Monday, November 29, 2010

CPI(M) Gives Voice to Tannirbavi Residents' Protest in Mangalore


Tannirbavi is a picturesque stretch of land, lying between the majestically-flowing Phalguni river and the Arabian Sea, between Kulur and Bengare.

There are about 300 families living in the area over some generations. Out of them, about 98% belong to poor and Dalit classes. Dependent totally on fishing and bidi-rolling occupation, they have been deprived of all benefits that the government makes available by way of developmental works.

for all Tannirbavi residents so far deprived of all such privileges.

Residents complain of the stepmotherly treatment meted out by the city corporation and the governmet and cite the non-issuance of door numbers to their houses as the best example. In the absence of door numbers, they are not entitled to getting any benefits. Ration cards, power connection, water connection, loan facilities, pensions for widows, monthly stipend for the differently able, old age pension and such other benefits have remained out of reach for them.

The only benefit they have so far obtained is the issuance of the voter IDs (EPIC), which too have been issued based on unknown or non-existent door numbers through a nexus between the officials and politicians.

Excepting for a scholarship being given to the Dalit students, where the rest of 22.75% funds earmarked for the community by the MCC go is important question raised by the residents here.

All the ruling party and opposition politicians at the MCC have turned a deaf ear to the demands of the neglected residents of Tannirbavi. Therefore the Communist Party of India Marxist has come out in open support of their agitation.

As part of it, the party's city committee, in association with a few other organizations, organized a procession and a "MCC Chalo" (Laying a siege at the MCC office) on Monday Nov 29. Dalit right activists Baby, Madhava, Jayashri, Jagannath, Lingappa Nantur, CPIM city unit secretary Sunil Kumar Bajal and others were in the procession and led the protest.

The procession began at the Besant school junction and went via Mahatma Gandhi Road towards the MCC office at Lal Bagh. The protesters gathered in front of the MCC office and shouted slogans demanding door number.

(Courtesy : Mangalorean.com)

CPI (M) Orissa State Committee gearing up for mass agitation

Orissa State Committee of Communist Party of India (Marxist) has decided to build public opinion demanding action against culprits involved in the galore of scams that surfaced in recent times.  The party would also take up issues such as permanent job status to casual workers who were forced to work like permanent employee and universalisation of public distribution system.

At the end of the CPI (M)'s State committee meeting, Secretary Janardhan Pati said the 2G spectrum scam had dwarfed all other scams those had come to light earlier. “The Rs.1,76,000 crore involved in the 2G spectrum scam would have made it possible to provide 35-kg rice or wheat per month to all family,” Mr. Pati said.

From December 5 to 11, the party would launch widespread public demonstrations and rallies highlighting cases of corruption those happened during the regime of Bharatiya Janata Party and Congress, he said. Mr. Pati said the party cadres would organise public meetings at block level making people aware about the misdeeds by people in power. The State Committee meeting also resolved to step of demand for waiving agricultural loan in 17-drought-affected districts and supply of seeds and water free of cost to farmers for rabi crop. It demanded provision of 10 decimal of homestead and agricultural land to all homeless and landless people in the State. Mr. Pati said during the month of December, January and February, block-level mobilisation programme would culminate in district level.

Trinamool akin to Congress, BJP : Biman Bose


The Trinamool Congress supports an “oppressive” political order just as much as the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Biman Bose, State Secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), has said.

“The economic policy of the State's main opposition party, the Trinamool Congress, is no different from that of the Congress or the BJP. If I were to give an analogy, I would say that the Congress, the BJP and the Trinamool Congress are born of the same mother's womb,” Mr. Bose said here on Sunday. Mr. Bose said that like the Congress and the BJP, the Trinamool worked for the interests of the landlords in the villages and the industrialists and capitalists in the cities.

Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee had also expressed the same view at a recent political rally where he had said that in the past the Congress protected the interests of the landlords, a mantle that the Trinamool had taken over.“Given the policies of the State, we are forced to raise certain issues against the oppressive political order, drawing our inspiration from Marx and Engels,” Mr. Bose said at a function to observe the birth anniversary of Friedrich Engels.

Protest Day
During the day, supporters of the CPI(M) observed a Protest Day against the recent violence witnessed in Kherjuri in West Bengal's Purba Medinipur district. Leaders of the CPI(M) have alleged that party supporters, who had been evicted from their homes, were returning but were prevented from doing so by the Trinamool. Party supporters organised a series of meetings and demonstrations at street corners across the State to register their protest.
(Source : The hindu)

Mamata's notion of ‘change' is regressive: Buddhadeb Bhattacharya



Chief Minster Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee dismissed as “regressive” the notion of “change” being promoted by Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee at a rally in Barrackpore in West Bengal North 24 Parganas district on Sunday.
 
