---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Liberation News Service <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 11:16 AM
Subject: ML Update Vol. 13, #44, 26 Oct - 01 Nov 2010
To: Liberation News Service <[email protected]>


ML Update
 A CPI(ML) Weekly News Magazine
Vol. 13, No. 44, 26 OCT – 01 NOV 2010


Comrade Ram Naresh Ram is no more

Veteran leader of historic struggles in Bhojpur, Central Committee
Member and leader of the CPI(ML)’s legislative group in the Bihar
Assembly from 1995-2010, Comrade Ram Naresh Ram passed away around 4
pm in PMCH, Patna, where he had been in a coma and battling a cerebral
stroke for the past several days. 87-year old Comrade Ram Naresh Ram,
popularly known as ‘Parasji,’ is among the tallest leaders of the
revolutionary struggle and is an icon for the downtrodden and
oppressed people, not only of Bhojpur and Bihar but the whole country.

Hailing from a dalit family of Shahabad (Bhojpur) region in Bihar, he
became a full-time communist organizer in the 1940s, participating
actively in the freedom struggle as an activist of the undivided CPI.
When the CPI(M) was formed in 1964, he became one of its founding
members in the Shahabad region. In 1967, he was elected mukhiya and
then contested the Assembly election, during which Comrade Jagdish
‘Master’ was brutally attacked and Comrade Ram Naresh Ram himself was
imprisoned by feudal goons. Inspired by the Naxalbari struggle, he
became one of the founders of the CPI(ML) movement in Bihar, along
with other legendary leaders like Jagdish ‘Master.’

In the 1980s, he was the Secretary of the Bihar unit of the CPI(ML).
Ever since 1995, he consistently represented the CPI(ML) in the Bihar
Assembly, and was the leader of the party’s legislative group. In
2003, when the founding conference of the All India Agricultural
Labourers’ Association (AIALA) was held in Ara, he was elected the
founding President of the AIALA.

Sahajanand Saraswati galvanized the peasantry of central Bihar in
militant anti-feudal and anti-colonial struggles during the
pre-Independence period; Comrade Ram Naresh Ram played a comparable
role along with others like Jagdish ‘Master’ in galvanizing the rural
poor in the post-Independence period in anti-feudal and
anti-imperialist struggles.

Comrade Ram Naresh Ram had a deep sense of respect for the legacy of
the First War of Indian Independence of 1857 as well as for the
freedom struggle. As a legislator, he had had a memorial to the 12
peasant martyrs of 1942 constructed at Lasarhi village in Bhojpur.

In his simplicity and his life-long organic link with people’s
struggles, combining both parliamentary and extra-parliamentary
struggles, he was a model for communist parliamentarians and people’s
representatives.

His abiding legacy will inspire the entire communist movement and the
struggles of the oppressed for time to come.

Red Salute to ‘Parasji’!



Organise Country-wide Protests during Barack Obama’s India Visit

(In lieu of Editorial)

US  President Barack Obama’s forthcoming visit to India this November
will inaugurate a new chapter in the ‘strategic partnership’ between
US imperialism and India’s ruling class. As people of India, let us
examine the interests that the US President represents and the
implications of his visit for India.

Barack Obama became President of the United States because he
represented, for the people of the US as well of the world, a promise
of ‘change’ – change from the imperialist policies of the Bush regime
that had imposed wars, occupation, and economic crisis on the world.

Two years later, both in the US as well as elsewhere in the world,
that promise stands belied. Obama’s regime has represented
‘continuity’ rather than ‘change’ with the policies of US imperialism
and war-mongering. Any ‘change’ has remained cosmetic. Obama colluded
in suppressing the UN’s Goldstone Report indicting Israel for war
crimes in Gaza. In the name of ending the occupation of Iraq, Obama
has actually renamed 50, 000 US troops in Iraq as ‘advise-and-assist
brigades’ rather than combat troops. The US war in Afghanistan
continues unabated. And there has been no change whatsoever in the
policies of US imperialism that force a grave economic crisis on the
people of the world.

As Manmohan Singh’s UPA-II Government rolls out the red carpet for US
President Barack Obama this November, we will one again hear the
familiar claims – that India’s ‘special’ relationship with the US is a
matter of pride and that being part of the US’ strategic embrace
protects India’s economic and security interests. But bitter
experience has taught us better.

