I
Home  
Liberation Index 2005  
Liberation Index  
   
Publications
Vinod Mishra:
Selected Writings
Thirty Years of Naxalbari
 
 

 

September 2005

Previous -ISSUE- Next

Editorial

Commentary

Campaign

Fact Finding

Report

activities

labour

Aadhizameen

International

Films

 
 
  Editorial
 

Minimum Employment at Less than Minimum Wages

FIFTY-odd years ago when our newly independent republic adopted its constitution, the state was asked to make it one of its directive principles to provide gainful employment to every able-bodied citizen. Some sixteen years ago, VP Singh came to power promising to make ‘right to work’ a constitutionally guaranteed fundamental right of every Indian. That was the first and last time the ruling elite in this country flirted with this slogan. Now the Congress-led UPA government at the Centre has come up with a highly diluted National Rural Employment Guarantee Act that promises potential annual employment ....Full text

  Commentary
 

Dancing with the US Devil

THE ghost of former Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi must be dancing away in her grave at Rajghat in New Delhi. Over three decades after she sanctioned the first nuclear bomb test at Pokhran in 1974 – and shocked the world – India has finally been recognized as a member of the global club of nuclear-armed states. ....Full text

Nanavati Commission Report:
Getting Away With Murder

(In 1984, when thousands of Sikhs in the capital city were burned alive in a State-sponsored bloodbath, a citizens’ team of PUDR-PUCL visited the affected areas and prepared a report – Who Are the Guilty - that was testimony against the State’s pleas that the violence was a ‘spontaneous’ outburst of grief and anger following Indira Gandhi’s assassination. In conversation with Liberation, Uma Chakravarti, one of the many who helped that team to put the investigations together, reflects on the implications of the 1984 victims’ frustrated quest for justice in the light of the Nanavati Commission Report.) ....Full text

EC Must Deter Criminals, and not Disenfranchise Citizens

THE Election Commission of India has asked that names of all those against whom non-bailable warrants (NBWs) are pending for over six months be deleted from voters’ lists. The Commission argues that since voters are expected to ordinarily reside at their given addresses, ‘absconders’ are obvious candidates for deletion. This, the EC would have us believe, would put an effective brake on criminalisation of electoral politics. Ironically, a delegation of RJD MPs that met the EC to oppose this order included the infamous criminal MP from Siwan, Md. Shahabuddin, who has got as many as six NBWs pending against him. The EC ....Full text

Washing Away the Myth of ‘Mumbai to Shanghai’

ON 26th July and the week that followed, Mumbai was devastated by floods. It is ironical that more than 400 people died in the most modern city of India directly due to the floods. Another 4-500 people died a few weeks later in outbreaks of various diseases. This disaster has exposed the vulnerability of the city ... ....Full text

‘Suspicion’ – Or License for State Repression?

SUSPICION seems to be the umbrella explanation and excuse for State-sponsored murder and suppression of civil liberties. In London – the Brazilian electrician de Menezies was a ‘suspected’ suicide bomber – that was offered as justification for the fact that the police pumped bullets into him even after he had been overpowered. The 3 boys in Kupwara shot by .... ....Full text

Reversal of Land Reforms:

CPI(M)’s Achilles’ Heel in West Bengal

THE countrywide official campaign for reversal of land reforms has assumed a particularly farcical dimension in West Bengal. On August 4, the State Assembly witnessed a rare unity of the treasury and opposition benches when the House resolved to pass the West Bengal Land Reforms (Amendment) Bill after ridding it of the most controversial clause 14q which had proposed to do away with rural land ceiling on a whole set of pretexts. Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and industries minister Nirupam Sen were however absent during the vote. While Bhattacharjee walked out minutes before the Bill was put to vote, Sen did not attend the House at all. The unity in this case however meant not the opposition supporting the treasury bench, but vice versa, as Left Front MLAs backed an amendment moved by the opposition Trinamool Congress! This manoeuvre was necessary because apparently a government cannot retract or amend a bill placed by itself! .... ....Full text

 
 
    Campaign
 
 

CPI(ML) organizes statewide protests on July 25

CPI(ML) organized demonstrations at district headquarters all over the state, demanding that the Central government pass the Employment Guarantee Bill in the monsoon session itself. Demands on central legislation for agrarian labourers, legislation .. . Full text

  Fact Finding
 


Battered bodies but hardened spirits!

[Excerpts from the report of an AICCTU team which went to meet the aggrieved workers of the Honda Motorcycles and Scooters India (HMSI) in order to inquire about the situation on 26th July 2005. The delegation visited the wounded workers in the Sadar Hospital and adjoining areas, interviewed the local people and the police personnel on duty about the incident. The delegation was not allowed to meet the workers who were arrested and kept under police custody at Sadar Thana; nor were they able to meet the union leaders as there was no information regarding their whereabouts. On the basis of the personal accounts of the incident gathered, the following report was submitted] .. . Full text

JNU Students Visit Orissa

(In May 2005, AISA councilors from the School of Social Sciences, JNU, organized an exposure trip to the Kashipur-Koraput-Kalahandi region of Orissa. 9 students visited the region and took a first-hand look at the politics of development, displacement and hunger there – as well as the struggle to resist and organise. One of the team members recounts their impressions. ) .. . Full text

