Thursday, December 27, 2012

Weed And The Valley


(Published in Fountain Ink-December 2012)

The story of Rashol is the story of an ancient, isolated mountain village whose visions of the mainstream world are framed by the tiny windows of its hallucinated houses; it is the story of how Italian Hippies, in their pursuit of a comfortably numb life that could be measured out with chillum drags, re-wrote the destiny of a people.

***
 “The most passionate examination of hash-smoking will certainly not teach half as much about thinking (which is an imminent narcotic) as the profane illumination of thinking about hash-smoking. The reader, the person thinking, the person waiting, the flâneur, are just as much types of Illuminati as the opium-eater, the dreamer, the intoxicated, and they are profaner.” –Walter Benjamin (On Hashish)

***

November 4, 2012. The day of State Assembly polls in Himachal Pradesh.

The polling booth in Rashol, a rundown primary school building where most families don’t send their children to, stands empty and abandoned. The polling officer and his assistant banish their yawns away bird watching and feeding biscuits to fluffy, hermit mountain dogs. A disinterested policeman stands outside, and is greeted with warmth by an occasional villager who passes by--a visitor who does not care to stop and vote.  His destination is elsewhere; the compelling crisis of his moment is not democracy.

Farther, farther up, on parts of earth accessible only to the people of the mountains, and to compulsive seekers of highs, the entire village is toiling in the ‘kutlas’, farms of a plant that once was of the forest and dreadlocked ascetics, but now is a cash crop that caters primarily to the recreational demands of a fugitive world. For the villagers, ganja is a season that commences in the last week of September and ends by the first week of November; a period fraught with many perils; a frantic time of the year where they have to earn as much as they can, for no other season brings them money. Women abandon their homes, children their schools, and they join the men in the farms, furiously rubbing the plant into charas that in the last forty years has garnered universal recognition in the cannabis world as among the best in the business.

On this day, though they have not bothered to vote, the polls are a major topic for much tittle-tattle, a welcome digression from the everyday stuff of chatter in the farms that usually hinges on surmisals, often paranoid, of who has sold how much to which mafia and who the new C.I.D’s in the village are. But eventually, all the talk boils down to charas and the future of ganja farming: Will they help us to work in peace? Will they stop sending the police to cut our farms down? Will they legalize ganja cultivation in the valley? Lakshmi, known amongst the villagers as a woman with hands hallowed by Renuka Matha, the patron Goddess of the village, to divine the finest charas, points her greasy, golden brown, fingers to the distant yet somehow touchable range of snow capped peaks that glisten under a regal blue sky and asks: “But for ganja, all we have is white snow and black rocks. What are we supposed to do if they take the farms away from us?”

In the mountains, the sun disappears in dramatic fashion, and by around three in the afternoon, a lush wash of crepuscular glow graces the ganja farms. Women and children light fires and do the last bit of rubbing for the day, while most men have by now retreated to the village square down below where they would gamble, drink and smoke, or engage in animated, masculine discussions on everything and nothing, or make a business deal or two.

At Gangabhai’s grocery shop, a group of five has already assembled: Paul and David, two charas fundamentalists, the former a man from Karnataka who runs a guesthouse in the village which has now been shut for the winter and the latter a vagabond from Mumbai and a friend of Paul who was arrested in 2009 with two kg of charas but was later acquitted—after being an undertrial for two years—on account of want of evidence; Karmi Bhai who considers the fabled Malana cream an overrated brand that may win the Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam year after year but whose ‘nasha’ will never measure up to that of the potent Rashol cream’s; Ramji, an old, sagely man whose nostalgia for the days of yore when ganja was a medicine translates into a propensity to regale his audience with pithy anecdotes; Gangabhai, the shop owner who is torn apart by the dilemma of choosing between the lucrative prospects of selling alcohol and the all consuming wrath of Renuka Matha if he does so—tradition forbids the villagers from selling alcohol and a fine of Rs 1000 is levied against the violators, though this has not prevented the rise of rampant alcoholism in the village.  

Karmi Bhai hands a piece of Rashol cream to David who crushes it assiduously and then mixes it with the tobacco that he has emptied out from a cigarette. A roach is made from the flap of the cigarette pack, and the mix of charas and tobacco is carefully placed on a long OCB rolling paper. As David rolls the joint, Karmi Bhai winces. “These papers are not really healthy to smoke. Charas is meant for chillums.” Paul nods his head in solemn agreement. “The sadhus always knew it.” Once the joint is ready, David hands it, as if like a religious offering, to Ramji who lights it, takes a long, hard drag and then says ‘Bom Bholenath’, the customary salutation to Lord Shiva who eons ago consumed sacrilegious amounts of Charas from the valley’s ganja forests and bowed in meek surrender to its mind altering essence, slumbering into a thousand-year-world of quiescence.

As the joint changes hands, the conversation picks up momentum. Whoever wins the polls, according to Ramji, should take immediate initiative to build a road to the village from Kasol. “A road will bring development to the village. More people will go out and work.” For Paul and David, outsiders to the village and runaways from a maddening society and its sophisticated traffic rules, the charm of Rashol is that of an antediluvian village snapped off from the rest of an ordinary world, and as such, the prospect of a road is one they dread. “Why do you need a road, Ramji?”, asks David. “Look at what happened to Malana after they got a road. Now the police come there every other day and they have lost their peace. A road to Rashol means easy access to the ‘kutlas’ for the police, and if there is no charas, how will the village survive?” At this point, Paul butts in with his pet theme: decriminalization of marijuana. “Ramji, whoever wins the polls, according to me, should take immediate initiative to press for the decriminalization of marijuana. If that happens, the villagers can cultivate ganja and sell charas without fear of the police. A road can wait.”

