Saturday, 17 December 2011

Against All Slanderous Campaigns of Capitalists - Imperialists Rise- up And Unleash Struggle In Defense of Communism and Communist Movement

                                                                                                     - Comrade.Shankar singh

Communism, the great ideology of mankind’s emancipation from all sorts of exploitations and slavery - economic, political , cultural, ethical and moral and the great International Communist Movement, the torch-bearer are under severe attack of reactionary forces of all hues imperialists-capitalists and modern revisionists combined since decades now. Ever since these reactionary forces combinely making use nefariously of certain petty grievances of common people centering round some petty faults here and there of the administrative apparatus of the respective countries could bring about demolition of the working class state- powers in the then Soviet union and other small countries of East Europe namely Poland, Rumania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and East Germany this attack against communism and International Communist Movement has assumed tremendous virulence in dimension and intensity.

Monday, 12 December 2011

Rumours being spread on Mullaperiyar dam


Encroachers on the water spread area of Mullaperiyar dam, who have constructed resorts and other buildings, are spreading rumours that the dam will cave in if the water level is raised beyond 136 feet, thus creating panic, Tamil Nadu Public Works Department has said. 

The Chief Engineer (Madurai) of Water Resources Organisation, M. Sampath Kumar, in a statement, said that the water spread area of the reservoir was 8,591 acres when the water level was at 155 feet. It was 4,678 acres at 136 feet. Since the dam level had remained at the reduced level of 136 feet for a long time many people had encroached upon the water spread area and constructed resorts and other buildings. 

Saturday, 10 December 2011

Bharathi - Poet of Freedom and Equality


“Freedom! Freedom! Freedom!
To the Pariahs, to the Tiyas, to the Pulayas,
Freedom!
Come, let us labour, all,
Sparing naught and hurting none,
Walking in the way of Truth and Light.
There shall be none of low degree.
And none shall be oppressed.
Born in India,
All are of noble birth.”

- Subramania Bharati
Movement remembered on 11 December - Subramania Bharati  Birthday.

Saturday, 3 December 2011

Trotskyism or Leninism? - J. V. Stalin 1924



Speech Delivered at the Plenum of the Communist Group in the A.U.C.C.T.U., November 19, 1924;

CONTENTS



Comrades, after Kamenev's comprehensive report there is little left for me to say. I shall therefore confine myself to exposing certain legends that are being spread by Trotsky and his supporters about the October uprising, about Trotsky's role in the uprising, about the Party and the preparation for October, and so forth. I shall also touch upon Trotskyism as a peculiar ideology that is incompatible with Leninism, and upon the Party's tasks in connection with Trotsky's latest literary pronouncements.

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Stalin's daughter Lana Peters dies in US of cancer

Comrade.Stalin's daughter Lana Peters dies in US of cancer.The only daughter of Soviet former leader Josef Stalin has died in the US at the age of 85.

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

November day meeting in Theni



On 20th October 2011, the Novemeber day puplic meeting was organized in Theni District by Communist Workers Platform (CWP), Tamilnadu. The public meeting was started with slogans which was taking oath to carry on the revolutionary fucnctions to fulfill unaccomplished tasks in India in a globalized envirornment against the stagnant capitalism and with revolutionary greetings. That meeting was presided by CWP's local secretary Com. Jeyaraman and guest speeches were given by Com. T. Sivakumar, Editor of matrukarruthu - bimonthly bulletin of CWP and the central excutive member of CWP and Com. Sathyamoorthy, Com. Varatharaj, state secretary of Struggle Commitee - the mass organization of CWP. In his 1 and 1/2 hour speech the Chief guest of the meeting Com. A.Anandan, the General Secretary of South India, CWP urged the participants approximately 70 in number to work forwary to fasten the Anti Capitalist Socialist Revolution against dying Capitalism in India and all over the world. The meeting was held successfully by the hard work of local members of CWP,Theni with the amble support of Theni People.

Friday, 18 November 2011

Capitalism is not the Last Stage of History - Proved by Today’s World Scenario in this Juncture Take November Day Oath to Construct the Socialist State


Fukiyama, a capitalist thinker wrote a book after the fall of Socialist States in Soviet Union and in other East European countries. He named that book as “The End of History”. In that book he tried to prove that capitalist democracy is the last stage of human history.

History cannot be created by an individual. It has been created by great people’s upraising.  These people’s upraising only brought an end to slavery and feudalism. The eminent thinker Karl Marx said that a great proletarian upraise will bring an end to capitalist system like that of slavery and feudalism. While approving the social change of first two social systems, Fukiyama appealed us to see that how those soviet systems fell down in Soviet Union and in East Europe which was against the base of what Marx had said. In his book, he said that these developments show why the Capitalist ‘Democratic’ system is the last stage of human history. In contradiction to Fukiyama’s statement from Wall Street of America to Buckingham palace of England, a slogan unanimously has been raised by the people of America and England today.

