WB ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS-2011

RE-ELECT LEFT FRONT GOVERNMENT OF WEST BENGAL FOR 8TH SUCCESSIVE TERM TO SAVE DEMOCRACY IN INDIA

Thursday, December 30, 2010

MAMATA' UNHOLY ALLIANCE WITH MAOISTS IS AN OPEN SECRET. YET P. CHIDAMBRAM APPEASES HER TO SAVE HIS CORRUPT GOVERNMENT. SHAME ON HIM.

D.O. No. 119-CM

December 28, 2010

Dear Shri Chidambram,

Kindly refer to your secret letter dated 21/22 December, 2010 which had been published in the media before it reached my office on 27.12.2010 at 11 A.M.

Your assessment of the situation in the State of West Bengal is surprising and is far from an impartial overview of the situation. Maoists have spread from across the bordering states and with the help of small section of local people are creating problems mostly in 28 police stations in three districts of West Bengal. They are trying to create their own areas of dominance. They are indiscriminately killing political opponents and even innocent people. They are attacking police stations, police camps and looting arms. They are also engaged in large scale extortions and other unlawful activities.

You are fully aware of these activities of the Maoists. The greatest challenge is how to contain the Maoists and defeat them finally both administratively and politically.

In recent times State and Central Police through their joint efforts have achieved major successes. Peace and normalcy have been restored in vast areas. People who were evicted earlier are going back to their homes. Govt/Panchayat office are functioning normally and so are the schools, markets and shops. Life is gradually coming back to normalcy in these areas but still we have problem in the areas bordering our state. Trinamool Congress which was earlier maintaining secret contacts with Maoist leaders and outfits are now openly organising meetings with them.

CPI (M) and it allies are trying their best to resist the Maoists by mobilizing people against them and in the process have lost more than 170 of their workers and leaders. Unfortunately, you are now blaming them for the present state of affairs. I am afraid it will divert the attention of all concerned who are struggling against Maoists, the greatest threat to our internal security.

As regards political clashes mentioned in your letter I would like to correct your figures. 32 Trinamool Congress supporters have been killed and 601 have suffered injuries while CPI (M) have lost 69 of their cadres and another 723 have been injured. Indian National Congress has lost one of their supporters and 111 have been injured during the period mentioned in your letter. I, however, agree that it is not a happy situation and I am doing my best to stop these senseless killings. I have repeatedly appealed to all the opposition parties to cooperate. All the parties except Trinamool Congress have come forward to cooperate. Trinamool Congress has refused to talk to administration. I am trying to disarm and demoblise all armed groups engaged in violence in some pockets of the state.

I strongly object to your using the word “Harmed” to mean the CPI (M) party workers without knowing the actual meaning of this nasty word coined by Trinamool Congress leaders.

More when we meet.

With regards,

Yours sincerely,
Sd/-
Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee


Shri P. Chidambram

Union Home Minister

New Delhi-110 001

Monday, December 27, 2010

PRAKASH KARAT: PROVIDE RELIEF TO AP FARMERS

Following is the text of the letter addressed by the CPI (M) general secretary Prakash Karat to the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on the serious situation facing the farmers in Andhra Pradesh on December 21:

I HAD recently spent a few days in Hyderabad and became aware of the serious situation facing the farmers in Andhra Pradesh. Due to heavy and excessive rainfall, there has been widespread damage to standing crops affecting at least 20 lakh acres of paddy and 10 lakh acres of cotton crops. Other commercial crops have also been affected.

It is distressing that there has been a spate of suicides by farmers due to the losses suffered by them. The state government has announced some measures which are totally inadequate to meet the situation. One of the steps taken is to increase the input subsidy by Rs 600 per acre making a total of Rs 2,400 which is meager and insufficient to compensate for the losses. Steps should be taken to see that tenant farmers get the benefits of the relief measures.

Immediate steps have to be taken for the procurement of discoloured paddy and a relaxation upto 25 per cent should be given. Similarly, relief has to be provided to weavers, fishermen, toddy tappers and other artisans by giving a daily allowance and compensation for loss of raw-material and implements.

In this connection, you must be aware that the former chief minister and Telugu Desam president Chandrababu Naidu has embarked on an indefinite hunger strike in support of the farmers’ demands which has entered the fifth day today.

Given the seriousness of the situation in Andhra Pradesh, it should be declared a national calamity. I request you to intervene and assist the state government to take the necessary steps to provide relief to the farmers and save agriculture in the state.

Source: www.pd.cpim.org/

Saturday, December 18, 2010

ASUTOSH COLLEGE, KOLKATA: BUTCHERS OF MAMATA BANERJEE DAMAGE PERMANENTLY THE EYES OF SOUVIK HAZRA


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KOLKATA: EYES OF SOUVIK HAZRA, A STUDENT OF ASUTOSH COLLEGE, SERIOUSLY DAMAGED BY BUTCHERS OF MAMATA BANERJEE

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KOLKATA: SWAPAN KOLAY OF ANDUL, HOWRH BRUTALLY MURDERED BY BUTCHERS OF MAMATA, MAHASWETA, ARUNDHATI AND MEDHA

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STUDENTS OF WEST BENGAL TO OBSERVE STRIKE ON 20-12-2010 AGAINST MURDER OF SWAPAN KOLAY BY BUTCHERS OF MAMATA BANERJEE

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NEW DELHI: CPI (M), CPI, FORWARD BLOCK AND REVOLUTIONARY SOCIALIST PARTY TO ORGANISE COUNTRY-WIDE PROTESTS AGAINST HIKE IN PETROL PRICE

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JHARGRAM: SUBHENDU ADHIKARI, MP & MAOIST INTELLECTUALS ANURADHA TALWAR, TARUN SANYAL ORGANISE HEARING.PEOPLE RESIST BUTCHERS PATRONISED BY THEM

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KOLKATA MUNICIPAL CORPORATION: CORPORATON EMPLOYEES RALLY ON DEMANDING SETTLEMENT OF THEIR LONG PENDING DEMANDS

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PANIHATI MUNICIPALITY: ASHOK BHATTACHARJEE, MUNICIPAL AFFAIRS MINISTER, INAUGURATES SEWARAGE PROJECT UNDER JNNURM SCHEME

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UDAYNARAYANPUR, HOWRAH: MASSIVE PROCESSIONS AND RALLIES AGAINST TERROR BEING CREATED BY BUTCHERS, RAPISTS, EXTORTIONISTS AND DACOITS OF MAMATA BANERJE

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ANDUL, HOWRAH: BRUTAL MURDER OF SWAPAN KOLAY BY BUTCHERS OF FASCIST MAMATA BANERJEE CRITICISED AT 17TH WORLD YOUTH CONFERENCE HELD AT JOHANNESBURG

