(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
Vol. XXXIV
No.
27
July
04,
2010
PETROLEUM
PRICE HIKE
Resounding Protests All Over the Country
KERALA
THE
Left and Democratic Front (LDF) in Kerala had called for a dawn-to-dusk
(6 am to 6 pm) hartal on June 26, 2010 to protest the cruel hike in
prices of petrol, diesel, kerosene and cooking gas. The hartal call was
extensively accepted and evoked massive response in the state with
people spontaneously venting their anger against the UPA-II
government’s anti-people move in numerous protest demonstrations.
Responding to the hartal call, industrial units and factories also
closed since workers’ and employees refused to work. Most of the
government offices remained closed as very few employees came to
offices; the public transport was totally halted while shops and
commercial establishments remained closed. There were hardly any
private vehicles plying on the roads. Prime minister Manmohan Singh’s
effigy was burnt in many places reflecting the wrath of the people. Immediately after the news about
the decision of the central government to effect a steep hike in the
prices of petrol, diesel, kerosene and LPG was flashed in the news
channels, people in large numbers spontaneously rallied in the massive
protest programmes organised by various class and mass organisations.
The hike also sparked off protests in sectors such as fishing, road
transport in a big way. In view of the response from the people, the
hartal in Kerala ultimately turned to be a total bandh. NEO-LIBERALISM AT WORK Just four months back, the UPA-II
government imposed a burden of around Rs 26,000 crore on the common
people by increasing the excise and customs duties on petrol and diesel
in its budget, which resulted in a huge hike in petroleum prices. In
the same budget, the government provided around Rs 80,000 crore tax
concessions to the corporate houses and the rich. And now in the midst
of unprecedented price rise in essential commodities, the government
has delivered this cruel blow of yet another hike in petro products.
This is the seventh hike in petro products effected by the UPA
governments since it assumed power in 2004. In terms of rupees, it has
so far increased the price of petrol by around Rs 20 per litre, diesel
by Rs 15 and LPG by Rs 90 since 2004, which is more than 60 per cent
increase! Despite the fact that the
government ridiculously tries to justify its atrocious decision with
the rhetoric of ending the“subsidy culture” and mitigating the
“under-recovery burden”, it conveniently hides the exorbitant taxes
imposed on the fuel price. The taxes comprise around around 50 –
57 of the price! In fact, the subsidy provided for fuel is a
paltry amount compared to the excise and customs duties imposed on the
petroleum products. Further, more deregulation of petroleum prices and
leaving it to market forces will only worsen the situation in the
coming days. When the petroleum prices are decided on the basis of
volatility in the international crude prices, it will lead to hoarding
and black-marketeering of petro products also. The government's decision of hiking
the petro prices immediately lifted the shares of the private corporate
players in the oil sector such as Essar Oil and Reliance Industries
(RIL) in the stock market. It may be recalled these corporate houses
were not in a position to operate their retail outlets because of the
subsidy given to the state-owned oil companies. It is irrefutable that
the decision to abandon fuel subsidy and deregulating fuel prices are
aimed to cater to the concerns of such corporate houses. The central
government is furthering the privatisation of oil sector, an area of
strategic importance to the nation’s economy. Previously only PSUs were
allowed in the oil sector. As part of the neo-liberal policies private
sector was allowed first in the lucrative oil refining sector and later
even in retail sector and hence corporate houses such as Essar Oil and
Reliance Industries have today a big enough hold in the oil sector. The
central government is keen in providing scores of concessions to the
corporate houses, including huge tax exemptions. The decision to
deregulate fuel prices undoubtedly is part of the UPA-II government’s
game plan to divest the public sector oil companies in future and to
pave way for the companies like Reliance to snatch the entire oil
industry. STATES HIT SEVERELY The magnitude of the cruel burden
being imposed on the people of the country by the central government
can be gauged from the fact that it gets around Rs 1200 crore from the
people of Kerala alone. In Kerala, around 100 crore litres of petrol
and 200 crore litres of diesel are sold every year. The people of
Kerala have to pay an additional sum of Rs 350 and Rs 400 crore
respectively on petrol and diesel alone to the central government.
