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From: "cpimllib" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 22:38:39 +0530
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;@tonto.eunet.fi>
Subject: [  INDIA] ML Update, Vol:4; No.7; 14 2 2001.

  
ML Update

A CPI(ML) Weekly News Magazine

Vol.-4; No.-7; 14-2-2001

 

 

Of Electoral Realignment and Political Credibility
 

As the countdown begins for the coming round of Assembly elections, the
process of political realignments has begun to gather momentum. The PMK of
Tamil Nadu has fired the first salvo by quitting the NDA and jumping on to
the Jayalalitha bandwagon. The amicable separation of the five PMK MPs from
the NDA does not however pose any immediate threat to the survival chances
of the reigning coalition at the Centre. Moreover, the PMK has promised to
jump to the NDA government's rescue should any threat really arise. If the
BSP had earlier set up new standards of political opportunism by entering
into an alternating arrangement of power-sharing with the BJP in UP, the PMK
has now surpassed the BSP with this unique combination of secularism below
and communalism above!

The PMK-AIADMK bonhomie may however end up putting off the Congress, TMC and
the emerging dalit outfits in Tamil Nadu from a possible grand alliance
against the DMK. The PMK has got a strong pro-LTTE image and it will
therefore be rather difficult for the Congress or TMC to accept it as a poll
partner. The dalit organisations too are known to be ill at ease with the
kind of aggressive backwardism symbolised by the PMK. The only affordable
alternative for the Congress and TMC may therefore be to forge a third
front. It will be interesting to watch the response of the CPI(M) and CPI to
such an eventuality. The two old communist parties are keen advocates of a
Congress-TMC-AIADMK tie-up, but now with the PMK virtually precluding such a
line-up, the CPI and CPI(M) will have to choose between the Congress and
AIADMK or opt for going it alone.

Another state where the two old communist parties have a difficult choice
ahead is Assam. Here the CPI and CPI(M) are still formally partners of the
ruling AGP-led alliance. Meanwhile, the AGP is getting increasingly closer
to the BJP. On the Ayodhya motion, the party sided with the BJP in the Rajya
Sabha. Not only BJP leaders but also Hindutva hawks like Shiv Sena MP Sanjay
Nirupam have addressed a couple of recent AGP rallies in the state.
Interestingly, it is the CPI, which has taken strong exception to the AGP's
growing pro-BJP stance, primarily because in the concrete electoral
conditions of Assam, the party can benefit more from an understanding or
adjustment with the Congress. In fact, the Congress has invited the Left to
join hands in a secular alliance; an offer, which has already found declared
favour with the CPI. The CPI(M) however can gain more from a continuing
tie-up with the AGP and the party therefore has not been able to summon any
greater courage than asking the AGP to 'clarify' its position vis-à-vis the
BJP. The request for clarification has however been turned own with obvious
contempt by even junior AGP spokespersons.

Both in Tamil Nadu and Assam, the only honourable course left for the Left
is to fight the polls as an independent, united Left bloc. Any electoral
alliance or adjustment with either AIADMK or the Congress in Tamil Nadu, and
with the AGP or the Congress in Assam, will only erode the already declining
credibility of the two old communist parties.

 

 

Sankalp Sabha Held at Mairwa in Bihar

 

A Sankalp Sabha (Pledge-taking meeting) was held on 7 February at Mairwa
block of Siwan district in Bihar in memory of eight comrades who laid down
their lives fighting against Satish Pandey-Suresh Yadav gang (patronised by
BJP-Samata) on 1 February. Thousands of people came to attend it from
distant villages. Before addressing the meeting Party Gen. Secy. Com.
Dipankar Bhattacharya and Convenor of Bihar Pradesh Khet Mazdoor Sabha Com.
Rameshwar Prasad met the families and neighbours of the martyrs at
Jagdishpur village where the incident had taken place. Recalling their
revolutionary optimism Com. Dipankar observed that despite the massacre,
cinders of life still carry fire under the ash and asserted that the
sacrifices will never go in vain and ultimately victory belongs to us.
Exhorting the people to plunge in thousands into the struggle along the path
shown by these heroes, he said that the struggle belongs to all those who
are aggrieved by the incident, and they all should come forward.

 

 

CPI(ML) Condemns Rajauri Massacre

 

While strongly condemning the incident of massacre of 15 villagers in
Rajouri district of Jammu and Kashmir, Party said that the NDA govt. led by
BJP has completely failed in restoring normalcy in J&K and breaking the
political impasse in the state. And so it has failed to protect the lives of
the common people. The Party blamed the NDA govt. for playing a dirty
political game on Kashmir that has resulted in these massacres.