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GANASHAKTI PATRIKA: A NEWSPAPER WHICH EXPOSES AND UNMASKS RIGHT REACTIONARIES AND AGENTS OF IMPERIALISTS WHO WANT TO INSTALL MAMATA AS CHIEF MINISTER


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JOHANNESBURG: 17TH WORLD YOUTH CONFERENCE




KOLKATA: STUDENTS STRIKE ON 20-12-2010 PROTESTING AGAINST BRUTAL MURDER OF SWAPAN KOLAY BY BUTCHERS OF MAMATA BANERJEE AND HER PERVERTED ALLIES


ANDUL, HOWRAH: BRUTAL MURDER OF SWAPAN KOLAY BY BUTCHERS OF MAMATA BANERJEE CRITICISED BY PEOPLE OF ALL SECTIONS IRRESPECTIVE OF AFFILIATION & COLOUR


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2365 FAMILIES GET LAND PATTAS AT JHARGRAM, BELPAHARI, BINPUR, SALBONI, GOALRTORE, SANKRAEL, NARAYANGARH, GARBETA, GOPIBALLAVPUR & KESHIYARI

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ANDUL, HOWRAH: MAA MATI MANUSH WANTS MORE AND MORE DEAD BODIES OF STUDENTS FOR ENABLING MAMATA BANERJEE TO SIT ON THE CHAIR OF CHIEF MINISTER


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BUTCHERS OF MAMATA BANERJEE HAVE EMPTIED LAPS OF 15 MOTHERS. MEDHA PATKAR, ARUNDHATI ROY AND MAHASWETA DEVI KEEP SILENCE TO SUPPORT THIS BRUTALITY.


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Thursday, December 9, 2010

ALL INDIA KISHAN SABHA DEMANDS MSP FOR PADDY & SUGARCANE

The following is the press statement issued by AIKS on November 24

THE All India Kisan Sabha notes with concern that despite repeated demands for providing remunerative prices for sugarcane, the Congress-led UPA government has been indifferent to them. Ironically termed “Fair and Remunerative Price” under the new system, in reality the prices are neither fair nor remunerative. Certain states which have fixed higher prices are facing a situation where the mill owners are refusing to pay the state advised price (SAP) citing the centrally fixed prices to be their only obligation. Crushing has not been taken up in sugar mills in Uttar Pradesh and the mill owners went to Allahabad High Court challenging the SAP. The central government is fully responsible for precipitating such a situation and putting farmers who are not getting fair and remunerative prices into further distress. As sugar mills are not taking up crushing farmers are also not able to clear their fields for beginning the sowing operations for the Rabi crop. AIKS demands stringent action against the erring sugar mill owners and immediate steps to begin crushing. Sugarcane prices should be fixed at a minimum of Rs 300/Qtl to make sugarcane cultivation a viable proposition.

AIKS also notes that the MSP for paddy has been repeatedly fixed way below the expectations of the farmers and not in keeping with the Dr Swaminathan Commission’s recommendations of C2+50 per cent. The present centrally fixed MSP is merely Rs 1000/Qtl while the market price is much higher. There is also a dearth of paddy procurement/purchasing centres in most states and the farmers are being denied even the MSP. Many states are witnessing a situation wherein the absence of procurement/purchasing centres is giving a free hand to private players who pay the farmers far below even the already low MSP. We demand that the MSP for paddy should be fixed at Rs 1500/Qtl for common and Rs 1600/Qtl for Grade A. The centre as well as state governments should take immediate steps to expand the network of paddy procurement centres and rectify the anomalies in payment of MSP to farmers.

We call upon the AIKS units to remain vigilant and unite the peasantry in protest against any effort to compromise farmers’ interests.

Source: People’s Democracy

Sunday, October 31, 2010

THE UNIVERSITIES FOR INNOVATION BILL 2010: ALTERNATIVE ROUTE TO FOREIGN UNIVERSITIES - Vijender Sharma

THE union ministry of human resource development has circulated a draft of the Universities for Innovation Bill 2010 in the middle of this year. Under the provisions of this bill, universities for innovation will be established with full public funding, private funding or in public-private partnership. These universities are intended to make India the global knowledge hub and will set benchmarks for excellence for other central and state universities. These universities will be based on different themes, focussing on one area or problem of significance to India.

These universities will be set up not through acts of Parliament, but through signing of memoranda of agreement (MoA) between the central government and the private promoters, companies, trusts or foreign universities established outside India for at least fifty years and recognised as amongst the ‘foremost’ universities of the world. Specific norms about the credibility of these promoters or even for the scrutiny of their MoAs have not been provided. Thus the bill provides tremendous freedom to private promoters or predators in higher education.

UNFETTERED FREEDOM

The memorandum of agreement of each university for innovation will include its name and location, the areas of studies, the capital investment plan for its establishment, the sources of financing the capital investment and the financial contribution of the central government, and the constitution of the board of governors. The central government will publish every memorandum of agreement in the official gazette to take effect. The MoA will be laid before each house of parliament.

The universities for innovation will have all-India jurisdictions with freedom to establish campuses anywhere in India and foreign countries. It is expected that they will provide teaching and research facilities of standards comparable or superior to the best universities in the world. These universities will enjoy unfettered freedom.

They will be free to evolve their own admission criteria, determine the nomenclature of their degrees and other academic distinctions awarded by them irrespective of the provisions of UGC Act, decide their own fee structure and other charges, appoint teachers, and determine their salary and service conditions. They will also be free to appoint faculty by invitation and give them differential salary and perks. At least half of the students admitted to these universities will have to be Indian citizens and the rest could be foreign. Thus the cap of additional 15 per cent of seats for foreign students set by the UGC will not be applicable to these universities.

Each university for innovation will establish a university endowment fund with such initial corpus as provided in the MoA. Therefore, different universities will have different initial corpus funds. These so called not-for-profit legal entities will not be under the purview of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG). They will appoint their own auditors. They will have all financial powers for acquiring and disposing properties. This provision gives indication that these universities will actually be profit-making entities.

EXEMTED FROM ACCOUNTABILITY

The universities for innovation would enjoy complete autonomy in the constitution of the board of governors, the members of which will be appointed or nominated as provided in the MoA. There will be no nominee of the government on the board of governors despite the fact that the central government will be funding them. However, at least one-third of its members will be from teachers or officers of the concerned university for innovation. The board of governors will have freedom to appoint academic board, schools of studies, etc.

While enjoying full autonomy --- academic, management and financial, these universities will have no accountability. They will have full freedom to determine and receive payment of fees and other charges for instruction and other services provided by them. The standards of teaching and research are expected to be higher than the minimum standards determined by the statutory regulatory body in the relevant field. Where no standards have been determined, the standards have to be equivalent or higher than the standards of the best international universities, about which nothing is provided in the bill.

