ML Update
A CPI(ML) Weekly News Magazine
Vol.-5; No.-14; 3-4-2002


DOWN WITH THE US-AIDED ISRAELI TERRORISM AGAINST THE PALESTINIAN LEADERSHIP

Yasser Arafat, the poster child of national liberation in the latter part of
the 20th century and presently the head of state of Palestine, is now
personally under siege. He is being held incommunicado without water and
electricity in his own headquarters in Ramallah, West Bank, surrounded by
booming Israeli tanks. The occupation army of the Israeli aggressors has
been issued orders to "neutralize" him. Arafat, the moderate voice of
Palestinian resistance all along, is heroically defying death and refusing
to surrender. Meanwhile, scores of protesting Palestinians are being
butchered everyday by the Israeli Army on the streets.

Israel has made no secret of its plans to strangulate the nascent
Palestinian Authority and throw back the peace process by decades. But they
know they can't do it as long as Arafat is around. Hence, exploiting a few
bomb attacks by hardliners, they are bombarding the headquarters of the
Palestinian leadership. This is terrorism par excellence, perpetrated
cynically in the name of "war against terror".

Trying to decapitate the leadership of another state has so far remained a
US privilege. Remember what they tried to do to Gaddafi and Saddam. Now,
under their able guidance, the Israeli hawks are out to do the same, defying
worldwide condemnation. The UN Security Council has called for an immediate
withdrawal of Israeli troops. Even the EU has condemned the siege. The
entire world community, except one nation, the USA, has reacted with
outrage. In fact, the Arab Summit, held in Beirut last week, even went to
the extent of formally endorsing the Saudi peace plan of Arab recognition of
Israel in return for peaceful settlement of the Palestinian dispute and
return of their occupied lands. This is a historic step forward. Yet, Israel
only reacted to it with its own plan of "neutralizing" Arafat and destroying
the Palestinian gains of a decade and a half since the Intifida of the
1980s. As only to be expected, George Bush condemned only the suicide
bombings while maintaining a studied silence on the Israeli bombardment in
Ramallah. And everyone knows that Israel acts with such brazenness only
because it enjoys the US blessings. The media in the US has brought out the
fact that the US administration was informed about the bombardment of Arafat
's HQ well in advance by the Israelis.
It is a matter of shame that India officially expressed only a mild "shock"
and that too much belatedly. Ever since the Saffron-Zionist bonhomie began,
the Indian foreign policy seems to have lost the backbone to forthrightly
condemn blatant provocations to world peace and arrogant challenges to a
just international order.

The liberal conscience in the West has pinned its hopes on intervention by
the USA. But whenever the US reined in Israel in the past it was the fear of
an Arab or Soviet backlash. However, in the post-Cold War, and especially in
the post-S11 world, the "war against terrorism" everywhere is being directed
from the situations room in the White House. Hence only the pressure of
popular protests can sober up the monsters a bit. To be sure, the storms of
protests have already gathered momentum around the world, notably in the US
itself.

Bush and Sharon are incapable of realizing that sending in the army is no
way to stop the young Palestinians from turning into suicide bombers.
Incursions of Israeli ground troops has only increased the incidence of
suicide bombings - five incidents in as many days. Absolute power seems to
have blinded them absolutely. The only weapons the mighty imperialists and
reactionaries lack in their arsenal are common sense and reason. No matter
whether they let Arafat come out alive or not from the present siege, there
can be no doubt that they have already buried Israel's security for years to
come. The questions are simple: After Arafat what? Who, and in what numbers,
are they going to kill to end the suicide bombings? But then, the imperial
madness has always remained inexplicable in history. How nicely Mao Tse-tung
put it when he said that the imperialists and reactionaries lift a big stone
only to drop it on their own feet!