It has been revealed recently that the US had information of the
Mumbai terror attacks’ mastermind David Headley’s links with terrorist
outfits as well of his plans to target Indian cities, but did not
share the same with India. Not only that, the US is even now keeping
its own secrets by protecting Headley from facing trial in India. In
the Bhopal gas tragedy, we saw how India’s rulers obliged the US by
failing to make corporations like Union Carbide and Dow face the
criminal consequences or even pay damages. The Indo-US Nuke Deal is
designed to keep a US leash on India’s foreign policy and increase
India’s dependence on the US, while the recently passed Nuke Liability
Bill is scripted to protect the interests of the US nuclear industry.
The Indo-US Knowledge Initiative on Agriculture and ‘Obama-Singh 21st
Century Knowledge Initiative’ are all increasing the US stranglehold
over India’s self-reliance in education and agriculture.

Obama’s visit to India will undoubtedly serve US interests in many
ways – by further prising open key sectors of the Indian economy for
US investment; by expanding the Indian market for the US
military-industrial complex; and by further binding India to the US’
imperialist strategies in the world. For the mass of Indian people,
however, it is clear that India’s growing ties with the US are
inviting economic crisis and terrorism on Indian soil, and shamefully
shackling India’s independence and self-reliance to imperialist
interests.

Barack Obama is coming to our country as the intelligent, democratic
face of US imperialism; let all who stand for peace, justice and
sovereignty greet him with protests all over the country with a loud
welcome message:

US Imperialism Keep off from India, Keep Off from Asia!

Asia is not for US Meddling and Occupation!

Stop Outsourcing War, Terror, and Economic Crisis!

CPI(ML) Liberation

CPM Punjab

Left Coordination Committee (Kerala)

Lal Nishan Party (Leninist)

For All India Left Coordination



US hands off India, hands off Asia!

(Background Note prepared by Arindam Sen for the protests during
Obama’s India visit)

Barack Obama’s journey to India in the first week of November promises
to be remarkable on several counts. Not all US Presidents visited
India; those who did came here only in their second terms in office.
Obama will be coming here before completing his second year in the
White House and the trip is expected to cover full four or five days –
the longest on record. Generally speaking this is a measure of India’s
enhanced importance in the American dream of world domination. But
perhaps more important are the current context and the immediate
concerns on both sides.

Right on the eve of Presidential trip, the CNAS (Centre for a New
American Security), a think tank headed by Richard Armitage and
Nicholas Burns -- both former Deputy Secretaries of State under George
Bush Junior and key architects of the Indo-US Nuclear Deal – brought
out a paper titled “Natural Allies: A Blueprint for the Future of
U.S.-India Relations”. Referring to the “rapid expansion of ties”
during particularly the Bush years, the paper laments that now this
progress has stalled. “Past projects remain incomplete, few new ideas
have been embraced by both sides, and the forward momentum … has
subsided” – the paper observes, adding “it is critical to rejuvenate
the U.S.-India partnership and put U.S. relations with India on a more
solid foundation.”

How does the Democratic administration propose to respond to this
Republican pressure?

According to an official statement from the White House, the visit
will focus on the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan, bilateral
business ties and the world economy. It is easy to guess that the
second item would dominate the agenda, since this is crucial both for
a recession-hit and debt-burdened US and for an India betting on an
outward-looking rather than domestic demand-driven strategy of growth.
The two sides will therefore focus on issues such as the easing of
high-tech exports to India by removing Indian firms from the banned
entities list, which is mainly a fallout of New Delhi not signing the
NNPT and other security-related technology transfer agreements like
CISMOA (Communications and Information Security Memorandum of
Agreement) and BECA (Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement). If
some success is achieved on this front, that will be used to project
the visit as “historic”. The principal beneficiaries will of course be
the corporate lobbies in both countries – particularly the
military-industrial complex in the US. Firms like Boeing and Lockheed
Martin Corp. expect to sell military-transport aircrafts, military jet
engines, freight locomotives, reconnaissance aircrafts and other items
worth tens of billions of dollars. As for the Indian establishment, it
will be only too happy to show off its commitment to “national
security” with the newly acquired state-of-the-art defence equipments
and technologies.