Giving all information about standards and fee etc on the website is enough of their accountability. If any dispute arises between such a university and the statutory regulatory authority with regard to the standards, etc, it will be referred to a committee of three persons and not even to the much trumpeted educational tribunals. Such a committee will include one person each nominated by the concerned innovation university and statutory regulatory authority while the third person will be nominated by another innovation university. Thus the representatives from the innovation universities will be in a majority. The decision of the committee will be final and binding.

AUTONOMY OVER APPOINTMENTS

Apart from other functions, the board of governors will decide the annual budget estimates, qualifications and other eligibility criteria and the processes for appointment to the posts of vice chancellor, professors emeritus, professors, associate professors, assistant professors and other officers. The chancellor of each university for innovation will be appointed by the promoter. The board of governors will choose the vice chancellor who could even be a foreign academician.

The board of governors of any university for innovation shall have the autonomy to enact, by statutes, its own policy to attract the highly qualified and talented academics having sufficient teaching or research experience from any part of the country or abroad, and to offer them emoluments and perks commensurate with their standing. This will include appointment by invitation of any person to accept the post of professor or associate professor and appointment by invitation of any graduating student with high academic distinction demonstrating exceptional talent for research as assistant professor on any terms and conditions. However, such assistant professors cannot be more than 20 per cent of the total sanctioned posts of assistant professors.

PRIVATE VARSITIES FINANCED BY CENTRE

These universities will be exempt from reservation. However, the central government will give grants to each university for funding research, fellowships and
scholarships for the socially and economically disadvantaged students. The central government’s public funding will be in the form of land, contributions to capital investment, grants for supporting research, and the promotion and development of higher education. The funding of universities of innovation by the central government will be the part of the MoA, as pointed out above.

These universities will be known as the institutions of national importance with full autonomy in all respects. These will be private universities financed by the central government. The central government will have neither general nor social control over them. The promoters will have their own agenda and vision, without any importance to national concerns. These universities will be for the elite and middle class of the country squeezing the requirements of higher education system in general and students in particular.

Each university will disclose to the central government about the new research leading to an intellectual property and apply for its protection. The government will pass on all profits or royalty earned to the university from such intellectual property, and it will be shared with the creator of the property.

These universities will give their annual reports to the board of governors only and not to the central government. There is no provision in the draft bill under which the central government can inspect the affairs and functioning of these universities.

PROMOTING COMMERCIALISATION


The wide-ranging freedom available to these universities, like differential salaries to teachers and fee and other charges, etc, will set an example for all other institutions of higher education in the country to demand such freedom. Such freedom will only help private promoters, companies and foreign universities seeking to take advantage of the provisions of this draft bill.

Before it is presented before both houses of the parliament, the central government will publish the MoA of a university of innovation in the official gazette to take effect. There are no provisions in the bill for regulation of its admission with regard to reservation, courses, fees, examinations, service conditions and appointments of the teaching and non-teaching staffs. There is no provision under which the central government or any regulatory authority can inspect the affairs of these universities. Thus the central government has neither general nor social control over these universities.

These universities will be outside the jurisdiction of the CAG. There will be no member of the central government on the board of governors. Any dispute between the statutory regulatory authority and the university of innovation in relation to standards only will be referred to a committee, not even to the proposed tribunals, the decision of which will be final and binding. There is no remedy proposed in the bill in relation to the disputes between students, teachers and other staff on the one hand and the universities of innovation on the other. Thus while funding these universities, the central government will have no control over them.

The ministry of human resource development (MHRD) has forgotten that great universities are not established; they grow to greatness. All universities are institutions for innovation. The government could only make some norms for world-class universities which could not be established overnight but evolve over time.

It appears that this draft bill provides an alternative route of the Foreign Educational Institutions (FEI) Bill 2010 to foreign universities and private players for establishing their campuses in India. They will not be required to acquire the discredited deemed universities status. This alternative route is going to give them greater power, freedom and prestige, with the removal of most of the restrictions that are proposed in the foreign educational institutions bill.
With the new agenda of the government in the name of expanding higher education and a series of bills, our higher education system is being thrown in to the hands of private players --- both local and foreign --- for the trade in and all-round privatisation and commercialisation of higher education. We have to force the government of India to protect education from these predators. For that purpose, let all the stakeholders, viz. students, teachers, non-teaching employees and officers of schools, colleges and universities, youth, parents, people’s science movement, etc converge in Delhi on December 2, 2010 to make the rally called by the national forum in defence of education a grand success.

Source: www.pd.cpim.org
Vol. XXXIV, No. 44, October 31, 2010

Friday, October 22, 2010

SUPREME SACRIFICES OF MARTYRS BENEFIT THE POOREST OF THE POOR

IN a choked voice, young Ravi Kumar Singh narrates to us how his father was brutally hacked to death by landlord criminals as he was returning from a meeting. A few seconds later, his words become not only steady but are laced with determination: “I tell my uncles and others to work hard for the CPI (M) which is fighting for the poor. I also want to work to fulfil my father's dream”. This young boy is presently studying in IX class in Delhi, staying at his relatives house. He was in his native village, Sakhmohan, for Dusshera holidays when we met him.

Ravi Kumar's father, Virender Pratap Singh, was a member of the CPI (M) Samastipur district committee and elected mukhiya (president) of the block when he was killed by the landlord-criminal Tun Tun Singh's goons on May 16, 2008. Virender Singh was in the forefront of struggles led by the CPI (M), AIKS and AIAWU for distribution of land to the landless. So dear he was to the people of Sakhmohan and surrounding villages in the block that most people did not cook for two days following his death. Thousands of people turned out to pay homage to the martyred leader. The son wonders how such a nice person working for the benefit of the poor could be killed. He is trying to seek answers whenever he comes to the village during holidays by trying to know more about the work of his father and the Party to which he belonged.

This family played an important role in building the CPI (M) in these areas. Virender Pratap Singh's elder brother, Udayshankar Prasad Singh, was one of the key leaders of CPI (M) who fought against social and feudal oppression in Sakhmohan village. Along with others, he strengthened the Party in these areas by waging militant struggles against the landlords. In 1978 he was CPI (M) candidate in the panchayat elections along with two others in Narhan and Pathelia villages – all three villages being the strongholds of CPI (M) and being contested for the first time. Udayshankar Prasad was brutally killed by the landlords while campaigning in that election. Both the brothers were district committee members of the Party at the time of their death.

Not just from this family, 22 other CPI (M) leaders and activists have also been martyred so far in Samastipur district while waging land struggles, particularly after the Party launched the land struggle in a big way in 1993. Among them included CPI (M) state secretariat member and AIAWU state general secretary, Ramnath Mahato, killed in the same Sakhmohan village. Scores of others have been injured in this class struggle.