Sunday, 13 November 2011

On the slogan of 'Long Live Revolution' - Bhagat Singh


Shri Ramanand Chaterji the editor of Modern Review, ridiculed the slogan of 'Long Live Revolution' through an editorial note and gave an entirly wrong interpretation. Bhagat Singh wrote a reply and handed it over to the trying megistrate to be sent to Modern Review. This was published in The Tribune of December 24, 1929. 

To 
THE EDITOR MODERN REVIEW 

You have in the December (1929) issue of your esteemed magazine, written a note under the caption "Long Live Revolution" and have pointed out the meaninglessness of this phrase. It would be impertinent on our part to try to refute or contradict the statement of such an old, experienced and renowned journalist as your noble self, for whom every enlightened Indian has profound admiration. Still we feel it our duty to explain what we desire to convey by the said phrase, as in a way it fell to our lot to give these "cries" a publicity in this country at this stage. 

Friday, 28 October 2011

The Principles of Communism - Frederick Engels (1847)

1.What is Communism?

Communism is the doctrine of the conditions of the liberation of the proletariat.

 2.What is the proletariat?

The proletariat is that class in society which lives entirely from the sale of its labor and does not draw profit from any kind of capital; whose weal and woe, whose life and death, whose sole existence depends on the demand for labor – hence, on the changing state of business, on the vagaries of unbridled competition. The proletariat, or the class of proletarians, is, in a word, the working class of the 19th century.

Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Occupy Wall Street Marks One Month


ccupations Spread to Over 100 US Cities

Movement For Economic Justice Gains Global Momentum


One month ago today about 2,000 people rallied in Lower Manhattan and marched up Broadway. Stopping at Zuccotti Park an estimated 150 stayed the night and began an encampment. Renaming the space “Liberty Square,” we kicked off a protest against bank bailouts, corporate greed, and the unchecked power of Wall Street in Washington. In the last month, the message of “We are the 99%” has won the hearts and minds of over half of Americans (according to a recent Time survey) and is gaining ground globally, with 1500 protests in 82 countries this past Saturday (October 15).

Monday, 17 October 2011

Corruption the root of the democracy not the branch to curtail

Let me ask a question, where everybody has their own answers but all cannot be the answers
What the corruption means?

Is it a staff from office boy to manager bribes the civilians neither the politician’s loot the money for their arduous job contributed to society?
The chunk of money that makes the imbalance in this economic structure of the society, no matter whether it is legal or illegal, government or private it is a corruption. The base of corruption can create a role to the surplus accumulated capital in various cultural and immoral aspect no way useful to the common people except to the few numbered polluted parasites in the society. Such as gambling, excitement, unnecessary sophistication, cultural demoralization are also some of the filthy outcome of this enormous accumulated capital.

Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Miscreants attack Prashant Bhushan in chamber

Team Anna member and senior lawyer Prashant Bhushan was violently attacked by activists of the Bhagat Singh Kranti Sena and Shri Ram Sena in his chamber located opposite the heavily guarded Supreme Court premises on Bhagwan Dass Road here on Wednesday.
The organisations claimed that the assault was in retaliation for his recent statement on Jammu and Kashmir, purportedly supporting the demand for withdrawal of security forces and a referendum to gauge public opinion.
While one of the miscreants was overpowered by lawyers and handed over to the police, the others ran away. During interrogation, the captured assailant identified himself as Inder Verma, president of Shri Ram Sena's Delhi unit. He purportedly revealed the name of another assailant as Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga, president of the Bhagat Singh Kranti Sena.

Thursday, 6 October 2011

The five-legged elephant

Looking back at Shankar Guha Niyogi, 20 years after his assassination.

On September 28, 1991, Shankar Guha Niyogi put aside his copy of Lenin on Trade Unions and Revolutions, and fell asleep under a mosquito net in his room on the ground floor of an apartment in the Bhilai industrial township. In the early hours of the morning, a young man rode up to the house, looked in through the bedroom's well-lit window and shot him dead.

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Protests against Wall Street spread across U.S.


A movement that has no single message, no leader and no list of demands is nonetheless gaining steam across the U.S. with protesters from California to Maine expressing their anger with the U.S. economy and corporate greed.
The so-called Occupy Wall Street protests are now in their 18th day after an initial protest organized by Adbusters called on demonstrators to occupy New York's business district.
Since then, protesters ranging from students worried about their tuition loans, to union employees and laid off middle-aged workers have joined up.
In Manhattan they are camping out in a park near the New York Stock Exchange. On Monday, hundreds of protesters dressed up as money-hungry zombies, wandering past the NYSE clutching fistfuls of cash.
Rosie Gray, a reporter with New York'sVillage Voice newspaper, said the movement, which has sparked demonstrations in Boston, St. Louis, Kansas City, Mo. and L.A., appears to have struck a chord with many Americans.

