People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVI No. 49 December 15,2002 |
As
our
December
8
issue
was
to
be
a
special
issue,
it
could
not
carry
Subhas
Ray’s
column.
Hence
we
are
reporting
here
the
parliamentary
proceedings
during
two
consecutive
weeks
together
On
December
5,
one
day
before
the
10th
anniversary
of
Babri
demolition,
opposition
members
sat
on
a
dharna
in
front
of
Mahatma
Gandhi’s
statue
in
the
parliament
complex.
They
raised
slogans
denouncing
the
demolition
and
demanding
the
arrest
of
deputy
prime
minister
L.
K.
Advani,
HRD
minister
M.
M.
Joshi
and
the
coal
and
mines
minister
Uma
Bharati.
They
also
demanded
action
against
the
Sangh
Parivar
outfits.
Demolition:
An
Act
Of
Terrorism
Members
also
took
up
the
issue
in
both
houses.
In
Lok
Sabha,
some
members
trooped
into
the
well
of
the
house
and
disrupted
the
proceedings.
They
tried
to
raise
the
issue
as
soon
as
the
house
assembled.
Hannan
Mollah
(CPI-M),
Ramjilal
Suman
(SP),
Ramvilas
Paswan
(Lok
Janshakti)
and
G
M
Banatwala
(Muslim
League)
gave
notices
for
adjournment
motions
on
the
issue.
But
the
speaker
rejected
their
notices
and
asked
them
to
raise
the
issue
during
zero
hour.
The
opposition
termed
December
6
as
a
black
day
in
the
country’s
history
and
the
demolition
as
an
act
of
trrorism,
saying
there
could
be
no
compromise
with
terrorism.
In
Rajya
Sabha,
the
CPI(M)’s
Nilotpal
Basu
raised
the
issue
as
soon
as
the
house
assembled.
IDBI
BILL
In
Lok
Sabha,
the
opposition
fought
tooth
and
nail
against
the
government’s
move
to
privatise
the
IDBI
through
Industrial
Development
Bank
(Transfer
of
Undertaking
and
Repeal)
Bill
2002.
At
the
introductory
stage
of
the
bill,
opposition
members
forced
a
division
in
order
to
stall
the
bill’s
introduction.
Opposing
the
bill’s
introduction,
Basudeb
Acharya,
CPI)M),
reminded
that
the
IDBI
was
established
for
planned
and
balanced
industrialisation
and
for
removing
the
regional
imbalances
and
backwardness.
But
the
government
intends
to
wind
up
the
IDBI
instead
of
toning
it
up,
he
charged.
The
IDBI’s
role
has
been
lauded
by
many,
including
the
parliament.
So,
he
asked,
is
there
any
valid
reason
to
convert
the
IDBI
into
a
commercial
bank?
Its
corporatisation
is
just
a
step
towards
its
privatisation,
Acharya
added.
HFCL
&
FCIL
ISSUES
On
the
closure
of
Hindustan
Fertiliser
Corporation
Ltd.
(HFCL)
and
Fertiliser
Corporation
of
India
Limited
(FCIL),
Acharya
moved
a
call
attention
motion
in
Lok
Sabha.
He
said
the
question
of
FCIL’s
and
HFCL’s
revival
was
raised
in
the
last
session
but
the
minister’s
reply
indicated
an
intention
to
close
these
concerns.
It
was
unprecedented
that
within
three
days
of
a
decision
of
the
group
of
ministers,
the
cabinet
had
hurriedly
decided
to
close
down
seven
units
of
the
HFCL
and
FCIL.
In
the
past,
the
opposition
had
given
a
number
of
suggestions
for
the
revival
of
these
units.
But
production
in
the
Gorakhpur
unit
was
stopped
in
1990,
in
Barauni
unit
in
1999,
in
Durgapur
(Bengal),
Talcher
(Orissa)
and
Ramagundam
(Andhra
Pradesh)
in
1997.
Even
though
we
have
abundant
coal
reserves,
we
have
phased
out
all
our
coal-based
units.
In
West
Bengal,
growth
in
fertiliser
consumption
is
higher
than
many
other
states.
