Sunday, May 6, 2012

Pravda Centenary Celebrations Begin


 Centenary celebrations of Pravda, first Russian working class daily, started by Lenin on 5th may  in 1912, are more about rededication than nostalgia and celebrating. Not surprisingly two day celebrations began in Moscow on a distinctly solemn note with representatives from fraternal communist press visiting and paying tributes at Unknown Soldiers tomb. Here they were joined by hundred's of Red flag carrying people, both young and old, led by Zuganov, the President of Communist party of Russian Federation (CPRF). Communist members in Duma were also present in dozens. Zuganov led paying tribute at memorial of legendry Marshal Zukanov, who is considered to be military architect of the then Soviet Union's victory in great patriotic war. Subsequently delegations of communist press paid tribute at Unknown Soldiers tomb. These memorials are situated in heart of Moscow, very close to Red Square and Lenin's mausoleum. Unknown Soldiers tomb salutes sacrifices of those soldiers in Great Patriotic War, whose names may remain unrecorded otherwise.


 Delegates from around 30 major communist publications from different countries, including some of erstwhile Soviet republics that gained independence with collapse of the then Soviet Union and socialist China, Vietnam, Cuba and D P R K as well as Laos, are also participating. CPI(M) central committee organs, People's Democracy and Loklahar (Hindi) are represented by Rajendra Sharma, Associate Editor of Loklahar. Shameem Faizee is representing CPI organs. Second day of two day celebrations is dedicated entirely to discussion on current challenges before communist media through a round table discussion on "Party Press and struggle of communists in present day situation."

An interactive meeting with Pravda editorial board, before the first day's main celebratory event, at House of Unions (also called House of Pillars) brought out significant aspects of situation of Russia today and role that Pravda is trying to play as an instrument of communist movement, to change these circumstances. Boris O Komotskiy, Editor in Chief of Pravda welcoming the delegations said, 'it appears that days of 20yrs back have arrived again.' reasercher and known author, Yuiry Yemelianov also contributed to the interaction lasting two and half hours. Programme ended with cutting of a special cake with Pravda hundred years inscribed on it.

CPI(M) Greets Pravda & CPRF

The following is the text of the greetings sent by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Russian Federation and to the Editorial Board of the Pravda on May 2, 2012. CC member, Associate editor, Loklehar, Rajendra Sharma is representing CPI(M) in these celebrations.

DEAR Comrades,

The Central Committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) greets the Editorial Board of the Pravda and the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Russian Federation (CPRF) on the centenary of the Pravda.

As Lenin had defined, a communist newspaper along with its 'exposure' of the ills and limitations of the present social system, should be a collective agitator, collective propagandist and a collective organiser. Pravda, a newspaper started by the outstanding communist leader Lenin, was run by him on these lines and became a model for all the other newspapers started for the socialist cause.

Indian Communists too, learning from the Russian experience, had started and ran many newspapers in the vernacular languages to expose the British rule, rouse the people into popular movements and also propagate the ideals of social justice.

Apart from the many vernacular dailies, that are continuing in the post-independent era, the CPI (M) is bringing out the weekly People’s Democracy, the official organ of the Party and Loklehar in Hindi, since the last 40 years. These organs are helping the Party to resist the ideological offensive of the ruling classes and to strengthen the Party.

In the background of the global economic crisis, the most severest since the Great Depression of the 1930s, there is all the more a necessity for the newspapers of the type envisioned by Lenin. The increasing struggles worldwide show the  growing discontent among the people. They are searching for alternatives. It is thus imperative upon us, the Communists and the media run by us to place before the people the correct path for bringing an end to their travails and exploitation. The newspapers help us in strengthening the 'subjective factor', as Lenin called it, to utilise the condusive objective factors for transforming the society – establishing a socialist system.

Once again, we extend our warm greetings to all of you, and also thank you for inviting our representative to be present with you and share thoughts on this august occasion.

Bid to frame CPI(M) in murder case: Pinarayi Vijayan

Communist Party of India (Marxist) State secretary Pinarayi Vijayan has alleged a high level conspiracy to frame his party in the murder of Revolutionary Marxist Party (RMP) leader T.P. Chandrasekharan late Friday night. 

Addressing a news conference on Saturday, the CPI(M) State secretary alleged that the conspiracy had been hatched by the ruling United Democratic Front (UDF) leadership to malign the CPI(M) on the eve of the Neyyattinkara by-election. The CPI(M), he said, did not believe in finishing off its enemies, he said.
Mr. Vijayan, who spoke to the media after a meeting of the CPI(M) State secretariat, said the statements by Chief Minister Oommen Chandy, Union Minister of State for Home Mullappally Ramachandran, State Home Minister Thiruvanchoor Radhakrishnan, Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee president Ramesh Chennithala and other UDF leaders blaming the CPI(M) clearly pointed to the UDF conspiracy to frame the party, which had nothing to do with Chandrasekharan's murder, he said. 

