above all in the South, tend to grow rapidly despite, in many cases, a receding economy. This growth is primarily powered by poor people from rural areas, who are drawn into the cities and their slums. Second, prevalent definitions of what a city is are beginning to lose their descriptive value. Nowadays, urban growth occurs mostly in the city peripheries, both economically and in terms of population.

“We are getting an entirely new urban landscape, a landscape which is neither city nor countryside. The rapid growth of slums outside the cities in the third world is one example. The immense areas of villa suburbs, shopping malls and workplaces here in Los Angeles, as well as other parts of the western world, is another.”

Third, we now have great city areas that are entirely disconnected from the global economy; in the third world it is the slums, in the US it is areas like Watts and Compton; in Europe it is suburbs like Clichy-sous-Bois outside Paris. This development in turn forces people to make their living in informal ways, opening doors to criminality, extremism and fundamentalism, Davis suggests.

“This is a development no one has foreseen. No one saw some decades ago that such a large portion of the world’s population would live in big city areas entirely without connection to the world economy. The people of the slums are furthermore of a social class that does not fit into our prevalent description of social stratification. They lack, for instance, the social power that the working class possessed at the beginning of the twentieth century.”

“The labour movement had strength since it could halt production; industrialisation had a tendency to unite people. Yet the logic of informal economy appears to be the opposite. The informal economy drives people to exploit each other, in the worst case yielding to nihilistic violence, like the street gangs in Los Angeles.”

It’s easy for people in power to turn their back on people living in the slums, Davis asserts. From a neoliberal perspective, they are superfluous. At the same time, he points out, it is dangerous to ignore the problems created by the global economy. In his two books, The monster at Our Door. The Global Threat of Avian Flu and Buda’s Wagon. A Brief History of the Car Bomb, which both came about during work on Planet of Slums, Davis describes two examples of why it is entirely faulty to pretend that the problems of the slums only concern the slums.

“Global epidemics and global terrorism are two problems that principally emanated from the slums. When one talks about ‘failed states’ one often means ‘failed cities’, such as Gaza, Sadr City or the slums of Port-au-Prince.”

What is truly interesting and horrifying is that the American military recognised this condition early on, much earlier than any one else. And it recognised this development from a very practical perspective, not a theoretical one. According to the military, these slum areas are the battlefields of the future. That is where the battle will be fought.

“Two events in American twentieth-century military history determined this direction more than anything. First, the blowing up of the American embassy in Beirut at the beginning of the 1980s; second, the retreat from Mogadishu at the beginning of the 1990s. Both events have been of greater importance to contemporary tactics and strategy development than the war in Vietnam.”

In reality, Davis states, the opponents in this war are militarily weak. They are narcotics syndicates, street gangs and terrorists. The problem is the terrain. For this reason, the American military has been working hard for a number of years on developing new tactics to take on the urban slums.

“The most interesting thing happening right now is the joint efforts of the US and Brazil in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. I would argue that the US sees that effort as a possibility to test and develop strategies to stabilise cities by means of security measures, city planning and social efforts. A sort of modern equivalent of Haussmann’s mop-up operation of Paris in the nineteenth century.”

Against this explosive world of poverty there are isolated islands for the global elite, what Davis terms the “paradise of evil”. In the anthology Evil Paradises. Dreamworld of Neoliberalism, he and a number of other writers and academics describe a world in denial. In gated communities across the globe, elites shield themselves from the brutal reality of the neoliberal economy.

“If Southern California has any significance to the development of the world’s cities, it is as model for life in the protected enclaves.”

Or, as he writes in the introduction to Evil Paradises:

Many of the “dreamlands” described in the pages that follow are, in fact, iterations of Los Angeles, or at least “California lifestyle”, as a global phantasmagoric ideal, which the nouveaux riches pursue with the same desperate zeal in the desert of Iran and the hills of Kabul as they do in the gated suburbs of Cairo, Johannesburg, and Beijing. But, as in autochthonic Los Angeles, Hell and the Mall are never more than a freeway drive apart. Thus, the real housewives of Orange County, like their counterparts in Hong Kong’s tony-phony “Palm Springs” or Budapest’s neo-Hapsburg gated communities, exploit the same labour of maids who themselves live in slums or even chicken coops on the roofs of mansions. The Metropolis-like phantasmagoria of Dubai’s super-skyscrapers or the Olympic megastructures in Beijing arise from the toil of migrant workers whose own homes are fetid barracks and desolate encampments. In the larger perspective, the bright archipelagos of utopian luxury and “supreme lifestyle” are mere parasites on a planet of slums.