The conversation is interrupted by the entry of a drunken man who plonks his heavy army boots down on the shop’s floor. Dressed in a pair of faded blue jeans, a black t-shirt, a Calvin Klein feather down jacket and a baseball cap pointing backwards, Meenaram, the intruder, is a local legend; a man who rubs so fast that on good days he makes up to twenty tolas of charas, but who eschews its intoxication because he thinks it screws his head up; a whiskey addict whose boozy howls in the night swell and sink across the valley like cries of a wounded bird; a manic gambler who more often lives than dies by the dice he rolls. Clearly in the mood for some frolic, he offers a tola to Paul as ‘prasad’, then turns to Karmi Bhai and asks who he thinks would win the elections. “I go for Ram Singh (BJP)”, replies Karmi Bhai. Meenaram is rooting for the Raja, (Maheshwar Singh, the King of the valley and a former state BJP chief who is contesting from Kullu assembly segment on the ticket of the newly formed Himachal Lokhit Party, an outfit of BJP rebels founded by him) and after arguing for some time about the merits of the two candidates, both men, neither of them having cast their vote in the day, decide to bet on the winner for a whopping Rs 50,000, an amount not too big in the harvest season.

Before the group disperses from Gangabhai’s shop, Meenaram opens his wallet and pulls out a currency note of Venezuela which he got from a tourist in Kasol to whom he had sold charas worth Rs 30,000. He shows the note to Paul and says: “The people of this country snort cocaine using these notes, and so their government makes notes which too have some kick. I hope, our country also does something like that.”

***

Perched in the remote regions of Parvati valley in Kullu district, Himachal Pradesh, Rashol is a tiny hamlet that is home to around 1500 people, comprising mostly of upper caste Hindus whose adherence to a tradition seeped in a rhetoric of exclusivity is non-negotiable. Traditionally shepherds and herb hunters, they had their first tryst with the people of lower altitudes in the seventies when forces of modernity irrupted into their world in the form of charas that the radicalism of a disillusioned, guilt-stricken post-war Europe was craving for. Indeed, the story of Rashol is the story of an ancient, isolated mountain village whose visions of the mainstream world are framed by the tiny windows of its hallucinated houses; it is the story of how Italian Hippies, in their pursuit of a comfortably numb life that could be measured out with chillum drags, re-wrote the destiny of a people.

When the Italians first arrived in the valley, it was at the outskirts of Malana, Rashol’s neighbouring village, that they pitched their tents. Until then, ganja was used primarily for medicinal purposes—for both humans and their goats—and for making fabric and ropes from its sinewy fibre; the plant’s powers of intoxication sought mainly by wandering Sadhus. Italians taught them the art of rubbing charas from ganja and the rest is a legend called Malana that has been chronicled often enough—the world’s oldest republic and its myriad cultural idiosyncrasies, the village that produces the most expensive charas in the drug market—not to warrant one more telling.

Marriage brought charas to Rashol. Renuka Mata, the village’s patron goddess is the wife of Rishi Jamadagni, the patron god of Malana, a holy alliance that gave sanction to marriages between their people. The secret of Malana’s burgeoning economy was picked up by Rashol, and in no time the ganja forests were transformed into ‘kutlas’. There, though, is a vital factor that distinguishes the ganja farming cultures of Malana and Rashol. While Malana, which learned the practice of rubbing directly from the Italians, considered it as an art form on whose aesthetics much emphasis was placed, Rashol treated it as pure business; unlike Malana where charas smoking is a lifestyle of the people thus making the village an important consumer of its own product, Rashol views charas smoking as merely an avenue for recreation. And despite Malana’s recent espousal of the commercial path, the contrast in cultures is still starkly delineated; while Malana swears by quality, Rashol trusts the might of quantity. The eventual economic outcomes of both situations, though, are nearly identical.

***

Typically, the ganja farming in the valley consists of three phases, the first of which is in the month of April when the soil is ploughed and made ready. In the third week of September, the male plants are cut to prevent them from pollinating the female plants; the state of ruminative bliss that charas offers is a function of the unsullied feminine. Pollen is detrimental to the quality of charas, often wrecking the trip with sensations of nausea and tedium. Jack, a thirty year old guerilla ganja farmer—someone who grows ganja in land they do not own—from the United States who has been staying in Rashol with his Indian girlfriend for the last eight months has been urging the villagers to cut the male plants much early. “Third week of September is too late, by that time some pollination would have surely happened. They also need to cut the male plants more regularly, not just once like they do here.”

The rubbing season starts towards the end of September. Among charas producing communities, hand-harvesting is unique to India, sieving and filtering being the preferred modes in countries like Morocco and Nepal.  In the rarefied atmosphere of snowy mountains, rubbing charas is an art in meditation, one that asks from its practitioner penetrative powers of perception and hands that have a heart of their own. “What is in the hand comes from the love you have for the plant”, says Lakshmi, and Jack agrees. “Really, there is no reason why Malana cream should be better than Rashol cream. Both villages are at similar height, and the plants are of similar quality. It is the hand that separates Malana from Rashol.”