CPI (ML) CONDEMNS ISRAELI ATTACK ON YASSER ARAFAT

CPI(ML) strongly condemned the US-motivated Israeli attack on the
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's headquarters situated in the West Bank
city of Romallah. Party has also denounced the ongoing Israeli terrorism in
the west and middle-east Asia and called upon the Govt. of India to launch
an unequivocal protest against the assault on Arafat's office and the
military encirclement of the civilians, cutting off their water and
electricity supplies by Israeli aggressors and work for mobilising
international opinion to compel the US-backed Israeli forces retreat from
the Palestine Territory.


PARTY DEMANDS IMMEDIATE REMOVAL OF MODI GOVERNMENT IN GUJARAT.

While welcoming the National Human Rights Commission's timely intervention
in Gujarat, the CPI(ML) has, in the light of NHRC's severe and direct
indictment of the Narendra Modi Government of Gujarat for its gross
negligence in checking the anti-minority riots that have not only taken toll
of more than 5,000 lives, and also in the light of the fact that till date
the rioting continues under the patronage of the Government, firmly
reiterated its demand to immediately sack Narendra Modi government.
Restoration of normalcy would not be possible under this regime, the Party
said.


ATTACK ON HURRYAT LEASDER CONDEMNED

In another statement CPI(ML) strongly condemned attack on Hurriyat leader
Abdul Ghani Lone by saffron hooligans in Kashmir.


WE HAVE A WAR TO DEFEAT, A WORLD TO WIN!

"...The anti-globalisation campaign has taken the first steps towards a
sustained and powerful anti-imperialist movement with a clear opposition to
the war and racism. We must step up international political cooperation and
coordination among broad sections of anti-imperialist anti-globalisation
forces to accelerate the tempo of resistance. While exploring and utilising
every possible opportunity to broaden the frontiers of this movement and get
more shades of people on board of the growing coalition for peace, democracy
and progress, I think the crying need of the hour is to deepen it in every
available national and even local context. The deeper we go, the stronger we
grow. And with strong roots among the masses, there can be no fixed limits
for revolutionary imagination and initiative. Argentina shows the way.

Just as it is important to name and target the global enemy, it is no less
important to identify and target the numerous local linkages of the global
enemy. Let us remember that the imperialist war machine moves on several
wheels and every wheel has numerous cogs. It is therefore crucial to resist
every local linkage and stop every real and potential and aspiring ally of
the US from aiding the war campaign in particular and the neoliberal
economic offensive in general. The best way, for example, we in India can
oppose imperialist globalisation and the war and racism is by defeating the
Indian collaborators of US imperialism who are unleashing a rein of what we
call communal fascism in India. And even in this struggle, let me tell you,
we derive our greatest strength from the anti-feudal struggles of the
landless and poor peasants, from the growing awakening and assertion of the
rural poor for basic freedom and human dignity. I say this not to belittle
the unquestionable importance of more direct forms and avenues of
anti-imperialist struggle, especially struggles of urban organised and
unorganised workers, but only to highlight the great reserves of
revolutionary strength and energy that are still waiting to be tapped in the
Indian countryside and I am sure, the same must be true of many other third
world countries.

In this context let me also add that to resist the neo-liberal offensive of
imperialist globalisation, it is absolutely important to scotch the rumour
of the so-called retreat of nation-states. This talk of nation-states
beating a retreat may be music to our ears schooled in proletarian
internationalism and eyes dedicated to the ultimate communist dream of a
classless and hence stateless society, but the point is it is just a rumour
and a dangerous rumour at that. Bourgeois nation-states are perhaps more
active than ever before, they have only reshaped their policies and
reordered their priorities. If the proletariat of each country, as called
upon by the Communist Manifesto, must first of all settle matters with its
own bourgeoisie; if, to quote the Manifesto again, the proletariat must
first of all acquire political supremacy, must rise to be the leading class
of the nation, must constitute itself the nation, the practitioners of
proletarian politics and proletarian internationalism cannot afford to
suffer from any confusion on this score. The importance of nation-state as
an arena of class struggle has only grown and not diminished in the present
era of globalisation. And in third world countries where the bourgeois
rulers are fast capitulating to imperialist dictates and are busy selling
off key and scarce national resources, the renewed relevance of economic
nationalism can hardly be overemphasised. Just as parliamentary treachery
and the historical obsolescence of parliament has not made parliament
practically and politically irrelevant to communists and socialists the
world over, the crimes committed in the name of bourgeois nationalism and
the technological marvels that are purportedly shrinking the world into a
village cannot render nation and nationalism superfluous in the
international struggle against global capitalism. After all,
internationalism as opposed to globalism can only become more meaningful
when it strikes strong national roots.