Los Angeles, November 2019. In the overpopulated and rundown city, Rick Deckard struggles to stay sane. He is a “blade runner”, a cop with a mission to kill genetically produced replicas whose only crime is that they want to be real people. Against a backdrop of ruin, criminality and uninhibited commercialism, Rick Deckard hunts around a dark Los Angeles. There is no room for humanity or intimacy here – just raw loneliness. And floating above all of this are giant advertisement shuttles that cry out their message: buy your freedom, leave the metropolis for a happy life in the extraterrestrial suburbs.

Davis often returns to Ridley Scott’s dark depiction of a future Los Angeles in the film Blade Runner (1982). Perhaps not so much because he finds it realistic, but because of his interest in the dystopian and apocalyptic. He states that he readily investigates the underside of things; that he prefers to emphasise the anomalous and negative. He himself describes it as a method; that by focusing on the negative, he sees new patterns and new connections.

While this method has proven to be successful, he has received a lot of criticism for his one-sided focus on all that is negative. Especially for the book Ecology of Fear. Los Angeles and the Imagination of Disaster (2000), which could near enough be described as a standalone sequel to City of Quartz, which was heavily criticised on precisely that point. Davis was accused for ignoring any information that contradicted his image of Los Angeles as a society on the verge economic and social breakdown. The same criticism has been directed to his description of slums in Planet of Slums. “It is no secret that I am fascinated by the apocalyptic side of our society. At the same time, I think that the criticism is a bit misleading. I don’t singularly look at the dystopian”, he says and points out that one of his later books, Magical Urbanism. Latinos Reinvent the US City, has a decidedly positive tone.

“In it, I describe how Latin American immigration is beginning to revitalise our American big cities. By means of the Latin Americans, many dead and rundown districts in cities such as Los Angeles and New York are gaining new life. Furthermore, a much more urban life than the suburban life that has pervaded many American cities in the post war era.”

But though there are positive streaks throughout his many books and articles, it is nevertheless the dystopian that remains in the mind.

At the end of Ecology of Fear, Davis paints a picture of American big cities of the future. It is something like a modern version of the Chicago School’s famous division of Chicago into different zones. In Davis’ picture of big city development, fear is one of the strongest forces. Fear of criminality and drugs force the middle class and capital ever further towards what are now known as “edge cities”; meanwhile, the inner city is divided into different zones. Some are safe and under close surveillance, others are abandoned by authorities and surrendered to crime, abuse and the informal economy.

At the centre of Davis’s image there is a small core to which all the big city’s homeless are drawn. And way out in the periphery is the ring of prisons. That is what the ecology of fear looks like.

And it is propagated throughout the world.

‘Curse of the Black Gold: 50 years of oil in the Niger delta’ now online

The Struggle for the City

Curse of the Black Gold, with pictures by Ed Kashi and text chosen by Michael Watts is now online at: http://www.powerhousebooks.com/blackgold.pdf

It is essential reading, showing clearly the price that some people pay for others to live glamorous cosmopolitan lives in New York and London. Ed Kashi’s introduction is below.

Ed Kashi

Shadows and Light in the Niger Delta

Iraq led me to the Niger Delta. Actually, it was my work in Iraq that brought me to the attention of Michael Watts, a Berkeley-based scholar. For over thirty years, Michael has studied issues of oil and conflict, especially in regards to the Niger Delta. With Michael’s guidance, on my first trip to Nigeria in July 2004, my eyes and heart were opened and my anger and disgust were ignited. To tell this difficult, but profoundly important, geopolitical story in a visual way became an obsession.

The Delta is the pivotal point where all of Nigeria’s plagues of political gangsterism, corruption, and poverty seem to converge. In late 2005, I returned alone to continue the project and faced severe restrictions and frustrations. There were moments in Port Harcourt, lying in a dark, hot, mosquito-infested room, when I wondered if I could continue to see beyond my own weaknesses to overcome the seemingly insuperable obstacles that challenged me at every turn.

