People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No.
14 April 01, 2012 |
CPI(M)
Intensify
Struggles Against Neo-Liberal Policies;
Strengthen
Organisation
Ashok
Dhawale
THE 20th
Ten years ago, a young and determined team
of SFI activists began CPI(M) work in Akole tehsil. Through a series of
militant
struggles on various issues, they established units of the SFI, DYFI,
AIDWA,
CITU and AIKS over the last one decade, and along with this they also
began to
build the Party. Gradually, the mass organisations spread from their
base in
Akole tehsil to other tehsils in the district. The Party made its
presence felt
in the electoral sphere during the last state assembly elections and
the
recently held zilla parishad and panchayat samiti elections. A spacious
Party
office was procured in Akole with mass collections from the people and
it was
inaugurated last month. It was in this district of Ahmednagar, where
the Party has
expanded recently that the CPI(M) state conference was held for the
first time.
The comrades from Ahmednagar district had worked tirelessly for months
and had
made excellent arrangements for hosting this state conference.
IMPRESSIVE
RALLY
The conference began on March 25 with an
impressive rally and public meeting that was attended by thousands of
people.
They included a very large section of women. All the above mass
organisations
had mobilised in strength. Peasants and unorganised workers were the
mainstay
of this rally, which coursed through Akole town with hundreds of red
flags. The
entire town had been decorated in red to welcome the state conference.
The main
speaker at the rally was CPI(M) Polit Bureau member Sitaram Yechury,
MP. Polit
Bureau member K Varadharajan was also present. The rally was presided
over by
state secretariat member Narsayya Adam, ex-MLA, and was addressed by
state
secretary Dr Ashok Dhawale, state secretariat members Rajaram Ozare,
MLA, J P
Gavit, ex-MLA, Dr D L Karad, Mariam Dhawale and Ajit Abhyankar,
Ahmednagar
district secretary Dr Ajit Nawale and district secretariat member Dr
Mahebub
Sayyed.
Sitaram Yechury and the other speakers
spoke of the political challenges before the country and the state and
called
upon the gathering to launch massive struggles on peoples’ issues and
to
strengthen the Party and the Left forces in the days ahead.
Two important events were held in the
public meeting. Four veteran local leaders - freedom fighter Gopalrao
Bhangre,
Yadavrao Nawale, Halimabi Chand Pathan and Ranganath Malunjkar – were
felicitated by Sitaram Yechury. And, two new books published by the
Party’s
publishing house Janashakti Prakashan –
one on Commercialisation of Education edited by Ramsagar Pandey and the
other a
collection of progressive poems by Subhash Boddewar – were released by
K
Varadharajan.
The conference began in the venue named
after Comrade M K Pandhe; the hall was named after Comrade Prabhakar
Sanzgiri;
the dais after Comrade Ahilya Rangnekar; the dais of the public meeting
after
Comrade Gangadhar Appa Burande; and the various welcome arches after
Comrades P
B Rangnekar, Krishna Khopkar and Vinayak Gaikwad – all of them having
passed
away after the last state conference.
One more arch had been named after Comrade
Mathi Ozare, a poor adivasi woman comrade from the Talasari tehsil of
Thane
district who was martyred on February 27, 2012. She was killed by BJP
goons
inhumanly by repeatedly stoning her on the head when she was going home
alone
at night. She was killed because she had worked day and night for the
victory
of the CPI(M) in the just-concluded local body elections. She was the
60th
martyr of the Party in Thane district since the historic adivasi Revolt
in 1945
and the first woman martyr of the CPI(M) and the AIDWA in
The inaugural session began in the
tastefully decorated venue on the evening of March 25 with the
flag-hoisting by
the senior most state committee member L B Dhangar, who is 84 years old
and who
joined the Party way back in 1947. After the rendering of revolutionary
songs by
the Praja Natya Mandal of Solapur, the
delegates paid floral tributes to martyrs.
The conference elected a presidium
comprising Narsayya Adam, Lahanu Kom, Dr Kishore Theckedath, Udayan
Sharma and
Sanjabai Khambait; a steering committee comprising the state
secretariat; a
resolutions committee comprising Ajit Abhyankar (convenor), Mahendra
Singh and
Kiran Moghe; a credentials committee comprising Vijay Gabhane
(convenor),
Sanjay Thakur, Umesh Deshmukh, Subhash Pandey and Preeti Shekhar; and a
minutes
committee comprising Prakash Choudhari, Shubha Shamim, Dr S K Rege and
Manik
Avaghade. Mahendra Singh placed the condolence resolution paying homage
to
martyrs, departed leaders and progressive personalities.