The statements by the Chief Minister and other UDF leaders, he contended, would result in the real culprits escaping the arms of the law. There were reports that Chandrasekharan himself had complained about threat to his life. If that was so, the government should answer the question why he was not given adequate protection. When the failure of the government and the police to provide him protection and the attempt to blame the CPI(M) for the murder were read together, the only conclusion was that there was a conspiracy to unleash a witch hunt against the CPI(M) in the name of the murder. 

At the time of the Piravom by-election, the UDF had engineered CPI(M) MLA R. Selvaraj's resignation from the party. Now that it was clear that others like him were not easy to come by, the attempt was to defame the CPI(M) and the LDF in the name of Chandrasekharan's murder. Going by reports, the murder was committed by a ‘quotation gang.' The CPI(M) believed in opposing its enemies politically and not with the help of ‘quotation gangs.' The guilty should be brought before the law. For that, there should be a free and fair investigation. Instead of ensuring that, the Chief Minister and Ministers were trying to set the agenda for the investigation. The real culprits should not be allowed to escape amidst all the false campaign, Mr. Vijayan said.

(Source : The Hindu)

The Attack on Democracy is Even More Intense in the Rural Areas: Surjya Kanta Mishra

Interview with Surjya Kanta Mishra, CPI(M) Polit Bureau member and Leader of the Opposition in the West Bengal Assembly.


Surjya Kanta Mishra: “The Attack on Democracy is Even More Intense in the Rural Areas.”

“It is as though criminals have started thinking that it is their Government.” Surjya Kanta Mishra, Leader of the Opposition in the West Bengal Assembly and Polit Bureau member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), feels that West Bengal is heading towards becoming an “anarchic State”.

In an interview to Frontline, Mishra spoke about issues ranging from the rise in violence in the State, the Mamata Banerjee Government's policies and its claims of achievements made in the past one year. “Instead of taking the State forward from where it stood a year ago, they are reversing the process of progress and development, undoing all that had been achieved. The future really looks gloomy,” he said. Excerpts:

The CPI(M) has adopted a policy of wait and watch before making any proper assessment of the Trinamool Government. But what is your preliminary assessment a year after it came to power? In which direction do you think the State is heading?

We had never said that we would not be critical. We said we would play the role of a responsible Opposition. We will not oppose for the sake of opposing as they [the Trinamool] did. There is a fundamental difference between our opposition and theirs. When Mamata Banerjee was announcing her achievements after 100 days or after 200 days [since assuming power], we pointed out that one could not make a proper assessment in such a short time. The problem is that she started claiming that she had completed 90 per cent of the work. We did not want any report card from her, nor did we want to grade her.

But one thing that has become clear after almost a year is that the Government does not have any vision. It is directionless. They have neither any concrete programme, nor any sense of priority. They are trying to rush things through, which is proving counterproductive, be it in the area of industry, land, or problems in the Darjeeling hills. Every time they try to resolve an issue, they complicate matters further.

But one thing that the Chief Minister should not have done – a promise she has not kept – is the assault on democratic institutions and democracy in general. This is dangerous, and we had earlier warned that this assault would not be confined to us, the CPI(M). It will spread.

As to where the State is headed, nobody really knows. All that was done before is now being undone – like land reforms, the establishment of a democratic, decentralised panchayat system and other institutions of participatory democracy. Our successes in the agrarian sector, based on which we were setting up industries – all such processes are being reversed. This is endangering the overall growth of the State. I will not yet say that an anarchic situation is prevalent here, but I fear it is heading in that direction.

Over the last several months political violence and crime have been on the increase. Do you think the Government is doing enough to curb them?

The violence against us has increased a lot. Since May 2011 [when the Trinamool-led Government came to power], around 4,800 Left workers and supporters have had to be hospitalised – most of them in serious condition. A large number of them have, in fact, been crippled by acts of violence. After coming to power, the Trinamool forcefully occupied more than 700 CPI(M) offices.

The situation is particularly bad for Left workers and supporters in the eight districts of West Medinipur, Bardhaman, Bankura, Hooghly, East Medinipur, Cooch Behar and the North and South 24 Parganas. In the first four districts that I mentioned, it is no longer possible to carry out even simple democratic functions; more than 40,000 Left workers have been driven out of their homes, party offices have been forcefully occupied, hefty fines have been imposed upon them. We have a detailed list of these figures.

It is not possible to understand the situation by the number of killings alone. In the 1970s, under the Congress Government, there were more killings of Left workers. But the situation of silent terror that is prevalent today is more effective in demoblilising any political opposition. It is not that they are perpetrating such terror in places where the Left is weak; in fact, it is worst where we have a reasonably strong support base – like the first four districts that I just mentioned. You can see how we were proved right when we said that this violence would be directed not only against us; today, Congress workers are being attacked. Even sections within the Trinamool camp are fighting each other.

