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India: CPI (M) -- Reconciling `anti-imperialist' rhetoric with `neoliberal constraints'
Communist Party of India Marxist-Leninist (Liberation)
March 5, 2008 -- The draft political resolution released by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) for its 19th Congress provides quite a revealing commentary on the opportunist political trajectory of the party. The resolution is characteristically elaborate about the description of the international and national situation. But when it comes to spelling out the concrete positions and role of the party, the resolution is rather vague and evasive. And as for the debate that the party now increasingly faces in its own circles, the resolution dismisses everything as a big anti-CPI(M) conspiracy!
The draft resolution devotes several paragraphs to the global economic situation under imperialist globalisation and the US-led ``war on terror''. It calls for a mighty worldwide anti-imperialist resistance that combines both anti-war and anti-globalisation sentiments and struggles on a global scale. But what task does the CPI(M) derive for itself from this global analysis and advocacy? The answer sounds pretty innocent -– ``rousing the anti-imperialist sentiments of the Indian people and mounting pressure on the Indian government to pursue a steadfast role in promoting multipolarity, defending sovereignty of nations and the non-aligned movement''.
Let us probe a little deeper. The CPI(M) resolution quite correctly identifies imperialist globalisation and the global war on terror as the two principal prongs of the global offensive spearheaded by US imperialism. Now, where do the Indian ruling classes stand in relation to these key components of the imperialist agenda? There can be no denying the fact that in both economic and foreign policy spheres the Indian ruling classes are moving towards ever closer integration with imperialism in general and US imperialism in particular. And this integration is increasingly assuming a strategic and military dimension as well. This policy course has remained unchanged through all the periodic changes of governments over the last two decades and the United Progressive Alliance [UPA - led by the Congress party] government has officially embarked on a course of strategic partnership with the US. Yet the CPI(M) resolution talks of mounting pressure on the Indian government to promote ``the non-aligned movement''!
The CPI(M) never offered any serious opposition to the Indo-US strategic partnership. The official announcement regarding the partnership was made during Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's US visit in July 2005. ``Non-aligned'' India also voted duly with the US against Iran at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), not once but twice. The CPI(M) did nothing ``commensurate with its strength and stature'' except making some noise in the media. It was only when negotiations over the nuclear deal entered the near-final stage that the CPI(M) stepped up its opposition. That too was diluted in the wake of Nandigram and the government was allowed to proceed with the ``nuclear safeguard'' negotiations in the IAEA. While the UPA government binds India into ever closer strategic integration with the US, the CPI(M) voices only piecemeal opposition from time to time. So much for the CPI(M)'s claimed contribution to the anti-imperialist consciousness of the Indian people.
What about the CPI(M)’s role in ``resisting'' imperialist globalisation? Its governments in West Bengal and Kerala are now routinely borrowing funds and ``vision'' from imperialist funding agencies and consultancy firms. Asian Development Bank (ADB), Department for International Development (DFID), McKinsey are not only well-known names in the CPI(M)-ruled states but they are increasingly the last word in the CPI(M)'s new-found discourse of ``development''. Regarding the economic direction to be pursued by the Left Front government of West Bengal, the draft resolution calls upon the government to maintain a careful balance without accepting wholesale privatisation in all economic and social spheres. How is this talk of ``careful balance'' and moderated, calibrated privatisation any different from the economic policy advocated by governments of other hues in other states or at the Centre?
`Slowing down' reforms
The CPI (M) resolution claims credit for ``slowing down'' the pace of neoliberal reforms. Insofar as neoliberal policies have to co-exist in India with a parliamentary democratic framework and the ruling classes have to renew their license every five years, an element of moderation or cautious calibration is built into the very scheme of things. The credit for slowing down of reforms should go to the popular protests that are building up against the predatory policies of the government and it is no secret that in CPI(M)-ruled states such protests have to face stiff resistance from the party and the government.
