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From: "cpimllib" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: CPI(ML)
Date: Tue, 6 Mar 2001 13:05:51 +0530
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;@tonto.eunet.fi>
Subject: [INDIA]  ML Update,  Vol: 4; No. 10; 7- 3- 2001.

ML Update

A CPI (ML) Weekly News Magazine

Vol.-4; No.-10; 7-3-2001

 Letter from Birsa Munda Central Jail, Ranchi

BJP Must Not Be Allowed to Reduce Jharkhand to a Police State

[In lieu of Editorial, this time we present before you a letter from General
Secretary Com. Dipankar Bhattacharya who was arrested on 1 March while
leading a massive protest demonstration before Jharkhand Assembly at Ranchi.
Com. Dipankar also suffered lathi blows before he was arrested. As the
Jharkhand Govt., spurred by political vengeance and with obvious green
signal from the Union Home Ministry, has implicated him under false
non-bailable charges like Sec.307 etc., he is at present lodged in Birsa
Munda Central Jail, Ranchi, along with 40 other comrades. ]

Three days after the March 1 gherao of Jharkhand Assembly, I am writing this
note from extremely overcrowded Birsa Munda Central Jail where I am
currently lodged along with 40 other comrades. These 40 comrades include one
young adivasi construction worker, Motu Oraon, who was picked up by the
police nearly an hour after we were taken into custody. His only crime was
that he happened to be standing near the site of the gherao and police
lathicharge. Motu's wedding was scheduled for yesterday, but he spent the
day in our company, privileged as a co-accused under section 307 and the
Criminal Law Amendment Act!
This so-called central jail of Ranchi has a sanctioned capacity of
accommodating 364 prisoners, but more than 2,100 prisoners are currently
lodged here. The number keeps swelling as hundreds of poor and mostly dalit
and adivasi prisoners who have been implicated in false cases are left to
languish for years without any legal aid or judicial relief. These are
prisoners who have already served their full prison term, but are being
forced to overstay for months and even years. There are nearly a hundred
septuagenarian prisoners  who are incarcerated defying all judicial norms
are court rulings. And then there are dozens of innocent Muslim youths from
Doranda and adjacent neighborhoods in Ranchi, victims of the continuing
spree of indiscriminate firing on the day of Eid last December.

Soon after the deck were cleared for the formation of Jharkhand, Advani and
his colleagues made no bones about their vision of the new province. They
wanted a model of police state. The first budget of the new state presented
on March 2 this year has reiterated this priority earmarking as much as Rs.
90 crore for the police forces' modernization. All this talk of police
modernization and improving the morale of the police are aimed at
legitimizing the order of lawlessness imposed by the very machinery
entrusted with the task of maintaining 'law and order' and the so-called
'rule of law'. This is all the more necessary for the Sangh Parivar in its
bid to push through its project of saffronisation and appeasement of
multinational capital.
If a police state thus becomes a political imperative in the saffron scheme
of things, democracy remains the battle-cry for all who want to improve
their own living and working conditions, and free Jharkhand from the
clutches of communal fascists, mafia gangs and capitalist predators. After
the formation of Jharkhand as India's 28th province and the installation of
the RSS-led Babulal Marandi regime, the question has now been posed squarely
on the agenda of the day : Whose Jharkhand? What kind of Jharkhand? The
oppressed and fighting people of Jharkhand are determined to brave all odds
to intensify the battle for democracy and secularism, for a new Jharkhand in
a new India.
Let me take this opportunity to thank all comrades and friends who have
condemned the police crackdown on the March 1 gherao of Jharkhand Assembly.

P.S.
The ongoing Taliban drive for demolition of rare Buddhist statues in
Afghanistan has rightly evoked worldwide condemnation. The cries of
condemnation emanating from the Sangh Parivar can however only be described
as an exercise in political hypocrisy of the most repulsive kind. A perfect
example of pot calling the kettle black. The history of pre-Mughal India is
replete with instances of demolition of Buddhist statues and the Sangh never
tires of glorifying this timeless civilization. And will anyone still tell
us how the demolition of Babri Masjid in December 1992, the end result of
what Advani and Vajpayee describe as independent India's biggest mass
movement, was any different from the Taliban spree of destruction?