The objective of rubbing is to extract maximum oil content from the plant. The leaves are first removed with great care after which the buds and crystals of the stem are rubbed with tender force. Too much pressure will eke out water and chlorophyll from the plant, polluting the oil, while too little pressure will fail to extract any oil. Once a sufficiently thick layer of oil settles on the palm, it is scraped out into balls which are then packed in thin plastic bags and left to age. According to the extent of the oil content, the charas from the valley is classified as super cream, first cream, second cream, medium cream, business maal, sabjee and junglee. In recent times, the village, in addition to the hand rubbed charas, has been producing ‘ice’ too. ‘Ice’ is charas made using ice and filter—the ice takes out the water and plant material while the filter extracts the oil out.

Though children, women and men all rub during the season, women are acknowledged as the producers of the finest charas. “Everything about charas is womanly until it reaches a chillum”, says Lakshmi with a wry chuckle. But the women of the village do not smoke, preferring instead an occasional evening drink. “The men smoke and drink and gamble. If we too start smoking, the whole village will be asleep.” Incessant rubbing, though, means that the women too are bound to be sufficiently stoned with charas that is absorbed into their bloodstream through the skin.

Throughout the harvest season, Rashol, despite the high degree of insularity provided by the absence of a road, lives in fear of cops cutting their ‘kutlas’ down and depriving them of their sole livelihood option. Around 30% of the farms were destroyed this year alone, with newly appointed women cops taking charge of the destruction. According to Ashok Kumar, Superintendent of Police, Kullu,  regular police action has resulted in cultivation getting shifted to higher reaches that only skilled climbers can access. “In spite of the obstacles that we are met with, the success we managed is evident from the drastic reduction in area under cultivation in personal lands, something which was common earlier.” 

Inaccessibility is not the only test the police have to pass; they also have to front up to the physical might of the villagers. “If I go in mufti to the village and show them my ID card, they won’t care one bit”, says Sher Singh, sub-inspector at Jari, the nearest police station. “But the reality is whatever we do and how much ever we cut, ganja is ganja. It will still grow in the mountains.” Most significantly, since the relatives of most cops own farms themselves—in Himachal Pradesh, the rule states that the constable and the head constable will be posted only in their home districts­— the news of a likely raid reaches the villagers much before the police is able to reach them.

In addition to traditional farming, the police, according to SP Ashok Kumar, are also investigating the possibility of hybrid ganja farming where marijuana seeds from the valley are crossbred with marijuana varieties having high resin content, and then sold under different brands in the international market. Though they are yet to hone in on any firm evidence, it is widely understood that hybrid farming is done through a set of foreigners who gets the hybrid seeds and another set who stays back in the valley and conducts the farming with the assistance of locals. “Hybrid crop is probably a gift from foreigners to local people”, says the SP. “By seeing the shape, size, colour and time required to grow the plants, anybody can tell their nature. In some places, the ganja plants are more than 12-foot tall. Indian ganja does not grow that high. The police have requested the Forensic Lab to provide details about the plants this year, but it will take some time. We have information that a foreign company is selling marijuana seeds under the Kullu brand.”

Kumar says around 150-200 kg of charas, which amounts to nearly one-fifth of the gross produce, is seized on a yearly basis from Parvati valley. This year, 142 cases have so far been registered under NDPS (Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) Act. A draconian legislation (it even specifies the death penalty in certain cases), it was introduced in 1985 by the Rajiv Gandhi government which at the time was said to be under pressure by the United States administration to ban ganja. NDPS, which brought ganja, a plant that has been a part of spiritual and social culture in India, and other modern synthetic drugs under the purview of the same law, is held by many to be culpable for the valley’s transformation from a Shangri-la to India’s Colombia, from a dwelling house of lonely Gods to a playground for the international drug cartels. In Karmi Bhai’s words, “The government created a law to create a crime.”

The Italians set up shop shop as early as in the seventies, and still have a stranglehold over the European smuggling network. While those who smuggle minimal amounts of charas for personal consumption usually prefer to wrap it in plastic and swallow so that they can later crap it out, the mafia deals in elaborately convoluted modi operandi that often involve the deployment of massive creative ammunition, forcing even the Superintendent of Police to “confess” that “smugglers are smarter than the police.” The most common yet the hardest to bust mode of smuggling, he says, is one that is done through “the creation of bogus cavities.” Various ways have also been devised to evade the threat of sniffer dogs, raising the levels of challenge for the police drastically.

The Italian mafia, according to the villagers, operates through old timers who have made Old Manali, Tosh and Kasol their valley hubs, and who, in a real life pastiche of O. Henry’s Cop and the Anthem, get themselves frequently arrested with small quantities of charas so that they can extend their visa period. “We are well aware of the situation”, says SP Ashok Kumar, “and have started making a list of all foreigners involved in NDPS cases in the last few years. The list is being sent to the MHA (Ministry of Home affairs) so as to black list them from coming back to India.”

Following the Italian trail, the Japanese Hippies came to the valley in the early eighties and established their own network. The eighties witnessed a surge in drug trafficking (and a corresponding surge in the rate of other crimes) from the valley, a phenomenon that is sometimes traced to the nine-year long (December 1979-February 1989) Soviet intrusion in Afghanistan, a nation that until then was a prominent purveyor of hashish in the global drug market. In the mid-nineties, the Israelis started coming to the valley, soon converting Kasol into one of their many Little Israels in India, and setting up a Chabad House there; they too, the villagers and the police say, have a smoothly operating mafia network in place.