That such supreme sacrifices have not gone in vain was clear when we visited Gangouli village, around 6 km away from Sakhmohan. There was a cluster of around 40 thatched houses, each with a small courtyard in front and back. Living in these houses were the poorest of the poor. Most of them were Musahars, the most backward among dalits whose main source of living has been piggery. There were also Dushads, another dalit sub-caste, Yadavs and some other backward caste people. These downtrodden people built their modest huts on land wrested from the landlord Baleshwar Babu under the leadership of the CPI (M). Ramnath Mahato, Virender Pratap Singh and others stood with these poor when the landlords tried to reclaim the land.

Shyam Pari, a 50 year old dalit woman living in this cluster, said “We would have been ousted from here but for the strong support of the CPI (M). Once the landlord's people tried to burn our huts to evict us. They also resorted to firing in which one constable posted in the police picket in village died”.

Along with Shyam Pari, 1300 more such poor dalit and other downtrodden sections people have benefited in the form of house sites from the consistent land struggles waged by the CPI (M) in this region. This fact would definitely give satisfaction to young Ravi Kumar, who, while we were parting, had this advice to give to all CPI (M) members: “If you are in the CPI (M), work hard for the Party”.

N S Arjun from Samasthipur

Courtesy:
www.pd.cpim.org
Vol. XXXIV, No. 43, October 24, 2010

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

COMMONWEALTH GAMES IN THE TIME OF DENGUE - Amit Sen Gupta

THERE are genuine reasons for the nation to exult as India showcased its capabilities through the truly spectacular opening ceremony of the Commonwealth Games in Delhi. A nation, reeling from the continuous disclosures of ineptitude and corruption in the run up to the Games, breathed a collective sigh of relief. There will be occasion later to make sense of why a country, supposedly poised to take its place among the most developed nations of the world, should have made such a complete mess of the preparations for the Games. Notwithstanding how many accolades the organisation of the Games are able to now garner, the fact remains that the Kalmadis and their ilk have not shamed themselves – they have shamed a proud country and its people. They have, through their acts, allowed the country to be subjected to ridicule, some of which were thinly veiled examples of persisting racist prejudices.

THE CLEANSING OF DELHI

This column, however, is not about the Commonwealth Games. It is about another Delhi – a city where people live, work and die. A city where the working people are expected to be used but not to be either seen or heard. For Delhi is a city where the poor have been banished to the periphery, so that the rich and the affluent are not faced with the moral dilemma of having to constantly contrast their plush lifestyles with those who make Delhi function. Mercifully, Mumbai, Kolkata or Chennai still do not offer them this option – the poor still retain some rights to share the same physical space as the sons and daughters of ‘Shining India’. But Delhi has been almost entirely cleansed of its poor – at least from places where the gaze of the rest of the world is likely to be focused. This started many years before the Games, beginning with the Emergency and then with the move to relocate industries and workers from the centre of the city. The Games has been but another excuse to further sanitise the city.

The grand facades that welcome visitors to the Games do not stand testimony to the efforts of the now completely discredited Organising Committee of the Games – they are a creation of the blood and sweat of tens of thousands of workers who were brought into the city to showcase modern India’s accomplishments. Curiously, it is these people who the Delhi Government is desperate to hide. The attempts at denying that poor working people actually constitute a majority of the city’s population would have been comic were it not for the tragedy that it hides. The past few weeks have witnessed frenzied attempts to drive away the poor in the few remaining pockets in the centre of the city, where they still lived. Newspapers have reported how the police and administration held out threats of dire consequences to force migrant workers – who built the Games infrastructure – to leave the city. Those who could not be driven out are hidden from view behind giant cutouts that welcome visitors to the city. The city seems to be under a virtual siege and bus services used by the working people to commute to the city centre have been withdrawn for reasons difficult to understand.

The poor are much more magnanimous than the rich and famous that they are forced to serve. They do not grudge the fact that a few shall have a place in the sun at their behest. They are proud to be Indians and want to see the nation of 1.2 billion people take its rightful place among the community of nations. They are even willing to overlook the severe disruptions in their daily lives caused by the conduct of the Games – for they do not have the luxury to go on an extended holiday as some of the rich and famous have declared their intentions to. All they however would like, is to be seen, and acknowledged, and heard. For they have stories to tell that completes the picture of the real India.

DENGUE EPIDEMIC IN DELHI

As the cacophony regarding the Games reaches a crescendo, something else -- that has affected the life of ordinary citizens in the city -- has been quietly buried. Few in the media even care to report any more that Delhi is experiencing one of the severest epidemics in recent decades. Talk to people in Delhi and everybody knows of some friend or relative who’s suffering from dengue fever. While official figures peg the number of cases of Dengue to about three thousand, the real numbers would be anything between 10-100 times that.

Dengue has been a constant companion of the citizens of Delhi. Every year, after the monsoon showers, Delhi welcomes the onset of a Dengue epidemic. We also know that the severe epidemics are seen in cycles of 3-4 years, ie, while every season sees a number of Dengue cases, there is a sharp spike every 3-4 years. There is a reason why this happens, but it has nothing, unfortunately, to do with any public health efforts by the Delhi government. Like all epidemics, the dengue epidemic starts slowing down when a sufficient number of people have been infected by the virus as those affected get immunity to the disease -- known as “herd immunity”. After a lapse of 3-4 years the effect of this herd immunity weakens and the epidemic is seen in a more severe form.

Dengue is a viral disease transmitted by mosquitoes. The reason why Dengue epidemics occur just after the rains is twofold. First, rainwater collection promotes mosquito breeding. Further, moderate temperatures in the monsoon season provides optimum conditions for both mosquitoes to breed and survive and for the virus to thrive. This is also why the epidemic starts petering out as winter sets in – Delhi’s harsh winter acting as a deterrent to both mosquito breeding and the transmission of the virus.

While in most people Dengue runs a relatively benign course, with a few days of fever and pains, in a small percent of those affected it can acquire a much more severe and life threatening form. In these patients there is a sudden drop in a kind of blood cells, called platelets that are vital for the clotting of blood. When the number of platelets fall below a certain level, the person affected can have spontaneous bleeding from different sites of the body. If not treated in a hospital setting such patients can die due to blood loss or other complications. This form of Dengue – called Dengue hemorrhagic fever – affects children and adolescents more than others, but other age groups can also be affected. The reason why Dengue patients have to be treated with extreme care is that there is no way to anticipate which of the infected patients will eventually get Dengue hemorrhagic fever. Consequently, all Dengue patients need to be observed carefully for symptoms of Dengue hemorrhagic to be expressed.