Apart from political violence, general crime has also increased greatly. It is as though criminals have started thinking that it is their Government; and the police and the administration are just not handling the situation in a proper manner.

With all these things happening around us, the Chief Minister remains in denial mode, insisting that nothing has really happened. In none of the incidents of violence and crime – be it the Park Street rape case, the murder of two CPI(M) leaders in broad daylight in Bardhaman, or the rape on a train in Katwa – has the Chief Minister condemned the acts or apologised for them. Instead, she said they were orchestrated incidents.

What is your opinion on the Government's policy relating to land acquisition for industries?

First, I would like to say, regarding land, that thousands of people in rural Bengal have been ousted in the last one year. Even Trinamool supporters have not been spared.

Now, regarding the State Government's land acquisition policy. The Government claims that it is against acquiring land on behalf of industries. So how can land be acquired for industrial purposes? Their solution has been to lift the land ceiling, so investors can directly buy land – but the Government will have no role in acquiring land from the farmers. Unfortunately, this will empower the land mafia and the land sharks, and as a result, farmers will be denied their rightful compensation and rehabilitation packages, which will not happen if the Government acquires the land.

Moreover, big manufacturing industries will be reluctant to come, as they know how difficult it will be for them, without the intervention of the Government, to get the kind of land required to set up large plants. The situation is not conducive to big industries.

Not just in the case of land. The present Government does not really have a proper industrial policy. Take the case of power. When we were in Government, we left behind for the State a surplus; the present Government is now in such a state that it has to reduce power generation to minimise losses. Moreover, the way the resource mobilisation plan has been done, nobody knows where funds for infrastructure development will come from. The process of industrialisation is not just about giving land. It is important that the atmosphere is also conducive to industrial growth.

What is the Government's major achievement in its first year in power?

Apparently, the Darjeeling hills are peaceful – which everyone can see is not the case – and peace has returned to Jangalmahal. But this is just an illusion of peace. It cannot be considered an achievement, as it is paving the way for another wave of problems. Then, of course, there are a whole lot of promises that are yet to be kept. The only positive work that I feel the Government has done is to have decided not to set up the Legislative Council as it had decided earlier. We opposed this decision, and they finally dropped the idea.

Instead of taking the State forward from where it stood a year ago, we are seeing that they are reversing the process of progress and development, undoing all that had been achieved. The future really does look gloomy.

There has been some disenchantment with the Government among the urban middle class. Do you think this has spread to rural voters? Will it have an impact on the upcoming panchayat elections?

We have seen disillusionment among the urban middle class, even among those who voted for a change. But the attack on democracy that we talked about is even more intense in the rural areas. On top of all that, there is major distress in the agrarian sector, as is evident in the spate of suicides by farmers and agricultural workers groaning under the burden of debt.

Whether this will influence the results of the upcoming panchayat elections is very difficult to say. The ruling party has been threatening to prevent the Opposition from fielding candidates. It all depends on whether our candidates will be allowed to file their nominations. But I will say that when people start understanding the implications of what is happening around them, they will get disillusioned. But to go into the mode of active resistance takes some time.


[The interview was published in www.frontlineonnet.com on volume 29 - issue 09 - May 18, 2012]

Left Parties Statement

The Left parties, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), Communist Party of India, All India Forward Bloc and the Revolutionary Socialist Party held a meeting today. They have issued the following statement:
 
The Left parties discussed about the proposed food security legislation being brought in parliament. The Left parties have been campaigning for a comprehensive and effective food security law and the provision of a universal public distribution system for all excluding only the better off sections.
 
The Left parties decided to conduct a countrywide movement on this issue culminating in an indefinite protest action in New Delhi during the Monsoon Session of parliament. The next meeting of the Left parties will work out the specific programme.
 
The Left parties held a preliminary discussion on the forthcoming presidential election. It would be better if there is a wide agreement on a candidate for the post of President. The Left parties decided to consult with other secular opposition parties before taking a final stand in the matter.
 
Those who attended the meeting were the four general secretaries of the Left parties -- Prakash Karat, Sudhakar Reddy, Debabrata Biswas, T J Chandrachoodan, besides, A.B. Bardhan, Sitaram Yechury, S Ramachandran Pillai and D Raja.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Comrade P Sundaraiah centenary celebrations launched


 
As decided by the 20th party congress of the CPIM, the party has launched a year long birth centenary celebration across the country, of its first General Secretary and revolutionary legend Com. P Sundarayya on his birthday (May 1). A meeting was held in the party headquarters in New Delhi which was inaugurated by CPIM General Secretary Com. Prakash Karat. He described in detail the role played by Com P Sundarayya in the formation of Communist groups in the southern states of Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Andhra. He also praised the role, comrade Sundarayya played in the glorious Telengana Armed struggle. CPIM PB members Com. S Ramachandran Pillai, Brinda Karat, CC members com. Venketeswara Rao, Suneet Chopra were present in the dias. 