The first decade of the new millennium witnessed the prolific rise of the Indian mafia with Mumbai and Delhi as its lynchpins. According to Karmi Bhai, the finest charas from the valley is shared by the Italians and the filthy rich of Mumbai and Delhi. A tola (11.663 grams) of super cream that costs Rs 2500-Rs 4000 in the valley is sold for Rs 5000-Rs 8000 in Mumbai. A charas nexus exists, according to SP Ashok Kumar, between Goa and Parvati valley too; a contention corroborated by the claims made by certain young men of Rashol of their proximity with some high-flying DJ’s of Goa’s trance party circuit.

A young, corporate India’s flings with the perfunctory thrills of a backpack culture and its phony fascination for a bohemian fashion statement called the Himalayas has resulted in the rise of a local mafia within the valley: the café’s and guesthouses of Kasol. After Manali, Kasol is the favoured destination of Indian tourists in the valley; a Little Israel whose villagers are fluent speakers of Hebrew and whose cafes evoke cinematic images of a spooky underworld. A casual affair with charas from the Parvati valley is what most of these tourists hanker for and the subsequent upsurge in the demand of charas is what the café-guesthouse mafia of Kasol cashes in on. In what can be perceived as a microcosm of how the valley’s charas has segued into a marquee brand, ‘tolas’ of the worst quality the mafia buys from the valley’s villages are sold to Indian tourists as Super Cream for prices that are exorbitant but with which hardly any arguments are made. The villagers of Rashol are in perfect cognizance of the abuse their venerated product is subjected to, but they do not deem it necessary to take any sort of ethical responsibility for what is happening down below. “If that is what these tourists deserve, then so be it. It is their bad karma. In any case, even if they were given real Super Cream, they wouldn’t really be able to appreciate its quality. So what difference does it make?”, asks Karmi Bhai.

Esconced in the company of so many mafias, Rashol too has birthed a few of its own. But instead of institutionalized networks, the mafias of Rashol are quirky individuals; they are eleven year old kids like Choppu Mafia who has already established his alpha-maledom among other kids of the village through the speed of his rubbing and the profitability of the barter deals he strikes with travelers: five ‘tolas’ for a Sony camera, two ‘tolas’ for a football boot; or they are trippy twenty one year old chess mavericks like Keku Bhai, who at the age of fifteen reached the Israelis through charas, and then at sixteen reached LSD through Israelis, and at eighteen reached a rehab through LSD, who now at twenty one tells his lover at Malana that “I am your don, and I will call you my donness.”

**

Quantity of charas seized in the last decade:


Year
No: of Cases
No: of Persons Arrested
Quantity of Charas Seized
2001
92
111
160 Kg
2002
135
162
385 Kg
2003
111
124
146 Kg
2004
81
90
161 Kg
2005
67
79
124 Kg
2006
111
108
109 Kg
2007
52
63
66  Kg
2008
121
132
147 Kg
2009
130
169
209 Kg
2010
148
174
180 Kg

-Courtesy: Himachal Pradesh Police

***

Incredibly enough, for a valley that is synonymous with charas, the quantity of charas that is now pumped into it from the outside tops the quantity of charas that is produced in the valley, an upshot of the staggering rise in the global demand for Parvati charas. Most of it comes from Nepal, and reaches the valley through Nepali labourers who are hired for the harvest season. The Nepali charas which has high pollen content is then mixed with Parvati charas, and sometimes the ratio of the mix is such that a tola of super cream that costs Rs 4000 could just be a chunk of Nepali maal coated with a flimsy film of Parvati charas for the effects of colour and aroma. While for a casual smoker, it is virtually impossible to discern mixed maal from pure Parvati, even a knowledgeable smoker would find it an onerous task to identify mixed maal from just its smell and colour. The only proof of charas is in the smoking; if pure Parvati flows inside the head like a pristine stream, the mixed maal thunders like a violent sea.

Usually, Nepali labourers are hired for Rs 500 per day. Farmers with large kutlas sometimes give a portion of their land to the Nepali labourer and employ him for Rs 300 per day to work in the rest of the farm. The charas made from the portion of land allotted to the labourer is sold to the farmer who owns the land. “It works better for us that way, it is the safe option. To get into the business of selling and dealing with the mafia is dangerous for us”, says Vikas, a labourer who came to the valley from Nepal a year ago. “And trust me, it is not just Nepali maal that is mixed here, even goat shit would do sometimes,” he giggles. After the day’s work, Vikas works as a cook in a village guesthouse. This year, he left for Nepal a week before the official wrapping up of the season—the season ends with the ritual of offering a goat to Renuka Matha. Two days later, he came back to the village empty handed after he was badly beaten up on his way in Manali and looted of everything he had earned over a season’s sweat and toil. Lighting a beedi filled with charas scraped from a tola of the purest of pure super cream he made for himself, he wonders what they mean when they say “Ye Parvati hai, yahaan pe sab shanti shanti!

Down the valley, Parvati the Princess of Mountains, an enigmatic mélange of fury and indifference, flows like a raging dancer, sometimes enlightening a crippled Baba who has run away from the sea to her banks, sometimes carrying the tattered corpse of a white woman down its foaming, mica-flecked, turquoise course. For Parvati, beauty is the alter ego of her violence.

***

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Down Under In A Boat

(Published in Fountain Ink-October, 2012)


Sri Lanka’s Tamils are caught in a crisis without end. The end of the civil war has made their search for refugee status in the West harder. So the more enterprising and more desperate see the long and perilous journey by sea to Australia as the only way to get a life.

