Opinion/ V C Bhaskaran
Gujral has only Laloo to reckon
with -- but Veerappan has a whole lot of Laloos
On October 9, when Veerappan was calmly
whisking away a bus load of
visitors from the Bandipur national park, the head of the Special
Task Force (constituted to nab the brigand) was picnicking just three
kilometres away with friends from Delhi.
It's a mystery how Veerappan, reputed to know
every inch of the 2,000 square kilometres where he operates, failed to get
wind of the STF chief. Had he taken the police
official captive, it would have been a prize catch. But fortunately, it didn't
happen -- and the police officer can thank his stars for that.
In any case, the brigand has, as Karnataka Home
Minister Roshan Baig admitted one week after the incident, made laughing
stock of the government. It may look strange
that despite the massive manhunt mounted by
the Karnataka and Tamil Nadu governments, in which, for a time, even the
Border Security Force was involved, Veerapan still calls
the shots.
But it isn't, actually. All it takes is a
superficial understanding of our politicians. And when
the political leadership is hand in glove with a criminal,
the bureaucracy cannot be far behind, can they now?
That is not to say that
all are black sheeps. But the white ones
are few and far between. So, naturally,
Veerappan reigns supreme.
And thumps his nose at the authorities whenever he feels like it.
According to conservative estimates, Veerappan has sold sandalwood
worth a billion rupees and ivory worth 120 million -- all from the
Karnataka and Tamil Nadu forests, and all necessarily by means
generally used to transport goods. Common sense dictates
this cannot have been without the collusion
of the men-in-power.
We are
talking about millions here, remember?
Thanks to him, a full grown tusker has become a rare
phenomenon in the forests
of Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu. A
keen forest watcher told me he had, many a time,
chanced upon herds forming a ring around a male. The norm is for
the tusker to lead the herd. The poor beasts
have sensed the ever-present spectre of death for their males
and the imminent extinction of their race!
Veerappan has often spoken of the high and mighty who have eaten
out of his hand. These people have no use for him
any more. Worse, he is a sinister threat to their survival. Veerappan knows
it too well.
The hostage drama
is his game plan for survival.
Let Veerappan speak. No doubt, the criminal
deserves the hangman's
noose. He has committed numerous
murders. But his collaborators in
khadi and khaki
also deserve punishment for aiding and abetting him.
If Veerappan speaks up,
he will be doing a great service to the
people, especially the poor and helpless for
whom he has a lot of sympathy. These people
have remained poor because of the criminals in
power.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral, who has vowed to
undertake a
satyagraha against corruption, has called for an
'amicable solution' (whatever that may mean) to the hostage crisis.
Perhaps Gujral can gauge
Veerappan's feelings best
as a fellow fugitive (albeit political).
Gujral has only Laloo Yadav to reckon
with; Veerappan, a whole lot of Laloos, big and small, in Karnataka
and Tamil Nadu! So the best service the PM can do the nation is
let Veerappan speak
before he is silenced.
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