After the welcome address by Dr Mahebub
Sayyed on behalf of the reception committee, the state conference was
inaugurated by Sitaram Yechury. He began by referring to the situation
in
Coming to the national situation, Sitaram
Yechury came down heavily on the UPA-2 regime for its neo-liberal
policies
which are playing havoc with the toiling masses, and its unbridled
corruption
scandals. The BJP was no different in both these aspects, and in
addition was
continuing with its communal machinations. For the advance of the
Party, it was
necessary to launch sustained mass struggles on both economic and
social
issues. Along with striving for the unity of our basic classes, the
socially
oppressed sections must get the confidence that it is only the Red Flag
that
will stand by them unflinchingly. An alternative to the present ruling
classes
can only emerge on the basis of intense struggles and alternative
policies.
Detailed discussion on all these issues will take place in the ensuing
20th
Party Congress. Sitaram concluded by asserting that in the present
situation in
the country and in
The conference was then greeted by Prakash
Reddy on behalf of the CPI and by S V Jadhav on behalf of the PWP. Both
of them
called for strengthening Left unity in the days ahead.
POL-ORG
REPORT
In the delegate session, state secretary Dr
Ashok Dhawale placed the political-organisational report. Four printed
documents had been circulated to all the delegates – political report,
organisational
report, statistical appendices to the organisational report,
and mass front reports. All of them had been discussed and
adopted by the state committee earlier in the month. Another document
that was
also circulated was the resolution on party whole-timers adopted by the
state
committee.
The political report takes stock of the
socio-economic processes unfolding in
The organisational report takes objective
stock of the Party organisation in three sections: agitational work;
political-ideological work; and organisational work. The main features
of the
work of the Party in
·
The Party has conducted
statewide mass struggles and political campaigns, in some of which
there has
been good mobilisation of one lakh to 1.60 lakh people each: against
price rise
and for food security; against corruption; campaign against the Indo-US
nuclear
deal in which several central Party leaders participated; against the
Jaitapur
nuclear power plant; jathas and public meetings to commemorate the
golden
jubilee of the formation of Maharashtra state; intervention in several
cases of
social atrocities; electoral campaigns for the Lok Sabha, Vidhan Sabha
and
local body polls; and the successful completion of the unprecedented
Comrade
Godavari Parulekar Housing Scheme of 10,000 houses for women beedi
workers in
Solapur.
·
The mass organisations have
conducted statewide struggles as follows: trade union front – large
participation
in the three all
·
In the Lok Sabha elections of
2009, the CPI(M) polled nearly 2,00,000 votes in the two constituencies
of
Dindori (ST) in Nashik district and Palghar (ST) in Thane district. In
the
Vidhan Sabha elections of 2009, the Party polled over 2,70,000 votes in
20
seats, retained the seat in Thane district for the eighth time in a row
since
1978, polling over 62,000 votes there, lost the other two seats in
Nashik and
Solapur districts but polled over 92,000 votes in both of them
together, got
over 15,000 votes in two other seats, and over 10,000 votes in three
more
seats. In the local body elections of 2012, the CPI(M) won 31 seats – 8
zilla
parishad seats, 17 panchayat samiti seats and 6 municipal corporation
seats in
7 districts – Thane, Nashik, Solapur, Nandurbar, Parbhani, Nanded and
Buldana.
In all the above elections, the Party practically relied on its own
independent
strength.
·
There was an increase of over
1,35,000 (5,43,581 to 6,79,129) in the total membership of all six mass
organisations during the last four years, as follows: trade union –
85,625 to
1,22,487; kisan – 1,90,197 to 2,35,212; agricultural workers – 82,452
to
1,26,530; women – 75,112 to 73,510; youth – 86,925 to 86,055; and
student –
23,398 to 35,335.
·
The proportion of Party
membership in each mass front in 2011 was as follows: kisan – 50.4 per
cent; trade
union – 17.5 per cent; youth – 12.3 per cent; women – 8 per cent;
agricultural
workers – 4.9 per cent; student – 1.4 per cent; other fronts – 2.9 per
cent.
