From: "cpimllib" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 15 May 2001 17:56:44 +0530
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;@tonto.eunet.fi>
Subject: [INDIA}ML Update, Vol:4; No.20; 16- 5- 2001.

ML Update
A CPI(ML) Weekly News Magazine
Vol.-4; No.-20; 16-5-2001

The May Mandate and After

Yet another exit poll has been rubbished by the actual poll outcome. Of the
four states and one union territory, which went to the polls on May 10, only
Kerala has conformed to the exit poll predictions. All the other states have
their own surprising stories to tell.
But first, let us look at the larger picture. From Assam to Tamil Nadu, NDA
partners have been mauled quite badly. Even in Kerala and West Bengal where
the BJP fought it alone and was by its own admission looking only for some
entry points into the Assembly and not for a slice of power, the party has
suffered a clear setback. The economic crisis resulting from the government'
s disastrous policies lurked as a common live backdrop to all these Assembly
elections. The snowballing popular resentment against the growing economic
misery has been a key component fuelling the so-called anti-incumbency wave
in most states. On the whole, the May mandate is bound to add to the worries
of the Vajpayee government at the centre and it may well catalyse a
realignment of political forces against and away from the NDA. Among non-BJP
forces, advocates of a third front will, however, have to face a
considerably re-energised Congress boosted by its significant gains in
Kerala and Assam.
The Left Front had high stakes in these elections. It has lost one of the
two states where it was in power, but as of now its emphatic win in West
Bengal has managed to eclipse its equally emphatic defeat in Kerala. The
CPI(M) is blaming its defeat in Kerala on an underhand Congress-BJP deal and
on the crash in cash crop prices. Both arguments however also expose the
Left's own opportunism and bankruptcy. The CPI(M) has only itself to blame
if it glosses over the essential commonality between the Congress and the
BJP, the two rightwing parties of the ruling classes. If the BJP's vote
share in Kerala has been halved in this election, it could very well be a
reaction to the plight resulting from the BJP's surrender to WTO. Instead of
treating it as a case of communal consolidation in favour of the Congress,
the moot question for a Left government should be why it found itself at the
receiving end of the people's disenchantment. Observers say the defeated
Nayanar government has been one of the worst and most insensitive in the
history of Left governments in Kerala and the verdict in Kerala is a
veritable indictment of this discredited regime.
In West Bengal, the Left Front has clearly got a new lease of electoral life
under the leadership of Buddhadev Bhattacharya. The Congress-Trinamool
combine was beset with all sorts of internal and external problems, and a
united Left Front succeeded in making inroads into the traditional Congress
turf in several districts. This effectively made up for whatever reverses
the Left Front suffered in its own strongholds in spite of its legendary
electoral machinery. Incidentally, along with Mamata's "now or never" bid
for power, and the BJP's ambitious plans of saffronising Bengal, the polls
have also buried the paper tiger called PDS. In social terms, Buddhadev has
emerged as the clear corporate choice of the day and sections of the
disillusioned Bengali middle classes also appear to have rallied back around
the Left Front. It now remains to be seen how Buddhadev, the new-found
darling of the corporate sector and upwardly mobile middle classes, proposes
to reconcile the core social coalition he has inherited as a legacy of the
Left since the late 1960s with his profound fondness for economic reforms
modelled on the Andhra pattern.
In Assam, a resurgent Congress has not only managed to wrest power from the
hands of the AGP-BJP-ABSU-ASDC(U) combine, the third forces have also been
humbled in the process. In no other region has this perhaps been more
pronounced than the erstwhile non-Congress citadel of Karbi Anglong where
the ASDC(P) has lost all the five seats and the Congress has succeeded in
regaining its lost presence. The ASDC faction led by Holiram Terang has
managed to hold on to a couple of seats but only by reneging on the ASDC's
anti-Congress anti-BJP independent credentials. The Left and other
revolutionary democratic forces will have to wage a tough battle to recover
their lost ground and intervene in the turbulent politics of Assam.
In Tamil Nadu, Jayalalitha has returned to power riding on the crest of yet
another 'sympathy' wave and heading a well-crafted alliance. But while
draping herself in a whole new set of 'secular' clothes, she has also
managed to expose the politics of crass opportunism and double standards. It
is quite revealing to see so many anti-corruption anti-autocracy crusaders
of yesteryears turn ardent supporters of Jayalalitha in her latest 'secular'
avatar.

