People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
42 October 17, 2010 |
SPECIFICALLY
in three
places, north and south 24 Parganas and east Medinipur, popular
struggle has
forged ahead against the undoing and riotous activities of goons,
history-sheeters, and plain old criminals with a police record several
metres
long. All of these ‘jewels’ in the right
reactionary ‘crown,’ expectedly belong to the Trinamul Congress.
Near the dwip or peninsular-island communities of
south and north 24 Parganas, touching the mangroves of the lovely
Sunderbans,
Biman Basu, CPI(M)
Deeper south,
some of the
fields and market places where Biman Basu has of late addressed
meetings,
teemed with people, waving countless Red flags, bright in the afternoon
sun,
spring is finally here, albeit late, hanging on to the speaker’s every
word.
Yet violence hung like an albeit shredded coverlet over and across the dwip region, replete as the area is with
multitude of riverine wetland patches green with vegetation, full-grown
forests
of short, thick trees that sport more flowers than leaves, mangrove
clutches,
large openings of rice paddies, water bodies, and also, menacingly,
tragically,
enough cover for terrorists to run loose and mount ambushes.
Already five
CPI(M)
comrades have had to face martyrdom and countless others have been left
with
varying degree of assault-related injuries, over the past months soon
after the
popular resistance to the Trinamuli misrule in the Zillah Parishad
commenced of
late, under the vanguard leadership of the CPI(M).
The resistance continues as the
popular tide fills out with
fervour and militancy.
Across the
moth of the
On 2 October
Mukundapur,
also near Kontai, was witness to a massive rally of marchers that
covered in jatha
form, 52 villages, and areas in between, over a period of two days
and two
nights. Everywhere the marchers were welcomed and offered a surfeit of
refreshments. The villagers strung up numerous Red banners, buntings,
and
posters welcoming the jatha. The
intermittent bike-borne assaults by the Trinamulis, especially the
incident of
bomb-throwing at Deulpota, a Trinamuli ‘stronghold,' were indifferently
brushed
aside by the large mass of the people who marched on regardless and
then took
part in a sit-down rally at Mukundapur.
The