People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 30 July 28, 2013 |
Ajit Nawale THE
All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) held its 21st
Maharashtra state conference at The
venue was named after veteran AIKS leader
Krishna Khopkar; the public meeting venue after veteran
CITU leader M K Pandhe;
the conference hall after AIKS leader Vinayak Gaikwad; and
the stage after
another AIKS leader Narendra Kavishwar. Renowned
journalist P Sainath inaugurated the
conference that was attended by AIKS president S
Ramachandran Pillai and AIKS
joint secretary Vijoo Krishnan; both remained present on
all three days. The
conference was attended by 257 delegates from 23 districts
of INAUGURAL SPEECH On
July 11 morning, after the flag-hoisting
by veteran AIKS leader L B Dhangar, floral tributes to
martyrs, condolence
resolution and welcome address by reception committee
chairman Udayan Sharma, P
Sainath inaugurated the conference. Referring
to the fact that the conference
was being held in Vidarbha which has gained notoriety for
peasant suicides,
Sainath said as per the latest data released by the
National Crime Records Bureau,
a total of 2,84,694 farmers committed suicide in India
during the last 18
years. Of these, the largest number (over 57,000 peasant
suicides) is from Sainath
then analysed the factors behind
this crisis --- massive increases in the cost of inputs
and consequently of the
cost of agricultural production, sharp fall and
fluctuations in the price of agricultural
outputs and the crunch in institutional credit to the
peasantry. All these
factors are policy-emanated. While banks give loans to buy
a luxury Mercedes
Benz car at seven per cent interest, a farmer has to buy a
tractor at 14 per
cent interest! About 50 per cent of agricultural credit in
Mumbai is being
given to corporates! Recommendations
of the National Commission
for Farmers headed by Dr M S Swaminathan are gathering
dust for the last six
years. They included many seminal pro-farmer steps like a
price stabilisation
fund, farm output price to comprise cost of production
plus 50 per cent profit,
agricultural credit at four per cent interest etc. But
union agriculture minister,
Sharad Pawar, said Sainath, was more interested in Lavasa
than in taking these
steps! Sainath
sharply criticised the new central scheme
of doling out Rs 7,000 crore to corporates in the name of
so-called training of
ten lakh farmers; the growing concentration of land and
water resources in the
hands of a few; the trend towards corporatisation of
agriculture; the skewed
viewpoint as regards irrigation; and withdrawal of the
public sector in
agricultural research which is now fast becoming a
monopoly of the corporates. To
increase agricultural production and
productivity, Sainath suggested steps like concerted
agricultural research,
scientific testing of soil and water, cooperative
management of agriculture and
so on. At the same time, he stressed that the paramount
need is to build a
powerful struggle against the anti-peasant policies of the
ruling classes. He
concluded by saying: “Mass Movements, not Mass Suicides!”