Opening Up Defence Sector to MNCs Would Endanger National Security --
CPI(ML)
CPI(ML) in a statement issued on 10 May strongly opposed the Vajpayee
government's decision of further opening up various sectors, including the
strategic defence sector to private and foreign direct investment by
multinational corporations and said, "The government has blurred the
distinction between the strategic and non-strategic sectors. Earlier, it was
talking of privatisation only in non-strategic sectors, but, now it has
opened up even defence sector for private and foreign multinational
investment. It holds serious implications for national security."
The party charged the BJP-led NDA government with sqandering away vital
national assets to foreign multinationals and abdicating its responsibility
of safeguarding the crucial sectors like banking, telecommunication,
pharmaceuticals, transport and civil aviation.
The Party said, "The government is not only institutionalising corruption in
economy and politics and breaking the backbone of the economy, it is also
damaging the national security of the country. Massive protests must be
developed to unseat such a government."

Blast in Muzaffarpur Church by VHP
Vishwa Hindu Parishad goons threw crackers at St. Francis Cathedral situated
at Kalambagh Road in Muzaffarpur in Bihar on 5 May. They threw
anti-Christian pamphlets and tried to tear the Bible. Party District
Committee members led by State Committee member Com. Meena Tiwary visited
the site immediately after the incident and met church people. On 8 May a
march, led by Central Committee member Com. KD Yadav, was taken out in Patna
to protest against the outrage and a meeting was held at All India Radio
square. Com. KD Yadav also met the Bihar Archibishop Mr. Benedict Costa and
appraised him of our Party's concern over such attacks.
State Party Conference in UP
The 7th State Party Conference in U.P. is going to be held on 26-27-28 June
in Jamania, Ghazipur. It would be centred on the main slogans "Oust
Rajnath's Police-Mafia-Saffron Raj", and "March Forward Along the Red Wave
of Revolutionary Struggles". A leaflet issued for the occasion exhorts upon
the party ranks to march courageously to impart a leftward shift to the
politics in Uttar Pradesh, the country's heartland, at this crucial juncture
of our national life.

Our Performance in Bihar Panchayat Elections
Bihar State Committee of CPI(ML) has complained to the State Election
Commission apprehending largescale rigging during the counting of votes.
Particularly the inordinate delay being in the counting has made rigging
more probable. Dharnas and street corner meetings were organised in almost
all block offices in Bihar on 7 May to protest rigging in counting.
In most of the districts, counting of votes has not yet started. It seems
the whole of May will be consumed in completing the counting. In some
districts like Bhojpur, where the counting started, it is still going on and
it is expected to finish only by the evening of 15 May.
However, according to whatever unfinished reports we have received, In
Bhojpur candidates supported by CPI(ML) have bagged 2 seat in District
Council(DC), 18 Mukhiya (Village Panchayat Chief) seats and 14 Block
Development Council (BDC) seats. In Darbhanga, we won 8 Mukhiya seats and 11
BDC seats and in Nalanda, apart from winning 8 Mukhiya and 5 BDC seats, we
secured one seat in DC also. In Buxar, we won 1 DC seat, 3 Mukhiya seats and
4 BDC seats. In Samastipur, 1 Mukhiya and 3 BDC seats went to our
candidates. In Katihar, we won 5 Mukhiya and 4 BDC seats, and in Buxar 4
Mukhiya and 4 BDC seats. In West Champaran we won 1 Zila Parishad, 3 Mukhiya
seats and 3 BDC seat, and in Begusarai we won 3 Mukhiya seats.
In Jahanabad, our candidates have won 4 Zila Parishad seats, 13 Mukhiya
seats and 25 BDC seats. The victory of our candidates in important areas of
class struggle has once again proved that basic masses continue to stand on
our side at the grassroots level even facing severe repression. For example
we won Mukhiya seat in Bathe, where Ranvir Sena had massacred 58 innocent
people in 1997, and in Shankarpur, where the massacre in 1999 had even
resulted in imposition of president's rule in the state for a brief period,
we won Mukhiya and Zila Parishad seats. Similarly in Damuha-Khagri and
Bistaul, we won Mukhiya seats, BDC and Zila Parishad seats. We also won
Mukhiya and Zila Parishad seat in Mande Bigha of Jahanabad.