Appeal to Party Ranks and Concerned Citizens

CPI(ML) had organised Jharkhand Assembly gherao on 1 March on the following
demands: (1) Stop atrocities on dalits,(oppressed castes) adivasis (tribals)
and minorities; (2) Stop Koel-Karo Hydel Project; (3) Arrest the culprits of
Ranchi "land scam" and return the land to tribals; (4) Appoint judicial
enquiry on Doranda firing and punish the concerned officials; (5) Police
officials responsible for Tapkara killings must be booked under 302 I.P.C.;
(6) Suspend the medical officer related with the investigation of Kurpania
rape and punish the concerned S.P.; and (7) Book the concerned police
officials under Sec.302 who killed innocent Jaipal Rajak in Bokaro Steel
City.

It can be mentioned here that within the short span of two months, the
Jharkhand Govt. has ordered police firing thrice, and on the other hand, two
successful bandhs (general strike) have been observed against it, called by
CPI(ML) and other democratic forces. Therefore, CPI(ML) had decided to
gherao  (encircle)  the Jharkhand Assembly peacefully to voice people's
protest against Chief Minister Babulal Marandi's attempts to turn Jharkhand
into a police state and also to raise issues related to Adivasis' land and
the anti-Adivasi Koel-Karo Hydel Project.

During the gherao, when Com. Dipankar and other comrades, on their way to
the Assembly, reached near the barricade, CRPF and RAF contingents posted
there without the least provocation resorted to brutal lathicharge on them.
The City S.P. Sampat Mina and SDO Sunil Singh led the attack.
Not only the arrested persons were manhandled, they were also given electric
shocks through a special machine by the SDO himself.

After their arrest, out of the 41 comrades, nearly 30 were put in the police
van for 12 hours. Com. Dipankar and 10 other comrades were put in 8 ft. by 8
ft. police lock-up of Jagannathpur P.S. (in H.E.C., Ranchi) for 14 hours.
They were manhandled and mentally tortured by CRP and RAF jawans under the
instruction of SDO and City SP. Attempts were made even to handcuff them,
but the police could not succeed due to massive protest by our comrades.
Then after 14 hours of arrest, Com. Dipankar and 40 other comrades were
presented before CJM at his residence at 5 o'clock in the morning. Com.
Dipankar and 5 other comrades were booked under Sec. 114, 147, 148, 149,
323, 324, 357, 188, 353, 307, 431, 506 of IPC and 7 criminal Act.

The kind of political vendetta resorted by the Government of Jharkhand under
patronage of Union Home Ministry is unprecedented and portends ill to the
democratic polity. This may be the beginning of the new phase of fascist
repressive methods to silence political parties expressing the discontent of
the common people. We urge upon you to take cognizance of the gravity of the
incident and rise in protest against this onslaught on democracy. The Party
has decided to observe 7 March as all-India protest day. Send protest
memorandum to the Governor (Fax No. 0651-301596) and Chief Minister (Fax No.
0651-252563 or 252561) of Jharkhand Government.

--Swadesh Bhattacharya, PB member


Intellectuals in Patna Condemn Ranchi Incident

The incident of brutal lathicharge on CPI(ML) activists who were going to
stage a peaceful gherao of Jharkhand Assembly protesting against Tapkara and
Doranda firing incidents and demanding scrapping of Koel-Karo project is an
open fascist act by Jharkhand Government, aimed at violating the people's
democratic right to stage a protest. ... This act of Jharkhand Govt. is
politically motivated and anti-democratic. We all strongly condemn this act
and demand immediate and unconditional release of all arrested persons
including Com. Dipankar.
--Prof. AKP Yadav, Father Phillip Manthara, Prof. Kishori Das, PUCL, Prof.
Santosh Kumar, Prof. Bharati S. Kumar, Prof. Shahida Hassan, Advocate, Mr.
Khursheed Alam, Prof. Sadhu Sharan Suman, Mr. Basant Chaudhary, Advocate,
Mrs. Meera Dutta, Mr. Vishwajeet Sen, Mr. NP Kuer, Shri Madan Kashyap, poet,
Shri Alok Dhanwa, poet, Shri Shekhar, story writer, Prof. Ram Bineshwari
Singh, Shri Ranjit Verma, Advocate, Prof. Niroj Sinha, Mrs. Laxmi Kumar, Mr.
Virendra Kumar, Prof. Pradhan H Prasad, Prof. Rohit Raman, Mr. Shankar
Singh, Mr. Chandrika Prasad.