Let us take some recent examples. The SEZ (special economic zones) Act was passed unanimously in Parliament in 2005. The CPI(M) owes an answer to the people of India why its 40-plus MPs voted in favour of the Act; or for that matter, under what ``compulsion'' its model government in West Bengal had to anticipate the Central Act with its own 2003 version of the same land-grabbing legislation. If the UPA government has now been forced to introduce some elements of ``moderation'', it has been in the wake of the people’s resistance at Nandigram [peasants resisting land acquisition have been brutally suppressed by the CPI(M)'s West Bengal government] and popular mobilisation against SEZs elsewhere in the country.
And the whole country knows what role the CPI(M) has played at Nandigram -– it has only perpetrated and patronised massacres at regular intervals in a desperate bid to thwart the resistance of the people. Likewise, if there is now talk of amending the Land Acquisition Act 1894, it is all because of the debate that has been generated by what has happened at Kalinganagar and Singur. It is indeed strange that a party that fraudulently uses an arbitrary law like the Land Acquisition Act of 1894 to acquire one thousand acres of fertile land for monopoly capital should wax eloquent about the need for ``amending and updating'' this antiquated legislation! We know how CPI(M) ideologues rationalise this hypocrisy. To them it is simply a case of ``distinction'' between a state government operating under ``neoliberal constraints'' and a communist party applying its ``freedom of expression'', and if we are not able to grasp this distinction we are guilty of ``inversion of reason''!
``Liberalism'' in economics is always complemented by illiberalism in governance. The deepening of neoliberal reforms in almost every sector of the economy has been matched by a proliferation of special legislation of control to incriminate every form of public dissent and protest. The so-called ``national security'' doctrine of the UPA government is fast degenerating into a gospel of unmitigated state repression and systematic truncation of democracy. The CPI(M)'s critique of neoliberalism is remarkably reticent, if not silent, about this growing danger.
Even when it comes to the demand for repeal of the most draconian Armed Forces Special Powers Act, the CPI(M) merely advocates replacing it ``with a suitable law which can enable the army to be deployed in disturbed areas to combat insurgency that will do away with the draconian features of the existing law!''. Obviously, one will look in vain for any word of criticism in the CPI(M) document regarding the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act that has incorporated several features of the Prevention of Terrorism Act or draconian state laws like the Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act which is being invoked by the BJP [Hindu-chauvinist Bharatiya Janata Party] government in the state to trample upon press freedom and civil liberties. The CPI(M)'s opposition to the BJP revolves only around the issue of communalism, with very little attention paid to the fundamental question of democracy.
For the last four years the CPI(M) has been actively associated with a government at the Centre. How does the CPI(M) describe its association? The CPI(M) is a signatory to the Common Minimum Programme which is the ruling UPA's commonly drafted and commonly monitored manifesto of governance. Yet the CPI(M) would have us believe that its association with the government is only selective. In fact while it claims credit for legislation on rural employment guarantee (will the CPI(M) tell us if it has been instrumental for the NREGA, why the rural poor in CPI(M)-ruled states have not even got ten days' employment a year instead of the assured 100 days?), right to information and prevention of domestic violence, and for the presumed slowing down of reforms, it blames the Congress [Party] for everything neoliberal and pro-imperialist in UPA policies! Whatever may be the CPI(M)'s formula for apportioning credit and blame, the fact remains that the CPI(M) cannot hide its actual status as a participant and major stakeholder in the UPA government.
The draft resolution boldly rules out any alliance or united front with the Congress Party. In state after state the CPI(M) enters into electoral adjustments with Congress (Gujarat was the most recent example), and at the Centre the CPI(M) underwrites a Congress-led coalition government, albeit without any ministerial portfolio. The resolution would like us to believe that it is a one-way relationship where the Congress depends on the CPI(M) with the latter remaining completely independent! [CPI(M) Chief Minister of West Bengal] Jyoti Basu was clearly closer to the truth when he had once famously described this relationship as one of mutual interdependence. The CPI(M) has no problem with sharing a common minimum program of governance with the Congress and with having seat adjustments wherever possible, yet it claims to be steering clear of any ``united front'' with the Congress.
