People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 13 March 31, 2013 |
KARNATAKA Nityananda
Swami THE
fifth Karnataka
state conference of the All India Agricultural Workers
Union (AIAWU) concluded
with a resolve to give priority to quick expansion of
the organisation to at least
75 taluks in 25 districts and to conduct militant
struggles on the demands of agricultural
workers in the next three years. The conference, was
held at Gangavathi in
Koppala district of Karnataka, in this birth centenary
year of Comrade P Sundarayya,
a legendary leader of the great Telangana peasant
armed struggle who was
also the founder of
the first
agricultural workers’ union
in the country. The
AIAWU
conference was attended by 241 delegates from 14
districts. Out of them, 77
were women. PROCESSION & OPEN SESSION The
conference
commenced with a mass rally and a public meeting on
February 7, 2013. A
Vijayaraghavan, general secretary of the AIAWU,
inaugurated the open session,
saying that the UPA government at the centre was, by
projecting Rahul Gandhi as
the next prime minister, trying to make people forget
its record of corruption.
He then asked the agricultural workers’ union to foil
the design of the central
government. The activists of the AIAWU must go from
house to house and explain
to the people the fraud involved in the direct cash
transfer and other schemes.
He also pointed out how there is no difference between
the economic policies
pursued by the Congress government at the centre and the
BJP government in
Karnataka. On the question of corruption, both the
Congress and BJP governments
have been competing with each other. AIAWU
all-India president
P Ramayya said the Left parties are the real alternative
to the Congress and
the BJP. First in Kerala and then in West Bengal and
Tripura, it was the Left
Front governments that enacted progressive land reforms
and distributed surplus
land among the landless tenants and dalits. He appealed
to the exploited and
dalit sections in Karnataka to support and strengthen
the Left forces. AIAWU
state president
Nityananda Swami presided over the meeting. Its state
vice president G N Nagaraj
and AIKS state president Maruthi Manpade also spoke. K
Hussainappa, general
secretary of the reception committee, proposed the vote
of thanks for the hundreds
of agricultural workers who made the rally and public
meeting a success. The
cultural teams of Bagepally and local SFI presented
revolutionary songs in
Kannada and Telugu languages, leaving a impact on the
people. DELEGATES
SESSION The
conference
commenced on the same evening, with flag hoisting by
Nityananda Swami, followed
by floral tributes at the martyrs column. A presidium
consisting of G N Nagaraj,
Bhimashetty Yampally, Rajiva Padukone, Sarojamma and
Ameenabi was then elected
to conduct the proceedings. On the condolence resolution
moved, the conference
observed two-minute silence to pay homage to the
departed leaders and members. Inaugurating
the
delegates session, Vijayaraghavan said the conference
was being held at a time
when attacks on agriculture are increasing. Since the
onset the neo-liberal
policies, the number of landless people has increased
from 23 to 42 per cent.
Agricultural subsidies have been cut. Peasant
suicides continue unabated. The share of
agriculture in production has come down from 32 to 16
per cent. The government
is out hand the agriculture sector over to corporate
houses. After
dwelling on
the record of Left led governments in regard to
agriculture and rural
population since 1957, the speaker said in Kerala the
AIAWU recently conducted
another successful movement. In the state of Kerala,
almost 90 per cent of
rural households have land. The remaining landless
workers are well organised.
Thousands of them came to join the recent movement and
the government and
surplus lands were identified. One lakh volunteers
enlisted to go to jail. The
land occupation movement lasted for 17 days, but the
Congress led UDF
government did not have the courage to arrest anybody.
Nor did it dare to evict
those who had occupied the land. Rather the state
government was forced to
invite the leaders for discussion and to assure the
grant of ownership of the
land to the landless. The AIAWU has conducted similar
militant struggles in
Andhra Pradesh and Tamilnadu as well. The speaker then
urged the conference to discuss
the land issue in Karnataka and mobilise landless
agricultural workers fo
powerful land struggles. Vijayaraghavan
also
narrated how it was the pressure of the Let parties that
forced the UPA
government to start the rural employment guarantee
scheme and some other
pro-people schemes. We have to mobilise the people for
proper implementation of
these schemes. The AIAWU must also take up issues
concerning women agricultural
workers and the increasing assaults on women. We should
also mobilise agricultural
workers to fight against increasing anti-dalit
atrocities and against the practice
of untouchability. All this requires that we strengthen
our organisation,
expand it to newer areas and form more and more village
level committees. REPORT
AND
DISCUSSION
AIAWU
state general
secretary Chandrappa Hoskera presented the draft report
which explained the
condition of agricultural workers in the state and the
activities conducted by
the union in the past four years. After discussing the
report in district-wise
groups, the delegates spent five hours time to express
their views. A total of 47
delegates, including seven women, participated in the
discussion, supporting the
main thrust of the report. They also identified some of
the issues for
struggle, like proper implementation of the MGNREGA,
wage increase,
universalisation of public distribution system,
housesites, regularisation of
unauthorised cultivation by landless workers, caste
discrimination and crimes
against women. On
behalf of the state
committee, Hoskera thanked the delegates for their
valuable suggestions and frank
criticism, and then inferred the tasks identified for
the next three years. He
said that, as suggested in the report, AIAWU membership
in the state must cross
three lakh mark, with at least 600 village units, in the
coming three
years. The
report was adopted
unanimously. As a
part of the AIAWU
state conference, one session was set apart to discuss
the problems faced by
women agricultural workers. Smt Savithri Muzumdar,
editor of weekly Mahila
Loka, inaugurated the convention
while Smt Shivamma, president of the district Anganwadi
Employees Union, was
the chief guest. A presidium of five women agricultural
workers conducted the
proceedings of the convention where a charter of their
demands was placed,
discussed, and adopted. It would be submitted to the
state government. The
convention also adopted a resolution condemning the
recent crimes against
women. At the end, the convention constituted a state
level sub-committee of
women agricultural workers. State
AIKS general
secretary G C Bayyareddy, state CITU secretary R S
Basavaraj, state DYFI president
Bharathraj and state SFI president Ananth Naik greeted
the conference. At the
end, the state
conference elected a new state committee with 47
members, including five women.
The newly elected state committee then met and elected
15 office bearers, with
Nityananda Swami as president and
general secretary, to be assisted by six vice
presidents and seven assistant
secretaries. The
conference came
to an end with the concluding speech by AIAWU president
P Ramayya.