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From: "cpimllib" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 1 May 2001 23:23:45 +0530
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;@tonto.eunet.fi>
Subject: ML Update, Vol:4; No.18; 2- 5- 2001.

ML Update : A CPI(ML) Weekly News Magazine

Vol.-4; No.-18; 2-5-2001



Days of Debate in Parliament are Over, Prepare for Battle on the Streets

The budget session this year will not only be remembered for the deadlock in
both houses of Parliament, it will also go down in the history as a singular
session in which both the Railway Budget as well as the Union Budget were
passed without any discussion at all. Of the total 55 days of the Budget
Session, Parliament sat for only 16 days, and most of it was before the
presentation of the budget. Then, it is said that in the name of avoiding a
"financial crisis", all sections of the House came to an agreement at the
Speaker's behest and the government was allowed to expend thousands of
crores of rupees without any hitch. Question didn't arise of any cut
motions. The finance bill was cleared by the Lok Sabha through a voice vote,
of course several non-Congress Opposition parties did indulge in a theatrics
of walk-out. One wonders whether all this drama was just to avoid the uneasy
scenario of revealing the economic skeletons in the cupboards of these
parties, mainly the BJP and the Congress, before the public through
parliamentary debates that are supposed to go on for three long weeks; and
therefore there was a mutually accepted, silent deal to let this "dream
budget" go undebated and unrevised? The suspicion thickens when one
witnesses the winding up of the exercise with a vehement altercation that
ensued between the Prime Minister and the Leader of Opposition, not on any
economic policy issue but centering personal accusations and
counter-accusations invoking things past. Just an attempt to stretch a cheap
comic shade over an otherwise tragic episode. A brawl meant just to cover up
the utter lack of responsibility towards the people, while forcing the
bitter economic pill down through their throats.

And then, probably for the first time in the history of parliamentary
democracy in India, both the houses of Parliament were adjourned sine die a
fortnight before the Parliament was scheduled to be formally prorogued. This
is really intriguing. Most purturbing however is the role of the official
Left parties, who made the demand for an adjournment, which BJP readily
obliged as they were eager to dodge a discussion on Tehelka. Strangely
enough, several NDA partners appeared to be critical of this adjournment.

Once again this has brought to the focus the question of so-called consensus
on economic policy among the mainstream parties. Well, after the decade of
"reform", masses, particularly working class taking to the streets every now
and then, have already pronounced their verdict that there can be no
consesus whatsoever on the policies of liberalisation, privatisation and
globalisation that the government is so ruthlessly steamrolling. In this
situation, bourgeois opposition gets compelled to reflect them in a partial
and superficial manner, even though it cannot do so on a principle basis.
Such has been the case with Balco and Enron issues. Even Dattopant Thengdi
of BMS, BJP's labour wing, had to pronounce unsavoury remarks against
Vajpayee and Sinha. Disinvestment programme, confessed by Arun Shourie as a
'movement towards privatisation of public sector enterprises', has already
generated a lot of controversy within the bourgeois camp. Now the
anti-labour measures laid down by the Finance Minister under the euphemism
of "labour reforms" in the current budget have caused uneasiness even among
the allies of BJP. 

Even before the budget was thus stealthily given a nod, working class have
launched a sustained movement against the privatisation of BALCO and so far
there is no sign of its abatement. And the movement against Enron,
particularly the success of Maharashtra Bandh has not only forced the State
and Central governments to reconsider their sell-out but even scared the
mighty Enron to weigh the option of going out. Although an unyielding Sinha
has only "revised" his budget proposals further to the benefit of moneybags,
working class is determined to undo the wrongs done by him through his
paperworks. The May Day of the new millennium holds all the promises of a
resurgence in the working class movement against bourgeois bulldozing. Let
the red flag crimson with the blood of their forefathers shine the path of
their emancipation from the yoke of carnivorous capital.



OBITUARY



Red Salute to Com. Dipak Bose

Com. Dipak Bose, a veteran Party leader aged around 60, breathed his last on
27 April due to respiratory failure in Udham Singh Nagar of Uttarakhand.

Com. Dipak Bose, an engineer at Korba in Chhattisgarh, joined the Party in
early 70s and working underground as a wholetimer, he took up the
painstaking task of developing organisation in Madhya Pradesh. Then he was
shifted to UP where he worked in many places. Lastly he was working as a
member of Uttarakhand Leading Team. Despite his prolonged illness, he
continued to pour his energies in whatever Party work he was entrusted to
only because of his undaunted devotion to the cause of revolution.

While paying homage to the departed comrade and sharing the grief with all
those who knew him, Party resolves to learn from his fine communist
qualities. May his memory shine forever in our hearts.