Friday, 9 September 2011

'108' ambulance staff for regularisation of services(Madurai) - The Hindu


Employees affiliated to the ‘108' Ambulance Service Association observed a dawn-to-dusk fast here on Thursday demanding the State government to take over the utility service and absorb them as government servants.
The members observed the fast at Kalavasal in the city. The members urged the government to intervene and regularise their services. Their other demands include provision of overtime wages as it was mandatory that any employee working beyond eight hours must be given overtime wages. They demanded that the suspended staff members in Kanyakumari district should be taken back for work without any condition as they were allegedly punished with vendetta. 

‘108' ambulance service employees observe fast (Cuddalore) - The Hindu


Employees of ‘108' ambulance service observed fast in front of the Collectorate here on Thursday, urging the State government to take over the service.
Three sections of employees, including call centre operators, medical technicians and drivers, who formed part of the service, participated in it.
“Services not affected”
District president of the 108 Ambulance Employees' Union told The Hindu that even though they were on fast they saw to it that the services were not affected for the day.
Only those who were “off duty” took part in the hunger strike and therefore, the services were operated as usual.

EMRI ambulance workers want services to be taken over by Government(Salem) - The Hindu




Workers of ERMI 108 Ambulances and members of Tamil Nadu Government 108 Ambulance Workers Union resorted to one day token fast highlighting various demands here on Thursday.
The workers said that they had not been regularised for long. The private management, which runs the ambulance service, was not providing adequate wages to the workers.

Saturday, 3 September 2011

Red Salute Comrade Mao Zedong


"Unity of the masses, the Party and the whole country is essential. At the same time, criticism may take place along comradely lines, while at the same time a basic unity is felt and preserved. This is the dialectical method.
Marxist dialectical materialism, which connotes the constant struggle between opposites in an empirical setting, is the best method toward constant improvement. Objective analysis of problems based on empirical results is at a premium. Criticism is a part of the Marxist dialectical method which is central to Party improvement; as such, communists must not fear it, but engage in it openly.Cadres, the instrument for uniting with and working for the people, must be leaders versed in Marxist-Leninism. They must have both guidance and the freedom to use their creative inititave in solving problems. Newer cadres and older cadres must work together with a comradely respect, learning from each other".

 - Mao Zedong

Monday, 29 August 2011

Bhattarai new Nepal Prime Minister



Nepal's legislature-parliament on Sunday elected Baburam Bhattarai, Vice-Chairman of the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), new Prime Minister. The Maoists were supported by the United Democratic Madhesi Front (UDMF), an alliance of five Madhesi parties. In the House of 594 MPs, 575 members participated in the election and around 340 voted for Dr. Bhattarai, helping him secure a simple majority.

Sunday, 28 August 2011

Organize the student and young community of India to support the movement of Anna Hazare


 The movement against uncontrollable corruption in India by the social activist Anna Hazare has been continued for 12 days until the dramatic end happens through the acceptance of the Government to discuss the issues of Jan Lokpal Bill drafted by the Anna Hazare team on 28/08/2011. Young generation of India waves their support in full swing as like a strong wind for this movement. With no organizational background Anna Hazare started this movement like a one-man army and this has been spread like anything. Government acted on this background and has been unleashed undemocratic actions against this peaceful movement rather cruel than the English Government before freedom. The government thought that the attitude of the docile people in India also strengthens their way of handling this movement. But the strong growth of this movement proved that the government analysis is wrong. The strong condemnation is in the insight of the young generation against this social evils awakes suddenly and it has been emerged as gigantic support for this movement.

Monday, 22 August 2011

Parents bring children to witness ‘second freedom struggle'

“I will go and tell friends that Anna Hazare is a very good person. He wants a corruption-free India with no fighting and no violence,” said 10-year-old Mayank Jaswal, who helped distribute pamphlets among the crowd at the Ramlila Maidan here on Sunday in the scorching heat, along with his mother and six-year-old sister.

Tamil Nadu saw spontaneous protests after the hanging


The execution of Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev in March 1931 saw a spontaneous outpouring of sympathy for the revolutionaries and protest against the British government across Tamil Nadu.
Be it in Arcot or Coonoor or Dindigul or Devakottai or Kodavasal or Nagapattinam or Panruti or Srirangam or Tindivanam or Tuticorin, people expressed their feelings. Hartals, public meetings, hoisting of black flags and processions were held, a perusal of issues of The Hindu in late March 1931 reveals.
Eminent historian Chaman Lal's compilation of rare documents on Bhagat Singh threw light on the revolutionary's inspiring facets and his impact on the people in different regions of the country.