With Lok Sabha [national parliamentary] elections approaching, the CPI(M) will of course now be more in the denial mode regarding its relations with the Congress. A typical expression of this denial mode is the renewed advocacy of a third alternative. The notion of the third front would come in handy particularly in states like Andhra Pradesh and Assam where the CPI(M) may well seek electoral adjustments with regional parties like the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and Assam Gan Parishad (AGP). Never mind if the CPI(M) had teamed up with the Congress against the TDP in the last Lok Sabha and Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh –- the draft resolution describes the TDP as a regional party that seeks cooperation with the Left! In a way the draft resolution marks a near-complete liberalisation of the CPI(M)'s political line where ideology, elections and governance are neatly compartmentalised. Phrases like ``left and democratic unity'' and ``third front'' are used more for ideological posturing and political consumption while policies regarding electoral adjustment and governance are sought to be rationalised in the name of ``neoliberal constraints'' and ``constitutional compulsions''!
`Ruling classes, right-wing reactionaries and the ultra-Left'
The draft resolution calls upon the entire party to ``defend the Left-led governments from the attacks coming from the ruling classes, right-wing reactionaries and the ultra-Left.'' The call must be read in the context of the countrywide opposition and criticism that the CPI(M) has had to face following the forcible land acquisition at Singur and the massacres at Nandigram. Now this opposition has come primarily from the affected and aggrieved people of Singur and Nandigram which in turn has found widespread support from the broad democratic opinion not only in West Bengal but in every corner of the country. In the case of Nandigram, the local people who opposed the West Bengal government's move to set up a chemical hub were all long-standing supporters and activists of the CPI(M) itself. But a rattled CPI(M) establishment could not tolerate this unexpected resistance from within its own base and responded with a series of massacres.
The violence naturally evoked all-round condemnation. Yet instead of paying any heed to the voice of protest senior CPI(M) leaders took it upon themselves to justify the killings –- following the third massacre in November 2007 the Chief Minister openly said that trouble-makers had been ``paid back in their own coin'' -– while heaping scorn and ridicule on whoever condemned the killings and questioned the CPI(M)'s discourse of corporate-led ``industrialisation'' and neoliberal ``development''. Even a thoroughly partisan Prabhat Patnaik who had questioned the neoliberal direction of West Bengal was dismissed by the Chief Minister as an armchair economist devoid of any connection with reality! An eminent Marxist historian became an enemy of the people in the eyes of Prakash Karat simply because he had drawn a parallel between Gujarat and Nandigram! This paranoid arrogance has now been made party policy in the draft resolution.
The CPI(M) may club the ruling classes, rightwing reactionaries and the revolutionary left (ultra-left in its vocabulary) as its common enemy. This does not however prevent the CPI(M) from doing brisk business with significant sections of the ruling classes and their oldest political party, the Congress!
In sharp contrast to this arrogant sectarianism of the CPI(M), the revolutionary left knows how to distinguish between the ruling classes and the opportunist left. The CPI(ML) has serious differences with both the CPI(M) and the self-styled Maoists, but it never subscribes to the anti-communist tirade of the ruling classes and their ideologues. Inside West Bengal, the CPI(ML) has been the only party to have always maintained its independence and demarcation from the entire spectrum of right-wing forces, working consistently for a left and democratic alternative. The misdeeds and arrogance of the CPI(M) are providing a fertile ground for the right and the CPI(ML) is there to counter this process in the best interests of the left movement. The CPI(ML) does not have to indulge in any exercise to malign the CPI(M), but it is certainly the political responsibility of the CPI(ML) to counter the negative impact of the CPI(M)'s utterly indefensible acts like Singur and Nandigram. And this is not a separate task for the CPI(ML), but only an integral part of its overall mission: ``people’s resistance, left resurgence''.
[The CPI (ML) Liberation's web sites are mlint.wordpress.com and www.cpiml.org .]