Yet
there
is
a
proposal
to
phase
out
the
provision
of
freight
subsidy
for
the
state.
Once
this
subsidy
is
phased
out,
farmers
in
Orissa,
Bengal,
Bihar
and
Jharkhand
will
get
fertilisers
at
higher
prices
as
these
will
have
to
be
brought
from
western
India
and
Punjab.
Thus
the
government
is
bent
upon
destroying
our
agriculture.
Farcically,
it
is
out
to
close
down
indigenous
units
but
wants
to
set
up
a
joint
sector
fertiliser
unit
in
Oman!
Acharya
also
asked
the
minister
to
clarfy
as
to
how
the
ministry
of
chemicals
and
fertilisers
gave
instructions
that
workers
of
Barauni,
Sindri
and
Durgapur
will
have
to
vacate
their
quarters
within
a
month
while
the
verdict
on
the
issue
is
yet
to
come.
How
inhuman
this
government
is,
is
clear
from
the
fact
that
under
its
instructions
all
the
schools
where
the
children
of
these
workers
are
studying
are
being
closed
down,
in
the
middle
of
the
academic
session.
Hospitals
too
are
being
closed.
The
government
has
introduced
a
voluntary
separation
scheme,
and
those
unwilling
to
take
the
VSS,
will
be
dismissed.
An
order
has
been
issued
not
to
supply
water
to
the
workers’
quarters.
They
have
asked
the
Durgapur
Project
Ltd
not
to
supply
power
to
the
workers’
colony.
The
Bengal
government
had
asked
some
NRIs
from
the
US
to
build
a
methane-based
unit
and
was
to
lay
a
pipeline
for
gas
supply
by
April
2003.
But
the
centre
closed
the
unit.
Acharya
forcefully
demanded
withdrawal
of
the
cabinet
decision
and
the
VSS.
During
the
discussion,
Lakshman
Seth,
CPI(M),
refuted
the
minister’s
contention
with
facts
and
figures.
He
said
there
would
be
a
gap
in
fertiliser
supply
to
the
extent
of
55
lakh
metric
tonnes.
He
asked
how
this
gap
would
be
filled
up.
Certainly,
we
will
depend
on
fertiliser
imports.
May
be
farmers
will
initially
get
fertilisers
at
a
low
cost.
But
with
the
ruination
of
indigenous
units,
importers
will
hike
the
prices
at
will,
imposing
a
severe
burden
on
farmers
and
seriously
damaging
our
self-reliance.
Seth
also
said
the
government
has
not
announced
any
fertiliser
policy
to
date.
The
issue
of
naphtha,
gas
or
coal
is
not
yet
finalised.
It
is
not
clear
how
private
investors
will
come
forward
to
invest
in
the
industry.
So
Seth
demanded
that
no
unit
must
be
closed
down
till
a
fertiliser
policy
is
announced.
NON-PERFORMING
ASSETS
ISSUE
Rajya
Sabha
held
a
discussion
on
the
Securitisation
and
Reconstruction
of
Financial
Assets
and
Enforcement
of
Security
Interest
Bill
2002.
During
the
discussion,
the
CPI(M)’s
Dipankar
Mukherjee
said
this
issue
involves
Rs
one
lakh
crore
and
has
been
confronting
the
country
for
many
years.
“I
have
got
the
evidence
and
names
of
the
defaulters,”
Mukherjee
claimed.
As
for
the
minister’s
claim
that
people
have
come
for
settlement
in
10,000
cases,
the
member
asked
the
minister
to
come
out
with
the
details
of
these
cases
to
show
how
many
of
them
are
big
defaulters.
Expressing
apprehensions
about
the
bill’s
efficacy,
Mukherjee
said
political
will
is
required
to
implement
it.
As
an
example,
he
said
Rs
100
crore
have
been
diverted
by
Dunlop
India
that
is
now
sick.
Workers
are
starving;
some
have
committed
suicide.
Banks
want
its
assets
to
be
seized.
But,
has
the
government
done
anything
to
see
that
the
company
is
back
on
its
feet?