Rare documents on Bhagat Singh's trial and life in jail


The photograph of Bhagat Singh and B.K. Dutt was taken by Sham Lal in Delhi on April 4, 1929 and sent for publication to newspapers by Bhagat Singh's comrades. Photo Courtesy: Chaman Lal
The Hindu The photograph of Bhagat Singh and B.K. Dutt was taken by Sham Lal in Delhi on April 4, 1929 and sent for publication to newspapers by Bhagat Singh's comrades. Photo Courtesy: Chaman Lal 
Digitalised records with the Supreme Court reveal some inspiring facets of the revolutionary. Bhagat Singh and B.K. Dutt offered themselves for arrest after throwing harmless bombs in the Central Assembly to 'make the deaf hear.' Their case drew worldwide attention.

Thursday, 18 August 2011

ON COMMUNIST CODE OF CONDUCT — SHIBDAS GHOSH

The communist code of conduct has been an issue over which both confusion and alien practice have been rampant among the self-styled Marxist parties in this country. In a meeting of Calcutta district party workers back in 1969, Comrade Ghosh provided concrete guidelines as to what should be the communist code of conduct in this present age and in what way should the leaders and cadres of the communist movement conduct their inner party struggles, how and why it was necessary for the leaders and the cadres of the revolutionary party to carry on unfaltering pursuit of a life-style and day-to-day conduct, imbibing the higher proletarian culture, ethics and norms free from bourgeois vulgar individualistic traits, what is the correct understanding of the concepts of criticism- self criticism, how should the relation between leaders and cadres be maintained and developed at all stages and phases of party conduction and various such other vital relevant questions.
 

China worst before ever.........



China going worst ever before but still making an false claim on socialism
A recent article about china by Dr Damian Tobin reveals the real face of china

The rapid growth of China's economy over the past three decades has been greeted with largely unquestioned assumptions that increasing affluence would lead to a happier, wealthier and more equitable society.

Of course, such assumptions came with an implicit acceptance that some would get rich faster, but also that these benefits would eventually trickle down.

The emergence of a middle class, combined with high levels of personal savings and low levels of personal debt, offers tantalising evidence of China's new-found wealth.

Yet, behind these headlines, there is compelling evidence that although economic growth has created vast wealth for some, it has amplified the disparities between rich and poor.

These disparities indicate an often hidden vulnerability in China's rapid growth, but one which is neither unique nor new to China's leadership.

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

RED SALUTE COMRADE SHIBDAS GHOSH


(5th August 1923 - 5th August 1976)

"What does happen when a change of government is brought about... without a radical change of the state structure? if honest men come into government that creates further complications because common people have faith in them. if they are confused despite being honest and cannot take to the path of revolution, they have no other options but to objectively act as lackeys of the capitalist class. It is the capitalist system which they have to reform and further consolidate, yet the grievances of people subside for some time at least because people trust them. Hence, the bourgeois rule, the capitalist rule only gets the opportunity to further consolidate itself and built up a firm foundation during the regime of such honest' administrators."

 ( Independence on 15th August and problem of Emancipation of people. SW, Vol.III, p. 46 - 47)

Sunday, 17 July 2011

Maruti Suzuki Workers’ Strike

The 13 day strike of over 2000 workers in the Maruti Suzuki India’s (MSI) Manesar plant in Gurgoan (Haryana), close to the national capital Delhi, in the first weeks of June is an important sign of ascendancy of the working class militancy in the region.Anand Kumar, Bangalore, New Socialist Alternative (CWI India)
This strike comes in the wake of the victory of the Gorakhpur Yarn workers (Uttar Pradesh) and a partial victory of the Air India pilots earlier. While the result of the Maruti workers strike cannot really be termed a victory for the workers as the media, management, government and (most disgustingly by the) central trade unions proclaim, it nevertheless comes at an important juncture of high price rises and a not so bright economic outlook for the country.

Tuesday, 12 July 2011

The movement of 108 ambulance workers

The movement of 108 ambulance workers to submit petition to the district collectors in Tamilnadu,  in reply collector warns not to take any action against the workers those who given petition...

EMRI 108 ambulance workers (affiliated to COITU) those who are in shifts hoisted the movement of submitting petition to the district collectors of Madurai, Theni, Virudhunagar, Coimbatore, Cuddalore and Dharmapuri. The collectors received the petition and handled the claims of the petition direct under themselves without posting it to the appropriate departments. Especially the collectors of Virudhunagar and Coimbatore warned the administrations should not retaliate against the workers who have given the petition which was quite confident to the workers in the other district. The workers haven’t given petition in the rest of the district has planned to do the same in the following days.