The major function on the launch of the birth centenary celebration was held in Andhra Pradesh where the new campus of Sundarayya Vignana Kendram (SVK) built on a sprawling four-acre land was inaugurated at Gachibowli by Home Minister P. Sabitha Indra Reddy. It is the second campus of the literary and cultural centre after the one in Baghlingampalli here. The centre has a collection of over 2.5 lakh books in Telugu, Urdu and English languagesc on culture, history, literature, philosophy, sociology, arts and science.

Speaking on the occasion Ms. Sabitha Indra Reddy said the life of Puchalapalli Sundarayya, popularly known as comrade PS, was inspiration to present and future generations and there was need to propagate his ideology. CPI (M) PB Sitaram Yechury who presidedover the function said it was a coincidence that the new SVK centre was being opened on his 100thbirthday.

Rich collection
Earlier, managing trustee of SVK B. Sambi Reddy explained that they had over 1.5 lakh books in English, 70,000 in Telugu and 40,000 in Urdu. The SVK had all issues of 24 literary magazines beginning from ‘Bharathi' in Telugu. They had also digitised about 2,000 rare books in Telugu.

The first published women's weekly in the country, Nizam's hand-written poems, paintings, Ghalib's poems, the complete works of Iqbal, autobiographies, ‘nazams, masnavis, dasthans', all issues of Tazib-ul-Aqlaq newspaper run by Syed Ahmed Khan, Moulana Abul Kalam Azad's Al-Hilal and Al-Bilag newspapers were among their priceless Urdu collection, he stated.

The Baghlingamapalli centre had space only for about 80,000 books and the new centre was also falling short now with about 40,000 books still being kept in carton boxes. They were planning to take up construction of another block in Gachibowli with 20,000 sft space.

State secretary of CPI (M) B.V. Raghavulu, State secretary of CPI of K. Narayana, freedom fighter Mallu Swarajyam and others participated.

Communist Party of India-Marxist Vijayawada city unit and Prajasakthi Sahiti Samstha jointly kicked off Puchalapalli Sundaraiah birth centenary celebrations on a grand note on Tuesday. On the occasion, CPI(M) city secretary Ch. Babu Rao said that Sundaraiah had long ago foreseen the implications of imperialism and globalisation, and gave a call to oppose the imperialist policies. CPI(M) state control commission chairman B. R. Tulasi Rao stressed on the need to take forward the ideologies of Sundariah. Prajasakthi Visakhapatnam edition manager Sudhakar released a special issue on Sundaraiah birth centenary celebrations.A blood donation camp was organised to mark the centenary celebrations.
(Courtesy : The Hindu)


CPI(M) leader Com. D Mani passes away


Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader, freedom fighter and former MLA in Tamil Nadu Assembly Comrade D Mani passed away on Tuesday, May 1st. The 88 year-old four-time former legislator had not been keeping well for some time, CPI(M) state secretary G Ramakrishnan said. Party flags would fly half-mast in CPI(M) offices across the state for three days starting Wednesday, he said in a statement.

Having joined the Communist movement in 1944, Mr Mani was instrumental in forming trade unions for rubber and cashew workers in Kanyakumari district and had served prison terms, besides going underground for nearly six years, he said.Com Mani represented Vilavankode constituency four times in the Tamil Nadu Assembly. In 1948, when the communist party was legally banned, he along with his brother went underground and paid special attention in forming party units in the southern portion of the then Travancore state. in 1948 october 2 both of them where captured and send to jail.

His body was taken from hospital to the CPIM district committee office at Thiruvananthapuram where CPI (M) leaders including Opposition Minister of Kerala Assembly V.S.Achuthananthan, PB Members Comrade Pinarayi Vijayan and Kodyeri Balakrishnan paid tributes to the great leader. Later the body was brought to his house at Marthandam and a large number of people paid tribute to him.

CPIM Tamil Nadu State Secretary Com G Ramakrishnan, State secretariate member Com Noor Mohammed paid tributes to the leader. His body was laid to rest near his brother's memorial, G. S. Mani at Vettunthi near Marthandam.
All the May Day functions organised by the CPI(M) were cancelled due to the death of D. Mani. In the meantime a peace procession was organised in Nagercoil

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

COMRADE P SUNDARAYYA BIRTH CENTENARY


P SUNDARAYYA An Extraordinary Communist Leader: Prakash Karat

MAY 1, 2012 marks the birth centenary of Putchalapalli Sundarayya. It is an occasion to commemorate the life and work of an extraordinary Communist leader.  P Sundarayya, PS as he was popularly known, was a product of the anti-imperialist and anti-feudal movements in the two decades leading up to India’s independence.  Joining the freedom struggle at the young age of 17, Sundarayya began his political journey from being a Congress activist to a committed Communist. 

