People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
1 January 11, 2009 |
Twelfth Congress of the All India Peoples Science Network
Amit Sen Gupta
ON December 20, 2008, the
streets of Ranchi reverberated to the sounds of Jan Vigyan Zindabad,
AIPSN Zindabad as over 2,500 activists of the All India Peoples
Science Network marched to mark the opening of the twelfth All India
Peoples Science Congress. The twelfth congress of the AIPSN also
marked its 20th anniversary, after its formation in 1988
in Cannanore. Participants in the rally included over 600 delegates
who had congregated in Ranchi from 24 states in the country,
representing over 30 organisations and over 5,00,000 activists that
are part of the AIPSN. It also included over 2,000 activists who had
come to Ranchi from different parts of Jharkhand, led by an over
1,000 strong contingent from Dhanbad.
HARNESSING
SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLE
The
rally culminated in the open session at the Gossner College grounds
of Ranchi, that marked the opening of the congress. The session was
conducted by Ashim Sircar, secretary of Jharkhand Gyan Vigyan Samiti,
the hosts of the twelfth congress of the AIPSN. Welcoming the
delegates, Amit Sengupta, general secretary of AIPSN, said that
the congress was being held in the backdrop of several challenges
that are starting to affect the lives of common people across the
world. The world food crisis a year back has been followed by a
global economic meltdown. While countries try to bail out big
business and capitalist banks, global capital will try to pass on the
burden of the crisis on to the people. He said that this crisis has
been brought about due to the pursuance of neoliberal economic
policies across the globe and had been predicted by many, including
the Peoples Science Movement. As the crisis deepens, more and more
people are being forced to compete for less and less, thus creating
conditions for communal and fundamentalist forces to divide people on
the basis of religion. The challenge for us today is to help maintain
the unity of the working people on one hand and to pose alternatives
through the use of advances in Science and Technology, that address
the real needs of working people.
M P Parameswaran,
former president of AIPSN, in his address retraced the route of
decentralised democracy in India and spoke of experiments in
decentralisation in the three Left led states of West Bengal, Kerala
and Tripura. While speaking of the experience of Peoples Plan
Campaign in Kerala, he lamented the total absence of the same in
Hindi heartlands of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and
Rajasthan. He appealed to the Peoples Science Movement to take
forward to much larger constituencies its experience on decentralised
planning and peoples participation. Prabir Purkayastha, from the
Delhi Science Forum, spoke about the need to define development in
terms of its ability to make a real difference in the lives of common
people. He said that the agenda of development has been hijacked by
global capital, and today it means immense prosperity for a few and
increasing misery for the vast majority of people. He warned against
creating a false contradiction between science and technology on one
hand and inclusive development on the other, and said that the former
needs to be harnessed in a way so that its full potential can be
controlled by people and utilised in their own interest.
The
session was also addressed by J S Majumdar, one of the founders of
the All India Peoples Science Network in 1988, as the then general
secretary of the Federation of Medical Representatives Association of
India (FMRAI). He spoke about the special needs of Jharkhand and its
unique situation. Jharkhand is one state in India where whole
families continue to migrate to other regions to look for work. While
Jharkhand is one of the best endowed in the country in terms of
mineral and natural resources and the presence of heavy industries
and science and technology institutions, it is also one of the
poorest in the country. He spoke about the need to challenge the
entrenched feudal structure in the state as a fundamental requirement
to change the conditions of the people. He also spoke about the need
to understand and address the genuine concerns of adivasis and other
working people, who are opposing a model of development that leads to
further pauperisation and displacement of the local people. The open
session was also addressed by veteran trade union leader of
Jharkhand, A K Roy, and Dayamani Barla, activist and leader of
adivasi struggles in the state. C P Narayanan, president of AIPSN, in
conclusion, said that the Peoples Science Movement is uniquely placed
to bridge the gap between the promise of science and its present
situation where it is largely used as an instrument of power by the
ruling classes. He expressed the hope that the twelfth congress would
help the AIPSN chart out a course that would be designed to do this
work. The cultural troupe of the Bharat Gyan Vigyan Samiti (BGVS)
also presented a colourful skit titled Gyan Vigyan ki Rail
which depicted the need and the potential to use the power of
learning to change the circumstances and the conditions of ordinary
people.
Interactive Discussions Sharing of Experiences
In
the next two days of the congress, over six hundred delegates divided
themselves into separate sessions that deliberated on the eight sub
themes of the congress: science popularisation; health; rural
technology, enterprises and self help groups (SHGs); exclusions and
marginalisation; agrarian crisis and sustainability; education and
literacy; decentralised governance and entitlements; and environment
and climate change. The discussions were structured into eight short
sub-plenary sessions where presentations focused on the AIPSNs
perspective, experience and future strategy in the respective areas.