Tuesday, 5 July 2011

GREAT SUCCESS FOR THE 108 AMBULANCE WORKERS STRIKE IN NAGERCOIL


The Workers of 108 Ambulance from Nagercoil filed a petition against the autocratic approach of their district management to the collector of Kanyakumari District. By dismissing a 108 ambulance Worker named Babu, the management took their revenge against the Workers. On account of this incident all the Workers of 108 Ambulance from Nagercoil waged a collective struggle against the management in the pursuit of District Collector on 04/07/2011.

Because of this strike the services of 108 Ambulance was stalled in entire District of Kanyakumari on 04/07/2011. Sensing this development with fear, the District management reinstated that  worker as well as it called on the workers for further talks on their justifiable issues. This development creates a great encouragement among the workers of 108 ambulance in entire Tamilnadu.

Comrade. Mahilchi Communist Workers Platform(CWP) and Central Organization Indian Trade Unions(COITU) successfully lead this struggle in front with the true participation of all the workers of 108 ambulance, Nagercoil.  CWP and COITU greet their wishes to the workers of 108 ambulance union (Affiliated with COITU) who waged a stubborn collective struggle. CWP and COITU heartily greet their thanks to the workers of 108 ambulance of entire Tamilnadu who supported this struggle with their great support and density.    

Wednesday, 29 June 2011

Athens demonstrators gather ahead of austerity bill vote


Protesters were congregating in the Greek capital's Syntagma Square early Wednesday to blockade the parliament building in an attempt to prevent access by lawmakers.Hundreds of police dressed in riot gear were lining up around the building and had blocked off roads ahead of what was expected to be another day of chaotic protests. 

General strike called for June 28-29


According to the General Confederation of Workers of Greece (GSEE) and the civil servants' umbrella federation Adedy, the 48-hour strike is an escalation of their recent industrial action comprising 24-hour nationwide strikes in protest of the medium-term programme. 

A main demonstration will be held on Tuesday, June 28, at the Pedion tou Areos park in central Athens at 11am, while on Wednesday another demonstration will be held in downtown Klafthmonos Square

Monday, 27 June 2011

Petrol price hike unwarranted


The increase is unwarranted, particularly because international prices of oil had shown a declining trend in recent weeks. This is indeed a post-election gift to people from the UPA government,

Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Maruti strike may spread to Hero Honda, HMSI and Rico Auto


The strike at Maruti Suzuki India's plant is threatening to spread to the Gurgaon-Manesar belt, with a panel of workers of various firms in the region warning that a similar stir could hit others unless demands of their agitating colleagues' at India's largest carmaker are met.Over 1,000 workers from different companies in the Gurgaon-Manesar industrial belt have gathered at the gate of Maruti Suzuki India's (MSI) plant to stage a 'satyagraha' in support of the ongoing strike.
 
They are backing the demand for reinstatement of the 11 sacked employees of MSI and also recognise the newly formed union at MSI's plant here. 

Also read "If the issues are not  resolved immediately, then a similar strike can happen in other factories in the Gurgaon-Manesar industrial belt," AITUC Gurgaon District Secretary Harjeet Grover, who is also the General Secretary of HMSI Employees Union said.

Monday, 13 June 2011

Villagers resist Posco land acquisition drive


 The land acquisition process by the Orissa government for the Posco project in the Dhinkia gram panchayat of Jagatsinghpur district did not make any headway on Saturday following resistance by members of a five-party delegation and villagers.The gram panchayat remained a hostile region for the district administration that had in the past fortnight stepped up the land acquisition process for the steel plant.
With children and women at the forefront, villagers blocked the land acquisition teams for the second consecutive day, though the administration declared their assembly unlawful.

For five hours on Friday, women and children braved the oppressive sun and did not let the teams backed by scores of police personnel to enter the village.

Spain’s unemployment crisis has precipitated sizable protests in Madrid, Barcelona, and Bilbao:


Hundreds of young Spaniards camped out in Madrid and other cities on Saturday to protest against high unemployment and austerity, defying a ban on demonstrations in the run up to local elections.

The number of protesters, dubbed “los indignados” (the indignant), was expected to swell by the evening, after 25,000 people crammed into Madrid’s main plaza on Friday night.Protesters were also gathered in Barcelona, Valencia, Sevilla, Bilbao and other cities, as they have been all week, urging people not to vote for Spain’s two main parties, the ruling Socialists or the center-right opposition Popular Party in Sunday’s local elections.

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

Hazare on fast for 'second freedom struggle'



Taking on the government, civil rights activist Anna Hazare on Wednesday went on a day-long fast at Rajghat, declaring that his agitation against corruption was the “second freedom struggle” and threatened another hunger strike from August 16 if Lokpal Bill is not passed by then.