must be our slogan in
the days ahead. PUBLIC MEETING AND CONFERENCE REPORT Held
on July 11 afternoon, the public
meeting was presided over by AIKS state president J P
Gavit; the main speaker was
AIKS president S R Pillai. Others who spoke were AIKS
joint secretary Vijoo
Krishnan, CKC member Dr Ashok Dhawale, AIKS state general
secretary Kisan
Gujar, veteran leader L B Dhangar and state office-bearers
like Dada Raipure,
Udayan Sharma, Shankarrao Danav, Yashwant Zade and Arjun
Adey. The
public meeting was a success despite
constant rains for the preceding few days. Peasants,
agricultural workers and
unorganised workers came from tehsils of The
conference report was placed in the
delegate session on July 11 evening by AIKS state general
secretary Kisan
Gujar. The 88-page printed report comprised the following
main sections: 1)
current political challenges; 2) the crisis in Indian
agriculture; 3) the
agrarian situation in The
report said the Maharashtra Rajya Kisan
Sabha has led a number of struggles in the last four
years: 1)
A massive independent statewide Jail
Bharo stir in January 2011 for implementation of the
Forest Rights Act (FRA)
and on burning issues like peasant suicides. Over one lakh
peasants courted
arrest. 2)
Revival of the same struggle for FRA
implementation and on the question of severe drought in
April 2013. Over 50,000
peasants conducted Rasta Roko at several centres for over
40 hours. The state
government was forced to concede many important demands on
April 17 after
negotiations with the AIKS. 3)
Independent statewide demonstrations of
1.25 lakh rural poor in 2012 for their demand for
inclusion in the Below
Poverty Line (BPL) list. The struggle was successful in
some districts, where
the names of thousands of rural poor were included in BPL
lists. 4)
A joint struggle from 2007 to 2010, in
alliance with the PWP, against the proposed 25,000-acre
Maha Mumbai SEZ
allotted to Mukesh Ambani. It entailed two huge rallies of
over 50,000 peasants
each and a referendum. The state government was finally
forced to denotify the
SEZ, which was a major victory for the peasantry. 5)
Two independent statewide rallies of
thousands of peasants before the 6)
Struggles for remunerative prices for crops
like cotton and sugarcane. 7)
Struggles on the burning issue of bank
credit to the peasantry. 8)
Struggles against severe load-shedding
of power and exorbitant power bills. 9)
Struggles for getting temple lands,
pasture lands, waste lands etc vested in the names of the
cultivating peasants. 10)
Campaigns against price rise, for food
security and universalisation of the PDS. 11)
Statewide campaign against irrigation
scam and other corruption scams. 12)
Successful local struggle on the issue
of canals of the Nilwande dam in Nagar district. 13)
Mass marriage programmes of thousands
of Adivasi couples in Nashik district. 14)
Active support to all-India working
class strikes and to the Sangharsh Sandesh Jathas. 15)
Regular holding of AIKS state camps for
activists and publication of literature. After
group discussion in their district
delegations, 43 delegates from 23 districts spoke on the
report on July 12 and
enriched it with their experiences, suggestions and
criticisms. After the
general secretary’s reply, the report was unanimously
adopted amidst cheers. GENESIS & CONTOURS OF AGRARIAN CRISIS While
addressing the conference, AIKS
president S R Pillai congratulated the Maharashtra Rajya
Kisan Sabha for the struggles
it has led and the expansion it has achieved in the last
few years. However, he
underlined that in view of the severity of the agrarian
crisis in the country, there
is much more that the AIKS must do all over the country. He
said the roots of today’s agrarian
crisis must be traced to the immediate post-independence
period. The refusal of
the ruling classes under successive Congress regimes to
carry out radical land
reforms led to the concentration of land in the hands of
the landlords and rich
peasants, and thus to inequitable distribution of rural
wealth and incomes. The
green revolution helped mainly the irrigated areas,
further accentuating the
gap between the rural rich and the rural poor, and also
between irrigated and
dryland areas. With
the neo-liberal policies that were
unveiled two decades ago, things only got worse. The
government withdrew from its
responsibilities in agriculture, slashed public
expenditure, cut subsidies to
the peasantry, embarked on privatisation, encouraged
multinational corporations
and indigenous corporates, and surrendered to the unjust
WTO regime. As
a result of all this, said SRP, the
share of agriculture in the country’s GDP is now down to
just 14 per cent.
Agriculture is increasingly becoming an unviable option.
Along with peasant
suicides, innumerable farmers are being driven into the
ranks of landless
agricultural workers. Land acquisition by corporates and
other sections of the
land and real estate mafia is sharply increasing,
displacing thousands of
peasants from their land and livelihood. The
government says it does not have any
money for agriculture. But it has enough money to squander
on massive tax
concessions to corporate houses year after year, and for
the stinking
corruption scams that are being unearthed everyday. To
change this situation, concluded SRP,
massive and consistent struggles of the peasantry are the
need of the hour.
