People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 31 July 05, 2012 |
Struggle
For Real
G
Mamatha
THE Left
parties are organising a five-day dharna from July 30 to
August 3 demanding immediate legislation guaranteeing food
security. P Chidambaram, who had commented, “We are prepared
to pay rupees twenty for an ice cream cone but won’t pay one
rupee more for a kilo of wheat or rice” is back as the finance
minister. While the Left parties protest reflects the growing
anger among the people against the flawed policies of the UPA
government, the reinstatement of Chidambaram as finance
minister shows the intent of the government to further
marginalise the poor and downtrodden in our country. Let us
not forget, is it not Mr Chidambaram who had laid roads for
our three billionaires with 212 billions in assets (in 1996),
to increase the number of their ilk to 48 with 9,088 billions
in assets (in 2012)? And is it not his economic policies that
had resulted in the rise of prices of almost all essential
commodities in this period and an increase in poverty?
The people
who had come to
The peasants
from
The speeches
of the leaders struck an instant chord with the participants
as they were referring to their daily problems and the reasons
for it. An interesting feature is that during the speeches,
the people were actively participating by either mumbling how
correct the speaker was or sharing with their sisters a
related aspect. For example, when the speakers were mentioning
about the fact that the food grains are exported to other
countries only to be fed to the cattle there, they expressed
their anger with the choicest abuses.
Speaker
after speaker brought out various facets of the government
policy that is depriving the common people of food security
and the double-speak of the Congress party and the UPA
government. None other than our prime minister epitomises this
double-speak. While releasing the ‘Hungama' report (2012), he
said that he was “shocked” to find 42 per cent of children
malnourished, and called it a “national shame”. Can we believe
that the prime minister of a country, with years of experience
in the government – as finance minister, governor of the RBI,
finance secretary, Vice-Chairman of the Planning Commission –
is really unaware of this fact? Giving him the benefit of
doubt, the gentleman that he is, can we stop from questioning
what steps he had initiated to immediately address this issue
of 'national shame'? Nothing much, except forming an Empowered
Group of Ministers on Food Security, which is one among the
many such groups that the government had formed. And now,
without making public the output or recommendations of the
'empowered group', we got to hear that the group is, in fact,
wound up.
May be, the
prime minister is more concerned about addressing the
'international shame': his failure to offer our retail sector
at the altar of FDI and satiate the hunger of international
finance capital! He is more concerned about the ratings given
to our country by Standard and Poor, Moody's and Finch rather
than that given by the International Food Policy Research
Institute, which ranks
Another
important aspect that struck emotional chords with the
participants is the mention of the abrasive inequalities
prevalent in our society. Montek Singh Ahluwalia should have
heard the collective sighs of the people whenever a speaker
quoted the obnoxious poverty line fixed by the planning
commission, especially on the mention of his renovated toilet
costing 35 lakh rupees. A back of the envelope calculation
shows that it takes 330 years of labour for a citizen who is
just above poverty line to earn 35 lakh rupees (earning Rs 27
per day, one rupee above the poverty line fixed for rural
poor). Incidentally, because that citizen is categorised as
'APL', he cannot access many of the government schemes that
target the 'poor'. Irony is, he is categorised together with a
fellow APL citizen like Ahluwalia who can renovate his toilet
with 35 lakhs and spend a staggering Rs 2.02 lakh per day for
his foreign travel!
The heights
of irony with which our government acts can be understood from
the simple fact that the government wants to target and slowly
eliminate subsidies. The classification of APL, BPL is
intended for this purpose. It sees subsidies as an impediment
to the growth story of
The struggle
initiated by the Left parties is significant in this
background. The dharna taking place in
The struggle
we are witnessing in Delhi is historic in more than one sense.
Of course, it is historic because of the very nature of the
call for five-day dharna and the issues it seeks to raise. It
is also historic because it is a test of strength and
character of the popular struggles and the government that is
trying to shift gears for further reforms. It is a struggle
for claiming real India – India for its multitudes of toiling
people or the few who feed on these toiling people. History
teaches us that it is always the many who will be victorious.
When, depends on us.