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COMMUNICATION
'Misrule By Gun'

'. . . the terror practiced yesterday at Nandigram fills me with dread
and disappointment. . . Please, please have some regard for those who
feel that socialism is not terrorism, but humanism; and misrule by gun
will not be the rule of the Left in State authority'
V.R. Krishna Iyer

Letter from Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer to Prakash Karat on Nandigram

URGENT
March 15, 2007

My dear Prakash Karat,

I adore you as the top leader of the Marxist Party even as I hold Com.
Jyoti Basu as a creative wonder of the Communist Marxist Party. As you
know, I remained in power with the Communist Government in 1956 in
Kerala under the charismatic Chiefministership of EMS, the great
Leftist thinker. But alas!, in West Bengal things are murky,
capitalism is happy, poor peasantry is in privation and deprivation,
if newspaper reports throw light on events objectively. We, in 1957,
came to power by the ballot and rarely, if ever, used the bullet, with
the result the police violence was hardly an instrument against the
peasantry.

Look at the contrast. The brutality and bloodshed, at the instance of
the police force is now bulleting of humble humanity. I had and have
great hopes that the Marxists if in power, will rule with
compassionate ideology and win votes and people's co-operation beyond
party barriers. But to my horror, the terror practiced yesterday at
Nandigram fills me with dread and disappointment. The illusion of
exploitative power has led the ministry to govern by the gun. The
consequent bloodshed demands your urgent attention and commands the
party's authority to arrest the frequency of bloodshed policy and
police barbarity. Sri. Sumit Chakravartty telephoned me last night
about the police misuse of firepower. If true, I protest and entreat
you and the party to take immediate action and restore the basic
proposition that Communist Government is not power with violent
weapons. And action at party level must be taken if governance over
humanity is for the benefit of the peasantry. I am sure, thousands
like me will be shocked by the Nandigram incident. Please, please have
some regard for those who feel that socialism is not terrorism, but
humanism; and misrule by gun will not be the rule of the Left in State
authority. Do forgive me for expressing my strong feelings with the
expectation that the Left Administration believe and practice as a
fundamental for the humble people, not for the proprietariat with the
brute force of the bullet.

With high regards,
Yours sincerely,

(V.R. KRISHNA IYER)

To
Sri. Prakash Karat
General Secretary
Communist Party of India (Marxist)
New Delhi

<http://in.rediff.com/news/2006/aug/14inter.htm>
'India can be changed by the new generation'

George Iype | August 14, 2006 | 14:15 IST

Fali Nariman, widely recognised as India's finest Constitutional
lawyer, once said: 'When V R Krishna Iyer speaks, the nation listens.'

Justice V R Krishna Iyer is now 91 years old. Even though he cannot
walk without assistance, his brilliant mind, which made him one of the
greatest judges to sit on the Supreme Court, continues to search for
answers to India's many problems.

For hours every day, he reads and writes in his humble study at his
home in Kochi. "I want to go out and make speeches against corruption
and scandals that are afflicting us on this Independence Day. But I
cannot stand for long," says one of India's most admired judges.

Young lawyers, judges and politicians come to his home frequently to
consult with the judge on the Constitution. "Nobody cares for the
Indian Constitution these days, but for me this is like the Bible," he
says.

Is the India of today what V R Krishna Iyer had hoped for when he
witnessed the country gaining Independence in 1947?

In an exclusive interview to Managing Editor George Iype, the great
legal mind assesses the meaning of freedom.

The first of a year-long series of interviews with eyewitnesses to
India's recent history.

[Q] What are your most enduring memories of Independence Day in 1947?

[A] The great Jawaharlal Nehru making a memorable speech was the most
touching memory. It was a magnificent speech, for its ideas, promises
and its literary value. I was inspired by his speech. Whenever I met
him, I told him that.

Even today, whenever I have doubts about the objectives for which this
country stands for, I quote Nehru's great speech and ask the common
people to fight for the very causes which Nehru had put forward before
the people.

[Q] Who made a lasting impression on you during the freedom struggle?

[A] Almost everyone. But certainly it was Mahatma Gandhi and Nehru
whom I admired those days.

[Q] As someone who was born before Independence, are you satisfied
with the India of today?

[A] Unfortunately, no. If I may say so, India is today absurdly
contrary to my expectations. I say so because Nehru's speech which I
keep in my mind every day, said: 'We will wipe out the tears from
every eye.'

Mahatma Gandhi said during the freedom struggle: 'We will give jobs
and employment to every person in the villages.' Gandhiji had this
deep desire for the rehabilitation of the common people. But sadly, we
have today more unemployment, more violence, more starvation and more
denial of human rights.

Therefore, I feel sad that after 59 years of Independence, this
country is going down. Is it a case of decline and downfall? Or are we
going to have a better deal from a new generation that will wake up
and say: 'India belongs to us and India is great.'

[Q] Why has this happened to India?

[A] India belongs to the people; that is what the Constitution says in
the beginning: 'We the People of India.' Alas, alas... today we have
rogues, rascals and freebooters. These expressions that I am now using
were once used by Winston Churchill opposing the Indian Independence
Act.

Churchill was wrong in using these words at that time against the
leaders of India. Today, we find the country is full of corruption;
the country is full of the craze for power; the country is full of
violent members of Animal Farm.

Bharat Mahaan has suddenly become an Animal Farm. And that is why I
feel sad that today our expectations have darkened into anxiety,
anxiety into threat and threat into despair.

[Q] What do you think have been India's greatest achievements since
Independence?