***


Gemini doesn’t know if it was a dream crushed or a nightmare averted. He won’t try his luck again, not anytime soon. But he is not sure. “Or maybe I will,” he says. Rathnavel, his friend, has no doubts. “I’ll take the boat again,” he says, with a flinty indifference that is a poignant reminder of his and his people’s tragedy. His obstinacy is not fuelled by the promises of a glorious dream to a prodigal fortune hunter, but by the reconciliations a refugee is forced to make with the lifelessness of his everyday circumstances. “This place is like an open jail. Where is life here? And if I go back to Sri Lanka, I know what fate awaits a Tamil there.”

Gemini and Rathnavel were two of the 151 people—including 19 women, 22 children, three Indian nationals and 28 Sri Lankan Tamils with passports—detained by Kerala police from a fishing boat off the Kollam coast on June 4. The boat was to take them to Christmas Island in Australia, 1,500 kilometres west of the nearest point on the mainland. The island is the port of call for asylum seekers, the Promised Land for Tamil refugees from both Sri Lanka and the camps in Tamil Nadu.

The sea was violent—the monsoon had just set in—and the dilapidated boat named Kottaram (Palace) was not good enough for even the most tranquil of waters. The asylum-seekers, almost all the 151 of them, were crammed into the “ice boxes”, which is the boat’s fish hold. “The moment I got into one of those ice boxes, I knew we wouldn’t make it. Maybe everyone felt the same. But we still were hoping,” says Gemini.

Gemini and Rathnavel, inmates of the Puzhal refugee camp in Chennai, had paid Rs.50,000 each to their agent, a fellow resident of Puzhal camp. They were told to reach Kollam by bus via Madurai and Thenkasi. “The agent asked me to take infants too with me, if I had any in my family. Apparently, if there are infants things become easier once the boat hits Christmas Island. We hear that if there are women and children, the detention period won’t be long and asylum will be provided in quick time,” says Rathnavel. They were asked to destroy all their ID cards, and were instructed to tell the Australian authorities that they were from Jaffna and not from a refugee camp in Tamil Nadu. “There’s nothing new in this story,” says Gemini. “People have been going from these camps to Australia for a long time now. Some boats reach Australia; some are lost at sea. But when we hear from those who reached Australia, it’s easy to forget about those who didn’t make it. Life is great in Australia. They get good houses to stay, and a PR (permant resident status) is not difficult. It’s hard not to be lured by the money they send to their relatives in camps.”

“And once we reach Australia, we can travel around the world too,” adds Rathnavel.

***


Intense coastal security and patrolling off Palk Straits has seen the Kerala coast emerge as the new operating base for human trafficking networks. According to Thomson Jose, Assistant Superintendent of Police, Kollam, the geographical peculiarities of the Kerala coast, particularly Kollam, make it extremely difficult for police and the coast guard to thwart such operations. “Earlier the boats left from spots in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh—Mangalore, Kanyakumari, Nagapattinam, Cuddalore, Pondicherry, Chennai, Kakinada and Vizag. But after a couple of operations were busted by the Q department (Internal security wing of Tamil Nadu CID), the agents shifted their base to Kollam and Kerala. The fact that Kollam has a strong Tamil fishing community means it’s almost impossible, unless we have prior information, to track these refugees. In Tamil Nadu, they are easily identified as Sri Lankan refugees. But here they pass off as Tamil fishermen. Also, unlike Tamil Nadu, the large number of ferry points along the Kollam coast, makes it easy for the agents to board the people in small, different groups, thus avoiding suspicion.”

Another significant factor aiding human trafficking here is the easy availability of boats. Neendakara harbour in Kollam is one of the prominent boat trading centres in South India. “The ease of procuring the boats,” the ASP says, “is what has made Kollam such an attractive spot for the trafficking agents. But after the recent cases we have now made it mandatory for all boat transactions to be registered at the police station. As a result, the trade has slowed down considerably.”

Alex, owner of the fishing boat Kottaram, was approached by his neighbour and friend Das—Das was later arrested for abetting the trafficking racket—who asked him if he was interested in selling the boat to four Tamil fishermen. Alex had bought the boat three years ago and had been neck-deep in debt since. When he was offered Rs. 13 lakh—a price he now agrees that his boat did not command—he readily agreed. “Perhaps, I should have been more cautious,” says Alex. “But it was too good an offer to refuse and I was so much in debt that I had no other option but to sell my boat.” The deal took place on June 1; on June 4 Alex was arrested. He now works in a boat yard, his job is to paint boats. He often wonders how he will raise the money to fight his case.

The boat didn’t have too much going for it. Its body was made of iron, which over time had acquired the colour of rusted orange. It had six “ice boxes” or fish holds, and a rectangular wooden cabin painted blue and white for the “Sraank” or the captain and his crew. Worn and frayed tyres of various sizes hung from its railings. Next to the cabin there was space for the fishing net. In this condition it could take a fishing expedition or two, but not more. Kottaram had to be made ready for its voyage to the Australian coast. At a yard near Neendakara harbour it was modified and repaired. Space was set aside for women and children, makeshift toilets were constructed, and within the claustrophobic confines of this battered boat a place was found to store food and drinking water—for 151 people. In its life as a fishing boat, a rather small one at that, Kottaram had never carried more than 10 people. It was structurally strengthened too. The bottom of the boat was gouged out and replaced with a hunk of metal. Two fuel tanks were added for its transcontinental journey.

