People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVI No. 51 December 29,2002 |
THE
WEEK
IN
PARLIAMENT
Subhas
Ray
THIS
was
the
last
week
of
the
winter
session
of
parliament,
overshadowed
by
the
communal
forces’
victory
in
Gujarat
polls.
Needless
to
say,
the
economic
depression,
unemployment
and
closure
of
hundreds
of
textile
mills
in
the
state
only
went
to
help
the
consolidation
of
these
forces.
The
prime
minister
gleefully
announced
outside
the
parliament
that
the
BJP
would
repeat
the
“Gujarat
formula”
in
other
states
also.
DISINVESTMENT:
CLAIMS
&
REALITY
Under
sustained
pressure
from
the
opposition,
Lok
Sabha
held
a
5-hour
long
discussion
on
disinvestment
of
public
sector
undertakings
(PSUs).
Led
by
the
Left,
the
opposition
sharply
attacked
the
government
and,
amid
interruptions,
the
Left
and
RJD
members
staged
a
walkout.
In
his
hard-hitting
speech,
the
CPI(M)’s
Somnath
Chatterjee
said
the
PSU
disinvestment
was
causing
havoc
in
the
country.
He
said
it
was
nothing
but
a
saga
of
loot,
committed
on
the
plea
of
getting
rid
of
so-called
loss-making
PSUs.
But
the
fact
is
that
even
profit-making
PSUs
are
being
sold.
Thus
an
extremely
dirty
trick
was
being
played
on
our
society.
Chatterjee
said
the
government
had
failed
to
answer
basic
questions
about
the
policy,
principles
and
objectives
of
disinvestment,
and
also
about
who
have
been
or
are
going
to
be
its
beneficiaries.
Dubbing
the
whole
process
as
a
hush-hush
affair,
he
said
the
assets
being
handed
over
to
a
few
for
a
pittance
are
the
people’s
assets,
but
the
people’s
representatives
are
being
kept
in
dark.
Casting
a
doubt
on
the
process
of
selecting
consultants
or
bidders,
fixing
the
reserve
prices,
etc,
Chatterjee
said
nobody
knows
what
is
taking
place
under
the
table.
Centaur
is
a
glaring
example.
If
the
process
of
fixing
the
reserve
price
had
had
any
relation
to
reality,
one
could
not
have
made
a
profit
of
Rs
34
crore
in
a
few
months.
Referring
to
the
book
Disinvestment
Policy
and
Procedure,
Chatterjee
said
one
ostensible
aim
is
to
realise
a
large
amount
of
resources
locked
up
in
non-strategic
PSUs
and
to
redeploy
them
in
areas
like
health,
family
welfare,
primary
education
and
socially
essential
infrastructure.
He
then
challenged
the
disinvestment
minister
to
show
just
one
instance
of
such
redeployment.
As
for
the
disinvestment
proceeds,
nobody
knows
how
they
are
being
spent.
About
the
issue
of
assets
valuation,
the
standing
committee
has
made
strong
comments,
saying
the
government
must
modify
the
guidelines
for
it,
put
the
nation’s
resources
and
assets
to
optimal
use
and
unleash
the
productive
potential
inherent
in
our
PSUs.
But
nothing
is
done
in
this
regard.
Nor
are
the
PSUs
being
modernised
and
upgraded.
Chatterjee
asked
the
minister
to
tell
the
house
as
to
which
public
sector
unit
had
been
modernised.
As
for
the
government’s
claim
that
disinvestment
will
help
in
creation
of
new
assets
and
employment,
Chatterjee
asked
how
many
assets
and
jobs
had
been
created.
Regarding
the
assurance
about
ensuring
that
disinvestment
does
not
result
in
private
monopolies,
he
said
precisely
this
thing
is
taking
place.
The
petrochemical
sector
has
almost
gone
to
private
hands.
He
concluded
by
appealing
to
the
house
to
compel
the
government
to
shun
its
anti-people
policies
and
protect
the
interests
of
lakhs
of
workers.