DELHI GOVT’S MASTERLY INACTIVITY

This is why a Dengue epidemic is a major public health problem. Unfortunately, the Delhi government has mastered a unique manner of addressing this problem – every Dengue season the government goes into a state of masterly inactivity! The reason for this lies in the almost total lack of a public health system in the city – not just health facilities but other public health measures such as mosquito control, sanitation, etc. Delhi’s health system, is afflicted with the same malaise that affects the entire country’s public health system. Every year, during the dengue season, we see ritual pronouncements about public health measures being undertaken such as spraying of mosquito repellants, and destruction of breeding sites. Clearly, such measures are far too inadequate. Moreover such measures do not have a major impact once an epidemic is established – they have to be continued throughout the year. Unfortunately every year is a new experience for the Delhi government, having learnt nothing from the experiences of previous years!

When an epidemic does get established, it is natural that a large number would be affected – not a few thousand as the government claims but tens of thousands. Again it is important to understand what the figures the Delhi government really means. There is no legal requirement to notify Dengue cases – so an overwhelming number of cases are never notified. This is especially so for the private sector, where a majority of Delhi’s citizens seek care, given the very poor state of public facilities. Second, Dengue can be conclusively diagnosed only through an expensive test for the antigen of the virus. A very large majority of people, who contract Dengue, are not tested for this antigen. In other words, the reported number of cases are those that by some miracle actually get reported. This failure is a failure of health surveillance – a necessary requirement for any epidemic control mechanism is a public health system.

The story does not end here. The Dengue season is a bonanza for the private health system. Private hospitals rake in huge amounts as people flock to these facilities, in the absence of public health services. Most of these facilities pump unnecessary drugs into Dengue patients though the disease runs its own course and does not respond to antibiotics. In a functioning health system almost all Dengue patients could be cared for at home under the care of a primary care physician. Those that would eventually require hospitalisation (a small fraction of all dengue patients) can be detected in time if they are monitored by the health system. In the absence of such a system incidence of expensive hospitalisation is much greater than what it should be.

Before we finish let us once again return to the Games. It is estimated that the total expenditure on the Games was twice that of the annual public expenditure on health in the entire country. We contrast these two figures, not as an argument for not organising the Games. But it is definitely an argument for balancing the need to showcase “shining India” with the need to address the needs of the real India! The Delhi government’s negligence of the Dengue epidemic is but a small example of the systematic and deliberate neglect of the needs of an overwhelming majority of people in this country.

Courtesy: www.pd.cpim.org

Saturday, October 2, 2010

CASTE BIAS OF INDIA INC EXPOSED, WILL THE GOVERNMENT ACT? - G Mamatha

THE UPA-I government in its Common Minimum Programme in 2004 had promised to provide reservations for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in the private sector. Even after six years, it has failed to implement its promise, which betrays a lack of political will in providing social justice.

Last week, there were reports in the newspapers that the leaders of the corporate houses have categorically rejected the idea of reservations in the private sector and have conveyed the same to the prime minister’s office. The Indian Express dated September 27 carried a report under the heading, ‘India Inc to PMO: Can't Reserve Jobs, Hurts Merit,’ which said Corporate India, led by the presidents of the country’s three biggest industry lobbies, CII, FICCI and Assocham, have told the prime minister’s office that they will not be able to reserve five per cent jobs for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.

The corporate chiefs rejected the idea of reservations because they do not want any interference of the government in their affairs, including the hiring process and procedures. These champions of the neo-liberal policies want the government to abdicate all its responsibilities towards the people. But, they have no shame in demanding the government to act pro-actively in their favour, be it from rescuing them from the recent crisis, offering bail-out packages or doling out ‘incentives’!

The industrial houses that have immensely benefited from the 'reservations' provided to them in the name of protection by the government are arguing against reservations now. They do not think twice when demanding incentives and tax holidays in their competition with foreign players in the ‘market’ even in this era of ‘globalisation’. For them, this is the level playing field, but the same is not true for the unprivileged sections of our society who genuinely need reservations and government support. Irony can never get better.

The corporate leaders say they will voluntarily do the needful for providing employment to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and they should not be bound by reservations. But, as various studies show, caste based discrimination exists in the private sector hiring process. The results of field experiments and studies published in Blocked by caste: Economic Discrimination in Modern India, edited by Sukhadeo Thorat and Katherine S Newman found that low caste applicants who are equally or better qualified than higher caste applicants are significantly less likely to pass through hiring screens among private employers in the modern formal sector in India. In an interview based study of human resource managers responsible for hiring practises in 25 Indian firms, it was found that managers bring to the hiring processes a set of stereotypes that makes it difficult for low caste applicants to succeed in the competition for jobs. They face attitudinal barriers that subject them to negative stereotypes that may overwhelm their formal accomplishments in the eyes of employers.

The study says, “The empirical evidence presented contends that discrimination is not merely a problem of the past or an incidental force creating inequality, but an active agent in the growing gaps between those at the top and those at the bottom of the Indian society. It unfolds the role that systemic discrimination plays to explain low and high caste gaps in educational attainment, occupational segregation, access to capital assets and employment, and income polarisation. It provides the evidence of discrimination – induced / linked deprivation and poverty of the excluded social groups.”

“People who hold privileged positions within large organisations develop a sense that a certain kind of person is especially effective in their roles, leading many managers to favour potential recruits who are socially similar to themselves, a process that has termed been termed as ‘homosocial reproduction’. Conversely, employers hold stereotypes about certain out-groups as being unsuitable for an employment…. A person’s social networks prove important for finding jobs at the professional end and at a blue-collar end of the labour market, because social networks often run along status group lines, sponsoring people who are like us.” Therefore, unless it is legally enacted to provide job reservations for the SC/STs in the private sector, no matter what the good intentions and voluntary efforts are, they will not actually be implemented in practise.

The corporate leaders while refusing to implementing reservations have also spelt out that these would effect competitiveness and endanger merit. As pointed out in the earlier study, “The belief in merit is only sometimes accompanied by a truly ‘caste blind’ orientation. Instead, we see the commitment to merit voiced alongside convictions that merit is distributed by caste or region, and, hence, the qualities of individuals fade from view, replaced by stereotypes that, at best, will make it harder for a highly qualified low-caste job applicant to gain recognition for his/her skills and accomplishments. At worst, they will be excluded simply by virtue of birthright. Under these circumstances, one must take the profession of deep belief in meritocracy with a heavy dose of salt.”

It suggested that anti-discrimination law is required to insist on the actual implementation of caste-blind policies of meritocratic hiring and question the common and accepted practices of assessing family background as a hiring qualification, for it may amount to another way of discovering caste.

