People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 49 December 04, 2005 |
BENGAL
Left Front would undertake two statewide programmes in December.
First, on December 13, it would organise protest demonstrations all over
Bengal to register a strong protest against the sustained attempts by the WTO to
subserve imperialist interests.
The
Bengal Left Front strongly holds that the latest rounds of the ministerial
conference of the WTO at Hong Kong would see attempts at ‘finalising’ the
unfinished agenda of Cancun. Attempts
would surely be made by the WTO secretariat to push through legislations and
directives on such issues as agricultural pricing and global price equity.
The
Bengal Left Front has no doubts that such measures would immeasurably harm the
national economic interests of the developing countries in particular,
broadening and deepening the process of immiserisation of billions of people.
The
Bengal Left Front, meeting at the Muzaffar Ahmad Bhavan in the early afternoon
of November 28, has also urged upon the Left TU’s and Left mass organisations
and, indeed, upon mass organisations from every political persuasion, to
participate in the statewide programme and to make December 13 a resounding
protest day against the intransigence of the WTO.
Biman
Basu, chairman, Bengal Left Front later informed the media that massive
demonstrations would be held throughout the day to register the protest of the
people against the WTO’s misdeeds.
The
Bengal Left Front would also organise a plethora of anti-communal and
pro-secular programmes throughout the day of December 6, the day in 1992 when
the fundamentalist and communal elements pulled down the Babri Masjid in Uttar
Pradesh unleashing a major and violent backlash throughout the country as the
propagators of the move gloated and chortled in devilish glee.
A large central rally would be held in Kolkata under the aegis of the
Kolkata unit of the Bengal Left Front, said Biman Basu.
The
Bengal Left also took up the issue of franchise and voting in the light of
newspaper reports that said in sum and substance that the Election Commission
would prefer to bar from the voting process those who had criminal cases pending
against them.
The
Bengal Left Front reacting to the newspaper reporting has held that the issue of
barring persons having criminal cases pending against them should be looked at
again legally because there appears a difference between a case and a
conviction.
Biman
Basu clarified to say that the view of the Bengal Left Front on the issue was a
mere ‘primary and preliminary observation on newspaper reports.’
Biman Basu said that the issue should be looked at legally at the
appropriate levels. The issue, said
the CPI(M) leader, touched the democratic rights of the citizens to take part in
the electoral process.
Reacting
to questions from the media at the news conference Biman Basu added to say that
in the 1952 Lok Sabha polls, Kongsari Halder had won a sweeping victory while in
jail despite being unable to take part in the election campaign at all.
Biman
Basu pointed out that in Kerala in 1965, more than 25 communist candidates won
electoral victories even while they were either behind bars or serving the Party
underground. Biman Basu was of the
view that democratic movements and arrests that are a fall out of acts emanating
from those movements should really be differentiated from acts of crime.