ML Update
A CPI(ML) Weekly News Magazine
Vol. 6; No. 8    19 - 25 Feb 2003

KALAM'S ADDRESS:
CONNECTING THE SAID AND UNSAID

The Vajpayee government has predictably made full use of the presidential
address to the joint session of Parliament to articulate its post-Gujarat
political offensive. From Gujarat and Ayodhya and Pakistan and Bangladesh to
disinvestment and connectivity, President Kalam took the joint sitting of
Parliament on a conducted telescopic tour to his pet theme of 'Vision 2020'.
The presidential address tried to clinch the entire debate on Gujarat with
the claim that the December elections have strengthened democracy and ended
a sad chapter in the state's history. This amounts to claiming parliamentary
legitimacy for the BJP's official policy of rewarding the perpetrators of
last year's genocide and terrorising the survivors.
On Ayodhya, the President has called upon the judiciary to 'expedite its
work and give an early verdict'. Viewed in the backdrop of the Supreme Court
's welcome rejection of the Government's plea for an immediate hearing and
strident VHP demands for transfer of the entire land, the reference is
clearly an integral part of a concerted pressure tactic to extract a
judicial solution in favour of the saffron brigade.
The address virtually remained silent on the impending threat of yet another
US-led war on Iraq. A renewed war on Iraq would destabilise the whole of
Asia and create tremendous external pressure on India's own economy by
disrupting oil supplies. There could be no bigger immediate threat to India'
s vital economic interests and national security concerns than a war on
Iraq. Yet, the address remains obsessed with Pakistan and Bangladesh and the
nuclear programme in North Korea while keeping mum on the central question
of freedom for Palestine and withdrawal of US troops from Asia.
The address has also thrown an open challenge to the growing movement
against disinvestment in profit-making public sector companies in key
strategic sectors like aluminium and oil by terming the disinvestment policy
'irreversible'. The government had already indicated its adamant stand by
rewarding disinvestment minister Arun Shourie with the additional portfolio
of IT and communication. It should now be the turn of the trade union
movement and the Left forces to respond adequately to the war declared by
the government.
President Kalam has also chanted his favourite mantra of 'connectivity'. The
other day, Vajpayee too had issued a connectivity revolution in his New Year
musings from Goa. The President has stressed four strands of the
connectivity network: physical connectivity, tele-connectivity, knowledge
connectivity and market connectivity. Of these four connectivities, the last
mentioned is really working overtime and it has already spawned an
all-pervasive fifth connectivity about which Kalam has been conspicuously
silent. It is the connectivity called crisis. It is nothing but a growing
crisis which really connects the increasingly globalised Indian economy and
the vast majority of India's cheap and unpaid productive labour and
impoverished direct producers.
While Kalam and Vajpayee weaved the web of scientific and technological
connectivity, the Singhals and Togadias are busy discovering new ploys to
divide the people and vitiate the atmosphere with communal venom. From
Ayodhya in UP they are now branching out to Bhojshala in Madhya Pradesh and
Baba Budangiri in Karnataka. In the Sangh Parivar's scheme of things, the
'scientific' vision of connectivity and the political art of communal divide
always go hand in hand.