The study also questions how merit is produced in the first place. It says, “The distribution of credentials, particularly in the form of education, is hardly a function of individual talent alone. It reflects differential investment in public schools, health care, nutrition, and the like. Institutional discrimination of this kind sets up millions of low-caste Indians for a lifetime of poverty and disadvantage. As long as the playing field is this tilted, there can be no real meaning to meritocracy conceived of as a fair tournament.”

Merit makes little sense in a society based on the inheritance of private property, and privilege related to birth. Logically, merit is at best a measure of an individual's movement from a given starting-point to an end-point within a definite trajectory. And as Lyndon Johnson, in a famous speech in 1965 that laid the foundations for the Affirmative Action in US says, “You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains, bring him to the starting line in a race and then say, 'you are free to compete with all others'. It is not enough just to open the gates of opportunity. All our citizens must have the ability to walk through those gates”, until the day that institutional investments are fairly distributed, policy alternatives will be needed to ensure the upliftment of the downtrodden and marginalised sections of our society.

It is noteworthy that many universities that are globally rated highly - and only two Indian institutions rank among the world's top 500, according to a Shanghai University survey - consciously promote a diverse mix of cultures, languages and social and ethnic backgrounds through aggressive affirmative action.. They admit students not because they are "bright", but because they are "interesting" and can contribute to diversity. Diversity has not lowered the ranks of Harvard, Oxford, the Sorbonne or London School of Economics. Thirty-seven per cent of Harvard's students are people of colour.

Therefore, India Inc must be made to realise that providing reservations to the marginalised sections will not hurt them, but on the contrary, will add to the enrichment of their work output and experience.

The UPA government makes a lot of noise about inclusive growth. It must realise that growth with inclusiveness requires a concerted effort, backed by legal protection against caste based discrimination in the form of law, and specific legal measures to implement reservations for the SC/STs in private sector and remove the barriers that prejudice generates on a daily basis for the majority of people in this country. These interim relief measures should be of course, followed by strengthening the public sector, ensuring job security and implementing land reforms.

Source: www.pd.cpim.org

Friday, October 1, 2010

MASS MEETING AT KAJORA, ANDAL

10TH OCTOBER, 2010

MASS MEETING AT KAJORA MELA MAIDAN, KAJORA UNDER PS ANDAL, BURDWAN AGAINST RISING PRICES, DISINVESTMENT IN PUBLIC SECTOR UNDERTAKINGS, PRIVATISATION OF COAL INDUSTRY, FOR REVIVAL OF SICK INDUSTRIES AND IN SUPPORT OF PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM

SPEAKERS: COM. BUDDHADEB BHATTACHARJEE, CHIEF MINISTER OF WEST BENGAL, COM. BANSA GOPAL CHOWDHURY, MP AND OTHERS

JOIN THE MEETING IN MILLIONS

SFI WINS IN TWO-THIRD COLLEGES OF WEST MIDNAPUR DESPITE MAOIST-MAMATA TERROR

CLICK TO ENLARGE

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

JULY 5 HARTAL: A BIG SUCCESS - Prakash Karat

EVERYONE, except the Congress party, accepts that the July 5 all India hartal was a big success. The hartal affected all parts of the country – from Manipur in the North East to Jammu in the North West and from Kerala in the South to Himachal Pradesh in the North. This response came from the people who are fed up with the ever increasing price rise of food and essential commodities. Ever since the UPA-II government came into office, there has been no respite from price rise.

The last straw was the second successive hike in petrol, diesel and cooking gas prices within three months. This time, kerosene was also not spared. On top of this has come the deregulation of petrol pricing which will mainly benefit the private oil companies and put consumers at the mercy of the market.

All the justifications by the government for increasing the prices of petroleum products and deregulating them have been exposed as untrue. India has the highest petrol price in the region which is due to high taxation. The government revenue keeps increasing exponentially with every price hike. The public sector oil companies are making profits and the so-called under recoveries are only notional. The price hikes will fuel inflation which is already in double digit figures and erode any possibility of providing food security.

The success of the hartal has led to the usual criticism – that the economy has suffered a loss of thousands of crores of rupees. This cry is being raised by the very quarters who have received tax concessions worth thousands of crores in the last budget and who are being promised more in the Direct Taxes Code to be promulgated shortly. Taxes foregone through various exemptions to the corporate sector alone amounted to Rs. 80 thousand crore in 2009-10.

The other attack is on the Left. The Congress has accused the Left of joining hands with the BJP. The corporate media is amusingly concerned about the ideological purity of the CPI (M). They are railing against the opportunism of the Left for combining with the Right.

The politics of the CPI (M) and its stand against communalism is well-known. The role played by the CPI (M) and the Left in countering the communal politics represented by the BJP and defending secularism is consistent. It does not suffer from the vacillations and compromises which the Congress is prone to.

The bogey of the Left joining hands with the communal forces is being raised to divert attention from the main issue. The CPI (M) has opposed the petroleum pricing policies of successive governments. During the United Front government when a policy announcement was made regarding deregulation, the CPI (M) had strongly objected to it. The Party had pointed out what steps should be taken to reduce the oil pool deficit. The United Front government could not implement this policy as it did not last long after the notification. However, deregulation was implemented by the NDA government in 2002 by dismantling the Administered Price Mechanism (APM). The CPI (M) opposed the policy and conducted agitations against the price hikes of petroleum products. The deregulation policy was discontinued in 2004.

Now too, the Manmohan Singh government’s decision to deregulate petroleum prices will be met with strong opposition from the CPI (M).

After the announcement in the Union Budget of increase in excise and customs duties on petrol and diesel, the Left parties took the initiative and 13 parties met and gave a call for an all India hartal on April 27. This was the first major all India protest action against price rise after the UPA-II government came into office.

Disregarding the protests of the entire opposition inside Parliament and outside, the Congress-led government has now callously taken further steps to increase the burdens on the people through another round of price hikes. This is accompanied by its refusal to make policy changes which will help curb price rise. This is the issue on which the Left parties along with seven other parties – the Samajwadi Party, AIADMK, TDP, BJD, JD(S), INLD and AGP – decided to give a call for the July 5 hartal. Faced with such a big attack on the people’s livelihood, no opposition party could keep away from an all India protest. Other opposition parties, mainly the NDA, also gave a call for a bandh.

Even the RJD and the LJP, which support the UPA government, have given a call for a bandh on July 10 in Bihar.

Faced with this massive opposition and protest, the Congress party and its supporters in the corporate media are now raising in chorus the spectre of a “Left-BJP unity”. They conveniently ignore the fact that almost all the secular opposition parties have conducted the hartal.

The people are not going to be confused by the talk of a “Left-BJP” combination. They are going to judge each political party by how sincerely they protect their interests in the face of this onslaught through price hikes. The Trinamul Congress has been stripped off all its pretensions of defending the people’s interests by being part of the Central government and going along with these anti-people measures.

