People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No. 43 October 23, 2011 |
CAMPAIGN
FOR TAMILNADU LOCAL POLLS
CPI(M) Seeks More Autonomy
For Civic Bodies
S P
Rajendran
THE
Communist Party of
India (Marxist) has demanded that the state government must give
more autonomy
to the civic bodies in the state and also increase the
allocation of funds for
them so as to fulfil the objectives behind the creation of the
panchayat raj
system. The party said, “It is sad that the successive DMK and
AIADMK
governments over the last few decades did not show much interest
in enhancing
the powers of civic bodies.”
Various
state leaders of
the CPI(M), including its state secretary G Ramakrishnan,
Central Committee
members N Varadharajan, T K Rangarajan and U Vasuki, and the
party’s assembly
group leader A Soundararajan as well as its state secretariat
members raised
from several forums the demand, among others, regarding the
civic bodies in the
state during their campaign for the polls that were recently for
the local
bodies.
It is to
be noted that civic
polls have taken place in Tamilnadu in two phases --- on October
17 and 19. The
CPI(M) contested these elections in an electoral understanding
with
Vijayakant's DMDK. The CPI also supported this alignment in many
places. The CPI(M)
had fielded its candidates for mayor posts in
During
the preceding two
weeks, leaders and cadres of the party and of various class and
mass
organisations tirelessly engaged themselves in the election
campaign across the
state. G Ramkrishnan and other leaders toured from Chennai to
Kanniyakumari and
asked for votes for the CPI(M) and DMDK
candidates.
At a
public meeting in
Tiruppur, where the party was contesting more than 40 wards of
the city
corporation, Ramakrishnan said that the district planning
committees created
across the state under the respective district panchayat
chairmen should be
allowed to come out with their own plans for the holistic
development in the respective
districts. He stressed that the state government should increase
financial
allocation to the local bodies from the present 10 per cent of
the total tax
realisation in a fiscal to at least around 35 per cent.
In
Addressing
reporters here,
he said that the first State Finance Commission (1996-2001) had
recommended
allocation of 12 per cent of the state's revenue to the local
bodies. “But to
date only 10 per cent of the funds have been being given to the
local bodies,”
he said. Stating that the centre was sharing 30.5 per cent of
its revenue with
the states, Ramakrishnan said the state government too should
share one-third
of its revenue with the local bodies.
“Many of
the panchayats are
suffering without adequate funds. They could not foot even the
electricity bill
and pay salary to their employees. In this situation, how can
they find funds
for development works?” he asked.
Ramakrishnan
also sought
an integrated Urban Local Body Act for the town panchayats,
municipalities and corporations.The
Chennai Municipal Act, enacted in 1919, was very old and needed
a fresh look,
he pointed out.
While
addressing a public
meeting at Sivaganga, to canvass votes for the CPI(M) candidate
M Arjunan, who
is in the fray for Sivaganga municipal chairman post,
Ramakrishnan said the
people were fed up with the corrupt administration and
malpractices in various
local bodies. They did not fulfil the basic expectations of the
people. It is
high time to teach a lesson to both the Dravidian parties, he
stressed.
Recollecting
the incidents
that led to the snapping of ties with the AIADMK, he accused
that the latter party
had evinced keen interest for an electoral understanding with
the Communist Parties,
Desiya Murpokku Dravidar Kazhagam and other like-minded parties
to capture
power in the state assembly polls, but had announced candidates
on its own, ignoring
the alliance parties. The people have witnessed the drama of the
AIADMK and should
defeat its candidates, he pleaded. On the other hand, the DMK
had been facing
serious scam charges. It had lost its moral ground.
Ramakrishnan
said the alliance
of the CPI(M) and the DMDK would strive hard to ensure good
governance and
total transparency in the local bodies. That is why the people
should give a
chance to the candidates of this alliance.
At a
meeting in
Tiruvottiyur, the CPI(M) state secretary charged that the DMK
and the Congress
were going it alone in the local bodies though the two parties
were partners at
the centre and both were thoroughly exposed in the 2G spectrum
scam.
“Most of
the DMK's former
ministers are facing land grabbing charges. We don't know when
who is in jail
and who is on bail,” the CPI(M) leader quipped.
He also
criticised that
though the AIADMK and the DMK had diametrically opposite views
on all subjects
under the sun, they were united by their love for exploiting the
local bodies
to fill up their coffers. “They never bothered about the tender
procedures to
implement development works. They formed a syndicate among
themselves to
appropriate and divided all the contracts among themselves.”
“We are
participating in
politics not to make money but to ensure that honesty and
integrity are not
sacrificed,” he said.
DMDK
leader Vijayakant
also toured across the state and campaigned for the CPI(M) and
DMDK candidates.
AIADMK
CADRE UNLEASH
VIOLENCE
IN CHENNAI
Condemning
the violence at
several booths during the first phase of polling in the local
body elections on
October 17, especially in Chennai, opposition parties including
the CPI(M) and
DMDK have demanded fresh elections.
CPI(M)
state secretary G Ramakrishnan
petitioned the state election commissioner (SEC)
Many
AIADMK ministers,
MLAs and their kin entered the polling booths along with party
functionaries and
with the connivance of the police, he alleged.
Ramakrishnan
and T K
Shanmugam, the CPI(M)’s
In a
statement, Desiya
Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam president Vijayakant too said that his
party
candidates and poll agents were attacked and gravely injured by
ruling party
workers in Wards 35, 101 and 107. He condemned the
highhandedness of the
government machinery.
Asking
the city police to
arrest the attackers, he demanded that asked the SEC, which had
failed to
provide adequate security to the opposition party workers, must
identify the
polling booths where irregularities had taken place and order a
repoll.
Nearly 75
per cent of
votes were polled in the first phase.
PUT
KUDANKULAM
PROJECT ON
HOLD
The
centre should put on
hold all the work at the Kudankulam nuclear power project till
an independent
expert committee certified the safety of the nuclear reactors
there, the
Communist Party of India (Marxist)’s state secretary, G
Ramakrishnan, has demanded.
Talking
to reporters at
Madurai during his campaign programme for the local polls on
October 17, he
said though the type of reactors used in Kudankulam were in use
in European
countries for the last four decades, it was for the first time
that this type
of reactors were being installed in India.
Pointing
to the
apprehension expressed by the local people, Ramakrishnan said
the centre should
appoint an independent expert committee to study the safety
aspects of the
reactors. “Till such time the panel certifies the safety of the
reactors, the
work should be put on hold,” he said.
The
centre should handle
the issue in the right way, he added.