THE CPI(ML) CALLS UPON TO
FRUSTRATE  BJP's SINISTER COMMUNAL DESIGNS

The CPI(ML) called upon the opposition parties to frustrate BJP's sinister
communal design to hoodwink the people and the parliament as it plays the
"Ayodhya card" by going to Supreme Court just before the budget session and
in a year of elections. Though it has categorically been reaffirmed by the
former Chief Justice of India Sri J. S. Verma, that the Supreme Court order
of 1994 on the acquisition of land in Ayodhya had specifically forbidden the
handing over of any part of the acquired land to any party before the final
settlement of the main Ayodhya title suit.
The CPI(ML) Polit Bureau Member Swadesh Bhattacharya has said in a statement
on the eve of the budget session of Parliament that the BJP is vitiating the
communal atmosphere with an eye on the elections in four states and to
divert the attention from the bankrupt economic front. The CPI(ML) strongly
feels that the current budget session of Parliament should take up its
business in proper perspective. The parliament should uphold the great
concern of the Indian nation against Bush's war on Iraq and condemn and
oppose unequivocally the Bush-Blair-Israel evil-axis and their faithful
disciples here in India, the Sangh Parivar.
He further added that it is the demand of the day that the leftist
parliamentarians in particular will put the BJP in the dock on the questions
of its negligence to drought-stricken states, failure to address the crisis
on the agrarian front, disinvestment, etc., and finally on the additional
burdens the govt. is likely to impose on the common people through the
budget.