Com. Dipankar's Arrest in Ranchi Evokes Nationwide Protest,
Effigy of Babulal Marandi Burnt

After receiving the news of arrest of Com. Dipankar and 40 other comrades in
Ranchi on 1 March, a wave of discontent spread among Party ranks and general
democratic personages. The Party called for observing nationwide protest on
March 2. Immediately responding to the call, Party ranks all over the
country organised rail roko, rasta roko, demonstrations, dharnas etc. to
voice their protest against the arrest of Com. Dipankar and others and
police repression.

At Hazaribagh Road station, Rajdhani Express was detained for 5 hours. GT
Road was blocked at several places. At Nirsa in Dhanbad, a 3-hour Rasta Roko
was organised in which about  250 people participated. They were
subsequently arrested. The effigy of Chief Minister of Jharkhand was also
burnt.
In Dhanbad, a militant rally was held on the main road and after the rally,
a mass meeting was held. The effigy at Chief Minister Babulal Marandi was
burnt in front of the District Court, blocking the road there. Com. Swapan
Mukherjee, Upendra Singh and Sukhdev spoke in the meeting.
Akhil Bharatiya Coal Mazdoor Sangharsh Samiti (All India Coal worker's
struggle Committee) in its all-India meeting in Munidih area of Dhanbad
condemned the arrest of Com. Dipankar and other  comrades and demanded
immediate, unconditional release.

On March 2, statewide protest day was observed in Bihar. Roads were blocked
in Darbhanga and Dumraon, rail lines were blocked in Mairwa. Various forms
of protest including street corner meetings, effigy burning etc. were
adopted in Patna, Arrah, Jahanabad, Mohania, Dumraon, Gaya, Samastipur,
narkatiaganj, Bettiah and Muzaffarpur. On 4 March, Jahanabad bandh was
organised. On 5 March, a dharna was organised in Patna in which apart from
our Party, leaders from MCPI, SUCI, AICCTU, AIPWA, RYA, AISA, BPKS, Khet
Mazdoor Sabha (agricultural worker's union) also participated. From 6 March
Advani and Marandi's effigies will be burnt and statewide Chakka jam (stop
the wheels) will be initiated from 7 March. The movement will go on till
Com. Dipankar and other comrades are released.

CPI(ML) activists and supporters held a militant 'March to Home Ministry'
here in Delhi. In Delhi, protesters were stopped at Parliament Street Police
Station, where they held a meeting and burnt the effigy of Jharkhand Chief
Minister Mr. Babulal Marandi. The march was led by Com. B.B. Pandey,
Rajendra Pratholi and Ranjit Abhigyan.

In Calcutta, Party activists led by Com. Kalyan Goswami and Jayatu Deshmukh
staged a demonstration before Raj Bhawan on 5 March. Thirty comrades were
arrested while entering Raj bhawan. Elsewhere in Calcutta main roads were
blocked. A memorandum demanding Com. Dipankar's unconditional release was
handed over to the Governor.

Left Leaders' Jointly Condemn Com. Dipankar's Arrest

Com. Jalauddin Ansari, State Secy. of CPI, Com. Krishna Kant of CPI(M), Com.
Tarakant Prakash of RSP, Com. Nripendra Krishna Mahato of Forward Bloc, Com.
Amriteshwar Chakravarty of SUCI, Com. Ajay Chaudhry of MCPI and Com. KD
Yadav of CPI(ML) have in a joint statement condemned the arrest of Com.
Dipankar and other comrades in Ranchi on 1 March.

Movement Demanding Com. Dipankar's Release Mounts

The movement to get Com. Dipankar Bhattacharya unconditionally released is
gaining momentum day by day. Party's Jharkhand State Committee has started
massive indefinite dharna at Albert Ekka Chowk, Ranchi in which thousands of
people from various districts of Jharkhand are taking part. The Party has
decided to observe all-India protest day on 7 March, the day on which
telegrams and faxes protesting against the arrest of Com. Dipankar and other
comrades will be sent to President of India and Governor/Chief Minister of
Jharkhand. Meanwhile  a memorandum has already been sent to the President of
India. The Party has decided that in case the Govt. does not release Com.
Dipankar and others, "Ranchi Chalo" (March to Ranchi) will be organised on
14 March.