Apart from the burden of the raised fuel prices, its repercussion in a
state like Kerala will be most negative and far reaching. Consumer states like Kerala will be
the worst sufferers of the fuel price hike. Kerala has to depend on
other states for its food requirements given the fact that the state
produces only 15 per cent of the requirement. Agricultural production
in Kerala is mainly concentrated on cash crops. Most of essential
commodities are brought from other states. And hence any increase in
prices of the petroleum products will immediately reflect in the prices
of essential commodities due to the increased freight charges.
Immediately after the petroleum price hike, lorry owners and bus
operators demand for an increase in bus and freight charges. Four
months before, when the central government increased the excise and
customs duties on petrol and diesel, the state had to increase all such
charges including the bus, taxi, and auto fares and freight charges and
had to make immense effort to control the prices of essential
commodities. Even after all such attempts by intervening in the market,
by strengthening the PDS etc to curb the price rise, negative trend
still exists as a result of the increased fuel charges. The recent hike
would certainly sabotage the family budget of all sections of people,
particularly the fixed income groups. UNVEILING PRO-RICH STANCE The prime minister on the one hand
fraudulently laments about the alarming price rise situation and on the
other hand implements policies that further add fuel to the situation.
The Congress-led UPA government is trying to unleash neo-liberal
policies vigorously after it got an opportunity to retain power with
out the support of the Left parties. The government had already decided
to sell up to 10 per cent of the shares of the profit making PSUs under
the fraudulent pretext of ensuring ‘people’s participation’ in the
public sector. In order to safeguard the interests of US companies, the
Manmohan Singh government did not hesitate to introduce the Nuclear
Liability Bill in parliament which is patently detrimental to the
interest of our nation. In continuation of such anti-people and
pro-corporate attitude of the government, it has effected such a cruel
hike in petro prices at a time when the people are reeling under the
impact of the alarming price rise situation. As a matter of fact, one cannot
undermine the class character of the UPA-II government led by the
Congress party. Being a coalition that serves the ruling class
capitalist interests, the Left parties have no illusion that the UPA-II
government would willingly make any substantial shift in its policies.
The Left parties had to mount tremendous pressures on the UPA -I
government while supporting it from outside to bring about some relief
to the people. The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, The
Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of
Forest Rights) Act etc. were the outcome of such interventions by the
Left. The UPA-I government was not hesitant to implement pro-rich
policies by even violating the provisions in the NCMP. Its attempt to
dismantle even profit-making PSUs, introduction of the Seeds Bill to
serve corporate interests in agriculture, Patents (Amendment) Ordinance
in compliance with the Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights
(TRIPs) agreement of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) etc were either
halted or amended as a result of rigorous resistance of the Left. This
underlines the fact that the UPA–II government’s anti-people policies
can be resisted only by building massive people's struggles against
such policies by synchronizing the movement both inside and outside
parliament. The Left parties' have called for such a struggle in order
to compell the UPA-II government to be sensitive regarding people’s
concerns. No doubt, there is scope for a fabulous wide-ranging movement
in the future days to come.
K K Ragesh
TRIPURA SHARING the nationwide anger
against the recent hike in prices of petroleum products, the people of
Tripura observed a 12-hour general strike throughout the state on June
28, 2010 at the call of the Tripura Left Front committee. All offices,
both public and private remained closed. No students nor any teaching
staff turned out in Schools, colleges or any educational institutions.
Shops and markets and commercial centres remained stand still during
the day. Roads and streets in urban and rural areas presented a
deserted look because all types of vehicular traffic remained off the
road from dawn to dusk. The protest was so spontaneous that
nowhere it was necessary to conduct picketing in favour of the strike. All the Left parties, including the
CPI(M) and mass organisations, instantly started protest demonstrations
all over the state immediately after news about the hike of the
petroleum product and cooking gas by the UPA government was flashed.