To conclude, the world since Seattle and September 11 is an immensely
exciting and challenging world. The times are testing but full of promises.
With imperialism on the offensive and the war machine rolling on with all
its force, many a former voice in the left and liberal camp has fallen
silent. Worse still, many are singing different tunes. This is how bourgeois
liberalism has always exposed its limits. And this is why it is called
bourgeois liberalism. But for every voice that is falling silent there are
dozens more that are turning vocal. And there are millions more that are
waiting to be heard. As Lenin said almost a century ago while surveying what
he called Inflammable Material in World Politics, "Less illusions about the
liberalism of the counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie. More attention to the
growth of the international revolutionary proletariat."

We have a war to defeat, and a world to win!

(Concluding paragraphs of CPI(ML) General Secretary Comrade Dipankar
Bhattacharya's address to the 2nd Asia Pacific International Solidarity
Conference on 28 March, 2002, held at Sydney, Australia)


POTO WILL BE FOUGHT IN EVERY STREET

(Speech by Com. Jayanta Rongpi, CPI(ML) M.P., in the Joint Sitting of
Parliament on the Prevention of Terrorism Bill, 2002, on  March 26, 2002)

Dr. Jayanta Rongpi: "I stand here to oppose this POTO Bill. I was taken
aback by the intensity of the misplaced political will of the Government to
pass this piece of legislation. On earlier occasions, in the name of lack of
political consensus, in the name of lack of unity among the political
parties, many important legislations, like the Women's Reservation Bill,
have been deferred again and again. However, this time, even after it has
been defeated in the Rajya Sabha, the Government has called this joint
sitting to pass this POTO. I would like to say that other draconian laws,
like TADA, MISA, have created more terrorists in the North-East than solving
the insurgency problem. Terrorism in Punjab was contained not because of
POTO, not because of TADA, not because of any draconian law, but because of
the people of Punjab stood united to fight terrorism. If we want to fight
terrorism, then there should be unity. That cannot be achieved, if the
communal agenda is followed to divide the people of India in the name of
religion, caste, and creed. I will see to it that POTO is fought in every
street, every nook and corner of the North- East region."


CONVENTION AGAINST COMMUNAL RIOTS

CPI(ML) Itahar unit held a convention against communal riots at Itahar on 19
March, attended by more than a hundred people. North Dinajpur Distt Secy.
Com. Ajit Das, Itahar LC Secy. Com. Azizul Raman and Ganesh Chhetry spoke at
the convention. An anti-communal riot procession marched through the streets
of Itahar town at the end of the convention.
On 21 March street corner meetings and marches were held at Raiganj to
protest communal riots and the anti-people budget. CPI and RSP activists
also participated in these programmes. Com. Ganesh Chhetry and Taslim Ali
addressed the meetings along with CPI leaders.