[A] What the world has achieved, India has also achieved. We could not
invent, for instance, the radio and television. These are not things,
which we have achieved, but the world has achieved.

Technology has taken the world including India into a higher level of
achievement. But what has happened is that the achievements in India
are meant for the rich and not for the poor. Remember the technology
that we all talk about is mostly enjoyed only by the rich, not the
poor.

The fast food-wallahs, the five star hotels create all kinds of
gluttony and want more and more profit. Money is more important than
man. There are hidden agendas behind all the developmental activities
that we are boasting about in India. These hidden agendas are all to
do with the higher class, the rich and the wealthier class. The poor
are becoming poorer.

[Q] But India has also progressed tremendously over the years.

[A] I read the other day in some magazine that India has some 23
businessmen who are billionaires. I want to point out that India has
also one billion people, many of whom are poor. This is where we are.

What right have we to feel that something great has happened to India
after Independence? Many things have happened. But for whom? For
admission in LKG (Lower Kindergarten) for your child, schools are
charging Rs 20,000 to Rs 30,000 as fees even in small towns across
India. How can a poor family educate their children? Is it not a
matter of shame?

[Q] You mean moneypower has touched even education in India.

[A] Education in India today is priced, not given. For an admission to
a medical college, the followers of Jesus, the Catholic Church in
India, charges Rs 30 lakh to Rs 40 lakh. What shocked me the other day
is when someone told me: "Krishna Iyer, why are you not talking about
Hindu colleges that are also charging the same amount?"

I said you are right. Mata Amritanandamayi is getting lots of money
from America. All out of her messages of love. She speaks of love
everywhere. And Americans pay large sums of money for her to fulfill
her programmes and plans of love for the poor. Love for the poor means
dignity for them; dignity means development for them. Everyone is
impressed with Amma's trust and love.

But she also runs a medical college in Kochi called the Amrita Medical
College, and the minimum admission fee charged by the Amrita College
is Rs 30 lakh per student. I do not know whether Mataji knows about
it. But in her name, the followers of Amritanadmayi are collecting
large amounts of money. I do not think it is pardonable.

Sadly, this is what is happening in India. Every Hindu, Christian or
Muslim educational institution has become a money-making institution.
Education is now priced in India, not given.

This is a malignancy that has got into our country. This is cancer.
This has got to be eliminated. I do not know how this can be done,
except by Mahatma Gandhi's expressions: 'Do or die.'

[Q] Has the Constitution failed India?

[A] The Constitution has failed, in the sense that the people,
politicians, even the judiciary have ignored it.

Nobody cares a damn about the Constitution in India.

The Constitution says: 'We the People of India constitute a Socialist,
Secular, Democratic Republic. Is there a minister or judge, excepting
poor me, who takes the expression 'Socialist' seriously?

Everyone is against socialism in India. A Supreme Court judgment with
seven judges led by the then chief justice some years back said:
'Education is a commercial operation and profit-making is reasonably
permissible.' But the Constitution says ours is a Socialist Republic.

The other day we read what the Bengal chief minister said: 'I am
running a capitalist government.' This is what a Marxist chief
minister says these days while he has taken an oath, swearing by a
Socialist Republic.

[Q] Why do you think the legal system has declined in India?

[A] We are appointing judges by various circumstances which do not
take note of their past. When you select a judge, you must examine him
with Constitutional provisions. Do they believe in socialism and
secularism?

It is not fair to say that the judges have let down the judicial
system. We have let down the judiciary. Ambedkar said: 'If things
fail, we cannot blame the Constitution, it is because our men are
bad.'

[Q] Can the legal system be reformed in the country?

[A] It has to be reformed. Unfortunately, the government had appointed
a Commission for reforming the Constitution and it did preciously
nothing. It was headed by former Chief Justice Venkatachaliah. All
they did was recommend some changes here and there in the
Constitution.

But the fundamental value changes which should have called for a new
vision and mission are missing in the recommendations. I was the
chairman of the Fundamental Rights Committee of that Commission. But I
had no voice in the Commission. The Commission report was prepared by
Venkatachaliah and given to the government.

Unfortunately, no failures have been erased from the Constitution.

[Q] What do you think are India's greatest challenges?

[A] Our greatest challenge is to move ahead in unity. We have to find
out whether we are truly independent these days. Whether our poor are
free these days. We are the leading members of the Non-Aligned
Movement. But we have achieved nothing with NAM.

Rajiv Gandhi told me once: "Krishna Iyer, 108 NAM countries are there.
When the Americans bombed the Libyan capital, not one dog barked. I
alone critically shouted against this outrageous violation of
international law."

[Q] What do you think of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's leadership?

[A] We do not have a great leadership in India now. Manmohan Singh is
an honest man. He is simple. He does not take bribes. But his honesty
is not sufficient. If the team he leads is not honest, what is the
point? If he is told to follow America, then where is the leadership?

I think one of the biggest tragedies of India is that the country now
buys the largest number of weapons in the world. We will have much to
answer for in history.

[Q] Do you have hope in the new generation of India?

[A] That is my only hope. Let us hope the generation will do something
about bringing radical changes in Independent India. Ambedkar once
said: 'Every generation is a new nation.' So this new generation of
India may be a new nation with new ideas.

India cannot be changed by old men like me. But certainly India can be
changed by the new generation. I have hope in them. We need a
transformation, which has to be through the young. The young are going
to be in a majority shortly in India. Let us take the young into our
fold and make them feel India is ours.
--
Yoshie

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