He accused the government of putting “hurdles” in the drafting of Lokpal Bill and trying to defame the civil society members of the joint panel, such as Shanti Bhushan, Prashant Bhushan, Santosh Hegde and Arvind Kejriwal through a “discreet” campaign.

Mr. Hazare, joined by his associates and a few thousand supporters, went on the hunger strike to protest the police crackdown on Baba Ramdev’s supporters during their agitation against corruption here on Saturday night, which he termed as a “blot on humanity” and attempt to “stifle democracy“.
After paying floral tributes at Mahatma Gandhi’s samadhi, he reached the protest site at around to a rousing welcome from supporters who assembled there amid heavy police presence.

Monday, 30 May 2011

CA gets three-month extension


PM Khanal to step down for national govt , Integration within three months 


After hectic parleys late into Saturday night and wee hours of Sunday, the political parties struck a five-point deal, paving the way for a three-month extension of the Constituent Assembly.

According to the pact signed by top three leaders of the three major parties the Constituent Assembly term will be extended by three months; fundamentals of the peace process will be readied within three months; the first draft of the new constitution will be prepared within three months; the Prime Minister will quit to pave the way for formation of a national consensus government; and the Nepal Army will be developed as an inclusive institution by implementing the past agreements signed with Madhesi Morcha. However, it wasn't clear when the Prime Minister's resignation would come.

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Present Situation and Historical Task of the Proletariat - Nepal

                                                               - UNIFIED COMMUNIST PARTY OF NEPAL (MAOIST)


Today, our great and glorious party, the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), has arrived at a serious and extraordinary juncture of possibilities and challenges. 

The way how people's revolution, in the external struggle, is advancing amid immense possibility of victory and serious danger of defeat, in the same manner, party's internal life, as a reflection of the former, also lies in the midst of potentiality of advance and danger of anarchism and chaos as well. The height to which we can create new unity, voluntary discipline, self-confidence and vigour by means of a correct line, strategy, tactic, plan and programme to ensure as far as possible the decisive victory of revolution in this complex crossroads of class struggle, to that level will we be able to make victorious the revolution and party by safeguarding them from the danger of defeat and anarchism. In order to develop that kind of line and plan, we, by abandoning all kinds of subjective prejudices, must be able to have objective estimation of the situation and balance of class force based on the universal theories of
MLM. The plan and programme prepared on the basis of objective analysis will enable our party to lead the decisive victory of revolution. Expressing high regard and esteem to the entire known and unknown martyrs of Nepalese people's revolution including those of ten years of people's war and admiring the entire disappeared, injured fighters and their family members, this plenum of the central committee will be able to bring about a new dynamism in our party.

Thursday, 19 May 2011

BHOPAL GAS TRAGEDY - Conflicting signals



                                                                                                                  V. VENKATESAN
The Supreme Court judgment dismissing the curative petitions against its verdict in the Bhopal gas criminal case leaves observers nonplussed.



IN BHOPAL ON May 11, survivors of the gas tragedy taking out a rally in protest against the Supreme Court's latest verdict.
ON May 11, a Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court unanimously delivered a judgment that, perhaps, should never be considered a precedent. The Bench, comprising Chief Justice of India S.H. Kapadia and Justices Altamas Kabir, R.V. Raveendran, B. Sudershan Reddy and Aftab Alam, held that a judgment delivered by the Supreme Court could not bind a lower court and that no decision by any court, including the Supreme Court, could be read in a manner as to nullify the express provisions of an Act or the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC).
The judgment, according to several experts, is deeply flawed. The Bench delivered the judgment while dismissing curative petitions filed by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and others for recalling and setting aside the Supreme Court's judgment in Keshub Mahindra vs State of Madhya Pradesh, delivered on September 13, 1996. In Keshub Mahindra, a two-judge Bench, comprising Justice A. Ahmadi and Justice S. Majmudar, had quashed the charge of culpable homicide under Section 304 (Part II) of the Indian Penal Code, framed by the sessions court, against nine Indian accused in the Bhopal gas disaster criminal case and had directed the trial court to frame charges against them under Section 304-A, IPC.
The three foreign accused – the then chief of the Union Carbide Corporation, Warren Anderson; UCC; and Union Carbide Eastern Inc. – were absconding and did not, like the Indian accused, appeal against the charge of culpable homicide framed by the trial court. The Madhya Pradesh High Court had upheld the charge of culpable homicide against the accused before they went in appeal in the Supreme Court.
Under Section 304 (Part II) of the IPC, whoever commits culpable homicide not amounting to murder shall be punished with imprisonment, which may extend to 10 years, or with fine or with both if the act is done with the knowledge that it is likely to cause death. Section 304-A, on the other hand, seeks to punish those causing the death of any person by doing any rash or negligent act not amounting to culpable homicide with imprisonment for a term that may extend to two years, or with fine, or with both.

