People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 12 March 24, 2013 |
Editorial
Intensify Struggles for a Better India
THE four legs of the
CPI(M)’s
Sangharsh Sandesh Jatha
culminated
in a historic
rally at Delhi’s Ramlila
Maidan on March 19, 2013.
In one of the
largest gatherings at the call of the CPI(M), this rally gave
the battle cry
launching a new political Ramlila in
the country against the twin-demons of corruption and
anti-people
policies.
The central theme of
the rally is
that it is possible to create a better India where all its
people can be provided
with the basic rights to a decent life for which there are
sufficient resources
in the country. These
resources are
currently being either looted through the mega corruption
scams or are being
utilised to provide super profits and luxury to a miniscule
few in the country
while increasing the economic burdens on the vast majority of
our people thus
denying them their basic rights to a decent life and pushing
them into greater
depravation. It is these policies
that need to be changed in order to create a better India for
all our
people. The
current trajectory that is
widening the hiatus between the two Indias is simply not
acceptable.
In order to create
such a better
India, it is imperative that the following six basic rights of
the people must
be ensured. This can be done by changing the policy direction
in our
country.
1)
Right to Land and House-sites: Implement land reform policies by
distributing surplus land
to the landless. Guarantee house-sites to each landless
household.
2)
Curb Price Rise and Right to Food: Universal right to 35 kgs of foodgrains at
a maximum price
of rupees two a kg. Scrap APL/BPL based fraudulent poverty
calculations. Stop
forward trading in foodgrains and other essential commodities.
3)
Right to Education and Health: Stop privatisation of educational and
health services.
Increase allocations for education and health. Guarantee
implementation of the
Right to Education Act. Strengthen public services in health
and ensure strict
regulation of the private sector.
4)
Right to Employment:
Step up public investment to ensure creation of jobs; lift the
ban on
recruitment and ensure time-bound recruitment for all
vacancies, particularly
for SC/ST/OBC backlog; increase days of work under NREGA with
price index
linked minimum wages and expand it to include guarantee of
work days in urban
India.
5) Ensure Social
Justice and Rights
of Women : Curb
violence against women and provide one-third reservation for
women in
legislatures and parliament; end social practices of
untouchability and discrimination against dalits;
protect the land and forest
rights of adivasis; provision of equal opportunities in
education and jobs for
the Muslim community.
6)
End Corruption: Enact
Lokpal legislation with independent powers of investigation;
bring back black
money stashed in foreign banks; recover losses from the
corporates responsible;
send the corrupt to jail.
The ruling classes
often argue as
articulated by our prime minister recently that “money does
not grow on trees”.
This logic is used to impose greater burdens on the people
through hikes in
prices of essential commodities and cuts in subsidies meant
for the poor. The
budget presented recently in the parliament for the year
2013-14 shows that the
fiscal deficit last year stood at nearly Rs 5.21 lakh crores. In the same year,
the amount of legitimate tax
foregone by the government was over Rs 5.73 lakh crores. In
other words, more
than Rs 52,000 crores over and above the fiscal deficit is the
tax foregone by
the government. If
these taxes were
instead collected, then there would have been no fiscal
deficit at all. However,
in the name of reducing this fiscal
deficit, greater burdens are imposed on the vast majority of
our people pushing
millions into poverty. Such
injustice is
simply not acceptable.
Further, if these
taxes were
collected and used for public investments to build our
much-needed
infrastructure, particularly irrigation facilities to improve
our agricultural
sector and prevent the rising tide of distress suicides by our
farmers, lakhs
of new job opportunities could have been created. This, in turn, would
lead to significantly
increase the levels of domestic demand giving the impetus for
manufacturing and
industrial growth and thereby the overall growth of our
economy. Such an
alternative policy direction must be ensured through growing
popular
struggles.
On the other hand,
the mega
corruption scams, if prevented, could have provided sufficient
resources to
provide universal food security, education, health and other
necessities to improve
the life of our people. The
2G scam
alone (Rs 1.76 lakh crores) would have released enough
resources to provide 35
kg of foodgrains at not more than Rs 2/kg
to all families in the country both APL and BPL. The coal block
allocation scam – coalgate –
of Rs 1.86 lakh crores would have been more than sufficient to
ensure that
every single boy and girl in our country would be in school and provided with
books, uniforms and mid-day
meals by the government.
Such a mega
loot of our resources must be stopped by mounting greater
pressures through
popular struggles on our ruling classes.
As the rally began,
came the news
that an important ally of the UPA-2 government – the DMK – has
withdrawn its
support plunging this government into greater political
uncertainty. Already
this is a minority government
surviving on the outside support of parties like the BSP and
the SP. This
political uncertainty has, naturally,
thrown up the question of an alternative government.
On this score,
viewed from the point
of an alternative set of policies required to create a better
India, the BJP is
no alternative. Its economic policies are virtually no
different from the
neo-liberal reform trajectory.
While the
BJP-led NDA was holding the reins of the central government,
it had suggested
to permit FDI in the retail trade sector.
When the CPI(M) objected to this and organised
protests, the Congress
party then opposed this move. Now when the Congress-led UPA is
holding the
reins of the central government, FDI in retail has been
permitted despite the
BJP supporting the CPI(M)’s steadfast and consistent
opposition of this
reform. The BJP,
when in government,
undertook large-scale disinvestment of public sector. Its
first 13-day government,
while facing a certain defeat in the confidence
vote in the Lok Sabha,
called a cabinet meeting hurriedly during the Lok Sabha
proceedings to
grant the now disgraced and bankrupt
multinational – Enron – its
power
purchase agreement which
was virtually a
loot of the people. In
the current parliament,
the BJP supported the UPA proposal to privatise the pension
funds, thus,
exposing crores
of our employees to
vulnerabilities of
global finance.
While the BJP
continues to function
as the political arm of the RSS to achieve their objective of
transforming the
modern secular democratic republic of India into the RSS
version of a rabidly
intolerant `Hindu Rashtra’, it also pursues the same
anti-people policies of
neo-liberal reforms.
Therefore, what the
country needs is
not merely an alternative grouping of anti-Congress anti-BJP
political parties
to form a government. What
the country
and the people need is an alternative policy direction. The political
alternative which can bring
about such a shift in our policy direction can only come on
the strength of
rising people’s struggles.
The need of the hour
is to strengthen
popular struggles for bringing about such a shift in the
policy direction of
our country. In
order to carry forward
such people’s struggles to higher levels, the rally gave the
call for
countrywide picketing of all government offices from the
block, district to the
state level between May 15 and 31. Such
a programme of mass picketing will also include the violation
of law assuming
the dimensions of a mighty civil disobedience movement.
The CPI(M) calls
upon the Indian
people who have responded very positively to this Sangharsh
Sandesh Jatha to
come forward in larger numbers
for ensuring mightier struggles in the
future for creating a better India for all our people.
(March 20, 2013)