·
Apart from the six main mass
fronts, good work was done on the transport front and on the university
and
college teachers fronts, and in a few districts on the housing front.
·
Publication of a new colour edition
of the Party weekly Jeevanmarg began from
January 2012 with resultant increase in circulation, but a larger
increase is necessary.
Two large special annual issues of Jeevanmarg
were published in 2008 and 2011.
·
1,52,000 copies of 41 different
books and pamphlets were published by the Party state committee and by
the
Party publishing house Janashakti
Prakashan in the last seven years. There was a good sale of this
literature
by the districts (Rs 10 lakh in the last four years).
·
Three state-level Party classes
were held with an attendance of 350 to 400 comrades each. Five
state-level
classes were held for the student front, three for the kisan front, and
one
each for the agricultural workers and youth fronts. Several
district-level
Party classes were held. But much more work on the Party education
front is necessary.
·
There was a marginal increase
in Party membership from 12,051 to 12,586 in the last four years. There
was an increase
of 6.7 per cent in the peasant membership, but a corresponding decline
of 3.1 per
cent, 2.7 per cent and 0.9 per cent in the working class, agricultural
workers
and middle class membership respectively in the last four years.
·
A significant feature of
Maharashtra is that 53.5 per cent of the total Party membership is from
adivasis,
and most of it is from the Thane and Nashik districts. There is an
increase of
4.2 per cent in the number of adivasi comrades, increase of 0.8 per
cent in the
number of dalit comrades, and an increase of 0.6 per cent in the number
of women
comrades, but there is a two per cent drop in the number of minority
comrades
in the last four years.
·
However, one worrisome feature
is the 6 per cent decline of young comrades below 40 years of age, from
52 per
cent to 46 per cent in the last four years. This aspect must be
addressed
seriously by the Party in the days ahead.
·
Important initiatives were taken
by the state committee on the question of Party whole-timers. A Rs 40
lakh
whole-timers fund was collected in the state for the first time. An
increase in
the number and wages of whole-timers was effected, but much more is
necessary.
The first state-level Party whole-timers class was held in November
2011. A resolution
on Party whole-timers was adopted by the state committee for the first
time.
·
There was a substantial
increase in the Party levy coming to the state committee, from Rs 11.41
lakh in
2007 to Rs 29.74 lakh in 2011. A Rs 8.5 lakh fund was collected from
the state
and given to the West Bengal Solidarity Fund. Rs 17 lakh worth of
advertisements were collected from the state for the
Jeevanmarg special issue 2011, and this amount was utilised for
the renovation of the state Party office Janashakti
in Mumbai and for the Comrade B T
Ranadive Smarak Bhavan in New Mumbai.
·
A resolution on Party
Rectification in Maharashtra was discussed
thoroughly and adopted by the state committee, but implementation of
the
campaign was unsatisfactory at the lower levels. A ‘One and a Half Year
Plan
for Party Development’ was adopted by the state committee after review
of the
earlier Plan, but some tasks still remain to be completed.
·
The organisational report also
sharply pinpoints many weaknesses in several spheres.
]
The political-organisational report concludes
by setting out the direction of tasks to be adopted for the future. It
stresses
on unleashing large and sustained mass struggles; taking up social
issues much
more seriously; leading big campaigns against corruption and
criminalisation;
combating divisive forces of all types; fighting against imperialist
intervention in all spheres; increasing political-ideological awareness
amongst
Party members manifold; giving a much more extensive, democratic and
militant
shape to all mass fronts; trying to achieve unity of Left and secular
forces,
but fully concentrating on increasing the independent strength and
influence of
the Party; and preparing in right earnest for the Lok Sabha and Vidhan
Sabha
elections that are due in 2014.
The various reports of the mass fronts were
briefly placed before the conference by Dr D L Karad, Kisan Gujar,
Prakash
Choudhari, Kiran Moghe, Shailendra Kamble and Ajit Abhyankar
respectively.
In the day-long discussion on the
political-organisational
report on March 26, as many as 68 comrades participated. The level of
discussion surpassed that of earlier state conferences and the
delegates freely
expressed their views, criticisms and suggestions that greatly helped
to enrich
the report. The report was adopted unanimously after a detailed reply
by the
state secretary.