The Left Front called a 12-hour general strike on June 28 protesting
against this hike which has a fleecing effect on the common people. It
is very much a fact, particularly for the North East states like
Tripura, because most of the essential commodities are to be
transported into the state by roadways from other states. The Tripura
Left Front committee hailed the people of the state for their
spontaneous response to the call of strike and expected similar
support in a bigger movement in the days to come. ANDHRA PRADESH The people of Andhra Pradesh vented
their anger against both the central and state governments' cruel
attacks on their already burdened lives. Nine Left parties in the state
– CPI(M), CPI, CPI (ML) SUCI(C), MCPI(U), ML Committee, RSP, Forward
Bloc and CPI(ML-Ramanna Goud) – jointly gave a call for statewide
demonstrations on June 28, 2010 against the recently announced petro
price hike by the centre, the general increase in prices and against
the ongoing cuts in welfare schemes by the state government. Responding to this call, thousands
of people participated in the protest actions. Dharnas were held,
collectorate offices were gheraoed across the state and effigies of the
governments were symbolically burnt by the protestors venting their
anger. Most of the protest actions were accompanied by cultural troupes
decrying the insensitive nature of the governments through songs and
plays. In Hyderabad, top leaders of the
nine Left parties participated in the joint dharna held at Indira Park.
Addressing the protestors, CPI(M) Polit Bureau member and state
secretary B V Raghavulu called for intensifying and widening the
ongoing agitation against price rise and the cruel measure of hiking
petro products as both the governments are being grossly insensitive to
the sufferings of the people. “The common people are already unable to
carry on their lives with the unprecedented rise in the prices of
foodgrains and essential commodities. At such a juncture the centre has
imposed the recent hike in petro prices that is set to worsen the
plight of the poor”, said the CPI(M) leader. The central government has
effected a total of 12 hikes in the prices of petroleum products so far
and with the decontrol happening there would be many more hikes, he
felt. Debunking the justification being
offered for the price rise – that people are eating more due to their
higher purchasing power – Raghavulu asked if that is true then how come
lakhs of tonnes of foodgrains are lying in the godowns. The reasons
could only be that vast majority of people are not in a
position to buy the grains and another reason could be that traders and
blackmarketeers are hoarding the foodgrains with the connivance of
governments. Referring to the petroleum minister's statement
about the burden of subsidy on kerosene and LPG, the CPI(M) leader said
that it is clear that the prices of these commodities are set to rise
further. He asserted that both the central and state governments have
to be forced to retract their anti-people measures through mass
agitations. He appealed to the people to join in big numbers the
proposed nationwide agitation plans being chalked out by the Left
parties. The Left parties will be in the forefront of this agitation
which would be further intensified, he said. CPI state secretary K Narayana
lambasted the state government ministers for their irresponsible
statements about rising incomes of people of the state. It is not
people's incomes that are rising, it is only the incomes of such
corrupt ministers that is rising, he said sarcastically. He demanded
the state government to remove the excise duty on petroleum products if
its own party's government at the centre does not rescind its decision
of hiking the prices. Leaders of other Left parties spoke
in the meeting which was presided over by the Hyderabad city
secretaries of CPI(M) and CPI. MAHARASHTRA THE CPI(M), CPI, PWP and other
secular parties organised immediate demonstrations all over Maharashtra
from June 26-30 to denounce the Congress-led UPA central government for
its savage hike of diesel, petrol, kerosene and cooking gas prices.
This step was condemned as rubbing salt into the wounds of the people
who were already groaning under the impact of steep price rise of food
grains and all other essential commodities for the last few months.
