Wednesday, May 27, 2009

န CPI(M) POLIT BUREAU APPEALS TO THE PEOPLE TO CONTRIBUTE

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement :
Kolkata, 26 May :
The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) expresses deep concern at the loss of life and property caused by Cyclone Aila that lashed Kolkata and some districts of West Bengal on May 25. Scores of people have been killed and more than a lakh rendered homeless.The Polit Bureau conveys its heartfelt condolences to the families of the bereaved and expresses its sympathies with those who have been affected by the cyclone.The PB urges upon the Central government to urgently provide all necessary assistance to the state government to help in rescue relief and rehabilitation operations. The Polit Bureau appeals to the people to contribute their might to help mobilise resources for the cyclone affected people. Contributions may be made to the West Bengal Chief Minister's Relief Fund.
Photo : www.bengalnewz.com

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Left Front announces candidates for Lok Sabha Polls

Three ministers, 18 new candidates in West Bengal’s Left Front list
Kolkata, 3 March : Three ministers and 18 new faces figure in the list of candidates announced Tuesday by West Bengal’s ruling Left Front for the 42 Lok Sabha seats in the state, with Front chairman Biman Basu conceding that the alliance which has been ruling the state for 32 years faces a tough battle.

The ministers in fray are Sailen Sarkar from the newly created constituency Malda (North), Anisur Rehman from Murshidabad and Manohar Tirki from Alipurduar. While Sarkar and Reham belong to Left Front major Communist Party of India (Marxist), Tirki represents the Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP).
Keeping intact the seat-sharing formula among the Front partners, the CPI(M) will contest 31 seats, Forward Bloc and RSP four each, while Communist Party of India (CPI) will field their candidates on three seats.
Bolpur, the seat which Lok Sabha Speaker Somnath Chatterjee had won seven times consecutively on a CPI(M) ticket, will see Ramchandra Dom as the party’s candidate. Last time, Dom was elected from the neighbouring Birbhum constituency. Chatterjee, expelled from the CPI(M) for refusing to toe the party line and continuing as speaker during the Lok Sabha trust vote triggered by the left parties’ withdrawal of support to centre’s United Progressive Alliance dispensation over the India-US civil nuclear deal in mid last year, has announced his retirement from active politics.
But even if he had decided to seek re-election, Bolpur would have been out of bounds for the veteran parliamentarian as it has been reserved for a Scheduled Caste candidate. Former Asian Games gold medallist and sitting MP from Krishananagar Jyotirmoyee Sikdar has been renominated from the seat.
Veteran Congress leader and external affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee would be up against newcomer Mriganka Bhattacharya of the CPI(M) in Jangipur, while Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee faces an old rival in CPI(M)’s Rabin Deb in Kolkata South.
Among the party’s high-profile current MP's, Mohammad Salim will seek re-election from the new constituency Kolkata (North), while sitting MP Laxman Seth has being renominated from his Tamluk constituency, that includes the trouble-torn Nandigram.
CPI’s vocal Lok Sabha member Gurudas Dasgupta will seek the people’s verdict from Ghatal. In the 2004 Lok Sabha election, the Left Front had bagged 35 seats, while the Congress got six and the Trinamool Congress one.
Releasing the list, Basu said the alliance was waiting to see whether the Congress and the Trinamool can successfully conclude a seat-sharing arrangement in the coming days. “It will be a tough battle for us. We have to surmount a mountain of obstacles,” he said.
However, he said this alliance was not new. “Earlier, we used to fight the united Congress. Then Trinamool came out of it. Now the two parties and some other outfits are trying to form a Mahajot (grand alliance).”
“Whichever party forms an alliance, we are ready. We fight elections to safeguard the interests of the masses,” he said, after a Front meeting at the state headquarters of the CPI(M) at Alimuddin street.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