Anti-Globalisation Meet in Jaipur

The Rajasthan unit of People's Campaign Against Globalisation was launched
in a seminar against globalisation held in Jaipur on 30 April. Addressing
the meet, noted social scientist and former Finance Secretary SP Shukla,
Convenor of the Campaign, said that a handful of powerful nations are
reaping all benefits in the name of globalisation, and this new world order
is only increasing disparities among the countries and within the countries.
The liberalisation policies are ruining domestic industries in Third World
countries like India and incresing unemployment. The process of
globalisation is as old as capitalism but in its latest form it is once
again bent on usurping the sovereignty of poor nations. Senior journalist
Prabhash Joshi warned that the finance capital can suddenly cause collapse
of our economy as and when it desires to do so. He said that the free market
cannot decide the fate of citizens. CPI(ML) Central Committee member Com.
Srilata Swaminathan emphasised the need of mobilising public opinion against
the imperialist intervention that is going on in the name of globalisation.
Ex-Speaker of Lok Sabha Rabi Ray and Sawai Singh of Sarva Sewa Sangh also
spoke at the occasion.



CPI(ML) on the Path of Agitation Against Violence and
Booth Capture in Panchayat Elections in Bihar

CPI(ML) State Committee in Bihar has strongly condemned the violence that
has unfolded during the six phases of Panchayat elections and resolved to
launch a militant movement against it. Party has said that this mockery of
democratic rights of the common people has crossed all limits with not only
feudal elements and criminals but bureaucracy under the RJD Govt. actively
participating in manipulating the electoral exercise.

For example, the BDO of Mairwan in Siwan district, who is also the local
election officer, changed the booth just one day before the polling without
any advance information to the voters, and even set up a booth one k.m. away
from the site decided by the state election commission. At several places,
polling was stopped much before the scheduled time. Polling at such booths
where ballot boxes had been snatched away and thrown into the river has not
been countermanded and no repoll has been ordered. Against these
irregularities on the part of the administration, Party MLA from Mairwan
Com. Satyadev Ram, along with several other Party leaders, has taken up
indefinite fast at Mairwan Block office in Siwan district. In other
districts too such agitations are being taken up.

On the other hand, several mass meetings were held at Paliganj, Naubatpur,
Dulhin Bazar, Dhanarua, Masaurhi, etc. during the election campaign from 20
to 28 April, where the demand of resignation of Vajpayee government for its
involvement in corruption was also raised. Com. Nand Kishor Prasad, Party
Polit Bureau member addressed these meetings.



Protest Day Observed Against Massacre in Kaimur

Even before the Panchayat elections were over, eight poor villagers
belonging to dalit and backward castes were massacred by a criminal gang at
Satauna village of Nuaon P.S. in Kaimur district on 23 April. To investigate
into the killing a team led by Com. Ravishankar Ram, State Committee member,
visited the site of massacre. Party observed protest day in Kaimur district
on 25 April.



"Solidarity March" to Balco

Akhil Bharatiya Koyla Kamgar Sangharsh Samanway Samiti, affilated to
CPI(ML)-Unity Initiative and Balco Sangharsh Samarthan Group will organise a
"Solidarity March to BALCO" at Korba on 12 May. A public meeting will also
be held there. The main slogan of the march is "Save Balco, Kick Out
Sterlite". All the forces opposing sale of BALCO to Sterlite are invited to
join the "Solidarity March" under their own banner.



Gonda Bandh Against Murder of Amit Shukla

Amit Shukla, son of a senior CPI(ML) leader and ex-president of Gonda bar
association Com. Narainji Shukla, was killed by criminals on the night of
18-19 April. To protest against the ghastly killing Gonda bandh was called
by Nagrik Suraksha Sangharsh Morcha on 23 April which was unprecedentedly
successful. The morcha has been formed on the initiative of CPI(ML), taking
other left and opposition parties and prominent personalities. A large
procession was taken out on Bandh day on which police resorted to
lathicharge. Leading the march, Com. Lal Bahadur Singh, Gen. Secy. of RYA
and others suffered injuries. Addressing the indefinite dharna at Gonda
district headquarters, under the banner of the Morcha, UP State Party Secy.
Com. Akhilendra Pratap Singh criticised the negligence of the
administration. Whereas the police has failed to nab a single culprit, it
has clamped Gangster Act on 11 RYA activists including Rajesh Dixit, Salman,
Shambhu and Arvind Mishra, ex-president of students union. and 150 common
people. Protesting against this, a CPI(ML) delegation met Principal Home
Secretary Naresh Dayal in Lucknow and handed over to him a memorandum,
demanding immediate arrest of the killers and withdrawal of Gangster Act
etc. imposed over innocent people. The Sangharsh Morcha will intensify the
agitation and RYA-AISA will observe statewide protest day on 2 May.