“Those who are constantly harping on this change that needs to be brought are not progressive, but pushing for regressive ideas instead,” Mr. Bhattacharjee said questioning the kind of change that Ms. Banerjee wanted to usher in the State.
“She wants every project to end in disaster like Singur,” Mr. Bhattacharjee said, emphasising the loss that the State had suffered after Tata Motors withdrew their Nano small car project from Singur.

Dismissed
Admitting that some workers and leaders in his party [Communist party of India (Marxist)] had committed wrongs that had alienated the people, Mr. Bhattacharjee said that they had been dismissed from the party. “We shall have to go back to the people with folded hands,” he said. Criticising Ms. Banerjee for being whimsical, he said the process of industrialisation in the State could not be held back just because she wanted it.

Stating that the Left Front had realised that the State could not progress riding on agriculture alone, he stressed the need for industry. The State had attracted investment worth Rs. 9,000 crore last year. Evoking the Trinamool slogan of “Ma Mati Manus (the mother, the land and the people),” Mr. Bhattacharjee said that the youth of the State could not merely rely on this rhetoric and stay at home without jobs.

Reiterating the alleged links between the Trinamool and the Maoists, Mr. Bhattacharjee said the terror and violence being witnessed were reminiscent of the days when the Congress was in power. “Earlier they [Trinamool Congress] had covert links with the Maoists, but now they openly hold public rallies together,” Mr. Bhattacharjee said.
(Source : The Hindu)

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Only the red flag can protect the poor : Budhadeb Bhattacharya


“Choose carefully between the red flag of the Left Front and the tri-colour flag of the Trinamool Congress for bringing about peace and development in agriculture, industry, electricity and education in West Bengal,” Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee cautioned people on Saturday while highlighting the alleged corruption of Trinamool Congress-run zilla parishads and the false promises made by the party to people.

He also criticised the Centre's silence over the State Government's appeal to subsidise essential food commodities for sale through public distribution system saying that the government at the Centre was only for the rich.

Addressing a rally organised by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) at Basirhat in the State's North 24 Parganas district, Mr. Bhattacharjee accused the Trinamool Congress of protesting against and obstructing every other development project initiated by the State Government and asserted that only the “red flag” can bring about development in the State and work for the poor.

Speaking on the State's industrialisation drive, he said: “Just because they (Trinamool Congress) could stop setting up industry at Singur, they cannot stop us in every project. They are now protesting against the land acquisition for Rajarhat township near Kolkata…I want to tell them that the State Government will demolish all such obstacles to the State's progress.”

Taking a dig at the slogan of “change” popularised by the Trinamool Congress, Mr. Bhattacharjee wondered if it means giving back land from the poor to the landlords or doing away with the panchayat system that the Left Front had established.

“The two zilla parishads run by the Trinamool Congress have scored highest in corruption and even funds allotted for Aila victims have been swindled by them. A false propaganda by the party that the State Government will forcibly acquire land from the minority population is baseless,” he said.

Alleging that the Trinamool Congress is creating unrest in colleges and lawlessness in the State, Mr. Bhattacharjee reiterated that it has joined hands with the Maoists in Paschim Medinipur district to kill CPI (M) leaders and supporters.

(The Hindu)

Political use of religion hurts science: Yechury


CPI(M) Polit Bureau member Sitaram Yechury has said that misuse of religious sentiments for political gain is the biggest barrier in the development of science in the country.

He was speaking at a seminar on ‘Science and Secularism' organised by the All India People's Science Congress here on Saturday.

“Unlike common belief, science is not against religion but it is against the conditioning of the human consciousness which became more and more dependent on religion,” Mr. Yechury said.

Communalism

He said communal forces in the country were trying to mix philosophy with theology and mythology with history. “They prevent development of science in an attempt to maintain their domination over people,” Mr. Yechury said.

One form of class conflict that was going on was between those who tried to bring the fruits of scientific inventions for the benefit of masses and those who wanted to commodify science and research findings, Mr. Yechury said.

Criticises Centre

“India's secular democracy is a sham. Only an elite class is enjoying the democratic and secular rights.” Mr. Yechury said the Union government's stand against a joint parliamentary committee investigation into the 2G spectrum row was demeaning to Indian democracy.

C.P. Rajendran of the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, public health activist B. Ekbal, All India People's Science Congress president C.P. Narayanan, general secretary Amit Sen Gupta, Kerala Sastra Sahitya Parishad president Kavumbayi Balakrishnan and others spoke.

The seminar was organised as a prelude to the five-day All India People's Science Congress to be held in Thrissur from December 27.

(Source : The Hindu)

CPI(M) Tamil Nadu State Committee seeks State intervention on quota for Arundhathiyars

The State committee of CPI(M) on Saturday sought the State government's intervention to ensure that separate reservation for Arundhathiyars was implemented in the recruitment graduate teachers and technical assistants in TNEB.

