People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 03 January 19, 2014 |
TRIPURA
SFI
Holds 18th State Conference
Haripada
Das
THE
entire country is aspiring for a pro-people alternative at
the centre, sans the
Congress and the BJP. The Congress party, at the helm of
power continuously for
two terms now, has utterly failed to address the basic
problems that pinch the
people most. Its neo-liberal policies have caused havoc to
the people’s
livelihood. However, the BJP, though it is trying to cash in
on the people’s
anger against the Congress misrule, is equally infamous
insofar as misrule and
corruption are concerned. We are striving to form a
government with an alternative
policy framework that may render relief to the common masses
from the stings of
neo-liberal policies and save the country’s secular fabric.
In this endeavour,
the struggling people of Tripura, including the students
community shall have
to play a vital role, highlighting the successes that have
been achieved by the
Left Front government in Tripura.
This
was the appeal made by Sitaram Yechury who was addressing an
impressive rally
on the occasion of the 18th Tripura state conference of the
Students Federation
of India (SFI) at
Apart
from Sitaram Yechury, the rally at the
Attaching
high importance to the ensuing Lok Sabha elections, Yechury
these elections
would decide which direction the country would take in the
coming days. If the
Scathingly
coming down upon the ruling Congress party that patronised
the unprecedented
corruption scams occurred during the UPA regime, Yechury no
less than five lakh
crore rupees have been misappropriated from the government
exchequer in several
mega scams whereas only 1.75 thousand crore rupees are
sufficient to implement
the Right to Education Act, provide nutritious food for all
the undernourished
children of the country and draw them inside the school
premises. While the UPA
government is denying universal rationing of essential goods
including rice and
wheat in the name of lack of resources, how is it that
billionaires were given tax
exemption of thousands of crores of rupees, Yechury
retorted. Our students must
not keep their eyes closed to these facts of our national
life, he urged.
Describing
the semi-fascist attacks on democracy in
Prior
to the rally, SFI leaders and delegates paid homage at the
martyrs’ column in
the lawns of the
In
the evening, the delegates session started. Altogether 539
delegates attended
the conference, representing from 19 subdivisions. In his
inaugurating speech,
the state’s higher education minister Bhanulal Saha said
students are the most
sensitive section of the society and that they should not be
mere money-making
tools. They should realise the problems of the people, the
problems in the
spread of education, why many shining students of the
country fail to access
high education, why universal education could not be
implemented after so many
years of independence, what is the implication of the
neo-liberal polices for
the education sector. Therefore while preparing their
lessons in schools, simultaneously
they should build up struggle for better educational
infrastructure for the coming
generations.
SFI
state secretary Nabarun Deb presented the
political-organisational report in
the first session of the conference. The report dealt with
the economic and cultural
aggression of imperialist powers and the surrender of the
UPA government that
is pursuing the neo-liberal policies. Regarding the state
situation, the report
said the Left Front government is working amidst
multifarious adversities
including financial constraints. Following the debacle faced
by the Left Front
in
On
the 11th afternoon, a programme named Fire
Dekha (Looking Back) was organised. Former leaders of
the undivided Students
Federation and of the subsequently formed SFI were invited
to interact in a
seminar on the day. Bijan Dhar (at present the CPI(M) state
secretary), Tapas
Datta (now DYFI
state president) and
others exchanged their experiences of the formative days of
the organisation with
the audience.
The
delegates discussed the report of the general secretary from
the first session
on January 11. In all, 32 delegates including seven girls
participated in the
discussion and raised valuable issues concerning the student
community. The
issues they raised included the scarcity of teaching staff
in subdivisional
colleges, increasing incidents of atrocities on women in the
country, poor health
services in remote areas etc. They pointed out some
weaknesses of the SFI
organisation in the state. The SFI has no access as yet in
many of the
institutions, they reported. The delegates also urged about
exposure of the
evil politics of some corporate media to detach the student
community from
politics on the plea they are learners. They also demanded
early passage of the
women’s bill in the parliament and expressed fraternity to
the fighting people
of
In
the last session on January 12, the SFI’s all-India general
secretary Ritubara
Banerjee urged the building up of a bigger countrywide
struggle for democratic
rights of students. The student community cannot attain
these rights without
fighting against the neo-liberal policies, he asserted.
With
a view to further strengthening the students movement, a
79-member state committee
was elected by the conference, and the state committee then
elected a 17-member
state secretariat. The conference bid farewell to 47 members
of the preceding state
committee and the new members gave them mementos. Nilanjana
Roy and Nabarun Deb
were re-elected president and secretary respectively.