These changes, it was hoped, would make this fishing boat which had never ventured too far from the local seas sail to Australia with 151 people on board in a season when the ocean is unwelcoming.

Two locals were hired to navigate the tricky backwaters, to lead Kottaram to the sea. Huge tins of food—bread, jam, pickle, and dry fruits—were loaded along with cans of drinking water. No one really believed that the rations would last the trip. (Modifcations would not prove to be enough, either. The boat started leaking the day after it was seized by the police.)  “When I got into the ice box, I wondered if this was the boat that would take me all the way to Australia, or whether there would be another bigger ship waiting in the outer sea for us,” says Rathnavel. “I had no idea how the food or the fuel was going to last for so long a journey. There were women and children and even a couple of babies on board and there was hardly any breathing space. I knew that the sea was rough too, and all sorts of things crossed my mind.”

The passengers couldn’t sit inside the fish holds. They were told to stand inside, toe-on-toe till Kottaram reached the high seas. The hold was not deep enough for an adult to stand, and it had no ventilation either. Once on the high seas, refugees could come out on deck, breathe fresh air and soak in the emptiness of the horizon over which lay Chirtsmans Island.

The refugees were asked by the agent to split into groups, with each group assigned specific boarding points. The incident came to light when a group of young men at Mukkadupally Kadavu noticed a group of panicked refugees running towards the ferry point near Mukkadupally Church at around 10 p.m. Describing the scene as one of the strangest he has seen in his life, Gilbert, one of the witnesses, says: “After the day’s work, it is usual for us to sit here by the backwater and have some toddy. Then we saw two autorickshaws stopping near the church, people getting down and people running towards the ferry point in a state of great panic. Just a while earlier we had noticed a boat coming to the diesel pump and leaving in a jiffy. (Kottaram had taken 4,000 litres of diesel there. There were two additional fuel cans in the boat which were to be filled with diesel somewhere en route.) But since fishing boats go to the sea at night too, we weren’t too bothered about that. The group—there were around 15 of them including two girls—then told us that they were supposed to go in that boat to Australia and that they had given whatever they had to their agent and were now left out of the journey. We informed the police immediately. The people were then taken to the priest’s room where they were crying and yelling.”

The boat was intercepted near Neendakara harbour. The captain and the agents, according to the police, had by then escaped. People at the harbour were stunned to see police take the refugees out of the boat. Even the police were taken aback by the number of people inside the boat. The deck was littered with abandoned plastic sandals, drenched clothes of adults and children, and mobile phones. “It was like a scene straight of a Mani Rathnam movie,” says Gilbert. When Rathanvel is told of this, he says dryly, “I am not a movie buff.” 

***

Before he left for Kollam from Puzhal camp, Gemini was advised by one of his close friends who had reached Australia in January after a similar boat journey to “not to think about anything, not even about food or water” while on the boat. Gemini’s friend was fortunate to have a relatively safe journey, the sea was rough only in the last three days. According to Gemini, his friend had made peace with all the potential deaths—death by sickness, death by starvation, death by drowning, death by murder and even death by suicide—that lay in store for him Yet, even without thinking about anything, it was difficult for him to find some sleep. “He said he must have slept for about 20 hours during the 16-day voyage. I had no idea what he meant when he asked me to stop thinking about anything. But once I got into the boat, I realised that it was not that difficult a thing to do. I knew that whatever happened from that point, it would be a second life for me. And that was exactly the feeling I had when the police took us out of the boat at Neendakara.”

Gemini had decided not to tell any of his relatives in the camp, or his parents in Talaimannar, or his girlfriend in Colombo about his voyage. A father and two sons from a family that stays next to Gemini’s shed—a matchbox sized hut made of cement and tin sheets—set sail for Australia a couple of years ago and have since been missing. “The boat must have capsized. Or they must have died inside the boat. Or maybe it could be like one of the stories we hear where they say people are dumped into the sea for dissenting. But the family still thinks that those missing members will one day call them from somewhere or come back to their camp,” Gemini says, pointing at the youngest boy of that family.

On his friend’s advice, Gemini also decided to pack his bag light—clothes, a couple of books and some money. He wanted to take more money, but decided against it. Some of the others in the boat, though, had stuffed their bags with whatever money and jewellery they had. One reason for this, Gemini says, could be that some of the refugees would be asked by their agents to pay a part of their payment once they reach Australia. “I don’t know much about that. I was asked to pay the whole Rs. 50,000 at one go. But a couple of others in the camp who were also in the boat later told me that they were asked to pay Rs. 50,000 to the agent here and the rest to someone in Australia.”

The possibility of an international trafficking network is highlighted by ASP Thomson Joseph too. “Though we cannot divulge too much information, our investigation reveals a well-oiled network in place. It would be impossible for agents to traffic refugees from India to Australia without the assistance of people in Australia. We are also investigating the possibility of bigger ships stationed at deep sea which help these boats to fill fuel or even take the people in the boats to Australia.”

The first major arrest made in connection with the smuggling of Sri Lankan Tamil refugees was that of Arumainayagam Soundarajan’s (a.k.a Italy Rajan) in April 2010. Rajan landed in Tamil Nadu after his network that smuggled asylum seekers from the coasts of Sri Lanka was busted. According to a Q department official of the Tamil Nadu police who requested anonymity, Rajan recruited agents and sub-agents from various refugee camps across Tamil Nadu and sent people from the coasts of Mangalore, Kakinada, Kanyakumari, Kochi and Kollam. Ex-LTTE cadres were assigned the task of navigation as they had in-depth of knowledge of sea lanes. After Rajan was nabbed by the Q department, various agents started operating independently, enticing refugees with offers like “citizenship on arrival”.

