People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 50 December 14, 2003 |
Unite
To Defeat Neo-Liberal Policies
THE
11th conference of the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) got off to a flying
start in the morning on December 9, 2003 at Chennai with the organisation’s
president, E Balanandan, giving out a clarion call to build a new India, an
India which will fulfil the aspirations of the mass of the people, through an
alternative policy of economic development. He urged the youth of the country,
irrespective of all differences, of political, of trade union or any other, to
unite and build up the country ridding it of the policies of liberalisation,
privatisation and globalisation.
Earlier,
the five jathas traversing through thousands of kilometers covering every nook
and corner of the country converged in the conference venue, the sprawling Rama
Laxmi Paradise Complex. The march
of the red volunteers just before the commencement of the inaugural session was
quite impressive. The venue of the conference was aptly named as Comrade
Ramamurti Nagar, to commemorate the indomitable warrior of the working class,
the late Comrade P Ramamurthy, the founder general secretary of the CITU. The
conference hall has been named as Comrade Suseela Gopalan Hall, to recognise the
yeomen service rendered by her in the trade union, democratic and political
fronts, especially on the women’s front.
The
inaugural session commenced with a series of cultural programmes performed by
talented artists. There were patriotic and revolutionary songs, nadaswaram
music, etc, which earned the appreciation of the massive audience present in the
open ground. All the participants in the five jathas were felicitated on the
dais by E Balanandan, M K Pandhe and J Hemachandran. Kanai Banerjee, Secretary,
CITU, introduced the participants in the jathas.
The
CITU flag was hoisted by the president, E Balanandan amidst thundering slogans,
releasing of multi-coloured balloons in the air and bursting of crackers. 11
white doves symbolising the urge of humankind for peace on earth were released
on this occasion. Immediately after, the leaders and secretariat members of the
CITU led by E Blanandan paid floral tributes at the martyrs’ column.
E
Balanandan, in his presidential address, spoke at length on the autocratic
attitude of the Jayalalitha government in Tamil Nadu and condemned the manner in
which the government unleashed unprecedented repression on the government
employees and teachers who went on strike in July 2003 and recently how the very
same government unleashed repression on the freedom of press thereby attacking
the democratic rights enshrined in the constitution. At the national level he
was highly critical of the NDA government reform policies, which were ruining
the economy of the country by destroying the indigenous industries, reducing the
agricultural segment to nullity and throwing out millions of workers to the
streets. He said that the conference was going to discuss a paper on
unemployment, the present figure of the unemployed being more than 1/3 or the
total population, especially in the context of `jobless growth’ and `job
killing revival’. The registered unemployed, according to the union labour
minister’s statement on April 30, 2003 in the Lok Sabha was 4.7 crore and the
unregistered was estimated to be
more than 3 times. He stressed that a fight for policy change was a must, in
which the organised trade union movement should play the leading role.
On
the agricultural front, he referred to the steps taken by the central government
for the removal of quantitative restrictions on import of agricultural products
which paved the way for dumping these items into our country at cheaper rates,
affecting large sections of our peasantry and leading to price crash. The
reduction and removal of subsidies for electricity, water, fertilisers and
pesticides, the stopping of government procurement to save the peasantry from
distress sales and price crash, etc, have resulted in the ruination of peasants,
hundreds of them having committed suicides in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka,
Maharashtra, Punjab, etc. He called upon the working class to take up the
responsibility of helping the peasantry in the fight against the dangerous
consequences of the policy of globalisation as a priority job.
In
the international sphere, while being critical of the Bush-Blair combine for the
brutal war against Iraq, he pointed out to the silver lining in the horizon
emerging in the Latin American countries, which reaped the consequences of
implementing unbridled globalisation measures. He called upon the youth of the
country to help build a new India by adopting an alternate economic policy to
defeat the machinations of imperialism and to guide the present society in such
a manner as to embrace socialism the ultimate saviour of mankind.
N
Sankaraiah, chairman of the Reception Committee, in his welcome address traced
the history of working class and freedom movements from the early part of the
20th century in the state of Tamil Nadu. He recalled the establishment of the
very first trade union in Chennai, the Madras Labour Union in the year 1919 by
labour veterans, B P Wadia, Annie Beasant, Thiru Vi Kalyanasundaram, Sakkarai
Chettiar, G Ramanujalu, and G Selvapathi, the strike organised in Tuticorin by
the patriot V O Chidambaram Pillai, the boost given to the freedom movement by
the revolutionary poet Subramaniam Bharati, who hailed the October Revolution as
an epoch making revolution and as one of the most significant events in the
history of mankind. He also said
that the 11th conference of CITU was meeting at the defining moment in the
country. With the entire spectrum of the trade union movement having unitedly
resolved to enter a decisive action phase to defend the right to strike, he
hoped that the conference would chalk out plans to carry the resistance struggle
to further heights and to chart out the further path of advance of the Indian
working class and democratic movements.
A
Soundararajan, general secretary of Tamil Nadu CITU state committee, moved a
resolution in the session condemning the anti-people and anti-worker policies of
the AIADMK government in Tamil Nadu. The
resolution came down heavily on the Jayalalitha government for implementing the
same disastrous economic policies of the NDA government at the centre, for
enacting the anti-Conversion Bill, the TESMA, for attacking the freedom of the
press in the cases of The Hindu and Murasoli, for foisting of
cases under ESMA on the leaders of political parties on charge of instigating
the strike of government employees, etc. The
resolution reiterated its strong solidarity with the fighting people of Tamil
Nadu against the tyrant rule of Jayalalitha regime and called upon the working
class throughout the country to stand solidly by the toiling people of Tamil
Nadu fighting against the barbarous attacks and onslaughts on their livelihood
and democratic rights by the government. It also called for militant countrywide
mobilisation against the anti-people policies in the bedrock of which, the
tyrant rule in the state sought to thrive.
K
N Ravindranath, while seconding the resolution, pointed out that the autocratic
way in which the Jayalalitha government dealt with the strike of its employees
and teachers was only a trend which was fast developing in the various state
governments and which required to be met with resistance movements by the entire
trade union movement of the country including the government employees of all
the states and the centre. The resolution was then adopted unanimously.
Gurududas
Dasgupta, general secretary, AITUC, A Subramaniam, vice president, HMS, K L
Mahendra, president, WFTU, Krishna Chakravarty, vice president, UTUC(LS), C
Kuppuswamy MP and president of Labour Progressive Federation (LPF) and
Shivasankar, vice president, TUCC, extended their greetings, expressed their
fraternal solidarity and pledged to stand unitedly with the CITU in
struggles to defeat the LPG policies to put down the menace of
communalism in the country and to safeguard the democratic and trade union
rights of the working class. They were all unanimous in the view that the denial
of the right to strike had to be defeated by organising a united and countrywide
strike by the mass of the working people
of the country.
M
K Pandhe, general secretary, proposed a vote of thanks.