With a commission from National Geographic magazine, I traveled again to Nigeria in 2006. This new level of support afforded me the opportunity to make breakthroughs to areas and subjects that had been unattainable before. During the course of this project, one of the most important subjects I felt compelled to capture in images was MEND, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta. They are an armed and formidable militant group based in the cities and creeks of the Niger Delta, particularly in the western region of the Delta in and around Warri (the so-called “Warri axis”). MEND is responsible for “shutting-in” 40 percent (at present: approximately 900,000 barrels per day) of Nigeria’s oil industry through making direct attacks on facilities, taking hostages, and generally creating an inhospitable and unsafe environment for the oil industry.

To get access to this group, it was necessary to communicate with a shadowy figure named Jomo Gbomo. There were rumors he was a South African arms dealer, but nobody knew for certain his true identity, whether he was someone local or if he might be based on another continent. Our only link was an email address. Whoever he was, Jomo was media-savvy and wrote with a flair and élan that was reminiscent of Subcomandante Marcos. The emails ranged from personal, direct conversations to general communiqués distributed to a list of journalists about the group’s activities. Generally, Jomo’s pronouncements presaged what would later appear in the media, or they were responses to developments on the ground, including attacks on oil facilities or hostage takings. At times it was comical, always surreal, but ultimately serious and potentially dangerous. Amidst the theater and drama of masked militants lay an insurgency in which, as Jomo put it, “bitter men” were engaged in a ferocious struggle with the Nigerian state. I reached a point with Jomo where we were communicating nearly every day, and I looked forward to his daily urgings, instructions, or vows to keep me safe. Even though I accomplished my goal of access to MEND, it wasn’t through Jomo but instead through other contacts. At least, that is what I thought, but in reality I’ll never know. In the end, my perceived intimacy and trust might have been nothing more than another shadow in an enigmatic place that an outsider can never fully understand. Following are excerpts of emails exchanged with Jomo over a two-month period in the summer of 2006. This ongoing online conversation lead me to important reporting, exclusive access to a difficult part of this project, and powerful images. I never met Jomo Gbomo. At least, I don’t think so.

From: Ed Kashi
Date: May 24, 2006 1:03:22 AM EDT
Dear Jomo,
I am a photojournalist working with the National Geographic magazine on a story about the Niger Delta. I have already been there two previous times to develop a project that is looking at the effects of nearly 50 years of oil on the communities, people and environment in the Delta. I understand you can help me get close to MEND, which I see as a vitally important part of this story. I will be coming to Port Harcourt in a few days and would appreciate any help you could give me to accomplish this task.
Best,
Ed Kashi

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: May 25, 2006 8:03:22 AM EDT
Thanks ed, we are always eager to get our story out. We had earlier resolved not to have any contacts with the media except by way of this email address. Perhaps that will be reconsidered. I will think about this and get back to you as soon as i can. Im a great fan of the national geographic.

From: Ed Kashi
Date: May 31, 2006 5:59:29 AM EDT
Dear Jomo,
I am now in Port Harcourt … If we could meet that would be great. I am hoping you can help me.
Thanks
Ed

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: June 1, 2006 2:20:21 PM EDT
Hi ed, sorry i will be unable to meet with you…[On June 16, Ed and his fixer, Elias Courson, were captured and illegally detained by a Nigerian Joint Military Task Force that was based at an oil flow station in Nembe. They were detained for four days and the story made headlines in the Nigerian press as well as running on the BBC and Reuters.]

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: July 1, 2006 11:19:04 AM EDT
Hi ed, i read about your experience. The international media shares your views. The nigerian government and its security apparatus is brutal. Extra-judical killings is usual in nigeria but this time, people who have fought with us were victims. I promise you we will repay this debt ten fold. When you come in august, you will meet me and all my senior commanders. However i will not grant any interviews nor allow myself to be photographed. You may be allowed to speak with and film any of my commanders who may be willing to speak with you. We will give you a comprehensive tour of the delta as you have not seen it. This is a promise, God willing.

From: Ed Kashi
Date: July 21, 2006
Dear Jomo,
…I am planning to return to the delta in August to finish my project for National Geographic. I appreciate any cooperation you can offer at that time.