On June 30, the Republican Left
Democratic Front (RLDF) held an urgent state-level meeting and press
conference in Mumbai where it declared its full and active support to
the nationwide hartal on July 5. It called for an intense mass campaign
amongst the people against the UPA regime and for large processions,
rasta roko and rail roko actions on the hartal day. The meeting and
press conference was attended by Ramdas Athavale (RPI), Dr Ashok
Dhawale, K L Bajaj and Mahendra Singh (CPI-M), Narayan Ghagare and
Prakash Reddy (CPI), Vasant Shirali (JD-S), Kuber Maurya and Farooq
Ghosi (SP), S V Jadhav (PWP), Sanjeev Sane (SJP) and others.
The largest protest action took place on June 28 at Solapur, when over
1200 people led by the CPI(M) stormed the district collectorate by
breaking three lines of police cordons. The police resorted to a
lathicharge in which 18 CPI(M) activists were injured and 58 were
arrested.
In Mumbai, over 200 activists of
the CPI(M) and CPI broke ban orders and held a protest action in
pouring rain at the Churchgate railway terminus in south Mumbai. At
Talasari in Thane district, over 500 people led by the CPI(M) held a
protest demonstration. The CPI(M) held another action at Uran in Raigad
district. All the above three districts come in the Konkan region.
In North Maharashtra, over 200
people led by the Left parties held protests in three parts of Nashik
city and burnt effigies of the UPA regime. In Nandurbar district, 150
protested in Nandurbar, 139 in Shahada, 67 in Prakasha and 50 in Taloda
in actions led by the CPI(M). All the demonstrators were arrested and
later released.
In Western Maharashtra,
similar protest demonstrations were held by the CPI(M) along with other
Left parties at Kolhapur, Ichalkaranji, Sangli, Satara, Ahmednagar,
Akole and elsewhere.
In Vidarbha, the CPI(M), CPI and
Forward Block held a protest action at Nagpur. Another demonstration
took place at Ramtek. Actions also took place in Wardha, Amravati,
Yavatmal, Buldana and other districts.
In Marathwada, an immediate
demonstration was held by the CPI(M) and CPI at Aurangabad. Independent
and joint protest actions were held in Parbhani, Nanded, Jalna, Beed
and Latur districts.
Among those who led all the above
actions were state secretariat and state and district committee members
of the CPI(M). Hectic preparations are now on throughout Maharashtra to
make the July 5 all India hartal against the UPA regime a great
success.
(Ashok Dhawale)
DELHI Activists of the CPI(M) organised
processions, road blocks and effigy burning at several places in Delhi,
Ghaziabad and Noida on June 28, 2010 to protest against the increase in
prices of petrol, diesel, LPG and kerosene announced by the central
government. This is a sequel to the joint demonstration of Left parties
held on June 26. In Mangolpuri, CPI(M) activists organised a procession
and blocked the Outer Ring Road at the Mangolpuri fly over for over 30
minutes. An effigy of prime minister Manmohan Singh was also burnt on
the occasion. CPI(M) state secretariat member, Rampal led this protest.
In Dwarka, Party workers and sympathisers organised a procession that
was followed by blocking traffic on the Dwarka-Dabri main road for 30
minutes and here also an effigy of the prime minister was burnt. Party
and mass organisation activists, including large number of women,
blocked traffic at Jehangirpuri traffic signal for over 30
minutes and burnt an effigy of Dr Manmohan Singh. The protest here was
led by CPI(M) state committee members, Asha Sharma and Sidheshwar
Shukla. In Old Delhi, Party and trade union
activists, led by state committee member, Jagdish Manocha organised a
procession followed by a demonstration and effigy burning at Ajmeri
Gate Chowk. The CPI(M) and RLD activists organised a protest
demonstration and effigy burning at Mithapur Chowk in Badarpur. Traffic
was stopped here for nearly 45 minutes. The protestors were led by
CPI(M) state committee member, Jagdish Chand Sharma and RLD state
vice-president, Kalyan Singh Mann. In Ghaziabad over 500 CPI(M) and
CITU activists blocked Link Road at Vasundhara Chowk for over one hour.