Maharashtra Bandh Largely Successful

Maharashtra Bandh called by Anti-Liberalisation Action Committee, a forum of
Left trade unions in the state, on the demand of scrapping Dabhol power
project paralysed the life in Mumbai and neighbouring areas, it was also
successful in Vidarbha and Western Maharashtra and received a mixed response
in Marathawada region. All shops and establishments in Mumbai were closed.
Buses were completely off the roads. Railway services on Central Railway
were suspended and on Western Railway these were partially disturbed.



Dharna at U.P. Assembly

CPI(ML) and All India Muslim Forum (AIMF) staged a joint dharna at U.P.
Assembly in Lucknow on 25 April to demand resignation of the UP Chief
Minister Rajnath Singh for the massacre of minorities by police and PAC in
Kanpur and massacre of common people at Bhawanipur (Mirzapur). The dharna
was led by Com. Akhilendra Pratap Singh, UP State Secy and Nihaluddin,
President of AIMF. Senior peasant leader Pratap Kumar Tandon, RYA Gen. Secy.
Lal Bahadur Singh, MK Sherwani, Gen. Secy. of AIMF, Hiralal of RPI, Suman
Raj of Anti-communal Campaign, AICCTU State Secy. Ramesh Sengar, AIPWA State
President Shivani Verma and other leaders addressed the dharna. It was
presided over by senior Party leader Com. Ishwar Chandra and conducted by
Com. Ajanta Lohit, Lucknow distt. Party secy. Jan Sanskriti Manch, PUHR,
Vikalpa etc. also participated in the dharna, while hundreds of Party
activists came from nearby districts. It was culmination of the continuous
dharna staged at Ramswaroop Park in Kanpur since 31 March as well as the 30
hour fast undertaken by Com. Akhilendra Pratap Singh. Rajnath Singh Govt. is
shying away from holding judicial inquiry into Kanpur violence and has
accededed only to the inquiry by a member of Revenue Board. CPI(ML) has been
conducting a prolonged agitation on this issue.



AIPWA Seminar Against Globalisation and Communal Fascism

East Delhi unit of AIPWA held a seminar on "Onslaught of globalisation and
communal fascism on women" on 29 April. A paper was read out by Vibha Gupta
introducing the topic of the seminar and then opinions were expressed by
AIPWA State Secy. Jita Kaur, Vice President Aparna Bharadwaj, Anita Joshi,
Kranti Bhat and others. The main speaker was AIPWA Gen. Secy. Kumudini Pati,
who emphasised on the need to launch an awakening campaign against
globalisation and communal fascism with a view to increasing attacks on
women. Sumitra Sinha conducted the meet and Sunaina moved the vote of
thanks.



Getting Rid of the Poor in Naidu's Cyber State

Farmers' suicide, particularly in Andhra Pradesh, is no more an obscure
issue. However, not many people know how widespread this malady has become.
Recently in article in The Hindu, P Sainath has revealed that figures in
data of crime record bureau in Anantapur district of Andhra Pradesh show
that between 1997 and 2000, 868 people, most of them farmers, took their
lives using poison, mainly pesticides. Over 900 hanged or drowned themselves
or used other means to kill themselves. The total number of suicides was
1,826. Last year was the worst, with 577 people ending their lives. As many
as 45 per cent of those committing suicide across this whole period were
women. There are a lot of women-headed households in this high-migraion
area.

Even the police admitted that most of those consuming poison committed
suicide due to economic reasons. On record, however, "poverty" claimed no
more than 42 of these suicides. But those committing suicide because of
"sickness" (read stomach-ache) numbered 1,061. That is over 58% of the
total. And those taking their lives due to "other" (unspecified) causes were
438 or almost 24 per cent. These two catagories account for 82% of the
suicides.

On the other hand, children are being sold out by their parents for a paltry
sum of Rs. 1000-3000. Raids conducted in Hyderabad and Tandur revealed that
hundreds of children are being sold at a price of Rs. 2-3 lakh. Last year,
706 children were brought to 7 placement organisations in Andhra Pradesh. Of
these, 302 were successfully placed for adoption with Indian families and
153 with overseas foster parents. Actually in US and Denmark, the number of
Indian children being adopted has grown in the past few years. In 1999-2000,
the traffic to the US more than doubled and increased by a third to Denmark.

Thus in the cyber state of Chandrababu Naidu, on the one hand poor pesants
are committing suicides and on the other, their children are being sold to
relatively well off people. Indeed this is Naidu's hi-tech way of getting
rid of the "poor", if not poverty.