Monday, 16 May 2011

Trial by fire

                                                                                                                                  V. VENKATESAN
                                                                                                                                     in New Delhi

 As the joint drafting committee begins work on the Lokpal Bill, its civil society members face challenges from various quarters.




 
Social activists and civil society members of the Lokpal Bill drafting committee, (from left) Kiran Bedi, Swami Agnivesh, Anna Hazare, Prashant Bhushan, Shanti Bhushan, Justice Santosh Hegde and Arvind Kejriwal, after a meeting in New Delhi on April 23.
 

AS the leader of the five-member civil society group within the 10-member joint drafting committee to prepare the new Lokpal Bill, Anna Hazare finds himself in an unenviable position. After his successful agitation for equal participation for civil society in the legislative exercise to create the first Lokpal at the Centre, people expect him to set high standards of probity for his team, even though it will have a short tenure (ending on June 30) and a limited agenda. Allegations casting aspersions on civil society members on the committee, even if they relate to the past, make them defensive and distract them from the committee's task.

Anna Hazare himself was prudent enough to ignore the allegation of financial impropriety against him. The Maharashtra government instituted a commission of inquiry under Justice P.B. Sawant in September 2003 to inquire into allegations of corruption and maladministration against a few State Ministers and Anna Hazare, who had led a campaign against them. The commission's report, submitted on February 22, 2005, concluded: “The expenditure of Rs.2.20 lacs from the funds of the Hind Swaraj Trust [a trust which Hazare runs] for the birthday celebrations of Shri Hajare was clearly illegal and amounted to a corrupt practice” (page 365).
Sections of the media highlighted this in the days after Hazare's recent campaign. But his close confidant, Swami Agnivesh, described this in a television programme as a mistake rather than an instance of corrupt practice; some observers considered it too technical to cast aspersions on Hazare's personal integrity. In 2005, Hazare had challenged the State government to take action on the report, but the government chose to ignore it. Hazare did not offer any fresh explanation on the subject after the recent campaign.

Friday, 29 April 2011

Anti-labour union


The UPA-II government introduces with BJP support two anti-labour Bills, the Pension Bill and the Labour Laws Amendment Bill. 

ON March 24, the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government managed to do what it had not been able to do in its first term – it reintroduced the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) Bill in Parliament with the support of the Bharatiya Janata Party. The objective of the Bill is to undertake promotional, developmental and regulatory functions with respect to pension funds.

The Congress hurriedly mustered the support of the BJP as many Congress members were not present at the time of the Bill's introduction. The UPA, hence, narrowly escaped a loss of face when Left party members demanded a division of votes. The division showed that of the 159 members present in the Lok Sabha, 115 backed the proposed legislation, 43 opposed it, and one abstained.

While the UPA government held that the Left-led opposition had raised objections at the wrong time, the chief whip of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), Ramchandra Dome, said that they had every right to press for a division and that the Bill had been circulated only the night before its reintroduction, giving members little time to study it.

Owing to the opposition of the Left, the UPA-I government failed to secure parliamentary approval for the Bill's introduction. The surprise element this time was the support of the BJP, coming as it did in the wake of the WikiLeaks expose. The parties opposed to the Bill included the Samajwadi Party, the Janata Dal (United), the Biju Janata Dal and the Telugu Desam Party.

It was almost eight years ago, in 2003, that the National Democratic Alliance government constituted an interim pension sector regulator through a resolution. The PFRDA Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha in 2005, which was then referred to a Standing Committee. In 2009, the UPA-I regime proposed amendments, but they could not be moved; and the 2005 legislation lapsed after the dissolution of the 14th Lok Sabha. Now the same Bill has been reintroduced with some minor changes.

The changes pertain to the foreign investment policy for the pension sector. According to the statement of objects and reasons of the Bill, this policy will now be determined and notified outside the proposed legislation under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA).

The revised Pension Bill is viewed as giving an opening to private players; it will also help cut government expenditure on pension contributions. The Bill envisages making pension a contribution-based arrangement from being a defined benefit, which it is now. Under the new legislation, all government employees – except those in the armed forces – who joined service on or after January 2004 will be covered under the proposed National Pension Scheme (NPS). Strangely, while it has been made mandatory for government employees, private sector employees have the option of joining it or not. Pension would be disbursed to employees at a rate of return determined by the market, with no implicit or explicit assurance of a guaranteed return.
The NPS was introduced under the PFRDA in 2004 under an executive order by the NDA government. It allows private companies to manage Central and State government pension funds and invest part of them in stocks and corporate bonds. The PFRDA Bill is essentially a step to regulate the pension sector, which has been opened up. It will also provide statutory backing for implementing the NPS.