As far as the CPI (M) and the Left parties are concerned, such politically motivated propaganda will not deter them. The struggle against price rise and the government’s harmful petroleum pricing policies will have to be intensified further. The Convention held by the Left parties has already called for a campaign on food security and price rise in the month of August. This campaign should lay the basis for next phase of the struggle. In the meantime, the Left parties will, in coordination with the secular opposition parties, take up the price hikes of petroleum products in Parliament in the forthcoming monsoon session. Along with that, all these parties will consult on how to widen and develop the movement outside.

Courtesy: www.pd.cpim.org

FDI IN ORGANISED RETAIL: A LOSE-LOSE GAME - Raghu

THE UPA government is once again attempting to completely open up the retail sector to foreign direct investment including, possibly, 100 per cent FDI in organised multi-brand retail or supermarket chains. The department of industrial policy and promotion has issued a discussion paper on this subject, significantly without suggesting any upper limit on FDI. Currently, FDI is permitted up to 26 per cent under the automatic route in wholesale so-called cash-and-carry operations and up to 51 per cent with government approval in single-brand stores such as Nike shoes, Levi jeans or Calvin Klein readymades. These measures have been welcomed by industry, and seen by critics as the thin end of the wedge. Opening up the retail sector in India to foreign players has been a gradual process but the end-goal has always been clear, namely the unfettered entry into India of global supermarket chain stores such as Wal-Mart of the US, Carrefour of France, Marks & Spencer and Tesco of UK, Shoprite of South Africa and so on, all of whom have already established a substantial presence in India. The Indian retail market, with its burgeoning middle-class with growing purchasing power has, after the opening up of China, long been considered the last major frontier of globalised retail.

From the beginning these moves have been totally opposed by the Left and other progressive sections. Opposition has also come, albeit somewhat two-facedly, from the BJP with one eye on corporate interests and another on its major constituency of small traders who are deeply apprehensive. Arguments against have mostly centered around the potential adverse impact on the mostly unorganised small retail sector of so-called mom-and-pop stores (in India more often father-and-son stores) and the likely large-scale loss of employment in this sector. These arguments have been dismissed by proponents as being purely ideological and as going against modern trends and the opinions of experts.

Arguments advanced in support of this policy by corporate houses including Indian retail chains, business associations, consultancy firms and government officials have revolved around two major propositions which, this article would show, are complete myths.

First, huge wastage in the agri-produce supply chain in India will be avoided because MNC retail giants would make the huge investments required in storage, cold-chain and transportation infrastructure and also bring in new technologies. Second, the farmer in particular would benefit from this improved efficiency and by the elimination of middle-men, the customer too ultimately benefiting through better quality produce and lower prices. A win-win scenario advanced as the gospel truth.

On the contrary, international experience has shown that, except for the huge profits raked in by the supermarket chains, organised retail has been a lose-lose scenario for farmers, small traders and wholesalers, consumers, and the environment and therefore society as a whole.

FOOD WASTE IN SUPERMARKETS

India is the world’s second largest producer of fruits and vegetables in the world after China, producing around 180 million tonnes. Official estimates are that about 25-30 per cent of this produce goes waste between harvest and consumption. In theory, if fresh produce is collected efficiently at the farm-gate, and end-to-end cold-chain is maintained in storage and transportation till it reaches supermarket shelves as in developed countries, this wastage can be eliminated, translating into better prices for the farmer and lower prices for the consumer besides greater availability of the produce for processing, export and other value-addition. In practice, a very different story emerges from the West.

In the US, official data show 27-33 per cent of food being wasted between farm and consumer during collection, storage, distribution and consumption! Of course, this also includes the horrendous amount of food waste generated in households and restaurants, but the amount of wastes within the distribution system is not much less.

Supermarkets themselves in the US are estimated to throw away $20 billion (Rs 95,000 crores) worth of food every year, more than twice as much as in the EU. Huge quantities of fresh fruit, vegetables and meats are routinely thrown away by supermarkets every day partly from fear of spoilage but also simply because they appear unappealing to consumers. Food products constitute 63 per cent of a supermarket’s waste, according to a study by the California Integrated Waste Management Board. The logic of supermarkets dictates that they stock and display huge quantities of fresh produce, unsold stocks being simply thrown away. Supermarkets also compete with each other on the quality of their produce. This requires bulk suppliers to conduct ruthless sorting, throwing away otherwise edible but unappealing produce. In fact in the EU, prior to 2009 when a new policy came into effect, supermarkets were required by law to discard misshaped fruit and vegetables!

Supermarkets in the EU and USA are now being motivated to dispose of their wastes in an environment-friendly way in sanitary landfills or even through gasification or converting to manure, which can also generate some revenues although, of course, it would have been far better if food had not been allowed to become trash in the first place.


And all this is only with respect to fresh produce. The supermarket culture of course also encourages packaged, pre-cooked or semi-cooked foods with expiry dates, huge quantities of which again get thrown away by supermarkets each year because of over-stocking. Pre-packaging of groceries and other food items also leads to huge accumulation of packaging material which has to be discarded posing a huge waste disposal and environmental problem, amounting to 5.3 million tonnes in the UK alone!

So much for the saving wastage argument!

FARMERS AND SMALL TRADERS LOSE

The other myth about organised retail is that it would benefit farmers and also not harm small traders who could simply shift from the traditional supply chain to the modern one linked to supermarkets. Again the facts are exactly the opposite.

The authoritative UK Competition Commission found in a 2000 study of major retail chains including Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury and Tesco that supermarkets had a poor record on treatment of all categories of suppliers, specifically that “the burden of cost increases in the supply chain has fallen disproportionately heavily on small suppliers such as farmers.” Apart from prices, smaller farmers came under severe pressure from supermarkets due to the latter’s requirement for large volumes of each product, pushing farmers to grow single crops rather than the multiple produce they would usually grow to minimise risk. Similarly, insistence on or good prices only for similarly sized produce again works to reduce bio-diversity, pushes prices down and drives suppliers towards more input-intensive factory-farming. The commission called for greater regulation and enforcement of the UK Fair Trading Code of Practice which it said itself needed to be strengthened to protect smaller suppliers from exploitation engendered by the immense power exercised by large buyers.

Numerous other supermarket practices too worked against the interests of almost all other stakeholders. Supermarket chains routinely sell some products at lower than market prices, which appears to benefit to consumers, but this puts pressure on small local stores in turn having adverse impact especially on low-income and elderly consumers who rely on local shops. Supermarkets also tend to alter prices in different branches adjusting to local rivals, “price-flexing” as the Commission termed it, again working to the disadvantage of local mom-and-pop stores. All in all, the Report said, “27 [such] practices by… major buyers operate against the public interest.”