COMPETITION
BILL
On
December
16,
Lok
Sabha
passed
the
Competition
Bill
2001.
Opposing
the
bill,
the
CPI(M)’s
Rupchand
Pal
said
it
was
not
the
right
time
for
us
to
go
in
for
such
a
legislation.
Saying
that
the
bill
would
nullify
certain
goals
set
forth
in
our
constitution,
Pal
charged
the
government
with
working
more
for
the
WTO
or
European
Commission
than
for
this
country.
Regarding
the
proposal
to
set
up
a
Competition
Commission,
Pal
asked:
Will
it
be
a
judicial
or
a
quasi-judicial
body?
Will
it
be
a
corporate
body,
at
par
with
the
Tea
Board,
Coffee
Board
or
Spices
Board?
Who
the
new
law
is
going
to
protect?
Small-scale
industries
account
for
maximum
employment
and
for
40
per
cent
of
our
exports.
Will
this
law
protect
them?
Will
it
protect
the
consumers’
interests?
Evidently,
the
new
law
is
not
going
to
do
any
such
thing.
It
will
rather
ruin
the
private
as
well
as
public
sector
industries
in
the
country.
Saying
the
bill
was
not
required
at
all,
Pal
asked
the
government
to
wait
till
2005
when
there
would
be
a
discussion
in
the
WTO.
He
warned
that
globalisation
must
not
mean
surrender
to
whatever
we
are
told
to
do.
We
are
not
equal;
we
are
yet
to
develop,
he
pointed
out.
Pal
also
opposed
the
idea
of
ministers
sitting
in
the
boards
of
industries,
and
demanded
that
the
Selection
Board’s
chairperson
or
members
must
not
be
allowed
to
join
any
industry;
their
distant
or
close
relatives
too
must
not
be
in
any
way
connected
with
industries.
FREEDOM
OF
INFORMATION
On
the
same
day,
Rajya
Sabha
passed
the
Freedom
of
Information
Bill
2002.
During
the
discussion,
Chandrakala
Pandey,
CPI(M),
said
the
Supreme
Court
had
upheld
the
right
to
information
as
a
fundamental
right.
Yet
we
don’t
have
a
machinery
to
implement
it.
The
Official
Secrets
Act
and
other
such
laws,
which
deprive
the
people
of
vital
information
in
the
name
of
security
and
official
secrecy,
are
major
hindrances
in
its
way.
A
number
of
past
efforts
for
providing
to
the
people
the
right
to
information
could
bear
no
fruit.
The
list
of
reasons
for
which
information
can
be
denied
and
is
being
denied
to
the
people
is
long;
it
may
be
in
the
name
of
the
country’s
unity
and
security,
strategic
importance,
national
interest,
constitutional
crisis,
commercial
confidentiality,
etc.
Such
a
situation
cannot
bring
transparency
in
administration
and
cannot
contain
the
rampant
corruption
in
the
country.
Transparency
is
also
necessary
because
the
right
to
information
may
also
affect
the
centre-state
relations.
The
CPI(M)
member
pointed
to
a
major
weakness
of
the
bill:
it
is
silent
about
punishing
an
officer
in
case
he
does
not
discharge
his
duty
properly.
Here
she
suggested
that
the
officer
to
be
deputed
to
supply
information
must
be
directed
not
to
mislead
a
person
who
comes
to
him
for
a
piece
of
information.
There
also
appears
to
be
some
confusion
in
regard
to
filing
an
appeal
in
case
the
request
has
not
been
granted.
Hence
she
sought
more
clarification
and
details
about
the
status,
qualifications,
method
of
recruitment
and
the
manner
of
functioning
of
the
public
information
officers.
CRIMINALISATION
OF
POLITICS
This
week
Lok
Sabha
passed
the
Representation
of
People
(Amendment)
Bill
2002
that
seeks
to
check
the
criminalisation
of
politics.