Both Rathnavel and Gemini, though, dismiss the police version of agents luring inmates of refugee camps with various package deals. “Everyone wants to go,” says Rathnavel. “It is not as if these so called agents come scouting for us. In fact in most case, as in mine, we are the ones who seek out our agents. I have my relatives in Australia who had gone earlier this year. They were the one who had asked me to contact this particular agent.” As for the allegations raised by some like S C Chandrahasan, who heads the NGO OfERR (Organisation for Eelam Refugees Rehabilitation), that the agents are making a fortune out of the misery of the refugees, Rathnavel says: “I really don’t care if these people are making money or not. Most of us are willing to mortgage or sell everything we have to make this voyage. These agents are the ones who are taking the risks. They are the ones who will be arrested if the plan fails. We will either die or reach Australia or will be sent back to our camps. It is not as if we don’t know that what the reality is, or the agents are duping us. Everyone makes money in different ways.”

***

Reports in the media and the pronouncements of governments on the trafficking of people while ignoring the everyday life of refugees sickens Gemini. The issue, he says, cannot be grasped if one turns a blind eye to the life in the camps. “In the last two months, I have often wondered if those ice boxes in the fishing boats that take us to Australia are strange symbols of our own lives in the camps. Refugee camps are not how ordinary human societies are meant to be like,” says Gemini who holds a Masters degree in Computer Science and was employed with a leading private bank in Sri Lanka before he was forced to seek asylum in 2008. He, along with Rathnavel, now work as daily wage labourers in an onion exporting factory. “The Indian government does a lot for us. No question about that. We are given shelter, electricity and water and I know there are lakhs of Indians who can’t afford even that. But you must also remember that a lot of the refugees in these camps are well educated. Because of the way our camps are structured, and because of our refugee status, we can only work as daily labourers. It’s only human that such highly educated people would seek other options where they can put their skills to better use and secure themselves financially,” he says.

Comparing the conditions of Tibetan and Sri Lankan refugees, Athithan Jayapalan, part of the larger Sri Lankan diaspora and currently studying social anthropology in Norway, suggests that the Tibetan refugee situation and the rights they enjoy must be set as a model which, with no delay, should also be extended to the Sri Lankan Tamils.

“In many places in India such as Bengaluru, Delhi, Goa, Puducherry and Udhagamandalam (Ooty), Tibetans run shops of various kinds, though most of their businesses seem to be confined to the marketing of garments and ornaments. It is only because they enjoy the right to employment that they are independently involved in economic activities that sustain their lives.

“In stark comparison is the life faced by Tamil refugees in India. As soon as they arrive in the country, they are registered with the police and then holed up in refugee camps that are congested, difficult to live in and lack basic facilities such as toilets, water, and educational institutions. There are frequent processes of registration and checkups by police and security authorities that creates an atmosphere where Sri Lankan Tamil refugees are rendered as a collectively criminalised community.

“Their legal inability to work structurally ensures they are collectively looked upon as an exploited, informal and unorganised labour force. This limits money procurement, which in turn restricts the educational pursuit of many. Refugee youth then turn to ‘kooli vela’ (daily wage labourers). Those who do not have family members in the Tamil diaspora are also obliged to look after their families in Sri Lanka too, thus adding further complications. They are often left with no choice but to stay on and become subject to the oppressive conditions in the camps, since they can neither return to Sri Lanka, nor leave India to go elsewhere.”

The mass exodus of Sri Lankan Tamil refugees to India started in 1983 following the anti-Tamil pogroms that killed thousands. As the situation in war-ravaged Jaffna deteriorated, the rate of migration too intensified. Currently, over 68,000 Sri Lankan Tamils live in 111 camps spread across Tamil Nadu, while around 30,000 are estimated to be living outside the camps. In addition to coming to terms with the decrepit living conditions in the camps—cramped living space, dearth of employment opportunities, abject poverty—the refugees, Gemini says, also have to deal with the ramifications of a rapidly disintegrating moral structure of their society.

“Alcoholism has become rampant. Also, there are a lot of illicit affairs that go on in the camps, resulting in crumbling marriages and frequent fights. It is not just the lure of economic benefits that make us risk our lives and undertake this impossible voyage; it is also the lure of a normal social life.”

The situation perhaps is best explained by Police Inspector Y Kamarudheen who brought the 123 rescued Sri Lankan refugees (28 were remanded to judicial custody) from Kollam to Palayamkottai from where they were sent back to their respective camps. “The refugees kept telling us it was better to die or to be put in prison than to go back to the camps, ” he says.

With the recent cases of refugee smuggling from the southern coast of India, the police and the Intelligence wings are also probing the possibility of the LTTE trying to re-group, with Australia and Canada as their new bases. According to ASP Thomson Jose, the likelihood of a couple of LTTE cadres sneaking into boats that ferry refugees cannot be overlooked. He points out that there were people on the boat who were being taken for free. “If this was merely a human trafficking racket, it is only logical that everyone pays something to the agent. But when the refugees were questioned, some of them said that they had not paid anything. It suggests something fishy.” The ASP also says that the expertise of ex- LTTE cadres in navigating the ocean is also likely to be used by the agents. “The local people involved in this case were assigned to take the boat through the backwater tracks to the sea. Once the vessel reached the open sea their job was supposed to be over. “To navigate the boat across the oceans, one requires sufficient knowhow, which is what LTTE cadres possess. So though nothing has been proven as yet, the fact remains that the trafficking of Sri Lankan Tamils refuges does pose security threats. No one really knows how many boats have gone from here.”