 

 

CPI(ML)-AISA Team Returns from Bhuj

 

The CPI(ML)-AISA team led by Com. Ranjan Ganguli and comprising AISA members
from Delhi University (DU) and JNU returned from Bhuj district of Gujarat on
12 February where they had spent 11 days taking part in rescue and relief
work. The experiences of the team were an eye-opener, revealing the
extremely shocking attitude of the government machinery. From the very
beginning the team had to argue its way against a reluctant administration
asking them to go back because they didn't need hands. For its failure in
rescuing tens of thousands of victims as well as in keeping a check on mafia
responsible for non-distribution of relief materials, Gujarat government
must have been summarily dismissed, they opined. At Lalam College complex in
Bhuj, where AISA activists helped International Red Cross set up a 1000-bed
hospital, some 50,000 blankets were lying at one side in packets and barely
50 meters away hundreds of relatives of the poor patients were shivering in
cold under the open sky, until AISA activists discovered them and after a
heated exchange with the authorities, managed to provide blankets.

In Lakher, a village 60 km from Bhuj, the team gave Rs.5000 from its relief
fund for rebuilding of Madarsa in the village. Moreover, AISA activists
competently served every job, from manning the OPD registration to handling
pharmacy and X-Ray, erection of tents or other infrastructural job. They
also went to remote areas with ambulance to identify and bring victims to
the hospital.

 

 

Assam Hill Solidarity Day Observed All Over India

Massive Procession and Dharna in Assam

 

The CPI (ML) observed 'Assam Hill Solidarity Day' and held protests in
Delhi, Guwahati, Calcutta, Patna and several other centres of the country
against, what the Party calls, "the nexus between the Congress and the
extremist groups like UPDS in Assam and the ongoing conspiracy of this nexus
to destabilise the democratically elected Karbi-Anglong Autonomous Council
in the state". The CPI (ML) also urged the President of India to recommend
for the immediate implementation of Article 244-A of the Indian Constitution
in relation to the demand for an autonomous state comprising the hill
districts of Karbi-Anglong and N.C. Hills.

Observing the day in Assam, when the Assembly opened its budget session, a
massive procession participated in by around 10,000 people started from
Rajgarh Bihutoli to reach the Assembly at Dispur covering 6 k.m of busy RG
Baruah Road in Guwahati. The procession converted into dharna in front of
Assam Assembly. It was addressed by Com. Swadesh Bhattacharya, Party Polit
Bureau member, ASDC General Secy. and MLA Com. Hemsing Tisso, Selawar Bey,
Secy. of Karbi Anglong Party Committee, Com. Ranoj Pegu, Gen. Secy. of
Mising Memag Kebang, Bhuban Pegu, President of TMKP, Prakanta Warisa, Vice
President of ASDC and MP(R.S.), Rajatmoni Thousen, Gen. Secy. of DSU,
Pratima Ingtipi, Gen. Secy. of KNCA, Com. Subhas Sen, Secy. of AICCTU,
Loknath Goswami, Gen. Secy. of Sadou Asom Janasanskritik Parishad, Kanaklata
Dutta, Secy. of Sadou Asom Pragatisheel Nari Santha, Depulal Hojai, EM of NC
Hills Autonomous Council, Maikan Rongpharpi and Rongmili Hojai of DWS and
Baliandra Saikia, Secy. of AISA. A delegation led by CPI(ML) Assam State
Secy. Com. Rubul Sarma, Hemsing Tisso and Depolal Hojai submitted a
memorandum to the Governor of Assam and the Speaker of Assam Assembly. The
memorandum demanded immediate arrest of the culprits involved in mass
killings in Karbi Anglong and NC Hills and immediate high level enquiry into
the killing of JM Basumatary, EM of KAAC and the relation of Cong(I)-BJP
leaders and Holiram Terang's group with UPDS-DHD armed outfits and immediate
effective steps by the Government of Assam to stop mass killings in the Hill
Districts, seizure of illegal arms from the extremist outfits and provide
license and guns free of cost to the common people for their self-defence,
apart from recommending immediate implementation of Art. 244-A of Indian
Constitution and creation of Autonomous State comprising Karbi Anglong and
NC Hills.

 

 

Demonstration in Delhi

 

CPI (ML) activists and supporters led by Party leaders Kumudini Pati,
Rajendra Pratholi, Ranjit Abhigyan, Rajiv Dimri, Jeeta Kaur and Santosh Roy
held a demonstration near the Assam Niwas. Later, a delegation of the Party
handed over a memorandum addressed to the Assam Governor to the Resident
Commissioner of Assam Niwas. CPI (ML) sent another memorandum to the
President of India.