So
far
as
non-performing
assets
are
concerned,
he
asked
which
category
of
debts
the
government
was
going
to
target
first.
As
yet,
there
is
no
infrastructure
for
the
Debt
Recovery
Tribunals.
The
number
of
benches
in
the
BIFR
has
not
increased
in
spite
of
increased
industrial
sickness.
The
BIFR
has
the
mandatory
power
to
close
down
an
industry
but
no
power
to
revive
an
industry.
As
for
the
takeover
of
a
company’s
assets
by
banks,
Mukherjee
asked
who
is
going
to
take
care
of
the
workers’
dues.
Hence
he
demanded
the
insertion
of
special
clause
in
the
bill
in
this
regard.
MOVE
ABOUT
UTI
Lok
Sabha
passed
this
week
the
Unit
Trust
of
India
(Transfer
of
Undertaking
and
Repeal)
Bill
2002.
It
seeks
to
provide
for
the
transfer
the
UTI’s
assets
(excluding
some
specified
assets)
to
a
company
to
be
formed
under
the
Companies
Act
1956.
The
bill
aimed
to
repeal
the
UTI
Act
1963.
Moving
the
disapproval
motion
against
the
bill,
the
CPI(M)’s
Basudeb
Acharya
strongly
criticised
the
government.
He
said
the
bill
had
come
after
the
fourth
ordinance
promulgated
by
the
government
the
inter-session
period—a
wrong
practice
sans
any
reason.
He
said
the
ordinance
was
uncalled
for
and
not
in
the
interest
of
our
democracy.
Dealing
with
the
UTI’s
problems,
Acharya
said
the
former
UTI
chairman
had
invested
a
large
part
of
its
corpus
in
a
wrong
way
and
was
later
on
arrested.
A
parliamentary
probe
is
on.
This
could
have
been
avoided
if
the
Deepak
Parekh
committee’s
recommendations
had
been
implemented.
We
saw
the
US
64
going
bankrupt
in
2001.
Now,
to
restructure
theUTI,
the
government
is
splitting
it
into
UTI
I
and
UTI
II.
But
with
the
repeal
of
the
UTI
Act
1963,
the
objectives
of
its
formation
would
go
haywire.
While
UTI
I
will
manage
the
assured
return
schemes
including
US-64,
UTI
II
will
manage
the
market-linked
schemes
and
will
gradually
be
transformed
into
a
private
company.
This
shows
the
government’s
real
intention,
Acharya
said,
adding
that
many
questions
regarding
the
division
of
UTI’s
assets
between
the
two
units
remain
unanswered.
As
for
employees,
Acharya
also
wanted
to
know
about
the
service
condition
of
the
employees
who
will
be
transferred
to
the
UTI
II.
Opposing
the
bill,
Rupchand
Pal,
CPI(M),
reminded
that
the
UTI’s
original
objective
was
to
mobilise
the
people’s
savings
for
our
developmental
process.
Moreover,
the
UTI
was
a
non-profit
organisation,
with
social
security
as
its
main
objective.
It
is
such
an
organisation
the
government
wants
to
privatise
even
though
it
did
not
contribute
to
its
initial
capital.
The
bankruptcy
of
US
64
meant
a
betrayal
of
the
trust
people
had
in
the
Unit
‘Trust’
but
the
government
does
not
even
have
the
addresses
of
the
people
who
looted
the
public
money.
And
now,
with
this
bill,
the
government
is
out
to
destroy
the
hitherto
best
mutual
fund
of
the
country.
The
aim
is
to
hand
it
over
to
private
hands.
But,
Pal
warned,
privatisation
is
no
panacea
to
the
UTI’s
ills;
rather
it
will
be
a
sin
committed
against
the
nation.
For,
the
UTI
has
been
a
trendsetter
in
the
capital
market
and,
in
its
absence,
foreign
institutional
investors
will
drive
the
market.
The
government
owes
an
explanation
to
the
nation
about
the
rationale
behind
its
move
regarding
the
UTI,
Pal
said.
DISINVESTMENT
BLOOMERS
During
the
Rajya
Sabha
discussion
on
disinvestment
of
public
sector
units,
Dipankar
Mukherjee
of
the
CPI(M)
said
there
is
no
consensus
on
privatisation
of
profit-making
public
sector
undertakings.