Explaining a resolution adopted in the State committee meeting, secretary G. Ramakrishnan said the Madras High Court also had ruled that reservation for Arudhathiyars should be followed in all jobs since the State government had enacted a legislation.

Mr. Ramakrishnan said though State government had ordered for implementation of reservation for Arundhathiyars in graduate teachers' recruitment after CPI(M) pressed for it, employment exchanges failed to follow the government's instruction.

Similarly, there is no sign of implementing the legislation in the recruitment of technical assistants in TNEB.

(Source : The Hindu)

Saturday, November 27, 2010

General strike brings Portugal to a halt

General strike on 25 November in Portugal brought the country to a halt. Millions of workers from the public and private sector stayed away from work to protest ahead of a vote in Congress on government’s budget and austerity measures.
general strike was called by the Communist Party-led General Confederation of Portuguese Workers (CGTP) and the PS-aligned General Union of Workers (UGT), the first time both unions have called out their members for nearly three decades.
“We consider it to be the biggest strike ever,” declared UGT head Joao Proenca. CGTP general secretary Manuel Carvalho da Silva added, “I’ve never seen so many people support and identify so closely with the causes of a strike before.” CGTP officials said 75 percent of all workers in the country took part in the strike. Labour Minister Maria Helena Andre revealed, “We are facing a very reduced participation in the private sector of the economy.” This is a new development—up to now strike action has largely been confined to the public sector.

Statement by Jerónimo de Sousa, General Secretary of Portuguese Communist Party
 
The General Strike of November 24, convened by [the Trade Union Central] CGTP-IN, is one of the most important days of struggle held in Portugal after the April 25, [1974 Revolution]. It was a powerful response to the brutal offensive by the PS Government and the PSD, and to all those who, as is the case of the President of the Republic, have backed the course towards a national disaster that is being imposed upon our country.
 
It is a great General Strike that will go down in the history of the Portuguese workers and people, in which participated more than 3 million workers. A victory over resignation and conformism. A day which, due to the scale of the protest, has reasserted the key importance of the struggle.
1- The PCP highlights the national dimension and the cross-sector nature of the General Strike. Throughout the entire country, in the mainland and in the autonomous regions, there was an extraordinary participation in all sectors of activity.
 
The PCP stresses the importance and significance of the strong participation in the transportation sector, with the Lisbon, Oporto and South of the Tejo Undergrounds, the [urban naval transport company] Soflusa, [the rail companies] Transtejo, CP, Refer, EMEF and dozens of road transport companies, as is the case of STCP, Carris, Rodoviaria Entre-Douro e Minho, Barraqueiro Group and Transdev. All sea ports and many of the fishing ports were closed and all the (more than 500) scheduled flights were cancelled. The General Strike also had a strong impact on the productive sector, as for example in: the automobile sector with Auto-Europa and its entire industrial complex, Renault-Cacia, Mitsubishi, Tudor and Camac;  the metallurgy and metalworks sector with the Viana do Castelo Shipyards, the Alfeite Arsenal, Lisnave, Sacti, Jado Ibérica, Camo; the cement, ceramics and glass sector with CNE, Atlantis/Vista Alegre, Saint Gobain/Covina, Cinca and Lusoceran; the cork industry, with the Amorim Group; the textile, garments and shoemaking sector with Paulo Oliveira Group, Almeida e Filhos Textiles, Califa, Triumph and KIAIA; the food and beverages sector with CentralCer, Kraft Foods; and in hundreds of other companies of other productive sectors.
 
The PCP also underlines the major response that was given by the workers of the central and local public administration, with stoppages that reached historic proportions, totally or partially paralyzing the waste collection throughout the country, closing hundreds of schools, Polytechnics and University Colleges, public departments, finance departments, courts and other public services, as was the case with the health sector, where there was a strong participation of the sector's workers.
 
The PCP also stresses the scale and impact which the participation of thousands of striking workers had upon many sectors and companies, such as the Viana do Castelo Shipyards, the over 400 agencies of CGD [national public bank] and other banks that were closed, the closure of almost all post offices (CTT) and the important and significant levels of participation of the workers of Super and Hypermarkets, Motorways and Call Centers.
 
The scale of the strike is all the more significant in that it was achieved by the workers under pressure and blackmail. Ideological pressure, which proclaimed the alleged useleness of the struggle; blackmail resulting from the illegal imposition of minimum services which sought to restrict the right to strike; economic pressure, which targeted in particular workers with precarious labour relations, threatening them with dismissals and losses of income (bonuses); and the illegal harassment which in various places involved the use of the PSP and GNR [police and militarized police forces] to assist in the violations of the Strike Law.
 
