People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 25 June 23, 2013 |
CPI(M) Workers Court Arrest
All Over Rajasthan Rajendra IT was a pride moment for the
state of Rajasthan that over ten
thousand people, despite the blazing heat at 48 degree
Celsius of temperature, and
notwithstanding the season of marriages in the state,
marched and courted
arrest in mass civil disobedience in Rajasthan on May 31, as
part of a
countrywide action programme. As reported earlier, CPI(M)
general secretary Prakash
Karat courted arrest outside the Collectorate in Jaipur,
along with 500 protestors,
on this day. Next day, all the prominent
newspapers carried the news along
with photographs. PROCESSION,
RALLY AND COURT
ARREST After the rally organised at
the Ram Lila Maidan in New Delhi
on March 19, 2013, called for a mighty civil disobedience
movement between May
15 and 31, a two day meeting of the CPI(M) state committee
in Jaipur on April 12
and 13 decided to held statewide picketing of government
offices at the tehsil
and district levels all over the state during May 25 to 31. The picketing was to press
the demands like right to land and
housesites, curb on price rise, right to food, right to
education and health, right
to employment, social justice, an end to corruption, farmers
issues, no to FDI
in retail trade, and against the anti-people policies of
state government
during the last four years. All the district committees then
held their meetings
to chalk out strategies for the success of the picketing
programme. CPI(M)
state secretary and secretariat members attended these
meetings. Though the CPI(M) and its
mass organisations are not strong
in Jaipur district, all the branch committees were activated
and street and
gate meetings were organised. Party workers distributed
pamphlets in Jaipur
city. On May 31, party workers
gathered at Khasa Kothi circle and
proceeded towards the Collectorate via the district court.
Picketers raised
slogans against the policies of the state and central
governments. There was a
heavy jam on the road due to the procession. Women’s
participation in this
rally was very encouraging. The picketers organised a
meeting at the main gate
of the Collectorate. Prakash Karat congratulated
the people for joining the
picketing despite the scorching sun. While addressing the
rally, he explained the
political, social and economic situation of the country
elaborately. He said that
in order to create a better IMPERATIVES OF THE DAY Karat stressed that
implementation of land reform policies by
distributing surplus land to the landless must also
guarantee housesites to
each landless household. He alleged that the people are
suffering a lot due to incessant
price rise. He said universal right to 35 kg of foodgrains
at a maximum price
of two rupees a kg and scraping of the APL-BPL based
fraudulent poverty data collection
would be in a right direction towards ensuring the right to
food. He further
said that stop to forwards trading in foodgrains and other
essential
commodities would help curb the price rise. The CPI(M) general secretary
alleged that that education is being
handed over to education mafia and that there are moves to
open the retail trade
for foreign corporates. He said that privatisation and
commercialisation of
education and health services would make the sufferings of
common man totally unbearable.
He advocated an increase in the allocations for education
and health, and stressed
that implementation of the Right to Education Act,
strengthening of the public
health services and strict regulation of the private sector
are the need of the
hour. While talking about the right
to employment, Karat demanded
to lifting the ban on recruitment, stepping up of public
investment, expanding the
MGNREGA, and similar scheme for a guarantee of work in urban
Expressing anguished that the
honour of women is in danger,
the CPI(M) leader said the party demands curb on violence
against women and one
third reservation for women in legislatures and parliament.
He declared that
ending social practices like untouchability and anti-dalit
discrimination,
protecting the land and forest rights of adivasis, and
providing equal
opportunities in education and job for the Muslim community
would ensure social
justice. Declaring the Manmohan
government as the most corrupt government
in Independent India, Karat said the new economic policies
have created a nexus
between the corrupt politicians, bureaucrats and corporates.
He told the
gathering that to end corruption is the need of the hour. He
further alleged
that the LPG policies followed by the nine years long
Congress regime and by
the six years long BJP rule have made the rich richer and
the poor poorer. In his address, the CPI(M)
leader also dwelt on the dangers of
sale of public assets to foreign and Indian corporate
houses, the reductions in
subsidy on seeds, irrigation, fertilisers and pesticides,
the central
government making agriculture a losing proposition, peasant
suicides,
decelerating the rate of economic growth, and several other
issues. He
described the Congress and the BJP as two faces of one coin,
insofar as
corruption and economic policies are concerned. Karat asked
the party workers
to enhance the struggles against the policies of
globalisation, privatisation
and liberalisation and for implementation of alternative
policies. Sangharsh is
the only way to a better future, he said, adding that the
people must strengthen
the non-Congress and non-BJP parties and increase the
CPI(M)’s seats in the coming
assembly election in November 2013. STATE GOVT: AN
UTTER FAILURE Addressing the demonstrators,
CPI(M) state secretary Vasudev
described the four year Congress rule in the state as an
utter failure. Amid the
rising prices of essential commodities and all-pervading
corruption so much
that almost every minister of the state government is
tainted, the whole system
of administration has collapsed. Several police officers and
more than 200 of