Apart from the huge profits to be made from the sale of military
hardware, arming India to the teeth is important for Washington also
as part of its China containment policy. In the recent past, China-US
relations took some severe beatings on issues like arms sale to Taiwan
and Obama’s meeting with the Dalai Lama while the perpetually
simmering tensions in the Sino-Indian relations were also aggravated
on more occasions than one. Naturally the Indian Government is a very
willing accomplice in the American scheme of promoting “the world’s
biggest democracy” as a counterweight to “authoritarian China”. Of
course, this can happen only within a limit. For the Democratic
administration also accepts China’s crucial role in South Asia, as the
Beijing joint statement – which, inter alia, had appeared to convey
that China and the US would now keep a watch over differences between
India and Pakistan – made clear a year ago.

A thorny issue that will be sought to be sorted out during Obama's
visit is the teetering civil nuclear-energy partnership between the
two countries. US sanctions against India ended with the signing of
the nuclear deal a couple of years ago, but US firms like GE are not
selling nuclear technology to India yet. They are not prepared to
accept even the very limited liability placed on suppliers in the
event of a nuclear accident under the Nuclear Liability Bill. India is
hoping to assuage US firms that it will take care of their concerns
through the rules to be framed under the law, while US officials and
corporations want the law itself revised and the liability provision
scrapped —which does not seem to be feasible in the given balance of
political forces in India.

In the realm of world economy, the US wants India to support it in the
currency war against China, blaming the latter for artificially
devaluing the Chinese Yuan. But it has itself adopted a deliberate
strategy to devalue the dollar, the principal means being quantitative
easing (printing huge amounts of dollar for buying bonds and other
financial assets from the market). A weaker dollar would help the
President meet his avowed goal to double exports in five years, but
this is not good omen for other nations. This explains why Pranab
Mukherjee, during his recent visit to the US, refused to take the
American side in this war against the Chinese, currently India’s most
important trading partner. Nor did he forget to voice India’s
disgruntlement with the Obama Administration’s policy of discouraging
outsourcing. During the impending visit of the US President, he is
likely to raise this question again, and ask for liberalisation of the
H-1B visa regime.

The Indian wish list would also include a clear commitment from the US
to support its claim for permanent membership in an enlarged United
Nations Security Council. India, too, would be required to make a
number of commitments and policy changes. It will be under great
pressure for removing whatever restrictive regulations are still there
in sectors such as energy, technology, retail, health care and
banking. On the diplomatic front, New Delhi will be urged to join the
US in bullying Iran. As a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, Iran has an "inalienable right" to develop and use nuclear
technology for peaceful purposes and according to the International
Atomic Energy Agency there is no evidence to back up the charge that
Iran is "planning to produce nuclear weapons". And yet the US, which
lied about imaginary weapons of mass destruction in Iraq to
manufacture the logic of aggression, is now portraying Iran as a
threat to peace and resorting to escalating sanctions and threats of
military intervention against that country. Washington has already
named India’s oil and gas flagship ONGC, IOC and three other firms
among the 41 concerns worldwide having energy ties with Iran, an act
for which it may impose sanctions on them and the pressure will now be
further intensified.

Sending out a symbolic message of Indo-US partnership in the fight
against terror, the US President will begin his tour from Mumbai,
sight of the 26/11 attack. But is America really a dependable ally in
this struggle? Soon after the visit was finalized, ProPublica -- an
independent non-governmental organisation which was a recipient of
this year’s Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting -- gave out
minute details showing that three years before the November 2008
terrorist attack on Mumbai, US officials knew that David Coleman
Headley was undergoing training with the Lashkar-e-Toiba, which
plotted the attack. Had this information and his photographs been
shared with India at the time or even after the Obama administration
took over, India would not have given a visa to Headley for his
repeated visits and this could have prevented the terror strike. This
point has been largely ignored by major sections of the Indian media,
almost exclusively preoccupied as it is with exposing the role of
Pakistan’s ISI in the attack on Mumbai.