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: July 24, 2006 12:28:45 PM EDT
… this return date ensures you will be on time for the next wave of our attacks. This will be unrelenting and more punishing on the oil industry. You will be taken as far as you wish. We are capable of taking you through the states of the delta, meeting with our units scattered across the niger delta. You will be shown through villages that the nigerian government will not wish you to see as well as locations the nigerian military will not venture near. The choice remains yours. Decide how far you are willing or able to go. You will meet me but i dont know how much good that will be as i will not be granting any recorded interviews. As promised however, you may be permited to speak with any of my ground commanders who consents to an interview. …

From: Ed Kashi
Date: July 24, 2006 12:35:56 PM EDT
Cc: tom o’neill
Dear Jomo,
If it is not necessary to meet with you, then better to keep the security situation less stressful for both of us. …The writer, Tom O’Neill, will be accompanying me on this trip and he will need to do interviews with your commanders. …In terms of how far I am willing to go, my main concern is putting myself in a situation where I am with your men and we encounter Nigerian security forces. … I look forward to your next instructions. thanks, Ed

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: July 24, 2006 1:22:06 PM EDT
Hi, your safety is of great concern to us otherwise, how would our story get out? …When we take you through the creeks, we will ensure that you meet no security operatives and will always be taken in a clearly civilian boat, a good distance from our fighters. Like i said the choice remains yours. Be certain you will get all you ask for on this trip

From: Ed Kashi
Date: August 13, 2006 7:05:42 PM EDT
Jomo,
we are all quite shaken by the fierce gun battles that just took place right outside of our compound. We thought they were coming for us, but thank goodness we are fine. I can see things have heated up

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: August 13, 2006 7:26:16 PM EDT
I was informed so. No one can take you guys anyway, Be sure about that. Im more worried about you been hit by a stray bullet or something. They came for the other white guys. If by any chance you are taken be sure to tell anyone you are here at our instance. You will be released immediately or else………………? Always give me notice of your movement and sign in each night for your safety. I want to be able to act in good time if the unexpected occurs

From: Ed Kashi
Date: August 14, 2006 2:03:34 PM EDT
Dear Jomo,
we have been turned down by Shell for tomorrow and Thursday due to increased hostage taking, … I have spoken with my man in Port Harcourt and he sounds a bit skeptical but he told me that a leaking well that he showed us last week has exploded and is on fire. This is exactly what we need for our work.…

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: August 14, 2006 2:15:41 PM EDT
I will instruct that. Expect a call.

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: August 21, 2006 7:21:08 AM EDT
Hi ed, im sorry i may not be able to arrange the trip for you today … may be the end of this month. In trying to effect the release of all hostages in the delta, we sent out 14 of our fighters to a community in bayelsa holding a shell worker. They effected his release and on the way back to the camp, were ambushed by aobut 100 nigerian army soldiers … lost 10 of our fighters in this attack …in moourning. …big blow to us … attack was unprovoked and without warning…impossible at this point to do anything else. Hope you understand.

Yours truly

From: Jomo Gbomo

Date: August 28, 2006 8:22:00 AM EDT
Hi ed, please let me know when you get into warri I have arranged for you to speak with tompolo, the most
superior ground commander in the western delta. Im afraid for now, that is the closest you will get to me.

I have never allowed this sort of contact in the past and this is like a compensation for not keeping to my instructed that across the entire niger delta. Please abide by whatever rules you are subjected to when you
arrive at the first camp, …

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: August 28, 2006 11:35:19 AM EDT
…No one knows me as jomo. they know who sent you there and you may try but i doubt if anyone will speak
to you about me.…

From: Jomo Gbomo
Date: August 28, 2006 2:20:08 PM EDT
…it is important to us the world understands the galvanizing factor beneath our struggle. We have been called all kinds of names in the american media by those who have not bothered to be as thorough as you have chosen to be. …It is assumed that our motivation is derived from a desire to steal little amounts of crude oil from pipelines. What we are fighting for aside from what we term to be a liberation of the niger delta peoples from 50 years of political and economic slavery, is that the truth be heard everywhere about our fight for the freedom of the peoples of the niger delta who have cried out in vain for help. The truth as we all know is unambiguos and no matter how well camoflaged, will not remain hidden forever. We hope the truth …will come to light …We have nothing to say to anyone, go around as freely as you wish and decide if we have reason to fight.