PEOPLE'S POWER TAKES TO THE WORLD'S STREETS AGAINST US WAR PLANS

A new history was created on Feb 15 when crores of people throughout the
globe in 60 countries covering around 600 centres joined in protests against
Bush's war hysteria over Iraq. It was the largest single political protest
ever conducted and the first truly worldwide demonstration against
imperialist war efforts. People in the countries of the world, including
Israel, USA, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Australia, Japan,
Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India, sent a clear message to George Bush
that they are against his policies of aggression, hegemony and war.
After the UN weapons inspector Hans Blix and IAEA Director Mohammed
el-Baradei submitted their inspection reports at UN headquarters in New
York, thousands of anti-war demonstrators packed the streets near the United
Nations headquarters next day on Feb 15. The largest of an estimated 150
peace rallies across the US that filled city streets with banners, chanting
of slogans and widely participated by people from all walks of life.  A
number of antiwar veterans, including 83-year-old folk singer Pete Seeger,
singer Harry Belafonte and actors Susan Sarandon and Danny Glover, and South
Africa's Archbishop Desmond Tutu, addressed the protesters. Labor unions,
too, took a big role as five major national unions took part in this
protest.  "We can stop this war. We're using our own power to stop this
 war," said an activist.
Some 90 US city councils have passed resolutions opposing military actions
against Iraq, with many arguing that such a war would devastate their
economies.
Bitter temperatures didn't cool the tempers of more than 100,000 peace
activists in Montreal, who flocked to the city's core. In Toronto, about
10,000 people hit the pavement in a peaceful march that snarled traffic.
"George Bush is a terrorist," the crowd shouted. A march in Quebec City
attracted more than 3,000 people and the peace call echoed in 70 other
cities of Canada
London witnessed the biggest public demonstration ever held in Britain,
surpassing every one of the organisers' expectations and Tony Blair's worst
fears. Organisers claimed that around two million had turned out. The
protest witnessed participation of large number of ruling Labour Party
members and prominent personalities like Mayor of London Ken Livingstone,
Human Rights activists Jessy Jackson and Biyanka Jaggar, playwrite Herold
Pinter and Liberal Democratic Party leader Charles Kennedy.
As many as 3 million people marched through Rome against the rightist
government of media magnate Silvio Berlusconi. The Italian government had
pledged to allow the US army use Italy's roads, railways and ports in the
build-up to a conflict.
3 to 4 million took to the streets in more than 50 towns and cities of
Spain. Barcelona city officials estimated a turnout of 1.3 million
people -nearly equalling the entire city's population of 1.5 million - in
the largest demonstration in the city's history. Lakhs of anti-war
demonstrators marched peacefully through downtown Madrid.
Paris, in France, saw some 2,00,000 people marching, while hundreds of
thousands rallied in regional demonstrations held in over 80 other cities.
The Paris march was called for by some 70 leftist political parties, trade
unions, pacifist associations and human rights groups under the slogan:
"Together, we can prevent this war."
About half a million protesters marched through Berlin, and in other cities
and towns across Germany, to demonstrate against a war with Iraq,
underscoring Germany's strong anti-war stance. Protesters carried signs
saying "No blood for oil." People took part in huge numbers in Dublin,
Belfast, Amsterdam, Brussels, Vienna, Copenhagen, Athens, Moscow, Zagreb,
Osijek, Vukovar, Knin, Zadar, Sibenik, Split and Dubrovnik. "I am here
against the war because of the values that I was taught in the US. Bush is
anti-American," said Reverend Donald Mader, a US citizen who joined in a
protest march in Amsterdam. Also in Canberra, Sydney, Darwin, Perth, and
Melbourne in Australia. People marched through Brisbane bearing banners with
slogans such as "Axis of Idiots". In New Zealand tens of thousands
demonstrated in Wellington. In a rare sign of unity in Israel, 3,000 Jews
and Arabs marched together in Tel Aviv. Peace marches were held also in
Damascus, Bangkok, Cairo, Tokyo, Manila, Seoul, Koalalampur, Hongkong,
Taipei and Singapore. Marchers displayed slogans like "Axis of Evil:
America, Britain, Israel", "Drop Bush, Not Bombs", "No to war! Yes to
 Peace!", "No War for Oil", "The United States is the biggest terrorist
country", "Save the World" and "No to the imperialist war!" on banners and
placards. In Asia, demonstrations were held in Kathmandu, Bombay, New Delhi,
Srinagar, Madras, Bangalore, Dhaca, Karachi, Islamabad, Lahore, Multan,
Khanewal, Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Hyderabad, Khairpur and Colombo.
Unprecendented demonstrations were witnessed in countries like Cuba,
Argentina, Mexico, Brazil, Puerto Rico, Guatemala and Peru in Letin America
and South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Rwanda, Morocco and other
countries in Africa.
On the eve of these protests UN weapons inspector Hans Blix had accepted in
the UN that regarding weapons of mass destruction, he did not found any,
"only a small number of empty chemical munitions, which should have been
declared and destroyed" and "many proscribed weapons and items are not
accounted for one must not jump to the conclusion that they exist".
Moreover, he told to the Security Council that Iraq had cooperated in the
inspections process. Director of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Mohammed el-Baradei reported that he did not find any proof of a nuclear
programme going on in that country. These reports have boosted those
Security Council member countries' efforts who are opposing US war plans as
well as the people all over the world.
When Blix was presenting his report, George Bush continued his war rhetoric
on board USS J F Kennedy, and declared to the world,  the "Washington would
use every ounce of its power" and "if Security Council did not rally behind
it, Washington would go along" with the so-called "coalition of the willing"
.
Although Colin Powell has asked for more time to reiterate his case, the US
now is weakened in the Security Council and it is clear that majority of the
nations are against war. Russia, France and China are strongly opposing US
and pleading for the continuation of the inspection process. Mexico, Chile,
Angola and Bulgaria will not support US resolution till there is an
unanimity among all five permanent members of the Council, which is quite
unlikely.
In the mean time, America has ordered expulsion of an Iraqi journalist who
was deputed at UN and two Iraqi positions were bombed on Feb 14 on the
pretext of installation of missile systems in the so called 'no fly zone'.
Though, the unprecedented global protests of Feb 15 have created pressure on
US to some extent, it is still reiterating that America does not need any
permission from the UN to attack Iraq. The massive military deployment in
the gulf should not be ignored and danger of war is still looming large.
This anti-war campaign needs to be further strengthened till the American
war designs and its sinister intentions to hegemonise the world,
particularly the third world nations, be defeated.
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Imperialist war brings destruction but not the ultimate end.
 Either the people's resistance will prevent war or
 the war will give rise to the
revolutionary war of the people.
People, and people alone, not the weapons,
will have the last say.
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THE  UN SANCTIONS: ONGOING ATTACKS
 