As in the case of many other militant freedom fighters who became Communists, Sundarayya revolted against the caste system.  One of his first public actions as the young boy was  to sit on a hunger strike in his village to protest against the caste discrimination practiced against dalits.

Sundarayya was recruited to the Communist Party by Amir Hyder Khan, the first Communist to visit South India.   He saw the potential of a revolutionary in the young student.  From then began the remarkable revolutionary path of PS.  Looking back with the long view of history, PS will be recognised as one of the builders of the Communist Party. He became a member of  the Central Committee of the Party in 1936 at the young age of 24.  This was the first Central Committee of the centralised re-organised Party.  He was assigned the task of organising the Party in South India.  As EMS Namboodiripad has written in the `History of the Communist Party in Kerala’, it was P Sundarayya who played the key role in recruiting the first  batch of Communists in Kerala.  In Andhra Pradesh, his home state, PS worked tirelessly to build the Party and attract the young radical elements from within the nationalist movement. It was due to his pioneering and strenuous work that the foundation of the Communist movement was laid in Andhra Pradesh.  PS was intimately associated with the first group of Communists in Tamilnadu who were then part of the Madras province which included parts of Andhra Pradesh. 

Later, PS played a key role in the formation of the CPI(M). He became the general secretary of the Party at the founding Seventh Congress in 1964.  For twelve years, PS served as the general secretary of the Party and devoted all his energies to building the Party as a Marxist-Leninist organisation.  The `Task on Party Organisation’ adopted by the Central Committee in 1967, which sets out the blueprint for a revolutionary organisation, bears his imprint. 

P Sundarayya made a major contribution to developing the strategy of the agrarian revolution.  He was one of the founding members of the All India Kisan Sabha in 1936, when he became a joint secretary. He was one of the first to recognise the importance of organising the agricultural workers and their role as the rural proletariat. His leadership of the Telangana armed struggle of the peasantry is legendary. His book, `The Telangana Armed Struggle and its Lessons’ provides the most comprehensive account of this historic struggle.  Later, he continued to study various aspects of the agrarian situation and the classes developing in the countryside.  As late as the mid-seventies, he organised a survey of villages in Andhra Pradesh to get a scientific understanding of the land question and the agrarian classes. He was fully convinced that without an agrarian revolution which  emancipates the poor peasants and agricultural workers, there can be no completion of the democratic revolution in India.

PS was an ardent defender of the Marxist-Leninist ideology and principles. He struggled against revisionism within the Communist movement and fought equally vigorously against the `ultra-Left’ deviation.  The man who led the Telangana peasant guerilla struggle could easily discern the Left-adventurist and petty-bourgeois revolutionism of the Naxalite movement.

Sundarayya’s other great quality was in the nurturing and development of cadres for the Party and the movement.  In all the leadership positions that he held at various levels and times, he would identify potential cadres, assess their abilities and after recruiting them, nurture and develop them.  Successive generations of activists were moulded and reared as Communist cadres because of this unique capacity of PS.

There were a number of Communist leaders of PS’s generation who were self-sacrificing and  devoted, but Sundarayya stood out amongst them for his simplicity, sense of sacrifice and total commitment.  Sundarayya cycling for miles at a go in the rural areas of Andhra Pradesh, trudging through thick jungles in Telangana for days and leading a disciplined life for years in jail – there were very few  who could match his  physical stamina  and endurance. He was selfless as far as the Party was concerned and, by example, could get others to emulate him.  It was due to this simplicity and sacrifice that many non-Communists in Andhra called him a “Communist Rishi”.

The 20th Congress of the Party has called for a year-long observance of the birth centenary of P Sundarayya.  This centenary year should be utilised for a campaign to build and strengthen the Party.  The Polit Bureau will soon announce the programme for this observance.

Monday, April 30, 2012

CITU’S MAY DAY MANIFESTO 2012

ON the occasion of May Day 2012, the day of the international solidarity and unity of the working class, the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) extends warm revolutionary greetings to the entire working class and the toiling people of the country and the world. The CITU reaffirms its commitment to class struggle and the struggle for emancipation of the human society from all forms of exploitation of man by man.

May Day 2012 is being observed in a background when the working people all over the world along with mass of the people from all walks of life have been loudly voicing their indignation through worldwide numerous protest mobilisations against the very neo-liberal capitalist order which perpetuates loot and plunder on ninety-nine per cent of the common populace by one per cent in the capitalist class. The Indian working class will also be observing May Day this year with more confidence and commitment to carry on the struggle against capitalist exploitation under neo-liberal order, riding on the historic success of all out united countrywide strike action by 100 million workers on February 28, 2012, with a determination to raise the struggle to a more militant height.  