BENGAL AIKS CALLS FOR AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT AND INDUSTRIAL GROWTH

GENERATION OF EMPLOYMENT IS A CORE AGENDUM
Burdwan, January 31, 2009 : In its three-day meet at Burdwan Township in the districtof Burdwan, Bengal's rice bowl, the state unit of the AIKS called foragricultural growth at a faster pace. It also heralded a call forindustrial growth. Both agenda looked at increased figures of percapita employment as part of the pro-poor developmental perspective ofthe CPI (M), the Left Front and the West Bengal LF government.
The open rally was a 'mere' assemblage of six lakh for the districtmembership of the AIKS itself exceeds 25 lakh. Lest my friends in thecorporate media, sorely disappointed at the recent turn of political events in Bengal (more of which in a separate article), jump in gleewith both feet in, and label the conference a boycott by the district AIKS, we may hastily posit that only the leadership level cadres wererallied on the occasion. The reason why is to be found in that everelusive thing in Burdwan – open, uncultivated space.
The final choice fell on a broad swathe of a kilometre-long sandheadon the shores of the now quiescent but otherwise torrential riverDamodar, an area of hard-packed gravel that could accommodate butfive-odd lakh of people. That an additional one lakh turned up did notquite leave the question dangling of any disciplinary action. Theall-India AIKS leadership present was overwhelmed at the response –that was the outcome of strong political drive for, and relentless organisational dedication to the cause of social change.
In an attractive speech delivered in simple but evocative language, West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said that a challenge faced Bengal. The challenge comprise making the stat come to the very fore of the country's states in terms of development of agriculture,industry, education, and health. Buddhadeb was full of praises for the Bengal AIKS for the role it had emoted right from the days of thenation's freedom struggle to stand by the side of and lead the kisan, the humble tiller of the earth, organising them into a weapon ofsocial change.
The concluding part of the speech of the CPI (M) Polit Bureau member basically dwelt on the land reforms movement and the role of the AIKS in assisting the two UF governments of the late 1960 s and then of the Left Front government from 1977 in the process of redistributing landmade khas by the political will of the Bengal administration. The lonestatistics he mentioned was this, telling as it was in its impact : more than 84% of the 1.35 lakh agricultural land of Bengal belonged topoor and marginal farmers. The state also leads the list in productionof rice paddy, vegetables, and jute.
All-India AIKS leader K Varadarajan detailed the horrific picture ofthe condition of the kisan and of the agrarian scene at the nationalplane. He reminded the massive assemblage that the AIKS had prevailed upon the central government not to go in for a policy of liberalisation fifteen years ago – and the advice was just put in the back burner. There was collective sigh from the rally when the AIKS leader pronounced that until date, no less than 1.75 lakh desperate kisans, thrashing about in the pangs of abject poverty had preferred either to swallow pesticides or to hang themselves. Was the central government moved by this? No, has been the answer until today, assured Varadarajan. The causes of the mass suicide were market orientation of commodities, lack of good procurement prices, want for viable loan components, and the credit entrapment by the sahukars and the mahajans among others.
Polit Bureau member of the CPI (M) Nirupam Sen who dwelt on the imperatives of pro-employment industrialisation, and veteran AIKS leader Benoy Konar who spoke feelingly on the 'two nations existingwithin one nation, the rich and the poor segments,' also addressed thegathering.
In the wake of the delegate session where there were 525 delegates andobservers out of a total of several crore of AIKS membership, a newleadership was elected. Madan Ghosh is the president, Tarun Roy is thesecretary, and Achintya Roy is the treasurer of the Bengal unit of the All-India Kisan Sabha.
RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED AT THE CONFERENCE :
1. Condolence resolution
2. Struggle against imperialism, terrorism, religious fundamentalism,and separatism
3. Against anarchic attempts to crate chaos in Bengal
4. Industrialisation for the interest of the kisans themselves
5. Organising the khet mazdoor struggles in a multifarious stream of movements
6. Against river erosion, and in favour of extension of irrigation
7. Early completion of the Teesta scheme
8. Early implementation of the Subarnarekha river bund project
9. Strengthening the AIKS and the kisan movement farther
10. Augmenting and accelerating the cooperative and the self-help movements
11. Build up each Panchayat as a Red bastion for the safeguarding of democracy
12. Defend and secure the right of the forest dwellers and forest resources
13. Against the Israeli attack on the Gaza strip and againstPalestinian people in general
14. In demand of accelerated process of rural electrification
15. Onwards to the Lok Sabha election coming up
Photo : Dipankar Chatterjee

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Against Bush



Washington, 18 January :
An elderly man holds a placard protesting against US President Bush outside the White House in Washington.
Photo : AFP

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

President of Venezuela Hugo Chavez :

12 November, 2008
The President of Venezuela Hugo Chavez (2nd L)) waves to supporters during a rally in Petare neighbourhood, east Caracas, along with his candidates for the upcoming municipal and regional elections.

(AFP PHOTO)