I never heard from Jomo again while in the Niger Delta. I made my way to the funerals and creeks where MEND was through my own contacts. But I’ll never know how much was triangulated behind my back. As always, the real decisions took place in the shadows, out of my sight. In September of 2007, a man purported to be Jomo Gbomo was arrested in Angola while trying to make an arms deal. Communiqués from Jomo continue to this day, albeit with a slightly slicker tone and voice. My assumption is that whoever Jomo is doesn’t matter at this point. The struggle that MEND represents has grown beyond one person and will continue its fight until real change occurs in the Niger Delta.

Currently in the Delta, an unrestricted military struggle is taking place between state security forces with an awful reputation and a violent state machinery. An imbalance exists between secrecy and publicity about their causes, and it is this disparity that sustains the shadows of this troubled land. The violence of the Delta is a reaction to a long history of exploitation, the presence of transnational corporations, a style of politics where violence is often encouraged and supported by politicians, and the sheer welter of groups, gangs, and cults without a leadership.

The Niger Delta is one of the most difficult places I’ve ever worked. The people are hesitant and suspicious of outsiders, the terrain is tricky with remote areas reachable only by small boats and along every road and waterway danger lurks for the intruder. In June 2006, I experienced the worst incident of the entire trip. While attempting to photograph flow stations in the creeks of Nembe, I was taken into custody and detained illegally by the Nigerian military. The local boatmen we hired had lied about the presence of military in order to get extra cash. We knew if there was military present at the installations, we were not allowed to photograph. We relied on faulty information and paid the price. My fixer and I were detained for four harrowing days, our possessions and equipment were confiscated, we were locked in a room and were never told our fate. In the end, we were released because of the great work of Nigerian friends, human rights workers, the media, National Geographic, and my wife, Julie. Most people are not as fortunate and would have endured a much longer, more painful incarceration. This event left me empowered and even more determined to pursue my goal of creating a visual body of work to tell the untold story of the Niger Delta.

I always try to remain open in my heart and mind. This is what makes life worth living and allows one the opportunity to witness the unimaginable. From my chance encounter with Michael, I was given the opportunity to work in the Niger Delta—to shed light on this world of shadows.

India: Dharna at Jantar Mantar to Raise Collective Voices Against Displacement

http://housingstruggles.wordpress.com

Delhi Solidarity Group, 26 April 2008

CALL TO JOIN NATIONAL LEVEL ACTION

Join hands to raise our collective voice against Displacement & Un-Democratic, Unjust, Anti-People & Pro-Corporate Land Acquisition (Amendment) Act, 2007 and Resettlement and Rehabilitation Bill, 2007

Join Dharna at Jantar Mantar, Delhi 28th to 30 April, 2008

Dear Friends,

Today, as the State continues with the mad frenzy in the name of ‘development’ and ‘economic growth’, rural and urban poor face displacement and dispossession at an unprecedented scale. Not a day passes by when newspapers or channels in India does not have a story on yet another land acquisition, another resistance against corporate land grab or police atrocities on peaceful demonstrators. The government seems to have abdicated all responsibilities, even the pretence, of a “Welfare State”. It is now nothing more than a puppet of industrialists and capitalists, snatching all natural resources away from the people. On the other hand, for the multitudes-Dalits, Adivasis, agricultural workers, farmers, fish workers, artisans, forest dwellers- who have been facing the harsh reality of displacement and complete dispossession for years, there doesn’t seem to be even the hope of rehabilitation now. But be it in Nandigram or Jagatisinghpur, be it against uprooting people in the name of SEZs, mining or big dams or against the ‘illegalisation’ of urban poor, our country reverberates with voices of protest and struggle like never before. People are resisting the snatching away of the means of their lives and livelihood. They are resisting the theft and transfer of natural and common property resources into private hands for private profit. They are resisting the gross undermining of democracy and social justice that goes on in the name of development