This year May 1 marks the birth centenary of Comrade P Sundarayya, the legendary revolutionary leader of the toiling masses of the country. On this occasion the CITU salutes the revered memory of this relentless fighter for emancipation of the exploited classes.
The CITU calls upon all its affiliates to organise befitting programmes throughout the year to observe the birth centenary of the great revolutionary.      

FRATERNAL
GREETINGS
On the occasion of May Day the CITU reaffirms its international solidarity with the working class of the socialist countries in their struggles for upholding the principles of scientific socialism.  The CITU believes that the left and progressive forces will emerge victorious in defeating the enemies who are constantly conspiring to let loose counter-revolution in the socialist countries to restore capitalism. 

The CITU also expresses solidarity with the working class and toiling masses of the developed capitalist countries in their grim battle against the disastrous fall out of neo-liberal capitalist order and the nefarious design to impose the burdens of the current economic crisis on the mass of the people.

The CITU reasserts the bondage of solidarity with the working class of the developing countries in their bitter struggles simultaneously against imperialist machinations on their country’s socio-political and economic governance on the one hand and the onslaughts on their rights and livelihood by their respective ruling polity on the other under the influence of the imperialist driven neo-liberal order. 

The CITU extends solidarity with the agricultural workers and poor and marginal farmers in their struggle for survival against deepening agrarian crisis and its fall out in the form aggravating poverty and destitution, dwindling employment and earnings and increasing suicides among the farming community.

The CITU also greets the fraternal mass organisations of women, youth and students who are engaged in grim struggles against discrimination, unemployment, commercialisation and privatisation of education and public utilities — all arising out of the policies of neo-liberalism. The working class must establish fraternity with these sections for joint struggles for the cause of the country and the people.

SOLIDARITY WITH THE
PEOPLE OF PALESTINE
The CITU expresses its deep anguish and indignation at the hated Zionist policy of brutal occupation, aggressions, blackmail, blockades and other criminal acts against the Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza that has been continuing for decades. The CITU condemns such US-imperialist sponsored, uncivilised and barbarous machination by Israeli rulers, in unequivocal terms. The CITU firmly believes that all anti-imperialist, patriotic, freedom friendly, truly pro-people and pro-working class trade union movements in the world have a moral and humanitarian responsibility to extend powerful support to the struggle of the people of Palestine.

SOLIDARITY WITH THE
STRUGGLING PEOPLE
OF ARAB COUNTRIES  
The CITU greets the workers and the people of the Arab world who have come together in the historic popular uprising against authoritarian regimes, centring round the people’s upsurge in the countries of North Africa and Middle East. The double-faced deceit of the US led imperialist powers has been totally exposed. The US and its European allies are conspiring and promoting disturbances against the governments of Syria and Iran who are not subservient to them, in the name of democracy and civil rights etc, while at the same time openly supporting the brutal suppression and atrocities on the people’s upsurge against the pro-imperialist autocratic regimes in Bahrain, Yemen, Jordan, Morocco, and Saudi Arabia etc with money and military supplies. Under the guise of fighting terrorism, the US has built up military bases in the strategically located and oil-rich Arab countries.

On the occasion of May Day, the CITU appeals to the international trade union movement to extend powerful support to the fighting people of the region and to strongly condemn US imperialism and its European allies for their hegemonic interference in the region with the ulterior motive to instal neo-puppet regimes in the oil rich countries of the regions.

GREETINGS TO THE
PEOPLE OF LATIN AMERICA
On this May Day the CITU greets the Latin American working class for the decades-long determined and militant struggles along with the mass of the people against the economic plunder of imperialism forcing imperialist retreat. 

The victory of the pro-Left political forces in Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua and some other South American countries as well and their endeavour for an alternative path to neo-liberalism,  have delivered a severe blow to US imperialism. The coming together of the 33 Latin American and Caribbean nations at a conference in Venezuela recently and founding a regional forum called Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) is a very significant development.

Socialist Cuba continues to be a beacon of anti-imperialist struggles in the entire Latin American continent. It has played catalytic role in motivating, uniting and mobilising the people of Latin America against US imperialism. Moreover, despite economic blockade and constant conspiratorial onslaught of the US imperialist and other counter-revolutionary forces, the social progress achieved by Cuba is a matter of great inspiration to the working class.

SPECIAL FEATURES
OF MAY DAY 2012
On this May Day 2012, the barbarous face of capitalism stands further exposed under the stewardship of international finance capital in the format of imperialist neo-liberal politico-economic order. In this order, inequality, disparity, poverty and unemployment are promoted on the one hand resulting in rapid reduction in the purchasing power of the mass of the people thereby squeezing the market; on the other, speculation gets priority over productive-employment-generating investment for quick and maximum profit without any hassle. This has led to explosion of worst ever crisis and financial meltdown in the world capitalist order. The crisis originated in the main centre of imperialist power, the United States, and engulfed the entire capitalist world, the advanced industrialised economies most severely.