*The ongoing collateral damage of the last war and sanctions on Iraqi
civilians has totalled more than 1 million deaths,
half of which are children younger than 5, according to
UNICEF and World Health Organization reports.
* UNICEF confirms that 5-6 thousand Iraqi children are dying unnecessarily
every month due to the impact of the sanctions, and
that figure is probably modest.
* During the first eight months of 1991,
nearly 47,000 more children than normal died in Iraq, and
the country's infant- and child-mortality rates
more than doubled, to 92.7 and 128.5 per 1,000 live births respectively.
A 1999 UNICEF study showed a continuing trend:  In 1998,
the infant- and child-mortality rates were 103 and 125 per 1,000, respectively.
* In a January 1991 a document titled "Iraq Water Treatment
Vulnerabilities," the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency said
the bombing of Iraq coupled with
an embargo of chemicals and supplies could fully degrade
Iraq's civilian water supply.
"Unless the water is purified with chlorine,
epidemics of such diseases as cholera, hepatitis, and typhoid could occur,"
read declassified portions of the report.
*Massive new irrigation systems stretching across the breadbasket regions
of rural Iraq would normally be cause for celebration.
In a nation where nearly a quarter of the children suffer chronic malnutrition,
abundant crops of wheat and barley would signify hope and progress.
 But when Hans von Sponeck, former assistant secretary general of the United Nations,
visited Iraq last month he found neither:
The spigots were turned off. Although the
sophisticated sprinkler systems had survived the exhaustive screening of
U.N. trade sanctions, the water pumps had not.
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DESPARATION FOR OIL

US represents "the most colossal imbalance in military power ever seen of
this earth"
"Controlling Iraqi oil is at the heart of the Bush campaign to replace
Saddam with a more compliant regime."
-- Oil and Gas International, a Petroleum Industry Journal, Oct. 30, 2002.
At 112 billion barrels, Iraq's proven oil reserves are second only to Saudi
Arabia's (262 billion barrels).An October 2002 assessment by the
 US Department of Energy estimates that additional  "probable and possible"
Iraqi oil reserve could amount to 220 billion barrels.
The standoff over Iraq has more to do with domestic crisis in the US than
with the Baghdad regime. Washington is adamant to attack, despite Iraq's
readiness to cooperate, makes one wonder whether Iraq is not just a pretext
for the US to build "a new world order based on crude force rather than
International Law.
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US LAKEYS, SAY NO TO WAR, LOUD AND CLEAR !

When the world vehemently says no to war, the Prime Minister of India has
'advised' the 'super power' to show "great restraint" simultaneously telling
people that he was not aware whether the 'super powers' are really thinking
on these lines. He even avoided directly mentioning name of United States in
his statement. RSS chief also expressed similar views. Whatever be the
political compulsions for the government of India for taking such a feeble
position, the real intentions of the Sangh Parivar, whose ideology
ultimately runs the NDA govt., were explicit in VHP's Pravin Togadia's
statement. Supporting the American war plans, he said "What if there is no
proof of Iraqi complicity in terrorism, we are not talking about justice ...
we are talking about the clash of civilisations". Togadia shamelessly added
that the India businessmen and traders could make money in the post-war
construction boom in Iraq.
 
DHARNA IN PARLIAMENT DEMANDING AUTONOMOUS STATE

Dr. Jayanta Rongpi representing the Hill Districts of Assam in the
parliament staged a dharna in front of the main entrance of the parliament
on the eve of the first working day of the current budget session after the
President had addressed the joint sitting of both the houses. By displaying
posters and placards depicting slogans like "No Autonomous State No Rest",
"Create Autonomous State For Karbi Anglong & N C Hills", "Implement Article
244(A)" etc. Dr Rongpi wanted to draw the attention of the fellow MPs and
the nation as a whole towards the popular demand of the Hill areas of Assam.
Dr. Rongpi also expressed his deep anguish at the fact that the genuine and
constitutional demand for an Autonomous State by the people of Assam Hill
areas has been ignored just because the people remained confined to peaceful
and democratic methods of movement. The complete silence on the issue
maintained by the President in his speech yesterday has emitted a wrong
signal to the people of North East that the Central Government understands
only the language of AK56 rifle of the extremists and not the voices of
democratic movements. The agitating MP said that he has already moved
amendments to the motion of thanks to Presidents address. While reiterating
the urgent need to implement the special provision of Article 244(A) which
is a solemn national commitment to the people of the two hill districts and
thereby to create an Autonomous State within the State of Assam, the MP also
announces that his party CPI(ML) along with movement organisations like
Karbi Student Association(KSA) and Karbi Nimaso Chingthur Asong (KNCA) and
other fraternal organisation shall launch vigorous mass movement to compel
the Government to concede their demand.
 