"Oust the looters to save agriculture, Oust saffron to save the country" :
Call given by All India Peasant Conference held in Faizabad

The All-India Peasant Coordination Committee held its conference in Faizabad
of U.P. on 2-3 March. The conference, held at Narendralaya Sabhagar, was
attended by over 500 delegates from 9 states. After the welcome address was
delivered by Com. Akhilendra Pratap Singh, Secretary of CPI(ML) U.P. State
Committee, the conference was inaugurated by Com. Swadesh Bhattacharya,
Polit Bureau member of CPI(ML), who highlighted the adverse impact of
globalisation on peasants of our country and underlined the necessity of a
concerted action against BJP govt.'s anti-peasant policies adopted under
World Bank-IMF-WTO directives. A 5-member presidium comprising Mahendra
Chaudhary from Rajasthan, Khitish Biswal from Orissa, Ajit Das from West
Bengal, Rajaram Singh from Bihar and Ishwari Prasad from U.P. was formed to
conduct the proceedings. Shri S.P. Shukla, noted economist and former member
of Planning Commission, Vishnu Bhagwat, former chief of Indian Navy,  Com.
Tandon of CPI(M)-led All India Kisan Sabha and other peasant leaders
addressed to the delegates. The conference elected a 22-member body of
All-India Peasant Struggle Committee, with Com. Pawan Sharma as its
convener.

The next day, on 3 March a massive rally of over 5,000 peasants from various
states was held at Gulab Bari Maidan. It was presided over by Mahendra
Chaudhary. Speakers at the mass rally included Com. Akhilendra Pratap Singh,
former Prime Minister Vishwanath Pratap Singh, Vishnu Bhagwat, SP Shukla,
peasant leader from Terai region of U.P. Com. Krishna Adhikary, Rajasthan
Kisan Sangathan leader Com. Srilata Swaminathan, MLA and peasant leader from
Madhya Pradesh Shri Sunilam, peasant leader from Andhra Pradesh Com. Bangar
Rao, CPI(ML) MLA and peasant leader of Bihar Com. Rajaram Singh and Com.
Swadesh Bhattacharya.


Dharna by Peasants in Rajasthan

CPI(ML), CPI(M), CPI and Kisan Sangharsh Samiti(peasant's struggle
committee) jointly organised a token dharna before district collectorate on
26 February on the demand of uninterrupted supply of electricity for eight
hours and withdrawal of false cases against peasants. A memorandum was
submitted to the Collector in which the demand to fulfil government's own
commitment of supplying electricity uninterruptedly for 8-hours was
reiterated.

Mazdoor Ekta Manch Formed at Bhagalpur

In the process of forming workers' solidarity forums in towns and industrial
centres in order to develop unity and class consciousness within working
class movement, a workers' convention was organised on 4 March at IMA Hall,
Bhagalpur. More than 80 delegates from rail, bank, telecom, insurance,
postal, electricity, state govt. employees, primary education and local body
etc. participated in the convention. It was inaugurated by noted left
intellectual Com. TP Verma, who exhaustively delivered on the adverse
effects of globalisation and liberalisation policies pursued by the Indian
government on the life on the working class and vast masses of our country.
Com. Pradip Biswas, president of AIIEA (Eastern Zone)also expressed his
views. Com. SK Sharma, veteran bank employees leader, presented the approach
paper. Com. Pradeep Jha, Coordinator of Mazdoor Ekta Manch, Patna spoke of
the new needs of the working class movement and called for liberating
working class movement from its sectoral narrowness and trade union rivalry.
Com. Nand Kishor Prasad (insurance) and Com. Rambali Prasad (state govt.
employees) were also present. In the end, a 20-member committee of Mazdoor
Ekta Manch, Bhagalpur was formed taking representatives from all the
above-mentioned sectors. Com. S.K. Sharma was elected its convenor.


