People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 51 December 21, 2003 |
Gujarat:
CITU Holds Tenth State Conference
THE
Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) held its tenth Gujarat state conference on
November 29 and 30, at Bhavnagar. The venue was named after one of its founders,
the late Comrade Harikrishna Shah.
On
November 29, after the CITU flag was hoisted, delegates paid floral tributes at
Sheheed Bhagat Singh’s statue, amid shaheed
vandana songs recited by a Mahila Sangh group, followed by slogans. Present
on the occasion were state leaders of various trade unions, CITU state executive
members and reception committee members, among others.
Former
Supreme Court judge and Press Council of India’s former chairman, Justice P B
Savant, inaugurated the open session in the afternoon. He said a time comes in
the life of a nation when the problems of a section of people cannot be solved
satisfactorily unless all the problems faced by all the sections are solved
together. The present is a time of this very kind. In the past, we united during
the freedom struggle when we had to solve the problem of the nation’s
independence. In the same way we have to unite for solving the problems of
today. All of us, wherever we are working or living, have to put our heads
together for the purpose. But one must keep in mind that the problems we are
facing today demand more wisdom and sacrifices than what was required during the
freedom struggle.
For,
during the struggle of independence, we had to fight only one enemy, but today
we have to face several enemies, outside and inside. The main problems of today
can be broadly identified as globalisation, communalism, criminalisation and
corruption.
As
for globalisation, Justice Savant said it is a glorified name for imperialism.
It is economic imperialism and aims to exploit the resources and markets of the
developing countries. In its preset form, globalisation is not multilateralism
and no world trade on equal terms. It does not provide for level playing field,
equal opportunities and equitable sharing of resources, as some of the
intellectuals fondly believe or hope for. The truth is that globalisation is
unilateralism. Goods are flowing one way and the flow is determined by
pro-multinational agencies like the WTO whose function is to help the MNCs
capture the resources and markets of the underdeveloped countries. Today, unlike
in the past, the masters of the world economy, who are also the people’s
enemies, are invisible. But they have infiltrated every sphere of our life ---
economic, political, social, cultural, and even the defence sector. On this
occasion, the learned speaker also compared the cases of India and China, and
succinctly brought out their differences. He ended his presentation on
imperialist globalisation by paraphrasing Marx and Engels, saying, “The poor
of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose except your miseries!”
As
for communal forces, Justice Savant said they are the bedfellows of imperialism.
Talking of the fascist character of these forces, he said fascism comes to power
by whipping up the people’s passions on racist or religious lines. He pointed
out that communalism prevents the masses from coming together and divides them.
The masses have to unitedly fight communalism while fighting any other force.
Capitalism
brings with it criminalisation and corruption; they are the soul of capitalism.
Illegal money is being generated to fund the political parties, and corrupt
means are being used to eliminate competitors and generate monopolies.
These
are the things that must be kept in view for the larger struggle. The hitherto
experiences of organisation and struggle are to be utilised to fight the enemy.
Justice Savant said the working people have to unite for fighting the common
enemy, and pledged that he would spend the rest of his life spreading this
message.
CITU
secretary and Mumbai working class leader K L Bajaj was the main speaker at the
open rally that was huge, because when one end of the procession reached the
venue of the public meeting, many were still to start from the initial point.
Thus the meeting at Bhagat Singh Chowk at Ghogha gate was undoubtedly huge.
Subodh Mehta presided over the rally where Navin Shastri (former labour
minister), Rajkumar
(AITUC), Satubha Gohil (INTUC), Jayanti Panchal (HMKP), Mukul Sinha and
Ambrish Patel (GFTU), H I Bhatt and K M Rami (LIC), Dushyant Trivedi (AIBEA),
Pragjibhai Bhambhi (Gujarat Kisan Sabha), Kishor Bhai Bhatt (S T Union), and
Nalini Jadeja and Ivabahen Mehta (AIDWA) were among the other speakers.
State
CITU president Subodh Mehta presented the gist of the main report to the
conference. The report said not only the central government but even the Supreme
Court has unleashed an undeclared war against the working class of this country
by ruling that government employees have no right to strike. At the same time,
the centre is also bent upon effecting anti-worker amendments to various labour
laws and seeks to deprive the class of its hard won rights. On the other hand,
the communal forces are seeking to divide the working masses by engineering
communal riots and ethnic clashes. Gujarat witnessed a serious anti-minority
carnage for many months last year. At the time of ethnic violence in Assam, the
Shiv Sena sought to rouse passions against non-Maharashtrians in Maharashtra. On
the other hand, moves are on to snatch the social benefits available to the
common men and heap upon them newer burdens in the form of power tariff hikes,
education fees, subsidy reduction for various services, and what not. The report
warned against economism and the paralytic reliance on legal remedies only.
The
report specifically drew attention to the Gujarat situation where more than
5,000 units stand closed. Small, medium and cooperative industries are facing
the threat of elimination in Rajkot, Jamnagar and Kutch etc; the agro product
units have also been made uncompetitive. No less than 35 public sector units are
being liquidated or handed over to the MNCs; the Kandla port is being dismantled
taking advantage of the cyclone tragedy; 42 places on the coastline have been
handed over to them; power supply too is being given over to them. Assistance
for social sector and for the welfare of women, Dalits, child labour and
Adivasis are being withdrawn. Minorities are being forced to live as second
class citizens or leave the state. Democratic rights are being attacked and
semi-fascist propaganda is being carried out on a large scale.
The
report also gave figures of the shocking damages during the January 2001
earthquake: 20,000 deaths, 1,66,812 injured, 6,94,407 houses damaged and
3,08,299 totally collapsed; 180 talukas and 7,404 villages vanished and 20,623
cattle perished, apart from other losses. However, when the state was reeling
under the impact of this earthquake and also of the effects of 1999 and 2000
famines, the BJP rulers in the state as well as at the centre displayed
callousness towards the calamity. When the total loss amounted to over Rs 26,366
crore, the Gujarat government put it at only 12,848 crore and the centre gave
only Rs 2,807 crore in relief! Similarly, the death figures in the earthquake as
well as the anti-minority carnage were also underplayed. The report then gave
details of the relief work carried out by the government so far for the
earthquake victims as well as for the carnage victims, to show how inadequate it
was.
The
Sangh Parivar has already started treating Gujarat as the laboratory for its
communal fascistic project and for its anti-people economic and other policies.
But the real danger is that while the Congress party is getting disarrayed, the
Left, secular and democratic forces are quite weak in the state. In Gujarat, the
Congress party’s relief work as well as anti-communal drive presented a very
pitiable sight even though the party was ruling in 11 states.
The
CITU state conference adopted resolutions on proposed labour law amendments, on
small, medium and cooperative industries, on cuts in PF and ESI benefits,
against communalism, and on other burning issues. It elected a new leadership
with Subodh Mehta as president and Naginbhai Patel as general secretary, apart
from five delegates to the CITU’s national conference that was to be held at
Chennai.
After
the credentials committee presented its report, Bajaj made his concluding speech
while Naginbhai Patel proposed the vote of thanks. Later, Justice P B Savant and
Subodh Mehta also addressed a well attended press conference at Bhavnagar.