CPI(M) Polit Bureau member K Varadharajan,
addressing the conference after the conclusion of the discussion on the
report,
congratulated the delegates for their enlightening discussion. He
stressed the
need for conducting local struggles on people’s issues, building up the
mass
fronts and taking our political line to the people in a convincing
manner. He
also underlined the importance of following Communist norms and abiding
by the organisational
principles of the Party.
CONCLUDING
SESSION
In the concluding session of the state
conference on March 27, the conference adopted a number of important
resolutions: against the Jaitapur nuclear power plant; against social
atrocities; for the implementation of the Sachar Committee and the
Ranganath
Mishra Committee recommendations; for adivasi autonomous regions within
the
state of Maharashtra; on the implementation of the Forest Rights Act;
for
remunerative prices to the peasantry; for debt relief to the peasantry;
for
universalisation of the PDS; on the redressal of regional imbalances in
the state;
against certain proposed irrigation projects that will result in the
elimination of several adivasi villages; against the commercialisation
of
education; and condemning the recent police repression in Solapur.
Vijay Gabhane placed the credentials report.
There were a total of 381 delegates and observers from 30 out of the 35
districts in the state. Of these, 37
were state committee members, 291 were delegates and 53 were observers.
There
were 54 women delegates and observers. 63 delegates were from the
working
class, 79 from agricultural workers, 139 from poor peasants, 42 from
middle peasants,
1 from rich peasants and 51 from the middle class. 139 were adivasis,
53 were dalits
and 27 were from the minorities. 4 had joined the Party before 1964, 10
from
1965-70, 61 from 1971-80, 101 from 1981-90, 110 from 1991-2000 and 80
from
2001-11. 29 were less than 30 years of age, 99 from 31-40 years, 115
from 41-50
years, 81 from 51-60 years, 40 from 61-70 years, 10 from 71-80 years
and 2 were
over 80 years of age. 14 were illiterate, 23 had primary education, 159
had
secondary education, 63 had higher secondary education, 27 were
graduates, 50
were postgraduates, 12 were doctorates and 29 were medical doctors,
engineers
and lawyers. 297 were subscribers to Jeevanmarg,
73 to Loklahar, 45 to People’s Democracy,
35 to Marxist and seven to other Party papers.
There were 110 Party whole-timers among the delegates, and 68 more were
prepared to become Party whole-timers.
In an emotional session, a sum of nearly Rs
1,50,000 was collected or pledged by the state and district committees
of the
Party and the various mass organisations to help the family of martyr
Comrade
Mathi Ozare. This amount was handed over by Sitaram Yechury to the
Thane
district secretary of the Party, Rajaram Ozare, who announced that the
CPI(M)
Thane district committee has already given a call to its units to
collect Rs
1,00,000 for the family of its adivasi woman martyr.
The conference elected a 50-member new
state committee, a three-member state control commission and 16
delegates and two
observers to the 20th Party Congress. Five special invitees to the
state
committee were also announced. The new state committee, in its first
meeting,
unanimously re-elected Dr Ashok Dhawale as the state secretary and a
15-member
state secretariat whose other members are: K L Bajaj, Mahendra Singh,
Narsayya
Adam, J P Gavit, Dr D L Karad, Rajaram Ozare, Mariam Dhawale, Ajit
Abhyankar,
Manohar Muley, Dr Kishore Theckedath, Udayan Sharma, Vijay Gabhane and
Nathu
Salve. One more seat for the Marathwada region will be filled in six
months.
After the concluding remarks by Sitaram
Yechury, the enthusiastic felicitation of all the young volunteers at
the hands
of Sitaram Yechury and K Varadharajan, the vote of thanks by Dr Ajit
Nawale and
Narsayya Adam and the spirited red salute by all the delegates to the
Ahmednagar comrades who had carried out a splendid job of hosting this
state
conference, the conference ended with the Internationale
amidst resounding revolutionary slogans.
Several thousand rupees worth of
progressive literature was sold and a large number of subscriptions to
the
Party papers were collected during this state conference. An impressive
Marathi
play that was staged by the activists of our cultural front
Lok Sanskritik Manch from Aurangabad, and the Praja
Natya Mandal of Solapur inspired the conference throughout
with its revolutionary songs. The state conference received excellent
coverage
in both print and electronic media.