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CPI (M) attacks Nandigram residents -- again
Urgent Appeal:
May 6, 2008
CONDEMN THE FRESH LEASE OF VIOLENCE IN NANDIGRAM
CEC MUST INTERVENE TO ENSURE FREE AND FAIR POLLS
The shocking news that at least 45 residents of Nandigram - farmers, fish
workers, small traders, were ruthlessly attacked and are hospitalized in
Nandigram, Tamluk and PG Hospital, Kolkatta during the last one week is a
matter of grave concern.
News of politically motivated attacks have come in from other places in West
Bengal as well, such as Nodia and 24 South Paraganas. A few activists of the
Association for the Protection of Democratic Rights (APDR) and Bandhi Mukti
Morca were not just beaten, but are learnt to have been booked under fake
charges.
It is not any armed struggle or spate of violence which is meted out with
unjustifiable and repressive measures, but a simple non-violent agitation
within constitutional framework is.
The situation is indeed worrisome and is worsening day by day, as the Panchayat
elections are nearing. While the intellectuals, artists and academicians of
West Bengal with various people's organizations are raising a unanimous voice,
we the concerned citizens across the country appeal to all who care for
democracy, freedom and life of the people in Nandigram and elsewhere to protest
against the violence on unarmed people, men and women, whose only fault is that
they have become
politically aware and organized to challenge the economic players and political
agenda, as well as party. With the Panchayat election in West Bengal at the
doorstep, democratic rights are impinged upon by the brutality of the ruling
party cadres, who are not penetrating propaganda or any political moves by the
opponents. People in the villages of West Bengal are looking forward for
elections and to exercise their right to vote without fear and coercion.
In the past, even when the innocent people of Nandigram have faced assaults
with iron rods, sticks, small bombs and even swords, the West Bengal police
officials, have remained not just mute observers, but supporters of the squads
of the party cadres, coming in on motor bikes. It's a matter of serious concern
that then even Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) were not spared of the
political influence and were not allowed to discharge their duties.
In this context:
We demand that the Centre immediately plunges into action, through the CRPF,
ensuring their power to act without favour or fear, and engages in an earnest
political dialogue with its supporter, the Left Front.
We appeal to the Central Election Commission (CEC) and the West Bengal State
Election Commission to take every step to ensure peaceful and non-violent
elections, including putting up a team of independent observers, till the
results.
We appeal to the friends within Left Front to prevent CPI(M) cadres from taking
to violence, which is a blot of democracy and their own ideology.
As responsible citizens, we continue to monitor the situation, of not just the
truly democratic and fair election process, but the safety of all the people
and their rights, of West Bengal, especially Nandigram who hitherto were
subjected to serious human rights violations.
Signed by:
1. Arvind Kejriwal, Activist
2. Amit Bhaduri, Economist
3. Dr. Manoranjan Mohanty, Delhi University
4. Medha Patkar, National Alliance of People's Movements
5. AshokChaudhary, National Forum of Forest People and Forest Workers
6. Gautam Bandhopadhyay, Nadi Ghati Morcha
7. Vijayan M J, Delhi Solidarity Group
LATEST REPORT ON NANDIGRAM BY THE MEMBERS OF THE FORUM OF ARTISTS, CULTURAL
ACTIVISTS AND INTELLECTUALS
Yesterday on the 4th of May a team of artists, cultural activists and
intellectuals visited Nandigram to get a first hand experience of the alleged
atrocities being reportedly perpetrated by the CPI (M) cadres and criminals.
The incidents we witnessed and heard reported by the affected people were
simply horrifying.
We submitted a memorandum to the Block Development officer of Nandigram,
Shantiram Gorai in demand for a peaceful, terror free atmosphere, so that the
people of Nandigram could exercise their independent choice and opinion in the
coming Panchayat Elections. Even the BDO claimed his helplessness in
controlling the situation because of lack of co-operation of the district and
police administration. Till date he had written 47 letters to the O.C. of
Nandigram Thana requesting, urging him to check the violence, but to no avail.
Only two of his letters have till date been answered. He acknowledged the fact
that the CPI (M) was responsible for the spate of violence and the atrocities
on the innocent people of Nandigram, people without any political affiliation,
and those connected to the Bhoomi Uchhed Pratirodh Committee, or any political
party.