Privatisation of Foreign Policy
The nexus between Hinduja brothers and Vajpayee administration has brought
forth a new facet of the saffron-led NDA government, privatisation of
India's foreign policy. It has been revealed in the British Press that
Srichand and Gopichand Hindujas introduced Brajesh Mishra, Vajpayee's
National Security Adviser, to the the British Prime Minister Tony Blair in
June 1998, when Brajesh Mishra was on his post-Pokhran-II mission to western
capitals. The letters from Hindujas to Tony Blair's Chief of Staff reveal
that Hindujas were speaking on behalf of Brajesh Mishra and Vajpayee on
crucial matters of foreign policy. Then there are also news in the western
media that Hindujas also arranged Brajesh Mishra's meeting with President
Jacques Chirac of France. It should be kept in mind that in 1998 Vajpayee
was his own foreign minister and Brajesh Mishra virtually ran the foreign
policy. Defending this indefensible practice, BJP says that Hindujas served
a "national cause" in arranging the meeting. The same Hindujas were since
July 1993 trying to prevent the CBI gaining access to documentary evidence
about the Bofors payoff. Does this not reveal some sort of deal between the
ruling combine and the main opposition party, both making light of
Mishra-Hinduja affair? Here Quattrocchi and Hindujas seem to unite the
ruling and opposition parties in India. Will such a consensus reinforce
people's faith in the democratic setup? Is this how our main parties serving
the "national cause"?

Burdensome Food Policy
Food stocks with the FCI have increased to 45.74 million tonnes. This is
almost double its buffer stock norms. And the bad news now is that Iraq has
rejected large consignments of wheat sent by India to it under the UN's
food-for-oil programme because of its poor quality. In the case of rice
exports, India faces tough competition from China, Vietnam and Thailand. So
the FCI can sell neither wheat nor rice. Its poor competitiveness is not
amazing in the light of the fact that a part of FCI storage is already three
years old. Given the steadily declining food offtake, this predicament seems
unavoidable.
Not only procurement prices have increased, issue prices have also been
hiked and PDS prices have also been hiked in the last year's budget in order
to reduce food subsidy bill. The sale prices of foodgrains under PDS have
come closer to market prices as a result. Consequently India has not only
become internationally uncompetitive, but its own BPL population also cannot
easily afford to buy grains from the ration shops. Food offtake declined by
33% between April and December last year. The burgeoning stocks are also
because state governments are refusing to lift PDS foodgrains either because
it is sub-standard, adulterated because of FCI officials' corruption; or the
states themselves are bankrupt.
Will the Vajpayee government arrange to distribute it free to the people BPL
in drought hit areas? or will they release the poorer quality grain for
cattle. Will they introduce food for work in areas where agrarian labourers
do not get employment for a sizeable period throughout the year? Neither the
orientation of the budget nor the new policy initiatives being announced day
in and day out as part of second generation of reforms permit any such
alternative. However, the FCI is choking. And even this poor storage by FCI
is turning out very costly, amounting to Rs. 23 crores a day. This is
worrying the economic policy makers too. A number of wise proposals have
come. One is to export the surplus on reduced prices amounting to a subsidy
of Rs.2000 crore. Another is to sink the whole thing into the ocean.

Free Mumia Campaign
Demonstrations demanding US govt. to "Free Mumia" were held worldwide, even
in the US at Philadelphia City Hall, where the supporters of Mumia Abu-Jamal
held march, rally and pitched their tents on May 11-13. However, the
authorities denied permission for demonstration..
The US embassy in London has seen a series of pickets this year calling for
Mumia Abu-Jamal's freedom. The latest was organised by the "Mumia Must
Live!" campaign to mark May 12, the annual International Day of Action in
solidarity with Mumia Abu-Jamal by anti-racist, anti-death penalty forces
worldwide for the African-American political journalist and activist, framed
in the courts and on death row since 1982. Mumia is now waiting for his
retrial, his freedom, or his judicial murder. George Bush is a well-known
enthusiast of the death penalty. May 13 also marks the 16th anniversary of
the heinous bombing of the MOVE Organization -- a majority Black Community
group -- by the Philadelphia authorities in 1985 that slaughtered 11 women,
children and men.
In Cuba, 20,000 demonstrators called for the release of Mumia. Mass
demonstrations took place on 11 May in Spain, France and Germany. In Canada,
the Toronto demonstration included many speakers, and a drummer and poet
that got the crowd moving with some strong lines and chants and shouting
against George Bush. The US Consulate police again blocked the march. This
was apparently because another "Free Mumia" demonstration put on by
socialists was underway there and police did not want to merge them.
Screened in Toronto on a day before the march, Voice of the Voiceless is an
impressive and moving film on the history of MOVE and the incredible police
violence in Philadelphia that peaked with a police bombing of a residential
house that killed John Africa and ten others, including small children.Nine
MOVE members were jailed for 100 years and Mumia is on death row inside the
US prison industrial complex, against whom a third death warrant could be
signed.
Now a new legal team representing Mumia Abu-Jamal has filed three affidavits
that deal directly with what happened in Philadelphia on the night of Dec.
9, 1981, request for an evidentiary hearing. A person who had actually shot
an American police officer Daniel Faulkner, has come forward saying in a
sworn affidavit that he was hired to kill the police officer.
CPI (ML) expresses its firm solidarity with the movement to get Mumia
Abu-Jamal free from the US gaol.