It is the midst of all this that the Central Government has brought forth two Bills-The Land Acquisition (Amendment) Bill, 2007 and the Resettlement and Rehabilitation Bill, 2007. Introduced purportedly to strike a balance between the need for land for development and other purposes and protecting the interests of the persons whose lands are statutorily acquired, both the Bills will have far reaching impact if enacted. In effect, these Bills sanction displacement and loot of more and more land from the people for the profit of corporations and private investors. The Land Acquisition Bill allows land to be forcefully acquired in favour of private companies and investors, thus including private purpose in the definition of “public purpose”. It is more regressive and anti-people than even the original Colonial Act! While the government talks of protecting the rights of those whose lands are acquired, it is mere lip service. The R&R Bill doesn’t even guarantee basics like land for land and alternative livelihood based rehabilitation. The issue of urban displacement has been completely sidestepped yet again

Today the demand of people’s struggle across the country is one- a decentralised development planning process which ensures ‘development’ that is truly people centric and bases itself firmly on the principles of democracy, social justice and equity. Since concerns regarding development planning, land acquisition and resettlement and rehabilitation are intrinsically linked with one another and cannot be addressed in isolation, people’s movements and organisations have, for several years now, been demanding the enactment of a Comprehensive Legislation on Development Planning, No enforced displacement, and Just rehabilitation. In fact a draft of the same has also been prepared based on 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments which, in the true spirit of democracy, vest gram sabhas, municipalities with the right to formulate district and metropolitan level development plans. Ignoring these demands, the Government is keen on pushing these two Bills that instead of ensuring minimum and no enforced displacement endorse displacement. There is no doubt that these anti –people legislations have been brought forth under the influence and for the benefit of big corporations and private industrial and capitalists interests.

It is imperative that we, the people’s movements and organisations, challenge and oppose this move. It is important that we, the rural and urban poor, those struggling for just rehabilitation and those who oppose forced displacement and destruction carried on in the name of ‘development’, join hands and raise our collective voices. We must question our elected representatives and bring them to understand and voice our positions on these issues. We must challenge the Central government and compel them to heed.

We call on you join us for a massive dharna in Jantar Mantar, Delhi from 28th to 30th April 2008. We request friends and comrades from across the country struggling on diverse issues to reach Delhi on these dates to discuss and voice their questions, issues and concerns at the national level. It is critical at this juncture that we come together and raise our collective voices against displacement and for a just development planning. Please also inform and invite other groups and individuals working on these issues in your area.

Please do let us know of you participation and details regarding arrival and departure in order to help is plan better.

We sincerely hope you will join us in this very important struggle!

In Solidarity,

Ashok Chaudhary, Roma (National Forum of Forest People and Forest Workers)

Gautam Bandhopadhyay (Nadi Ghati Morcha)

Shaktiman Ghosh (National Hawkers Federation)

Ulka Mahajan (SEZ Virodhi Sangharsh Samiti)

Medha Patkar (Narmada Bachao Andolan & National Alliance of People’s Movements)

Gabrielle D (Pennurumai Iyyakam &NAPM)

Mukta Srivastava , Simpreet Singh (Ghar Bachao Ghar Banao Andolan)

Rajendra Ravi (National Alliance of People’s Movements)

Sr. Celia (National Alliance of People’s Movements)

Sandhya Devi (Kala Handi Mahila Samiti, Orissa)

Bhupendra Rawat (Jan Sangharsh Vahini)

Suniti S R (Vishthapan Virodhi Sangharsh Samiti)

Geetha D (Nirman Mazdoor Panchayat Sangam)

Subhash Bhatnagar (NCCUSW)

Sandeep Pandey (Aasha Parivar)

Vincent Manoharan (National Campaign for Dalit Human Rights)

Anil Chaudhary (INSAF)

Vimal Bhai (MATU)

And several others movements and organisations …

Contact Addresses:

· NAPM, C/o Chemical Majdoor Sabha, Haji Habib Building, A-wing, Naigoan Cross Road, Dadar (E), Mumbai – 400014

· Sangharsh 2007, c/o Bandhua Mukti Morcha, 7, Jantar Mantar, New Delhi

Contact Numbers: Rajendra Ravi-09868200316; Simpreet Singh-099363065; Vijayan/Sridevi 011-26680883, 26680914

Also see: The Abahlali baseMjondolo collection of documents against the Slums Act.