JOINT STATEMENT OF TVS AND AIKSS IN TAMILNADU

In a joint statement signed by Rajamanickam, Secretary of Tamilnadu
Vivasayigal Sangam( Tamilnadu Peasant Union) and Sugandan, Tamilnadu
co-ordinator of AIKSS (All India Peasants' Struggle Committee) declared
their resolute support to the ongoing Indian farmers struggle against
WTO-POTA driven policies. Condemning the Union Govt. decision to close the
procurement centres and the utter neglect of farmers in the TN state budget,
the statement indicted the Centre for not coming up with any integrated
national water sharing policy and continuously sabotaging the existing
irrigation schemes. Recalling the glorious history of Tamilnadu peasant
struggle during '80s, the statement urged the peasantry to take the path of
struggle instead of ending their life. Both organisations have agreed to
jointly mobilise the peasants all over the state for the April 9, 2002,
peasant's martyrs memorial rally of Tamilnadu at the Martyr's Memorial in
Vadachandur.


RAJASTHAN DIARY

Rajasthan unit of AIPWA held its meeting on 25 March in Jaipur. Condemning
Sangh Parivar and Modi Govt. for Gujarat riots, the meeting resolved to
carry forward AIPWA's national campaign to 'Fight Kesaria Terrorism'. It
also resolved to expose the central government's Domestic Violence Bill
which does not give women any serious respite as well as the anti-women
budget. AIPWA President, Srilata Swaminathan was present in the meet.
On 26 March Rajasthan CPI-ML held a cadre meet in Jaipur to oppose POTO
bill. The meet was attended by CCM incharge of Rajasthan, Com. Srilata.


OPPOSE PRIVATISATION OF TEA CORPORATION

Asom Sangrami Chah Shramik Sangha (ASCSS) organised a convention in Jorhat
on 26 March against privatization of Assam Tea Corporation (ATC), a state
govt. undertaking. Whereas the employees of tea gardens and offices of ATC
had not been paid their salaries for 9 months, tea workers in various
gardens under ATC had not been paid for 9 weeks. Instead of taking steps to
clear the wages, the Govt. of Assam is preparing to privatise the
corporation.
Condemning this attitude the convention demanded a white paper on the ATC
problems and their permanent solution, renovation of the gardens and
immediate clearance of the outstanding salaries. Conducted by Jogeswar
Bawary, Dibyajyoti Sarma and Prafulla Saikia, the convention was addressed
by Bibek Das, Gen Secy. of ASCSS and Kanaklata Dutta of Pragatishil Nari
Santha.


BHAGAT SINGH MEMORIAL DAY IN BANGALORE

Bhagat Singh Memorial Day was observed on 23 March at Peenya, Bangalore.
Krishnappa, RYA Convenor presided the meeting while Govindarajan, Poonacha
and Gandhimathi delivered speeches. Govindarajan stressed on the need for
youth to emulate Bhagat Singh and also lauded his role in the freedom
movement in contrast to that of Gandhi.
Dharna by AICCTU in Andaman

Unions affiliated to AICCTU in Andaman staged a one-day dharna at Tiranga
Park, Port Blair, on 14 March against the anti-national, anti-working class,
anti-youth and anti-people economic policies of the BJP-led NDA Govt. and
thereafter a public meeting was also held. All other central trade unions,
barring INTUC, joined the dharna. Among the speakers were Com. M Sadasivam,
NKP Nair, Arvind Lal Sharma, who criticised policies of both Congress and
BJP-led governments in following dictates of World Bank and multinational
corporations. Speakers also recorded their apprehension of the threat on
communal harmony prevailing over the Islands due to senseless speeches and
acts of communal forces.