 

 

Demonstration in Calcutta

 

A demonstration was staged before Assam Bhaban at Calcutta, led by Com.
Joyatu Deshmukh, Dhiresh Goswami, Amit Dasgupta and others. Speakers
strongly condemned the ongoing conspiracy by Congress(I)-UPDS to destabilise
the elected council and disrupt people's harmony and the Autonomus State
movement and expressed their solidarity with the movement. A memorandum
addressed to the Governor of Assam was handed over to the chief of Assam
Bhaban which carries a number of signatures of eminent personalities
including Jyotiprakash Chatterjee, Maitreyi Devi, Jiad Ali, Imanul Haq,
Swaswati Ghosh etc.

 

 

Statewide Black Day Observed in Bihar

 

Party activists and leaders throughout the state wore black badges observing
Black Day in Bihar protesting against the killings of Bihari workers in
Assam and attempts to destabilise the Autonomous Council in Karbi Anglong. A
memorandum signed by Party senior leaders as well as leaders of CPI, CPI(M),
Forward Bloc, RSP, MCPI, SUCI etc. addressed to Assam Governor was handed
over to Governor of Bihar by a delegation comprising Com. Ram Naresh Ram,
Ramjatan Sharma, KD Yadav and RN Thakur.

 

 

Party Condemns Killing of Left Leader in U.P.

 

Gulab, leader of Rashtriya Janwadi Morcha, a left organisation, was killed
by police in a fake encounter in Sonebhadra district of U.P. on 7 February.
Condemning this as a political murder, UP State Committee demanded that the
police campaign of killing left leaders in adivasi areas of Sonebhadra,
Mirzapur and Chandauli must be stopped. Party appealed to other left and
democratic forces as well as human rights organisations to put their weight
on the state government for the same. It is to be noted that Gulab did not
belong to MCC as claimed by police but he had a number of false cases
against him as he was fighting for adivasi and dalit peasants and workers.
He had contested from Naugarh for the post of member of district Panchayat.
U.P. Khet Mazdoor Sabha and peasant associations will observe statewide
protest day against this killing on 14 February. A People's Union for Human
Rights (PUHR) team has also visited Robertsganj.

 

 

The Builder-Politician Nexus

 

Admits one official: "The minister's links with the builder are well-known.
We are under pressure to spare him..."

Investigations by Outlook reveal that literally a quarter of Gujarat cabinet
are backers of land sharks. Apart from Vajubhai Wala, the other political
heavyweight-turned-builder is water resources minister Narottam Patel.
According to preliminary inquiries, he has been linked to Girish Patel,
another big builder charged for negligence and culpable homicide in two cses
filed last fortnight. In Girish's case too, the structure that he built were
found unstable, ther was no preliminary checking of the soil to examine
whether it was stable or not, building bye-laws were flauted with impunity.

Sources say the corruption begins at the very top. Chief minister Keshubhai
Patel's son Bharat Patel is regarded as one of the biggest property
developers in the state and runs a flourishing multi-crore business, with
able assistance, no doubt, from papa and his close men. And the irony is
that Keshubhai himself rode to power on a strong anti-corruption plank.
(Outlook, February 19, 2001)

 

 

Seminar in Muzaffarpur

 

A seminar on "Agrarian crisis and Means of resolution" was organised by
Muzaffarpur unit of Bihar Pradesh Kisan Sabha at Panchayat Bhawan, Itahan
Manihari Chowk on 4 February. Com. Suresh Das Kanaujia, member of Party
district committee and Jitendra Yadav, district convenor of BPKS and other
peasant, youth and student leaders addressed the seminar. The resolution
read out in the seminar demanded withdrawal from WTO and taking back
anti-peasant and anti-national agrarian policy.

 

 

Party District Conferences in Tinsukia and Sonitpur in Assam

 

Party's Tinsukia district organisation held its conference on 3-4 February
at Asom Sahitya Sabha Bhawan (named Martyr Anil Kumar Barua Bhawan for the
occasion) in Tinsukia. The report was presented by Com. Subhas Sen, Secy. of
the Adhoc DC. The conference elected a DC, which in turn elected Subahs Sen
as its secretary.

The 7th conference of Sonitpur DC was held at Borgang on 4, 5 and 6 Feb. On
4 Feb., an impressive rally was brought out and open session was held, which
was participated in by around 3,000 people who came from far-flung
tea-gardens and villages despite total transport collapse due to the bandh
called by ULFA on that day protesting Advani's visit to Assam.

Com. Lila Sarma presented the report on behalf of the outgoing District
Committee to a house of 50 delegates including 12 women, 11 observers and 3
guests. After a lively debate a 9-member DC was elected which in its turn
re-elected Com Lila Sarma as its secretary.

The two conference were also attended by Com. Rubul Sarma and Com. Swadesh
Bhattacharya.

 

 

Central Quake Relief Fund

 

Apart from contributions directly made to Red Cross Society by Party
organisations in Bihar and other states, Delhi State Committee and W.B.
State Committee have deposited Rs.23,570 and Rs.32,000 respectively to the
Central Quake Relief Fund. In Delhi the campaign is still on.