Here an effigy of union petroleum minister Murli Deora was burnt. Delhi
CPI(M) secretariat member, K M Tiwari and its Sahibabad committee
secretary, Brijesh Singh led the protestors. The CPI(M) and CITU
activists under leadership of the Party’s Noida secretary, Gangeshwar
Dutt, blocked traffic at Sector 8-9 main crossing in Noida for half an
hour and burnt an effigy of the prime minister. The CPI(M) Delhi state committee
has called upon the people of Delhi to continue their protests against
the anti-people increase in prices of petrol, diesel, LPG and kerosene. HARYANA CPI(M) activists staged protest
demonstrations at various district centres all over the state of
Haryana against the hefty increase in the prices of petroleum products
and the act of decontrolling these products by the UPA-II government.
These protest demonstrationswere accompanied by burning of effiges of
UPA government and of the prime minister in Rohtak, Hisar, Fatehabad,
Sirsa, Bhiwani, Panipat, Jind, Faridabad and Panipat. In Rohtak, CPI(M) workers took out
a protest march raising slogans againt the UPA government and the
Congress party. They demanded immediate roll back of fuel prices. An
effigy of the government was burnt at Chhotu Ram chowk where Party
state secretary Inderjit Singh addressed the protestors, among whom
included large number of women. The CPI(M) leader accused the UPA
government of betraying the same aam admi in whose name it garnered
votes. He described the act of decontroling fuel prices as disastrous
and grossly anti-people. He called upon political parties, mass
organisations, trade unions and common people to launch a broadbased
movement against the treacherous conduct of the UPA government.
Ram Chander Siwach of the Party also addressed the gathering. Immediately after knowing about the
decision of petro hike, the Haryana state committee of the Communist
Party of India (Marxist) issued a statement strongly criticising the
steep rise in the prices of petroleum products and their decontrol.
Describing the act as cruelty towards people because they were already
reeling under the impact of unabated inflation, the CPI(M) stated that
it was a totally unjustified measure. It reminded that the prices of
petrol and diesel were increased only three months before in the union
budget. The decision to decontrol petroleum products was taken being
done at the instance of private companies who would now be totally free
to increase the prices for their super profits and render the people to
the mercy of reckless market forces. The state committee called upon
all its units to organise protests along with other organisations and
consumers demanding the rollback of enhanced prices. (INN) CITU
DEMONSTRATION AGAINST PETRO
PRICE HIKE CITU activists led by its senior
leader and vice president M K Pandhe held a protest demonstration and
burned the effigy of the UPA-II government at the busy ITO centre in
New Delhi protesting against the steep increase in the prices of
petrol, diesel and cooking gas and not even sparing kerosene. Several
office bearers of CITU including Swadesh Dev Roye, Dipankar Mukherjee,
Hemalata, Kashmir Singh Thakur, Sudha Bhaskar and S Punyavathi, working
committee members including A R Sindhu, Amitava Guha and large number
of CITU members from Delhi participated in the demonstration. Addressing the gathering, Pandhe
severely condemned the insensitive attitude of the UPA-II government
towards the sufferings of the common people. Instead of controlling the
rising prices, the UPA-II government has increased the prices of
petrol, diesel, LPG and kerosene which would further increase the
prices of essential commodities. He also criticised the decision of the
government to link the prices of petroleum prices to international
prices. He warned that this would further result in price rise. Pandhe
demanded the government to immediately withdraw the hike and also
rescind the decision to link the prices of petroleum products to
international prices. He warned that if the government did not withdraw
its decision, CITU, along with all the other trade unions and mass
organisations would intensify the struggle in the coming days. The CITU secretariat in its meeting
held on June 25, 2010 strongly denounced the government’s moves to
increase prices of petroleum product as part of its efforts to
deregulate the prices of petrol, diesel, kerosene and LPG to please the
private refineries like Reliance and Essar. CITU has called upon all its state
committees to stage protest rallies and demonstrations all over the
country and send telegrams to the prime minister protesting against the
price hike.