Mass Meeting in Neyveli

A public meeting was conducted in Neyveli Main Bazar on 20 February on
behalf of Neyveli Lignite Corporation Workers' Solidarity Union (NLCWSU) and
Tamil Nadu Democratic Construction Workers' Union (TNDCWU), both affiliated
to AICCTU. Comrades M Selvaraj, R. Ravichandran and T. Pichaimuthu,
respectively President, Gen. Secy. and Treasurer of NLCWSU and K
Krishnamoorthy, Cuddalore District Secy. of TNDCWU presided over the
meeting. AICCTU president Com. S. Kumarsamy in his address hailed the NLC
union comrades for winning 'secret ballot system' through struggle and court
verdict.


Com. Dipankar Bhattacharya's Statement on the  General Budget, 2001-2002

Capital-friendly, Anti-poor Budget

The only principle followed in this year's budget is appeasement of capital
and further impoverishment of the poor. While the demands made by the
industry chambers have been more than fulfilled, desperate cries for
increased allocation for social sector and rural development have simply
gone unheard.

The dismantling of administered price mechanism coupled with the continuing
demolition of the public distribution system will aggravate the current
agrarian crisis and leave the small farmer and poor consumer completely
vulnerable to the whims of the market.

The accent on accelerated disinvestment will only result in many more BALCO
type sellouts. in sharp contrast to this clamour for stragegic sale of
majority shares of profit-making PSUs is the government's continuing
criminal silence on the future of the sick and closed industries.

The so-called rationalisation of tax and interest rate structure is also
tilted heavily in favour of the big investors while the small-savers will be
hit hard by the 1.5% reduction announced in the interest rate on small
savings.

The budget has signalled draconian changes in labour laws. It will leave
employees free to hire and fire workers while the proposed relaxation of
contract labour regulations will depress wages and intensify job insecurity.

The 'new deal' announced in the budget is clearly a raw deal as far as the
toiling masses and the poor are concerned. Rural and working India will have
to rally against the disastrous implications and impact of Yashwant Sinha's
market-friendly anti-poor budget.


Meeting Against Union Budget in Gujarat

A mass meeting was held near Dudheshwar Chowki in Ahmedabad of Gujarat on 5
March to protest against anti-poor union budget, 2001-02. Apart from mill
workers, students and intellectuals also attended the meeting. Addressing
the meeting Com. Ranjan Ganguli, incharge of Gujarat Party unit exposed the
pro-multinational and anti-poor, anti-worker nature of the budget and said
that the proponents of so-called Swadeshi and nationalism are in fact
selling the self-dependence and sovereignty of our motherland to
multinationals. Com. HJ Pagare, Secy. of Ahmedabad unit, labour leader Com.
Laxmanbhai Patanwadia, Baburam Yadav, SS Tiwary, Nandlal Singh, GDS Mansuri
etc addressed the meeting.
When the effigy of the union budget was being burnt at the end of the
meeting amidst the slogans "Atal Bihari-Yashwant Sinha, down down!" police
intervened and arrested 11 comrades including Com. Ranjan Ganguli,
Laxmanbhai Patanwadia and HJ Pagare. The meeting was presided over by
veteran communist leader Com. Kantilal Dabhi who strongly condemned the
autocratic role of Gujarat police.

Effigy of Budget Burnt in Delhi

CPI(ML) Mandawali Committee held a demonstration against anti-poor budget at
Sabzi Mandi on 28 February and burnt its effigy. The meeting was addressed
by Com. Suneeta and Gautam, members of Delhi State Committee, Ravindra
Sharma, Samunder Paswan, Ashok Kumar, Ravi Kumar and Vibha Gupta, who
demanded rollback of anti-poor provisions.

In Shahdara area, Party unit took out an anti-budget march on 28 Feb.
evening and burnt the effigy of the budget at Natthu Colony Chowk in a
demonstration. It was addressed by Com. Shashi Bhushan of RYA and Ram
Abhilash of CPI(ML).

In Okhla area, the effigy of budget was burnt on 1 March at Kalkaji Depot by
DTC workers. The demonstrators were led by Com. Santosh Roy, NM Thomas and
Dinesh Singh.

Mandawali Nagarik Sabha Conference

Second confererence of Mandawali Nagarik Sabha was held in East Delhi on 4
March. BB Pandey, Rajendra Pratholi, Suneeta, Ravindra Sharma, Madhunisha,
etc. addressed to the delegates. A 22-member executive committee was elected
with Samunder Paswan as its president.
Mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website http://www.cpiml.org


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