 

 

'Do Seer Dhan' Staged in Patna

 

Hirawal, performing unit of Jan Sanskriti Manch staged Do Seer Dhan (Two
seers of paddy) on 9, 10 and 11 February at Kalidas Rangalaya in Patna. The
play is based on renowned Malayalam literateur Takshi Shivshankar Pillai's
novel from which the stage-script was written by Suman Kumar. Directed by
Kunal, the play has 19 characters including three female artists. While
music was directed by Santosh Jha, Pramod Yadav, councillor of Jan Sanskriti
Manch, shouldered the responsibility of production controller.  Altogether
25 artists carried on rehersal for two months before it was finally staged.
The play has been dedicated to the quake victims of Gujarat. At this
occasion a souvenir was brought out under the editorship of poet Madan
Kashyap, vice president of Jan Sanskriti Manch.

 

 

In the Memory of Gorakh Pandey

Culture of Resistance and Poetry Today

 

Jan Sanskriti Manch, Delhi organised a cultural programme in the memory of
noted revolutionary poet and founder General Secretary of JSM, Gorakh Pandey
on 10 February at Rajendra Bhawan in Delhi. After the recital of a number of
poems from Gorakh by Pankaj Singh, renowned critic Dr. Manager Pandey
delivered the keynote address. Later Mangalesh Dabral, Sanjay Chaturvedi,
Kallol Chakravarty, Rajendra Dhorpkar, Savita Singh, Sunder Chand Thakur,
Sanjay Kundan and Indira Rathore recited their poems. At the end, Shubhendu
Ghosh sang Gorakh Pandey's celebrated Bhojpuri song "Sutal rahalin sapan ek
dekhlin". Bhasha Singh, convenor of Delhi unit of Jan Sanskriti Manch
conducted the programme and Radhika, co-convenor, thanked the participants.

In his address Dr. Manager Pandey said that the culture of resistance must
be developed in a multi-faceted way. Observing that the terror of
assassination and death has been on increase among the people, and poets do
share the pain, he expressed the apprehension that the pain and resistance
of writers does not reach the common people. Moreover, in order to develop
the culture of resistance, identification of the aggressor was the most
necessary thing. This was relatively straight in the times of Gorakh, but
today it is not only fascism that can be identified as the sole aggressor.
Market is equally building up the prowess to affect each and every aspect of
life. In this scenario it is imperative to understand the nexus of
capitalism and feudalism. A specific kind of integrated vision towards life,
society and history has become necessary to fulfill the task.

 

Accidents? or Fall-out of Govt. Policy?

 

Earthquake in Gujarat was a natural calamity, no doubt, but the extent of
loss suffered clearly indicated to the man-made aspect of disasters. Now
shocking stories are being revealed regarding the
builder-politician-administration nexus that has played its dirty role in
erecting so many disaster-prone structures in cities and towns, not only in
Gujarat but even in Orissa.

In Bagdigi coalmine in Dhanbad, at least 14 miners who went alive down the
Bagdigi mine for operations could not come back. The rescue team recovered
their corpses only. There may be some others whose corpses also might remain
unrecovered. Even primary investigation reveals that mining safety rules
were openly flouted there. Out of the 15 major disasters caused by flooding
of the coal mine, 7 are from Jharia coalfields. The worst one occurred at
Chasnala, adjacent to Damodar river, where as many as 375 miners were
killed. "Gross negligence and disregard of safety regulations on the part of
the management of mining companies remains the reason for most of the
disasters." "For coal companies, profit is the prime concern, not safety of
the miners", writes Pankaj Kumar, a Dhanbad-based correspondent.

After suicides by cotton and tobacco farmers, it is now the turn of
intermediate students. As many as five students, majority of them girls,
have committed suicide in the recent week in Andhra Pradesh -- Chandrababu's
cyber state! These students have undergo tremendous stress as they prepare
to appear for entrance examinations for admission into engineering, medical
and other professional courses where there are very few seats available. The
unprecedented pressure is the result of new education policy, which is
forcing the students to resort to such extreme steps like suicide.

A Delhi student, after being mercilessly beaten by the musclemen of a blue
line bus owner, is braving death in a ICU of a hospital. Abusing, beating,
manhandling, eve-teasing and molestation of women in Delhi buses is an
everyday affair. Incidents of school children getting dashed or crushed,
apart from dying due to overturning of the school buses, have become a
regular affair. The entire system of public transport is in chaos and
anarchy under the spree of privatisation.

Repeated incidents of MIG-21 crashes, rail mishaps, even events like the
Surajkund joyride meeting its tragic end -- the list is endless. And all of
them point to the policy of privatisation that criminally favours profit at
the cost of safety. Down with this death trap.

 

Web Ste: <http:// www.cpiml.org>

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