Superpower Gets A Double Drubbing
The world's sole superpower, the USA, received her first drubbing when it
could not make its way through the United nations Commission on Human Rights
(UNCHR). The shock came during the vote to fill 3 of the 14 vacancies in the
53-member Commission from the western bloc. France, Austria and Sweden
scampered home, the US came fourth and edged out. And the blow was handed
over not by 'rogue' states but UN members including its western allies as
well as a number of dependent countries.
The irony is that America had written pledges of support from 41 countries
but a large number of them reneged on their promise during this election by
secret ballot. The edge of the irony becomes sharper in the light of the
fact that countries like Pakistan and Sudan have made it to the Commission.
Then the US suffered another embarrassment at the United Nations by losing
the seat on the International Narcotics Control Board. The double drubbing
has sufficiently provoked the Republican-dominated Congress to hold out
threats of retaliation -- blocking the payment of US dues of $582 million to
the UN. The matter is listed for discussion and a vote.
Obviously, the US is perceived as an overlord dictating human right norms to
other societies, for instance China. However, the recent unilateral
announcement regarding a new world nuclear order by George Bush has not
pleased even the US allies, though servile governments like Vajpayee
administration went overboard to okay it. Many countries of the world have
not taken well the unilateral abrogation by the US of the Kyoto Protocol on
global warming as well as its shrugging off the Anti-Ballastic Missile
Treaty of 1972. Hence this unprecedented defeat of the mighty empire. It is
to be noted that along with India and Russia, the US had served on the
Commission without a break since its formation 54 years ago. This only
compounds America's humiliation, especially in the light of the fact that
the US had managed to rule the roost within the UN Security Council for a
while in the early 1990s, as revealed during the invasion of Iraq. But the
latest damage to Washington's prestige in regard to issues of human rights
and narcotics control -- two prime aspects of international discourse in
this post-Cold War setting, has revealed that the world is changing, and it
is changing fast.
In the words of Arnold Toynbee, "America ... now stands for what Rome stood
for. Rome consistently supported the rich against the poor in all foreign
communities that fell under her sway ... Rome's policy made for inequality,
for injustice, and for the least happiness of the greatest number."
(Quotations by Mumia Abu-Jamal in his article on the US defeat). It goes
without saying that America is looking forward to meet the destiny of Roman
empire.
Assembly Elections in Five States
West Bengal
1. Mainaguri (SC) 1,585
2. Siliguri 1,622
3. Goalpokhar 1,849
4. Karandighi 1,221
5. Raiganj (SC) 4,200
6. Kaliaganj (SC) 2,050
7. Itahar 1,200
8. Kandi 1,603
9. Nakashipara 2,086
10. Kaliganj 2,230
11. Chapra 2,100
12. Krishnanagar West 4,720
13. Naihati 1,703
14. Alipur 936
15. Balagarh (SC) 1,037
16. Pandua 1,873
17. Barabani 4,200
18. Burdwan North 2,710
19. Kalna 1,349
20. Nadanghat 2,336
21. Manteswar 999
22. Purbasthali 2,835
23. Sujapur 1,435
24. Kaliachak 2,144
25. Barjora 2,497
(Voting details of one seat, Kumarganj, not available)
Tamil Nadu
1. Ponneri(R) 724
2. Villivakkam 1,601
3. Thirupporur 1,636
4. Thiruchengodu 532
5. Thondamuthur 803
6. Madurai East 256
7. Vedachandur 933
8. Sirkazhi 2,685
9. Thiruvidaimaruthur 1,153
10. Thiruvadanai 751
11. Thirunelveli 739
Assam
Behali 12,280
Diphu (ASDC-P) 22,020
Baithalangso(ASDC-P) 15,476
Bokajan (ASDC-P) 17,222
Howrahghat (ASDC-P) 20,827
Haflong (ASDC-P) 21,778
Voting details for other 7 constituencies contested under Party banner,
namely Dibrugarh, Jorhat, Digboi, Chabhua, Gohpur, Champaguri and Barkhola,
have not yet reached Party Central Office. Similarly, voting details for
Dhokuakhana, Majuli and Janai constituencies, where CPI(ML) supported
independent candidates belonging to Mising community contested, are not
known till now.
Pondicherry
1. Mudhaliar Pet 90
2. Embalom 135
3. Ozhukarai 35
Voting details of Nayyathinkara and Malampuzha constituencies in Kerala
contested under Party banner have not yet reached Party Office.
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