KARBI YOUTH FESTIVAL BEGINS

The 29th Karbi Youth Festival started in Taralangso, Diphu from February 16.
Thousands of artists and other Participants are marching to Taralangso for
the Festival. A cultural troop from Jharkhand has also reached Taralangso.
Eminent poet and intellectual Nilamoni Phukan will participate as the chief
guest in the closing session of the Festival on February 19.
 
KILLINGS IN BIHAR: RESULT OF POLICE- CRIMINAL  NEXUS

The CPI(ML) has strongly condemned the killings of seven people in
Warsaliganj of Nawada district in Bihar on Feb 12 and retaliatory killing of
five people on Feb 16 and has described it a result of growing
police-criminal nexus. The day-long Warsaliganj bandh called in protest on
Feb 15 evoked a massive response. Protest demonstrations were also held in
all blocks of the district.
A team led by Prabhat Kumar, Central Committee member of the Party, visited
the site of the killings and met the family members of those killed as well
as the villagers. The CPI(ML) investigation team has exposed that the police
is also taking sides with either of the gangs and when killings were going
on police remained aloof, though its camp was only one kilometer away from
the scene of the murders and managed to reach the spot only after a gap of 14 hours.
Of late, Warsaliganj came into limelight for attacks and counter-attacks by
two warring gangsters, who enjoy  political patronage from RJD and NDA
leaders, over efforts to establish hegemony on sand mining from the
river-bed. Akhilesh Singh, who used to have monopoly over the sand-mining on
the river-bed, is now being challenged by Ashok Mahato gang, and this has
triggered a series of killings and counter-killings.
 
BETEL PRODUCERS STRUGGLE

Hundreds of Pan (betel) growers of Islampur block marched through a stretch
of 12 kilometers to block office under the banner of Bihar Pradesh Kisan
Sabha (BPKS). They were demanding compensation for the losses accrued due to
bad weather, loan without interest, and establishment of a Betel Research
Institute in the region.
 
DEMONSTRATION BY EIGHT PARTIES AGAINST COMMUNAL FORCES IN GUWAHATI

Eight parties of Assam gave a joint call to resist the proposed communal
rath Yatra in Assam. On February 10, these parties organised a protest
demonstration at Judges Field, Guwahati against the conspiracy to create
communal division in the state. Leaders and supporters of CPI(ML), CPI,
CPI(M), SUCI, RSP, RCPI, Janata Dal(S) and Samajwadi Party participated in
the demonstration.
 
STUDENT- YOUTH MARCHES IN BIHAR
A Chhatra-Yuva Yatra (Student-Youth March) is being taken out from four
different centres of the state. After covering several districts and
important centers and campuses, these marches will reach Patna on Feb 23 to
join the "Naya Bihar Banaao Jan Sammelan"( Mass Convention to Make New Bihar).
 
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OBITUARY
CPI(ML) condoles the death of veteran socialist scholar and leader Prem
Bhasin, who passed away on 5 February at the age of 86. Prem Bhasin was one
of founding fathers of Indian Socialist movement and had been general
secretary of Socialist Party for many years. At his demise Party shares the
grief with all socialist, progressive and democratic ranks of India.
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website: www.cpiml.org

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