Moldova Opts for Communist-led Rule

A new history was written when Vladimir Voronin, Chairperson of Moldovan
Communist Party was elected President of Moldava, an erstwhile constituent
republic of Soviet Union, on April 4. He won 71 votes in the 101-seat
parliament. Voronin's election made Moldova the first former Soviet republic
to return a communist to the post of head of state since the collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991. Later, Moldovan Parliament voted for a new government
headed by Vasily Tarlev and their Work Program. The new team was supported
by 75 MPs of the Communist Party and Braghis Alliance, and also received
unanimous 11 'contra' votes from the Christian Democratic People's Party
(CDPP) deputies. Ten days after assuming power the new Communist President
ruled out the possibility of his republic joining NATO, in striking contrast
to Romania which has shown eagerness to become a NATO "bastion" in southeast
Europe from 2002. Moldova, a largely Romanian-speaking nation, had joined
NATO's Partnership for Peace program, a loose contact group reaching out to
former Warsaw Pact states and often seen as a waiting-room for full alliance
membership, in 1994 under the rightist pro-western regime. Speaking at a
rally on 22 April while celebrating Lenin's 132 birth anniversary, Voronin
said that Moldova must hold out in Europe as Cuba has held out among
imperialist predators - meaning USA.

Moldova Communist Party (MCP) held its 4th (21st) Congress on 21-22 April,
which was attended by over 400delegates and about 800 guests. The Congress
re-elected Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin as MCP Chairperson, and
parliamentary MCP faction leader Victor Stepaniuk as Secretary of the MCP
Political Executive Committee. The Congress was attended by communist party
delegations from Cuba, Vietnam, North Korea, from a number of CIS countries
including Russia and other European states.

Rightist govt. in Moldava has been responsible for a fall in GDP by 3-fold,
a complete de-industrialization of the national economy, a $1.5 billion
external debt, 75% of the population living below the subsistence level,
lakhs of Moldovans earning their living abroad. They deliberately ruined
Moldova's traditional ties with Russia and the CIS. The MCP's historic
mission is to prove to the world: "the Communist idea, the Communist
movement have most favorable historic perspectives", Voronin said.



5th Annual Crafft Festival in Varanasi

For the past 5 years 'Crafft' (Centre for Research and Application in Folk
arts, Films and Theatre), has been involved in a broader cultural movement,
experimenting with creation of new folk expressions in response to today's
context while adopting and transgressing the whole gamut of old folk tales,
stories, gossips. The Crafft Festival that was held in Varanasi from 10 to
14 April was an arena of imaginative display of this endeavour, in which
subjects had a distinctly popular orientation. The film festival was devoted
to the legend of accomplished actor Raghuvir Yadav. Distinguished films like
Messy Sahab, Salam Bombay, Damu, Samar were screened at Assi Ghat as well as
in Vijaya Talkies, giving the presentation a varied local touch. This apart,
on each evening folk presentations involved everyone. Local people and
oustsiders danced together to the beats of rich folk musical legacy of
Biraha, Kaharwa, Kajri, and also occasionally with dances of Ahir, Kahar or
Dhobi styles.

Last two days of the festival were devoted to cultural seminar on "new
challenges of creativity". Com. Ramji Rai, Editor of Lokyudh and a senior
cultural activist, Ajay Singh, General Secretary of Jan Sanskriti Manch,
Zahoor Alam from Yug Manch, Prafulla Rai of Art Gallary 'Indus', Nihar
Bhattacharya, renouwned sculptor, and cultural activists from Arrah, Patna,
Ranchi, Allahabad, Delhi, Mumbai and other places were there to attend the
seminar. The discussion was centred on the paper presented by Crafft
President, Com. V.K. Singh. Com. Uday shed light on its practical aspects
and called on the speakers to express their views to enrich it. Renowned
intellectuals of Varanasi as well as presspersons were also present in good
numbers.

The Crafft festival of concluded in a magnificent way with the colourful
evening of songs, geetika and gazal, presented in a concert of Kala Kammune
and local artists. The new Executive of Crafft was elected, which reelected
VK Singh as president, and Uday as General Secretary.



Protesting Saffronisation of Film Awards

The Delhi unit of Jan Sanskriti Manch organised a protest against the
saffronisation of the National Film Awards on 29 April, singing a song
writted by Com. Rashid for the protest. The cultural activists stood with
placards outside Siri Fort, where the film "Pukar" was being screened. The
activists distributed leaflets and interacted with the audience. Filmmakers
Surojit Sarkar, Desmond Roberts were also present at the protest. Many other
Delhi based filmmakers extended support to the protest against
saffronisation of yet another institution, film awards.

All State/District Head- quarters, in particular the comrades who have been
deputed for sending their reports to the Party Centre, are requested to send
their mail positively by Sundays. Please note that the email address for
MLUpdate is:

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Special Issue of Liberation (May 2001) has just come out. Place your demands
to: 

Liberation Publications

U-90, Shakarpur, Delhi-92

Phone : 222 1067

email : [EMAIL PROTECTED]

CPIML e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Web Site: http//:www.cpiml.org



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