the lower level officials are behind the bars on charges of
rape, fake
encounters, illegal killings and involvement in corrupt
deals. Vasudev said police
atrocities cannot choke the voices demanding
democratic rights and warned that the CPI(M) would not be
cowed down in the
face of police excesses. We would further intensify the
agitation in the coming
days, he asserted. He also reminded that the people have not
forgotten the
misdeeds of the earlier Vasundhara Raje government which had
killed hundred of
people in police firings. CPI(M) district secretary
Suresh Vyas also addressed the
meeting. When party leaders asked the
protestors to defy the ban,
there was an altercation between the police and picketers on
the issue of entry
into the Collectorate. Unprecedented police arrangements
were visible; the
police had virtually cordoned the entire area with
barricades. When some women
activists led by Sunita Chowdhary tried to enter the
Collectorate by crossing
the barricades, the clothes of some of them were torn off. When the rallyists moved
towards the Collectorate through the
main gate, the police declared them arrested. But the
insufficient number of buses
to carry the protestors created a commotion for the police
and administration. The
protestors gheraoed the police vans and the adjoining roads
were jammed. At last,
the police arranged a few more buses to carry the arrested
CPI(M) workers, though
some party workers could not yet be put in buses whose
number still proved insufficient. All the arrested party
workers were taken to Vidhayakpuri The police registered 477
party workers as arrested while the
party records showed a different number. CPI(M) state secretary
Vasudev, Ravindra Shukla, Duli Chand,
Laxman Sen, Sanjay Madhav, Suresh Vyas, Rajendra, Kusum
Saiwal, Harender Singh,
Bhanwar Singh, Vijay Bahadur Gaur, Babu Lal Lugaria, Gilli
Bhojraj, Kishan
Singh and Sunita Chowdhary were among the state and district
level leaders who
participated in the mass civil disobedience programme. DISTRICT LEVEL
PROTEST
ACTIONS The civil disobedience
movement was conducted in many
districts of Rajasthan during the last week of May. A
partial report follows. Sikar: About 450
party workers gheraoed the SDM office for more than four
hours. It was led by
Amra Ram, Rugha Ram and Harphool Singh. The SDM himself was
encircled for many
hours. The gherao was lifted when the picketers were
declared arrested. About 400 cadres and
supporters of the CPI(M) including Pema
Ram, MLA, B S Meel and
Mohan Singh Fauji
were arrested for laying a seize on tehsil headquarters at
Laxmangarh. The tehsildar,
SDM and others vacated the office. Government work was
completely paralysed
during the protest action. The Khandela tehsil unit of
CPI(M) staged protest under the
leadership of Amra
Ram and Subhash
Nehra; 400 workers participated in
the gherao where women outnumbered men. Prior to the siege
of SDM office, party
workers organised a public meeting. Pema Ram, Rama Avtar Lamba
and Sohan Gurjar led the protestor
in Neem ka Thana tehsil. Ram Prasad, Abbas and Mehla led the
action in Fatehpur
tehsil. On May 31, more than 1000
protestors held a spirited
demonstration at the Sikar Collectorate. The protest in the
Collectorate
premises was led by Amra Ram and Pema Ram. District administration made
some additional arrangements as
a contingent plan. It deployed one additional SP, two deputy
SPs, more than a dozen
inspectors and about 500 policemen to stop the protestors
from enter the Collectorate
premises. Earlier, 350 party workers in Pilibanga, 400 in
Bhadra and 125
workers in Nohar gheraoed the tehsil headquarters, and were
arrested. Shri Ganga Nagar:
About 3500 party workers and
supporters organised a big
public meeting on May 31. Het Ram Beniwal,
B S Rana, Bhuramal Swamy and Gurucharan Singh Mod led
the protestors. The
police arrested all those present in the meeting but did not
have enough buses
to carry the protestors. Prior to it, satyagraha was
organised at other tehsil
headquarters in the district. It is worth noting that Pawan
Duggal, CPI(M) MLA from
Anupgarh, was released from jail after 22 days, on May 29.
He was arrested in
connection with the serious charges foisted against him when
peasants of this district
were running a determined agitation for irrigation water
from the first phase
of the Indira Gandhi Canal, during 2004-08. (See
People’s Democracy, May 26, 2013.) Dungarpur: The CPI(M)
organised
a "Chetna Yatra" here and it passed through all the tehsils
of
Dungarpur for a week. Then there was a padao
(sit-in) for two days at district Collectorate on May 30-31.
the police
arrested 110 party workers on May 31. 300 party workers were
present in the
public meeting on the day. Udaypur: 250 party
workers in Kotda and 300 workers in Jhadol demonstrated in
front of tehsil
headquarters. The police arrested them and released later.
There was an
impressive meeting in Gogunda during district conference of
All India Kisan
Sabha. More than 500 agitators
gheraoed the Collectorate on May 31.
Women’s participation was impressive. District
administration arrested all
protestors and released them after a few hours. B L Singhvi, Prem Pargi,
Chanwal, Prabhu Lal Shrimali
and Rajesh
Singhvi led the
demonstration. Jhunjhunu: There were
demonstrations in Guragodji and at Jhunjhunu Collectorate.
An agitation was
already going on in Jhunjhunu in protest against a murder
two days before May
31. Bikaner: 100 party
workers demonstrated in Lunkaransar, 150 in Dungargarh and
50 in Pungal tehsil.
The police arrested them. Alwar: 125 protestors
demonstrated in front of the Collectorate and were arrested. Bharatpur: 50 party
workers demonstrated at Collectorate on May 31. A delegation
submitted a memorandum
to the collector. Chittorgarh:
130 agitators protested in
Chittorgarh and were arrested. There were demonstrations and
arrests in Bundi and Tonk also.
Civil disobedience actions could not be earnestly organised
in Nagaur, Jodhpur
and Kota districts.