These were interspersed with 30 interactive workshops, in which
specific issues related to each sub-theme were discussed in detail. A
special feature of this congress was a focus on concrete experiences
within the AIPSN and their sharing with others. More than 50 written
papers were submitted, and the AIPSN shall compile them for
distribution among member organisations. Those presenting in the
sessions prepared written papers, thus also initiating the work of
documentation of the rich experience that the peoples science
movement has gained over the past two decades. Another unique feature
of the delegate sessions was that each session was preceded by a
choral song prepared by the Kala Jatha group of the Bharat Gyan
Vigyan Samiti. Each song was specially prepared to express the
thematic content of that particular session.
Senior
activists and experts who spoke at the different plenaries and
workshops included Suneet Chopra (All India Agricultural Workers
Union), T Jayaraman (Tata Institute of Social Sciences), Raminika
Gupta, V Venkatachalam (director general, CAPART), Vijender Sharma
(Democratic Teachers Front), Ashok Aggarwal, Sabyasachi Chaterjee
(Indian Institute of Astrophysics), K K Krishnakumar, Amitava Guha, D
Raghunandan, Asha Mishra, T Gangadharan, M K Prasad, Aniruddha Das, R
S Dahiya, Dinesh Abrol, K Sashidharan, Manoj Kulkarni, Vinod Raina,
Vivek Monteiro, etc.
The different sessions deliberated
on the movement�s diverse experiences and attempted to evolve some
future directions. A wide range of discussions were held in packed
halls and class rooms on diverse topics such as: the Right to
Education Bill; the National Rural Health Mission; Medicines and
Patents policies; strategies to diversify and deepen work with SHGs
and in setting up of rural enterprises; experiences of the SAMATA
network of the peoples science movement; the AIPSN�s nationwide
campaign on climate change and global warming; experiences within the
movement on working with marginalised sections such as dalits,
adivasis and minorities; experiences in different states in
conducting anti-superstition programmes and in publishing science
magazines; the proposed campaign in 2009 on the International Year of
Astronomy; experiences in peoples planning and decentralised
governance etc. The way the congress was structured allowed a large
number of activists to present their experiences and suggestions
making the congress perhaps the most participatory and interactive
ever.
The venue reverberated in the evenings to the
sounds of cultural presentations. One day was devoted to performances
from Jharkhand while the second day saw performances by different
member organisations of the AIPSN. The performances captured the rich
cultural and social diversity of the country and depicted the ability
of the peoples science movement to capture this diversity.
The
venue was also dotted with colourful stalls where member
organisations displayed their publications, products made by SHGs and
rural enterprises and exhibited the work that they are involved in.
Exhibitions were put up all around the venue and an exhibition on
science films ran continuously in one hall.
A
Memorable Congress
Kashinath
Chaterjee conducted the closing plenary of the congress, which, while
bidding farewell to all the delegates, expressed the resolve to take
forward the work of the peoples science movement. The congress
resolved to strengthen the ideological bonds that bind the partners
of the AIPSN together by forging common programmes and by increasing
the capability within individual organisations to intervene in
diverse issues that now form part of the mandate of the AIPSN. The
congress committed itself to building and strengthening the ongoing
campaign of the AIPSN on Planet Earth, Development and
Sustainability. Delegates at the closing plenary were also introduced
to the new office bearers of the AIPSN. A 21 member executive
committee was elected by the general council, which also re-elected C
P Narayanan as president, Amit Sengupta as general secretary and D
Raghunandan as treasurer. Also elected were Sabyasachi Chaterjee and
Komal Srivastava as vice presidents, and Satyajit Chakravarty and
Joginder Walia as joint secretaries.
Three resolutions
were adopted by the congress. The first was an appeal from all
delegates to the Jharkhand government to immediately initiate
measures to hold Panchayati Raj elections in the state. The second
was a resolve to carry out a countrywide campaign against the
practice of sex-selective abortions. Finally, the congress resolved
to build a national programme that explores the multi-cultural
heritage of our country, including the heritage of science and
technology that has drawn and nourished itself from a large diversity
of sources.
Delegates returning from the congress took
back two abiding memories. The first was the participation of over
2000 activists from different districts of Jharkhand in the opening
rally and open session. They came to the congress after traveling all
through the night, in harsh cold and foggy weather. Yet they
brightened up the congress with their slogans, their traditional
cultural performances and their commitment to the movement. Their
presence showed that the AIPSN is on the right path in trying to
build a peoples movement. Finally, delegates will take back the
memory of numerous volunteers from Jharkhand BGVS, helped by some
volunteers from other states, who ensured that the congress
functioned with clockwork precision. It was a huge challenge to
organise the congress in Ranchi amidst financial and organisational
constraints. Ranchi was chosen as a venue as it was the state
capital, though the organisational strength of BGVS Jharkhand lay in
other parts of the state like Dhanbad. The admirable conduct of the
congress is a tribute to the hard work and dedication of activists of
the state.