Among regional issues, the Af-Pak policy of US will also figure in the
talks, though hardly any breakthrough is expected. In the "Afghanistan
and Pakistan Regional Stabilization Strategy" released in January this
year, the White House promised an "enhanced partnership" with Pakistan
that would move far beyond the military funding the Bush
administration had provided. This was followed up by a provision of
$7.5 billion to be given to Pakistan over five years. All this is not
palatable to India, which never tires of complaining about US dollars
being used by Pakistan in abetting cross-border terrorism. New Delhi
is also eager to increase its stakes in Afghanistan and angry with
President Karzai for talking to the Taliban. Pakistan on the other
hand is reasonably aggrieved with the continuing US Drone attacks
inside its territory. In a situation as complex as this, the visiting
President will be hard put to balance relations between India and
Pakistan -- countries eternally at loggerheads, but both of which hold
significant regional influence in American plans for a post-war
Afghanistan.

The impending visit will have its interesting sidelights too. For a
starter, the Tata Group has announced a $ 50 million (Rs 220 crores)
gift to Harvard Business School -- the largest donation from an
international donor in the school's history. The symbolism should not
be lost on India’s state guest, who is also a Harvard (law school)
alumnus. But in terms of substance, how much will the trip actually
yield? Given the maze of multiple pressures and pulls in Indo-US
relations, no sensible observer will dare come up with a categorical
answer at this stage.

The US President comes to India at a time when he is experiencing a
steep fall from a peak of popularity in his own country and abroad for
failing to deliver on any of his high promises. The Manmohan Singh
Government too finds itself beleaguered by a host of nagging problems
ranging from skyrocketing prices to the CWG scam. Both sides
desperately need a face-lift and they will use the trip for that
purpose too. With the range of economic, diplomatic and strategic
issues to be covered, it is also evident that Obama’s India sojourn
aims at bolstering US interests well beyond this country. The point
was driven home by Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
Robert Blake, one of the top diplomats coming to New Delhi on a ground
preparation mission, when he said the centre of gravity of US foreign
policy has shifted from Europe to Asia. The bottom line is clear.
Barack Obama is coming to our country as the intelligent, democratic
face of US imperialism; let all who stand for peace, justice and
sovereignty greet him with a loud welcome message: US imperialism keep
off from India, keep off from Asia!



Adieu Comrade Rajesh

With a heavy heart, we have to convey the tragic news of the untimely
death of Comrade Rajesh Ranjan, an activist of AISA and CPI(ML), who
passed away of a sudden cardiac arrest on the morning of 26 October
2010.

Rajesh joined the AISA as a student of BA Korean in JNU. Throughout
his student days in JNU, he was actively involved in the revival of
AISA in JNU – he was an AISA office bearer as well as the general
secretary of the AISA JNU unit in 2007-08. He also contested JNUSU
elections as a Councillor candidate.

Rajesh was actively involved in the student movement in JNU. He was
rusticated by the JNU administration in 2007 for participating in the
movement for minimum wages and workers’ rights in JNU. In fact, he was
one of the first students in JNU who established a close rapport with
workers in the campus, and got to know of the large-scale violations
in workers’ rights in JNU. Students as well as mess workers in Mahi
hostel (where he was a resident for many years) will remember the role
Rajesh played in raising their issues. Rajesh was also part of the
group of students who got involved in teaching and taking classes for
the children of the construction workers in our campus.

Always an activist who was most serious and committed towards
revolutionary politics, he remained active even after his student days
as an activist of the CPI(ML). He was part of the AISA Headquarters
unit in Delhi, and was also a member of CPI(ML)’s and AISA’s
publications team and the website unit, and was also involved in the
publication work of AIPWA’s Women’s Voice and AICCTU’s Shramik
Solidarity. Comrades could always count on the solid, dependable,
hard-working Rajesh at all hours of day and night. He would also
render all kinds of help in organising a variety of people’s protests
and movements. His cheerful and simple nature easily won the affection
of all the friends and comrades with whom he worked.

There is no measure to the grief of his family (including his parents
and sisters), loved ones, as well his many friends and comrades. We
are all yet to come to terms with his shocking and sudden loss. We bid
him adieu with tears in our eyes and our hearts full.

Red Salute to Comrade Rajesh!

******************************************************************************************************




-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com




-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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