This is a success that is all the more remarkable as hundreds of thousands of workers are confronted with dire situations of debts and galloping living costs. These are workers for whom a day of strike means the difficult loss of a day of income.
 
This General Strike emerged from the heart of each company and shop floor, from the determined and consciencious decision of each worker. It emerged from a feeling of protest, indignation and struggle of millions of workers who chose to say “enough!”. No more injustice! No more injustice towards those who are always called upon to pay the costs. This General Strike was a unique moment of assertion of the dignity of Portuguese workers.
2- This General Strike was a just and necessary day of action against the theft of their wages and pensions. Against the cuts of social benefits, family bonuses and unemployment bonuses. Against the increase in the cost of essential services and goods, such as transportation or medication. Against the destruction of public services and the privatization of strategic companies.
 
This General Strike was a just and necessary response to the growth of unemployment, to the ever more widespread precariousness and impoverishment of vast strata of the population. A just and necessary response to the process of destruction of the productive apparatus, to the country's ever-growing indebtment and the loss of national sovereignty.
 
This General Strike was a just and necessary response to the scandalous accumulation of profits by the big economic and financial groups who, invoking the crisis and the deficits in public accounts, wish to impose an even more intense exploitation of the workers and plunder of the country's resources.
3- The PCP greets all the Portuguese workers for their participation on this General Strike.
 
We greet, in particular, the thousands of young workers who, for the first time, took part in a day of struggle of this magnitude. This is a factor of unquestionable political importance, which becomes an important guarantee for the future.
 
The PCP greets CGTP-IN, the broad trade union movement and all the representative structures of workers for their actions and the organizational capacity which they displayed. CGTP-IN confirms and asserts itself as the great trade union central of the Portuguese workers, and an unavoidable reference when it comes to defending the workers' interests and the country's future.
4- This General Strike was not a point of arrival, but a new step in the demanding and long struggle which the national situation requires. After this General Strike, nothing will remain the same. The Government and the Parties that support its policies, and the President of the Republic which sponsors it, today had a clear condemnation, a strong warning and a firm demand for a break with their policies.
 
The General Strike was a powerful expression by the Portuguese workers and people that they are ready to prevent more of the current policies, ready to become the key players in the break and change which the country needs.
 
The PCP was always with this General Strike, because it is with the workers' struggle, because it is committed to the demand for higher wages, for the development of the productive apparatus, for investments and public services. The PCP was and is on the side of the workers' struggle, because their struggle is a struggle for a country of progress, social justice, for a sovereign and independent Portugal.
 
Renewing its permanent commitment to this struggle, the PCP reaffirms to the Portuguese workers and people that they can always count upon the PCP.

Womens’ and Peasants’ Day Observed in Sit-in protest in Kolkota



In the ongoing sit-in in Kolkata, at the call of Left Front, Women’s Day was observed on Thursday and Peasants’ day on Friday. Hundreds of women joined in the demonstration on Thursday and protested particularly against the terror unleashed in the state by Maoists and Trinamool Congress. Addressing the gathering, leaders of Left Womens’ organizations condemned murder and kidnapping of women in Jangal mahal by the Maoists. At least 11 women have been either murdered or kidnapped in this year only. Latest victim being Sampriti Mahato, who was kidnapped from her home and still untraced. Shyamali Gupta, Banani Biswas, Minati Ghosh  and others also questioned the lack of morality of TMC chief who herself is an woman. Fullara Mondal, a leader from Lalgarh described the day-today experience of the women of that area.
On Friday, veteran Kisan leader Benoy Konar addressed the peasant gathering and emphasized the role of imperialism behind recent aggression against the Left in the state. Among others, Suryakanta Misra, Madan Ghosh, Abdur Rejjak Mollah addressed the meeting. The call of the rally was to fight against the anti-peasant policies of the centre as well as to build up mass political resistance against the forces of anarchy in the state.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Mid Day Meal Workers march to Parliament



Thousands of Mid Day Meal Workers from around the country marched to the parliament demanding various issues including Minimum Wages, Social security, Pension under the banner of All India Co-ordination committee of Mid Day meals workers (CITU) on Thursday 25th November. CITU All India President Com. A K Padmanabhan inaugurated the dharna. Com.AKP called upon the activists to carry forward the struggle against the anti people policies of the UPA government.  The dharana came as a strong protest against the proposed privatisation of mid day meals scheme by the central government. Com. Sitharam Yechury, Com. Brinda Karat, also addressed the gathering and promised them to rauise the issues regarding them in the parliament. Com. A Sindu, Convenor of Co-ordination committee presented the Demand Notice. Later a delegation led by Com.Sindhu met the union minister for human resources and presented the memorandum of demands.