The suggestion of the LTTE being involved in refugee trafficking elicits contrasting responses from Gemini and Rathnavel. Gemini wonders if he, as a Sri Lankan Tamil, can live anywhere in the world without in some way being suspected of association with the LTTE. “It is the easiest way to make sure we’re ostracised. I tell you that I am a Tamil and I am from Sri Lanka and you ask me what I have got to do with LTTE.” Rathnavel’s response is bereft of any equivocation. “In India my political status is that of a refugee. I am a Sri Lankan citizen. In Sri Lanka, the Sinhalese consider Mahinda Rajapaksa their hero. I am a Sri Lankan Tamil. And I consider Prabhakaran as my hero. I don’t care one bit what others think about that.”

***

According to figures issued by the Australian Department of Immigration, the number of asylum-seekers arriving by boat to Australia has hit a new record high in 2012. Till July this year, 6,765 people arrived by boat. The previous high was recorded in 2010 when 6,555 people came. Stephen Smith, Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, in an interview with Amanda Hodge, South Asian correspondent for The Australian, said: “If people come to Australia and they’re not refugees, they’re sent back home. If they are refugees and they are processed in accordance with our international legal obligations, if they are refugees they are given that status. We are a long standing signatory to the Refugee Convention. We don’t just comply with our international law requirements, we regard that as an obligation to do so and we do. But, what we also have to do is, Australians and the Australian government want to make sure there is integrity in our immigration process and that includes in our refugee process. Historically it is something which has always caused concern for Australians.”

In addition to Christmas Island, there’s a recent trend among Tamils and refugee smuggling networks to sail to Cocos Island. The voyage to Cocos Island is about 1,000 kilometres shorter than Christmas island. Consequently, the Cocos Islands’ animal quarantine station has been co-opted as temporary accommodation for asylum-seekers. Those who arrive at Cocos Island now stay there for a short time before being flown to Christmas Island.  Contrary to the portrayals of a peaceful and prosperous life in Australia, there are reports that paint a grim picture of the life in detention centres. There have been mass protests by Tamils against the inordinate delays in processing Tamil refugees and granting visas. People have been diagnosed with chronic depression and suicides too have been reported from detention centres.

Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan navy has requested the Australian government to send back large numbers of asylum-seekers as a solution to the menace of refugee smuggling. According to Sri Lankan Naval intelligence director Nishantha Ulugetenne, sending just one man back from Australia (in June 2012, Dayan Anthony became the first Tamil to be deported to Sri Lanka) will not help. “More than 1500 Sri Lankans have landed in Australia in the last six months. What are you going to do with them? Screen them one by one?” he has been quoted as saying.

Last August, the Julia Gillard government, in an effort to tackle the increasing problem of refugees being smuggled into Australian shores, announced new legislation, with the thrust being on removing incentives for asylum-seekers. Some of the major recommendations include the reopening of Nauru and Manus Island offshore processing centres and the extension of visa waiting times, which make it harder for successful asylum-seekers to obtain family reunion visas. Correspondingly, the number of humanitarian visas available each year to refugees applying through traditional channels will rise to 20,000.

***

After the smuggling operation was busted in Kollam last June, police have foiled several more attempts in the months that followed to smuggle refugees out of Karaikal, Nagapattinam and Mangalore. On September 8, the Mangalore police, in an overnight operation nabbed the vessel Shreerajksha, which was carrying 97 people including 95 refugees to Australia. The refugees came from camps near Chennai, Madurai, Pudukottai, Palar Anicut, Tirunelveli, and Hosur in Tamil Nadu. Six thousand litres of fuel was stocked in the boat. According to the police, it was the third attempt of that particular group to migrate, after two earlier attempts to set sail from Kerala were foiled. On September 14, fishermen from Nagapattinam rescued 61 Sri Lankan Tamils and four Sinhalese who were marooned in open seas after the engine of the boat carrying them to Australia developed a snag. The stranded Lankans were on a mechanised boat 120 nautical miles from the Nagapattinam. The rescued, during investivation, told the police that a travel agency had offered to take them to Australia without legal documents. On the third day of their journey, the GPS failed, upon which they abandoned the voyage to Australia and instead decided to return to Nagapattinam. But later, the engine too failed which left them stranded in mid-sea.

According to Gemini and Rathnavel, there have been more boats that have set sail to Australia in the recent months. A couple of friends who were with them on the boat that was intercepted at Kollam managed to reach Australia in July. It is the Great Australian Dream, Gemini says, and it won’t be wiped out till the last Tamil refugee is wiped out. But for those left behind life in the camps repeats its asphyxiating patterns every day. Occasionally, they find something to indulge in. The T20 World Cup in Sri Lanka is a welcome distraction. Interestingly, neither of them count Mutthiah Muralitharan as a Sri Lankan Tamil icon. “He is more an Indian Tamil. The way he speaks Tamil is not how we speak Tamil,” says Gemini, who is a Sanath Jayasuriya fan.  Rathnavel’s lips purse into one of his signature acerbic smiles. “Australia, you know, is the  country that no-balled Muralitharan.”

(Gemini and Rathnavel are not the real names of these men)