Participating
in
the
debate,
Somnath
Chatterjee
said
the
issue
has
been
causing
concern,
requiring
electoral
reforms
for
a
long
time.
We
also
need
to
minimise
the
role
of
money
in
the
elections.
Thus
the
bill
had
been
a
necessity
for
us.
Yet
we
see
people
coming
out
of
jail
and
getting
elected.
Well-known
crooks
are
getting
elected.
People
with
a
long
list
of
criminal
cases
pending
against
them
are
happily
raising
their
voices
here
against
criminalisation.
Chatterjee
emphatically
said
we
want
elimination
of
corruption
and
of
criminalisation
of
politics.
The
CPI(M)
has
accepted
the
position
that
a
winning
candidate
must
declare
his
assets
after
the
declaration
of
results.
But
he
must
also
prove
his
honesty
and
integrity
in
deed.
Asserting
that
the
CPI(M)
and
other
Left
parties
have
not
given
nomination
to
any
tainted
person,
Chatterjee
appealed
to
other
parties
not
to
give
nomination
to
persons
who
are
involved
in
crime.
However,
there
are
many
political
personalities
who
have
suffered
because
they
were
implicated
in
false
cases
and
convicted.
Steps
are
needed
to
ensure
that
the
law
is
not
misused
to
debar
genuine
political
workers
from
contesting.
Chatterjee
said
we
have
to
control
money
power
and
muscle
power
to
make
elections
free
and
fair,
but
these
cannot
be
controlled
merely
by
asking
candidates
to
file
affidavits.
Here
he
stressed
on
the
need
of
at
least
partial
state
funding
of
elections,
adding
that
it
may
help
in
minimising
the
evil.
The
system
of
proportional
representation,
with
the
list
system,
may
also
help
in
reducing
the
role
of
money
power.
In
the
end,
he
suggested
that,
taking
into
account
the
important
reports
and
recommendations
of
various
committees
in
this
regard,
the
government
must
bring
a
comprehensive
legislation.
WORSENING
SECURITY
This
week
Lok
Sabha
held
a
short
duration
discussion
on
internal
security.
From
the
CPI(M)
side,
Tarit
Baran
Topdar
said
the
security
situation
has
been
worsening
over
the
last
four
years
and
the
centre
has
been
unable
to
evolve
any
strategy
about
it.
Despite
the
enhanced
budgetary
provision,
augmented
police
force
and
reorganisation
of
the
home
affairs
ministry,
the
situation
has
assumed
alarming
proportions.
Four
or
five
years
ago
the
threat
was
confined
to
the
border
states;
today
a
sense
of
insecurity
grips
the
whole
country.
Yet
the
government
documents
note
that
its
role
will
be
merely
of
a
catalyst.
He
asked
whether
the
government
is
not
duty-bound
to
maintain
security.
As
for
reasons,
the
government
admits
that
narcotic
trade,
foreign
fund
flow,
land
disputes,
ethnic
discrimination,
lack
of
communication
and
transport,
etc,
have
added
to
the
growth
of
terrorism.
Foreign
agencies
are
also
promoting
subversive
activities.
Unfortunately,
our
opponents
too
are
utilising
these
outfits
for
narrow
gains.
Terrorists
are
penetrating
West
Bengal
and
other
states
via
our
borders
with
Bhutan,
Nepal,
Bangladesh
and
Myanmar.
Even
now
the
entire
border
in
the
north-east,
including
the
856
km
long
Tripura-Bangladesh
border,
is
very
porous.
There
is
need
of
increasing
the
strength
of
BSF
and
other
paramilitary
forces
here.
There
are
11
points
in
Bhutan
where
extremist
training
camps
are
being
conducted
and
the
ISI
has
a
definite
hand
behind
it.
There
are
such
points
in
Bangladesh
also.
Here
the
CPI(M)
member
demanded
that
the
work
of
fencing
the
international
border
in
Tripura,
West
Bengal
and
other
states
be
expedited.