The burden of the entire crisis, as usual, is being passed on to the toiling people through unemployment, price-rise promoted by speculation, cut on wages and social security and fast informalisation of workplaces through rapid casualisation and contractualisation and various other means while simultaneously bailing out the perpetuator of the crisis --- the capitalist class under the total grip of finance capital.

Mass of the toiling people have now started refusing to accept such loot and plunder on them lying down by one per cent of the capitalist class. The entire Europe is witnessing waves of strike action by the working people against onslaught on their rights and livelihood and similar protest action has also engulfed various countries of Africa and Asia and also got manifested in USA and even Israel. And precisely in this backdrop the world is now witnessing the spontaneous outbreak of the “Occupy Wall Street” movement which originated in the USA last September and gradually spread to 75 cities in the USA itself and to thousands of cities in almost all corners of the globe. And from this movement the slogan was raised – “ninety nine per cent versus one per cent” and “billions for speculators and pennies for the people,” demonstrating intolerance to the system of one per cent capitalists looting ninety nine per cent of the people.  

The CITU welcomes such spontaneous manifestation of peoples’ anger against the onslaught on their rights and livelihood through the spread of organised struggles of working class all over the world. The CITU believes, it is now the task of the working class movement committed to the philosophy of class struggle to raise such growing intolerance to capitalist onslaught on their livelihood to the consciousness and determination for changing the system altogether by overthrowing the inhuman neo-liberal capitalist order. Let May Day of 2012 invigorate such commitment and zeal in the organised movement of working people on a global scale, let us all work with that determination.   

IN INDIA  
This year’s May Day is a proud moment of the Indian working class for the unprecedented all-in-unity of the trade unions in the struggle for ten points demands aimed at defending and promoting the economic sovereignty of the country and achieving the basic socio-economic rights of all sections of the working class and toiling people of the country. The February 28, 2012 nationwide general strike, which is the 14th in the series since the introduction of neo-liberalism in the country in 1991 and involved around 100 million workers in the strike action, has many salient features unparalleled in the contemporary history of strike struggles by modern working class all over the world.

The UPA-2 government has been aggressively pursuing the neo-liberal agenda. Backbreaking rise in prices of essential commodities including food is being promoted and so also unhindered speculation in the commodity market to ensure windfall gains for the capitalist, traders and big landlord lobby. Crucial inputs and essential requirements like fuel, fertilisers, medicines etc are being priced at par with developed economies while keeping the mass of the people deprived of even the statutory minimum wages which can hardly provide for bare survival. Public utilities like health, education, roadways, transport etc are being privatised and commercialised through the so called PPP model to subserve the interests of big business. Simultaneously, blue chip public sector units in strategic, infrastructure and natural resources sector are being sought to be privatised in phases. And the whole neo-liberal process of economic governance in the form of deregulation and privatisation has led to, besides impoverishing the people, explosive exposure of big ticket corruption one after another, all involving plunder of precious natural resources by handful of big corporates, both domestic and foreign.

Such process of loot and plunder of the country and its people which has become synonymous to the capitalist system itself under neo-liberal dispensation, is continuing unabated despite organized protests by the toiling people. The toiling people are fleeced under the design of ‘austerity drive’ while the capitalist class continues to enjoy undue benefits of ‘bailout packages’ at a huge cost to public exchequer. In the current union budget also, while subsidies on food, fuel and fertilisers meant for the ninety nine per cent of the common populace is targeted to be brought down to mere 1.75 per cent of GDP, the same Govt showed no hesitation in allowing a huge concessions and perpetual tax default together to the tune of more than 5 per cent of GDP for the one per cent moneyed class among the large corporates, landlords and traders.

Workers are punished with dismissal and other punitive measures by employers for organising or leading trade unions and even murdered by police or hired goons of employers. And of late, active move is afoot to completely change the labour laws to legitimise the violations and empower the employers to hire and fire at will; pension system is being totally privatised to allow the pension funds to be handled by the speculators, both domestic and foreign along with switching over from a system of assured pension to a system dependent on the market forces. Employment and decent work have become the worst victims under various counts – retrenchment, recruitment ban, outsourcing, casualisation, contractualisation, informalisation, “no wage but honorarium instead” and so on. 

On this May Day, the CITU vows to redouble its initiative to unite the toiling class in the resistance to the regime of loot and plunder on people, who produces wealth and push up GDP numbers by their sweat and blood. The brutality of the employers class, howsoever atrocious it might be with the active patronage of those in governance, have to be combated by the working class through demonstration of greater unity, vigour and conviction to combat and defeat the exploitation and the exploiting class as well.

The challenge before us is to preserve and widen the unity of the working class and the people as a whole in carrying forward the fight against the exploitative system and also against the disruptive and divisive forces which seek to divide the people on caste, religion, parochial, identity and various other lines. Fight against all kinds of social oppression championing the cause of most downtrodden sections of the society, and fight against all hues of communal, fundamentalist and divisive forces is also to be carried forward simultaneously by the working class movement.    