These must be directed towards ensuring that alternative
agrarian policies are
put in place. For this, the right issues must be selected
at the right time,
local struggles must be intensified and the organisation
strengthened. He
expressed confidence that all this would be carried out in
AIKS
joint secretary Vijoo Krishnan made an
effective intervention on the last day, dealing with
various important agrarian
and organisational issues. SOME OTHER HIGHLIGHTS CITU
state secretary Amrut Meshram, AIAWU
state joint secretary Maroti Khandare, AIDWA state
president Mariam Dhawale,
DYFI state president Bhagwan Bhojane and SFI state joint
secretary Balaji
Kaletwad greeted the conference. One
of the highlights of this conference
was the placing of a 35-page document titled The Question of Irrigation in Maharashtra.
After discussion in the
AIKS state council, this document was prepared and placed
by AIKS state joint
secretary Dr Ajit Nawale. Printed copies were given to all
the delegates. One
delegate from each district placed his views on this
document. This document
will soon be finalised in the light of a wider discussion
and become the basis
of future struggles on this vital issue. The
other highlight was a reporting on the “Current
Agrarian Situation in The
first issue of the revived journal of
Maharashtra Rajya Kisan Sabha, Shetkari
Sangharsh, was released in this conference. It was
decided to bring it out
regularly as a bimonthly. After discussion in district
delegations, it was
decided to enrol over 8000 subscribers to this journal in
advance. It was also
decided to enrol over three lakh members of the AIKS in Several
resolutions on important issues
were unanimously adopted. The drafts were circulated to
delegates in a 44-page
booklet. The
conference unanimously decided to
observe August 3 every year as Peasant Day all over Amidst
great enthusiasm, S R Pillai
felicitated four veteran leaders of AIKS who had devoted
their entire lives to
the cause --- L B Dhangar (Thane), Nanasaheb Pokle (Beed),
Sarangdhar Tanpure
(Ahmednagar) and Prabhakar Nagargoje (Beed). He also
felicitated two young
comrades, Irfan Shaikh (Nashik) and Sonu Kakwa (Thane),
for extraordinary work
in different areas of struggle. AIKS
state joint secretary Arjun Adey
placed the credentials report which had many interesting
features. Progressive
literature worth over Rs 20,000
was sold during the AIKS state conference; literature
worth an equal amount was
sold during the 23 district conferences of AIKS that took
place earlier. Also,
subscriptions worth over Rs 18,000 to progressive journals
were collected
during the state conference. The
conference unanimously elected a
77-member state council, which in turn unanimously elected
its office-bearers
--- president: Dada Raipure; working president: Arjun
Adey; general secretary:
Kisan Gujar; treasurer: Sanjay Thakur; vice presidents: L
B Dhangar, Dr Ashok
Dhawale, J P Gavit, Lahanu Kom, Rajaram Ozare, Nanasaheb
Pokle, Udayan Sharma,
Ghanashyam Patil, Jaisingh Mali, Ramkrishna Shere, Ratan
Budhar, Gunaji Gavit; joint
secretaries: Shankarrao Danav, Pandurang Rathod, Yashwant
Zade, Barkya Mangat,
Uddhav Poul, Manoj Kirtane, Dr Ajit Nawale, Sidhappa
Kalshetty, Hemant Waghere,
Irfan Shaikh, Radka Kalangda, Umesh Deshmukh, Dr R
Ramakumar. After
inspiring concluding speeches by the new
president Dada Raipure, veteran leader L B Dhangar, CKC
member Dr Ashok Dhawale
and outgoing president J P Gavit, leaders felicitated all
the activists and
volunteers of the AIKS, AIAWU, CITU, AIDWA, DYFI and SFI
from Amravati district
who had spared no efforts to make this conference a great
success, with rose
flowers amid resounding cheers and slogans. The state
conference of the AIKS thus
ended in an atmosphere of unity, enthusiasm and
determination.