In
fact,
the
whole
parliamentary
system
is
getting
derailed
because
of
the
minister
for
disinvestment.
He
asked
what
the
problem
was
in
discussing
the
issues
of
strategic
value
like
oil.
Referring
to
a
former
chief
economist
with
the
World
Bank
who
said
that
“Perhaps
the
most
serious
concern
with
privatisation
is
corruption,”
Mukherjee
said
issues
like
corruption
in
evaluation
and
sale
of
assets
were
raised,
but
in
vain.
He
charged
that
the
government
is
trying
to
subvert
the
whole
parliamentary
system
on
the
issue
of
disinvestment,
and
demanded
that
no
profit-making
core
sector
unit
must
be
privatised.
Quipping
how
the
minister
could
carry
others
along
with
him
when
he
cannot
have
a
consensus
among
his
own
cabinet
colleagues,
Mukherjee
said
the
whole
disinvestment
policy
has
to
be
reviewed.
He
concluded
by
warning
that
the
government
would
not
be
allowed
to
sell
the
profit-making
public
sector
units.
OTHER
ISSUES
During
the
short
duration
discussion
in
Rajya
Sabha
on
some
recent
developments
in
Gujarat,
the
CPI(M)’s
Nilotpal
Basu
recalled
what
the
home
minister
had
said
the
other
day,
that
India
would
never
become
a
Hindu
Rashtra.
So
in
an
election,
Basu
asked,
can
we
allow
anyboody
to
appeal
to
the
voters
on
the
basis
of
religion?
He
wanted
to
know
what
the
government’s
attitude
towards
the
VHP
is.
Can
the
language
it
is
speaking
be
allowed?
Basu
said
the
house
was
competent
to
discuss
this
issue,
as
the
recent
developments
and
the
statements
made
in
Gujarat
pose
a
grave
threat
to
the
future
of
democracy
and
secularism,
the
fundamental
parts
of
Indian
constitution.
He
said
the
government
must
check
the
type
of
campaign
the
VHP
has
unleashed,
in
the
interest
of
holding
free
and
fair
elections
in
Gujarat.
Lok
Sabha
had
a
long
discussion
on
the
problems
facing
the
peasants.
From
the
CPI(M)
side,
Hannan
Mollah
said
though
75
per
cent
of
our
people
depend
on
agriculture,
the
peasants
are
not
getting
remunerative
prices.
Their
problems
are
aggravating
due
to
non-receipt
of
minimum
support
price.
The
government
has
to
ponder
the
matter
and
find
a
solution.
Moreover,
rich
peasants
garner
most
of
whatever
benefits
are
there.
But
the
problems
of
80
per
cent
middle,
poor
and
marginal
peasants
are
never
addressed.
They
do
not
get
fertilisers,
seeds,
etc,
in
time
and
have
no
marketing
facility.
This
problem
can
be
tackled
if
we
get
rid
of
the
middlemen.
Then
there
is
the
debt
problem,
forcing
many
to
commit
suicide.
All
this
deprives
the
peasants
of
the
benefits
of
new
technology
in
the
field
of
agriculture;
the
rate
of
investment
in
the
field
of
agriculture
is
declining.
The
government
has
to
ensure
easy
loan
for
the
peasantry
from
financial
institutions,
ensure
remunerative
prices
for
their
produce,
and
take
steps
to
save
the
perishable
goods.
while
the
peasants
are
in
need
of
fertilisers,
the
government
is
closing
down
one
fertiliser
company
after
another,
particularly
in
West
Bengal,
Bihar
and
Orissa.
It
is
also
reducing
the
subsidies
for
agriculture;
it
is
now
only
one
billion
dollars
while
the
USA
provides
180
billion
dollars
to
its
farmers.
This
curtailment
drive
must
stop.
Mollah
also
demanded
re-imposition
of
restrictions
on
the
import
of
agrarian
products.
The
peasants
will
not
keep
quiet
if
the
problems
facing
them
are
not
properly
addressed,
Mollah
warned.