As a follow-up to the historic general strike of February 28, 2012, the CITU calls upon the working class to widen further the all in unity of trade unions at the grassroots level and carry the united struggle of the working people to a militant height to fight for reversal of the anti-people pro-imperialist policy regime.   

SOLIDARITY WITH THE
STRUGGLE AGAINST ATTACK
ON DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT
WITHIN THE COUNTRY 
The international day of working class solidarity brings forth the task of organising solidarity with renewed vigour with the struggle against attack on working class and democratic movement within the country as well. In midst of crisis, the capitalist employers and the governments at their behest became more atrocious and desperate in crushing down collective assertion of the workers and trade unions for their just demands and rights. In many workplaces in the country, even the initiative to form trade unions is attacked with dismissal and other forms of victimisation by the employers along with false implication of the workers and union activists in criminal cases by the employers-administration combine. The incidents at Maruti Suzuki plant at Gurgaon (Haryana), Foxconn and Hyundai in Tamilnadu, and Volvo in Karnataka are some the examples. Such incidents of attack are expected to rise and widespread solidarity action by the working class all over the country is the urgent need of the hour, if the increasing attacks for eliminating or crushing trade unions by the employers-government combine is to be combated effectively. May Day 2012 must invigorate such spirit and consciousness for solidarity-preparedness among the trade union movement.

ATTACKS ON THE
PEOPLE OF WEST BENGAL    
Attacks on trade union and democratic rights assumed a new dimension in West Bengal where immediately after the last assembly elections in May 2011 and the formation of a TMC-Congress government, violent physical attacks have been unleashed on the trade unions, the CITU in particular and also on other trade unions and mass organisations of peasants, students, youth and women by the armed TMC-Congress hoodlums, with the police remaining a silent onlooker in most of the cases. Trade union offices are being set on fire and ransacked, Left supporters are being physically attacked, women including the Anganwadi employees are molested and tortured, houses set on fire and many of our comrades have been killed. Till date 58 leading activists of the democratic movement were killed including six from the trade unions; the number is increasing everyday. In the run up to the preparatory campaign of February 28, 2012 general strike, two of our comrades, Pradip Tah and Kamal Gayen were brutally murdered. 

Around 400 union offices were captured and hundreds were ransacked. Workers are being threatened and terrorised to desert the CITU and other trade unions. In many areas, contract workers owing allegiance to the CITU unions were thrown out of employment and new sets of workers engaged at reduced wages in connivance with the contractors. An atmosphere of terror is being sought to be created to maim the Left opposition and democratic movement. Such a situation bears ominous portents for democracy and the fascistic design to suppress the class and mass organisations in this strong bastion is aimed at weakening and marginalising any opposition to the anti-people neo-liberal measures being unleashed by the TMC-Congress regime in the state. Along with the democratic movement, trade union movement led by the CITU has been resisting the attacks braving all atrocities. The TMC government minced no words in declaring their intent to put a ban on right to strike in general and in particular on trade union rights of the government employees. All these are attacks on the rights and livelihood of the toiling class and are not confined to Left supporters alone. Resistance against these attacks has to be built up through broader class mobilisations.

Similar disturbance and attacks are being sought to be created in Left-front ruled Tripura state where assembly elections are going to be held in early 2013. In Kerala also, another stronghold of working class and democratic movement similar maligning campaign along with occasional physical attacks are being launched by the right-wing forces since last assembly election. 

On this May Day, the CITU, while offering Red Salute to the martyrs of working class and democratic movement, pledges to rouse the working class throughout the country ideologically and organizationally, to unite and fight against the brutal onslaught on their fellow travellers in West Bengal and also in Kerala and Tripura who always remained in the frontline of battle championing the cause of the working class and led the struggle against exploitative regime of the capitalist order.

THE APPEAL OF
MAY DAY 2012
On this May Day 2012, the CITU reasserts its commitment to international solidarity with the struggles being carried on by the working class throughout the globe against neo-liberal order and in defence of their rights and livelihood.

The CITU appeals to the working people in the country to work for strengthening the all in unity of the trade union movement in the country to combat and confront the onslaught being brought down by the corporate captive ruling polity on the rights and livelihood of the workers at every workplace; the struggle against attack on labour rights in workplace must be supplemented by solidarity actions in all others. Solidarity actions must form an inseparable part of the day to day collective life of the working people. This is the call of May Day.

On this May Day the CITU calls upon the working class to remain vigilant and fight against the divisive forces of all hues --- communalism, casteism and parochialism while defending and expanding the unity of the class and the people in the struggle against oppression and exploitation.

Long Live International Solidarity of the Working Class!
Down with Capitalism & Imperialism!
Down with Neo-Liberal Imperialist Globalisation!
Long Live Socialism!