“The government will contribute as an employer, not as the government. Earlier, employees knew how much pension they would be drawing; now it is going to be determined by the market. Even the contribution is not strictly contributory, it will be market-driven. Even in the United States, in case of vagaries, the government guarantees 75 per cent share of the pension and only 25 per cent is lost by the employee; in this case, there is no government guarantee of any kind,” said Tapan Sen, general secretary, Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) and CPI(M) member in the Rajya Sabha.

The PFRDA Bill allows part investment of the corpus in the stock market, though at the moment it does not have a foreign investment policy for the pension sector. The ceiling of foreign equity envisaged in the earlier version has been removed though it may be made effective through an executive order. It may be recalled that foreign direct investment in the pension sector was opposed by the Left parties. The Bill empowers the PFRDA to oversee multiple pension funds, which means that all kinds of social security, including provident fund, can come under its ambit.

The government has appointed six fund houses – Infrastructure Development Finance Corporation (IDFC), State Bank of India, ICICI Prudential Life Insurance, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Reliance Capital and the state-run Life Insurance Corporation of India – to manage pensions. The contributions of both employees and employers will be given to these fund houses and at the time of annuity or retirement, the corpus accumulated will be forwarded to an insurance company so that the pensioner can buy annuity or pension from them and also a lumpsum from the corpus. Instead of a predefined assured sum, pensioners will now have to keep track of the funds with the fund managers and evaluate different fund managers on the basis of their performance and other issues. The fund-selection technique has to be right so as to get substantial returns. Even supporters of the scheme say this is not possible in the present schemes of government pension as employees are not allowed to invest in the market.

Interestingly, the BJP's trade union wing, the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS), has strongly opposed what it calls the “anti-worker” pension fund Bill. Its national president, C.K. Saji Narayanan, said that the “government has fallen into the hands of the big industrial lobby and is trying to cater to the interests of private investors and the speculative market instead of protecting the interests of millions of employees”. He said that the Bill facilitated the back-door entry of foreign investors and that “the Government of India had not learned lessons from what had happened to lakhs of pensioners in the U.S. and in European countries whose pension funds were invested in private funds and in the stock market. It had ended in social calamity from which their societies have not recovered so far.”

The government, he said, was “trying to snatch away the existing privileges of employees and converting the benefit scheme into a contributory insurance scheme at the expense of the employees, thereby exonerating the liability of employers, including the government. Pension will be virtually converted into a return from private investment. It is fundamentally wrong on the part of the Finance Ministry to trespass into workers' issues; it is for the Ministry of Labour to take care of such matters on the basis of well-established principles and norms.”
The All India Central Government Employees Federation, the All India State Government Employees Federation and the Confederation of Central Government Employees have opposed the introduction of the Bill and planned campaigns.

Labour bill
A day before the introduction of the Pension Bill, on March 23, another contentious Bill titled the Labour Laws (Exemptions from Furnishing Returns and Maintaining Registers for Certain Establishments) Amendment Bill, 2011, was introduced in the Rajya Sabha. This Bill exempts employers of establishments employing up to 40 persons from the obligations of almost all the basic labour laws governing matters such as minimum wages, payment of wages, working hours, contract work, and payment of bonus. The exemption initially was for a larger number of employees but was reduced to 40 following protests from the Left parties, which argued that no unit employing people should be exempt from labour laws. Even with the ceiling coming down to 40, they feel that nearly 78 per cent of the workforce in the manufacturing sector will be out of the purview of the basic labour laws.

Tapan Sen told Frontline that he and his party colleagues in Parliament had opposed the Bill in its earlier avatar too. As a result, the Bill could not be introduced in the Rajya Sabha. He said that even the ceiling of 40 had been apparently calculated on the basis of those factories that submitted regular returns to the government, and that as per the government's own estimates, not more than 30 per cent of factories submitted regular returns. He said private sector employers and even contractors who supplied labour and materials to public sector companies did not maintain proper registers of the workers employed with them.
Tapan Sen said the Bill had been examined by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Labour, which submitted its unanimous report in December 2005. The committee expressed dismay that the government had not consulted employees' groups or employers' representatives before presenting the Bill in Parliament.

The Bill originally sought to give exemption to employers employing up to 500 persons; the number was brought down to 40. In his speech in the Rajya Sabha last year, Tapan Sen pointed out that hundreds of workers toiled for around 12 hours a day in many industrial areas in Delhi without the benefit of overtime. The names of only a handful of workers were listed in the employment registers while 80 per cent of them continued to be invisible, he said.

Unlike in 2005, the Left parties are not in a position now to defeat anti-labour Bills in Parliament. This makes it easier for the government to push pieces of legislation that were kept on hold owing to pressure from the Left. There is tacit support from the BJP for many of them that pertain to the financial sector. The question of public interest is only secondary.
( T.K. RAJALAKSHMI -   Frontline )