  Report
 

AISA’s Go-to-Village Campaign

BEGINNING June 10, responding to AISA’s gaon chalo abhiyan (Go-to-Village Campaign) a team of students from Allahabad and Lucknow universities conducted a padyatra (traveling on foot) of several villages, falling under Ghorawal tehsil of Sonbhadra district in eastern Uttar Pradesh, to learn and know about the life of poor tribals and labourers. Sonbhadra district is ... . . Full text

Champaran Peasant Movement Challenges Brutal Repression

Sankalp Sabha against Kidnapping and Murder Despite the reign of terror let

loose by the feudal-criminal-police-politician nexus, the peasant movement is surging ahead in West Champaran, one of the last surviving feudal bastions of Bihar. On July 27, Kisan Sangh goons in uniform, on the behest of landlord Baldev Prasad, attacked poor peasants in Araria-Barava village. The villagers, mostly women, mistook them for policemen, and began to resist them; they then opened fire, killing 65-year-old widow Tetaria Devi and seriously injuring 35 year old ... . . Full text

 

Criminalisation Is Common Minimum Programme of UPA and NDA:

Need for Unleashing Common Maximum Protests of the People

[Citizens in Patna stress people’s action against criminal-politician-administration nexus in Bihar] . . Full text

Land Struggles in East Godavari District

OF late, East Godavari district in Andhra Pradesh has been witnessing a new wave in land struggles by the rural poor under the leadership of the CPI(ML). At present, land struggles are going on in at least 15 villages simultaneously. The struggles are primarily being led by the village-level struggle committees of agricultural labourers and poor peasants under the leadership . . . Full text

Status of Land Reforms in Andhra Pradesh and the Need to Implement Radical Land Reforms

[A summary of the paper presented by K. Gopal Iyer in the Hyderabad convention on “Land Reforms and State Repression”] . . Full text

   

Activities

 


AISA :

AISA’s Two-day National Workshop at Dehradoon . . Full text

AISA National Convention And March to Parliament

In June this year, Jadavpur University had witnessed a police crackdown that sparked off a massive student movement. That movement did not stop with winning the withdrawal of unfair suspensions of 5 students; it has continued to demand a judicial enquiry into the incident – and to demand that the LF Government of W Bengal acknowledge and take responsibility for the crackdown. On August 11, the AISA unit of JU took the initiative of inviting students from campuses al over the country to share their experiences of struggles for democracy on campuses. . . Full text

ASSAM

Protest against the Handing over of Oil Fields to a Foreign Company . . Full text

BIHAR

Administration Yields to Prisoners’ Movement . . Full text

DELHI

Seventh Delhi State Conference . . Full text

JHARKHAND

Second Jharkhand State Conference: CPI(ML) Pledges to Develop Peasants’ and Working Class Movement to Newer Heights . . Full text

KERALA

CPI(ML) Dharna against Coca-Cola at Plachimada (Palakkad) . . Full text

MAHARASHRA

Conference of Maharashtra Rajya Sarvshramik Mahasangh . . Full text

 

   

labour

 

Winding up of the CGHS:

Another Blow to Welfarism and Livelihood

THE Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare of the UPA government, Dr. Anbumani Ramadass categorically declared in a press conference at Chennai on 1st June ’05 that the government of India had planned to wind up the Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS), which benefits 50 lakh beneficiaries, and that it had also been decided to introduce in its place the “Health Card” scheme. . . . Full text

   

Aadhizameen

 

 

Women’s Parliament in Lucknow

A Women’s Parliament was held at Lucknow on 29th July to highlight cases of violence on women in Uttar Pradesh. The Parliament was inaugurated by AIPWA President Srilata Swaminathan and renowned human rights activist Nandita Haxar was the Chief Guest. Speaking on the occasion Ms. Swaminathan said that there was not just one Imrana in India. Hindu women were also suffering in the same way. Women have to rise above religion and casteism and reject the capitalist forces represented by so many political parties so that they can be truly liberated. Ms. Nandita Haxar said that the media had communalized the case of Imrana. She said that the women’s movement cannot go on in isolation rather it should link up with other progressive movements. Women from Sitapur, Chandauli, Lucknow and other parts of the state recounted instances of violence. The Parliament adopted the following resolutions: ...Full text

   

International

 


Sharon’s ‘Disengagement’ Strategy: Out of Gaza – and Into Jerusalem

[Ariel Sharon is a master of manoeuvres, writes Lindsey Hilsum (excerpted from New Statesman, 15 August 2005). While the world watches the withdrawal from Gaza, he is creating and expanding settlements in more strategic areas. Lindsey Hilsum is international editor for Channel 4 News] Full text

‘Lie after lie…’: Britain sees rise of authoritarianism

THE brutality of the killing of 27 year old Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes on 22 July was matched by the scale of lies: within hours of his murder on a London underground train the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Ian Blair, told the media that the dead man was a suspect in the failed bombings of July 21st. In fact, his only ‘crime’ was to be seen walking out of an apartment building which the police had under surveillance. And this week it emerged that, contrary to police claims, he was not wearing a padded jacket which Full text

 

   

Films

 

 

History, Folklore and the ‘Rising’

Two years from now the country would be commemorating the blaze that lit the Indian subcontinent 150 years ago in 1857. Reports have started coming in about historians being commissioned and crores of rupees being allocated for nation wide celebrations. .Full text