REMEMBERING CHANDRASHEKHAR

Thousands of people including members of CPI(ML) to common students and
youth and broad sections of progressive and democratic intelligentsia
remembered Com. Chandra Shekhar, twice president of JNU Students Union and a
promising CPI(ML) leader who was killed, along with another young Party
leader Com. Shyam Narain Yadav, at JP Chowk, Siwan on March 31, 1997. Since
then the week starting from March 23 up to March 31 is observed as Martyrdom
Week by AISA-RYA, because it was on March 23 that Shaheed-e-Azam Bhagat
Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev laid down their lives fighting against British
imperialism, and another martyr poet-activist of Naxalbari, Avtar Singh
Pash, was killed by Khalistani terrorists in this last week of March. In
memory of the martyr trio, AISA organised a seminar "Indian democracy on
trial" on 27 March, in the context of the Gujarat genocide, the Ayodhya
flare up and passage of Prevention of Terrorism Act on 26 March. Prof.
Jayati Ghosh, Prof TK Ooman, Swami Agnivesh, Brij Bihari Pandey and Pranay
Krishna addressed the seminar held at School of Social Studies Auditorium,
JNU. Speakers underlined the seriousness of fascist threat that is looming
large in the wake of Ayodhya, Gujarat and POTO. The seminar was conducted by
Com. Radhika. On March 31 a screening of Anand Patwardhan's films was
organised in JNU.

Elsewhere in Bihar, UP, Tamil Nadu, Assam, etc., Party and student-youth
activists remembered the martyrs through organising various programmes.
While expressing resentment and protest over the criminally negligent
attitude of the government and the CBI betrayed in dumping the investigation
of Chandrashekhar's murder, the activists also expressed their resolve to
avenge the martyrs by carrying forward the movement of the poor, dalits and
other deprived sections of the society and sink the communal fascist forces
in the sea of mass struggles.

At the time when the notorious gangster Shahabuddin has virtually taken the
whole of Siwan in his terror grip, the RJD leadership is finding it hard to
throw him away, the BJP is trying to communalise the whole issue by
interlinking it with Islamic terror. Strange it may seem, but it is a fact
that Shahabuddin is nowadays claiming "much deeper support" from his friends
in the BJP against the main rival, the CPI(ML). After all, it is the BJP
government that has honoured Shahabuddin by offering him a seat at the Court
of Wards of Aligarh Muslim University!


BRITISH PROTEST US ACTION ON IRAQ

Waving placards and chanting slogans, thousands of anti-war demonstrators
marched through central London on 30 March, calling on Prime Minister Tony
Blair to steer the United States away from military action against Iraq.
This "Don't Start Wars" protest was arranged by the Campaign for Nuclear
Disarmament amid mounting speculation that President Bush was planning to
launch an offensive against Saddam Hussein's regime. The marchers included
Labour MP Tam Dalyell.


ISRAELI FIRE ON INTERNATIONAL GROUP

Israeli troops opened fire on an International group of about 150 persons
who were marching toward the Palestinian town of Bet Jaialla on 31 March.
Several persons were wounded, included three British citizens, one
Australian, one American, and two Palestinian journalists. Firing started
when the demonstrators marched near a church carrying a sign saying "We want
peace not war."


KOREAN WORKERS RESIST PRIVATISATION

More than 2000 riot police moved in to break up a protest by thousands of
state power workers on 23 March. Nearly 400 workers were arrested. The
operation began just after midnight as 3,200 workers gathered at Seoul's
Yonsei University for a sit-in protest against plans to privatize
debt-stricken state electricity firms and lay off thousands of workers. The
government outlawed the strike and has already dismissed 197 union leaders
and members. In addition, disciplinary action is being taken against 3900
power workers. Earlier in the day members of the labour unions of Korea
Electric Power Corp. (KEPC) subsidiaries took over the amphitheater at
Yonsei University while workers and students battled the police with rocks
and fire bombs at the university's main gate.

When the government ordered the workers back to their jobs, the Korean Power
Plant Industry Union countered that the government should resume talks with
them. Power workers have been on strike for nearly a month. The Korean
Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) announced that it would wage an all out
general strike if the KEPC goes through with it threat to sack striking
workers at its five provincial facilities who don't return to work by March
25. The current privatisation of the power industry is rooted in the
"agreement" the Korean government made with the World Bank in 1998 in the
aftermath of the financial melt down, and the Korean government agreed to
undertake privatisation of the "infrastructure" sectors.


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