Villagers of Simulkundu and Kanungochowk had all been hounded out of their
houses. The villages now lay unpeopled. Unauthorised structures had been
constructed over the Talpatti Canal as entry points for CPI (M) backed
professional criminals from Khejuri armed with latest sophisticated weaponry,
which was being brazenly ignored by the police, in spite of repeated reminders
from the BDO. The BDO himself had gone on inspection and found this out. But
still the police claimed ignorance of this fact. He also acknowledged that many
people had and were still fleeing their homes due to CPI (M) atrocities and
attacks. Their houses were being looted, ransacked, while men, women and even
children were being beaten up, assaulted and molested too. We witnessed a
pregnant lady, on the ground floor of the BDO office, who had been kicked
around on her belly and under parts of her body, with the wounds still
smarting.
The BDO further informed us that at a camp in Maheshpur, Gokulnagar, there were
about 400 homeless persons residing at present. All had been hounded out of
their houses in the past few days, by the CPI (M) cadres and criminals. He
requested us to contact higher officials, in case they could be awakened to the
immediacy of the crisis to the lives, persons and property of the people of
Nandigram.
Next we visited the Nandigram Block Hospital. We saw patients with head
injuries, broken limbs, lathi injuries and a variety of wounds, in the wards.
All claimed that they had been either pulled out of their houses and tortured
physically and threatened to dare go against the CPI (M), or assaulted on their
fields or on the roads by CPI (M) cadres passing by in rallies, conducting
house to house checks and delivering threats. Women were carried off into the
fields from in front of their men folk for daring to try protecting either
their husbands or children. The Medical Officer of the Block Hospital,
Shubhobrata Maity claimed that he was short staffed and no doctors were being
sent by the administration to tackle and meet the situation over there. As of
latest reports 2 patients have just been admitted with bullet injuries. (13.12
hrs/05/05/08)
We visited the relief camp at Maheshpur where we saw about 400 people housed in
the school buildings, unable to return home, since the CPI (M) marauding gangs
were daily attacking them at their houses and assaulting them. Women took us
aside to reveal deep injuries in their various private body parts as they
narrated the incidents of assaults by CPI (M) men and others who had their
faces covered in black cloth. They further claimed that local CPI (M) leaders
along with their womenfolk attacked them and stood as barricades to prevent the
CRPF from stopping the atrocities. Besides the CRPF have been instructed by the
local police administration not to prevent such atrocities or arrest the
culprits or take any punitive action against the CPI (M) culprits. We saw a
70year old man with severe head injuries (13 stitches) who claimed he had been
assaulted inside his house. He could not say what his guilt was for which, at
this age he had had to suffer such insult and injury. Neither could any of the
women. They had just refused to part with their lands. Yet now the State Govt.
was claiming that they were not going to take their lands. So why were they
being subjected to such torture. Nobody seemed to have an answer, save claiming
that the CPI (M) was out to recapture its lost political ground in Nandigram at
gunpoint or by whatsoever methods.
We saw a handful of policemen guarding the camp. But they said that they
already had orders to move out that very night, leaving the people at the mercy
of the marauding gangs. They knew the danger these people of the surrounding
villages and in the camp faced. They realized the pitiful plight of the common
people but they had to follow orders, though they did not support what was
going on.
As we set back to return, calls kept coming in of the CPI (M) having opened
fire on Sonchura and Gokulnagar village. Injured people were lying on the
ground and being allowed to bleed. The CPI (M) armed gangs with party flags
surrounded the villages preventing any ambulance or person to come and rescue
the persons. As I write this report, intense firing has been opened at
Satengabari village, 7 people can be seen lying bleeding on the ground, yet
nothing can be done to retrieve them. Heavily armed CPI (M) cadres are firing
indiscriminately as the people are fleeing their houses in terror. 2 persons
are reported missing.
This is the situation at Nandigram. Can this be the picture of Democracy? May
be! The democracy of brute force! Where is the voice of sanity and reason? Fled in the face of gunfire???!!!
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