In its January 2010 report, the UK Competition Commission concluded that the situation had not changed in over a decade, and that the practices of big retail chains continued to cause losses for farmers and small stores. The near-monopoly of supermarket chains, which procure over 70 per cent of food products in the UK, enables them to “dictate prices and force farmers into trading for less and less.” The UKCC found evidence that some chains including Tesco were bullying producers into lowering prices, a charge also leveled by the National Farmers’ Union, with dairy farmers receiving 20 per cent less for milk than they did 19 years ago, and over 1,000 dairy farmers having gone out of business in 2009 alone.

FAO in its “Spotlight 2005” Report concluded that these trends are witnessed in other countries and regions too, showing once again that these patterns are inherent to the very logic of supermarket chains, not to some peculiarities of Western cultures. Organised retail increases pressure on farmers to produce standardised produce, pushes down prices and margins, and over time weeds out larger numbers of smaller suppliers in favour of fewer and larger “preferred suppliers”. In Malaysia, one chain that had started with 200 suppliers had whittled them down to just 30 within two years. Despite the famous sharp preference of Asian consumers for fresh produce from local so-called “wet markets”, big cities of Malaysia saw the share of supermarkets in fresh produce retail rise to 60 per cent in fruit and 35 per cent in vegetables. Similarly in Bangkok, supermarkets were selling 40 per cent of fruit and 30 per cent of vegetables by 2002. The FAO report predicts that, following trends in Europe and the US, Asian markets too will witness gradual marginalisation of traditional wholesalers in favour of increasingly consolidated “preferred suppliers” and “dedicated wholesalers” who would be brought into joint ventures or tied-up in long-term contracts.

The Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute says that the heightened penetration of supermarket chains into Asia, Africa and Latin America is locking small farmers out of the supply chain and driving millions of farmers into poverty. Latin America has been the worst hit with the fastest growth in supermarkets, achieving in ten years diffusion rates that took 50 years in the US! In Brazil, the share of supermarkets in fresh food sales went up from 30 per cent to 75 per cent in just ten years between 1990 and 2000.

SUPERMARKET CULTURE: NEED FOR REGULATION

Colossal waste and inordinate pressure on suppliers are part of supermarket culture. In Singapore, studies have found that close to 30 per cent of fresh produce is thrown away in wholesalers’ sorting yards or supermarkets even before they appear on shop shelves because of ostensible defects or being otherwise deemed non-saleable. Within supermarkets themselves, food wastage in Singapore is estimated at 20 per cent compared to 30 per cent in the US or UK.

Indeed, supermarket waste has reached such proportions that the UK has an active Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP) aimed at reducing all forms of wastage in supermarkets. WRAP studies have found that many factors drive such wastage, chief among them being the very character of supermarkets and the type of shopping practices they engender. People shop more and buy far more than they actually consume simply because they can! In major urban centres, where supermarkets are often open round the clock, shoppers end up buying many other items than what they may have come in for, and more than they need. Promotional offers such as buy-one-get-one-free and other so-called multi-buy promotions means that more groceries get pushed than are consumed.

Yet the pressure exerted by the powerful retail chains is such, and the ideology of de-regulation is so strong, that of course one can barely talk of regulation in the US while efforts at regulation in the Eurozone and UK have not made much headway.

The influential UK Sustainable Development Commission (UK-SDC) in its study of policies relating to supermarkets strongly criticised the British government for allowing WRAP to leave it to the supermarkets themselves to formulate a voluntary self-regulatory set of practices to reduce waste termed the Courtald Agreement. UK-SDC stated that “too many supermarket practices are… unhealthy, unjust and unsustainable.” Needless to say, the UK-SDC report covered many other areas of supermarket operations too besides the issue of food and other waste.

An even broader ambit was covered by the UK Competition Commission whose 2000 Report cited earlier led to the proclamation of a Supermarkets Code of Practice which was later amended in 2009 to the Groceries Supply Code of Practice (GSCOP) that lays down standards and procedures for procurement, fair trade, inventories and sales, and so on.

It is indeed significant that in all the debate in India around organised retail, no industry or government body has said a word about regulation or the need for it. For all their weaknesses, it is the presence and functioning of regulatory bodies in the UK and EU, in contrast to the situation prevalent in the US that has at least thrown up a substantial amount of data and analytical information, and brought supermarkets under public scrutiny and the possibility of at least some social control.

Courtesy: www.pd.cpim.org

Sunday, September 26, 2010

“YOUR SOLIDARITY WILL HELP LEFT FRONT TO OVERCOME CHALLENGES”

The solidarity being expressed through out the country with the ongoing struggle of the Left Front in Bengal against the forces of reaction will help in overcoming the challenges it faces from these forces, said CPI (M) West Bengal state secretariat member Srideep Bhattacharjee.

Underlining the fact that West Bengal has become an intensified theatre of class struggle in the country, he expressed confidence that the Left Front will create history by winning the coming assembly elections for the eighth successive term.

Srideep Bhattacharjee was addressing a convention today in Hyderabad, organised by the CPI (M) Andhra Pradesh state committee condemning the ongoing violence against the CPI (M) in Bengal and expressing solidarity with the Left Front and its government. CPI (M) Polit Bureau member and state secretary B V Raghavulu presided over the meeting while the deputy general secretary of CPI S Sudhakar Reddy and state secretaries of Forward Bloc and RSP parties also addressed it. A 30-minute documentary on the latest situation in areas of West Medinipur district was screened on this occasion. The documentary has been produced by New Media, which is a part of the India News Network. Earlier a rally was taken out from the state committee office in RTC X Roads to the venue of the convention in Sundarayya Vignana Kendram in Bagh Lingampally.

Sreedip Bhattacharjee said the terror campaign against the Left in Bengal, which has claimed more than 280 comrades lives, has been unleashed by the so-called Maoists with the full support of both TMC and Congress. Parts of the border states of Jharkhand and Orissa are being used as launching pads for these attacks and as also shelters. He pointed to the duplicity of UPA-II regime on the issue of Maoist violence when the prime minister terms it as the gravest threat facing the nation while his cabinet colleagues openly hobnob with them.

The peculiar political combination against the Left Front which comprises forces from the extreme left to extreme right, the NGOs backed by imperialism, the corporates and its media was noted as also the systematic attempts to denigrate the CPI (M) by spreading canards. “The most heinous and murderous acts of the reactionary forces do not find place in the corporate media while the people's resistance actions are presented in a distorted manner. Some intellectuals are aiding in this distortion”, he said.

The ongoing people's resistance in the jangal mahal areas is becoming stronger by each passing day. People are returning to their homes and villages. The Left flag is fluttering once again in these areas defeating the forces of terror that had boasted of not allowing the Left back in these areas. The 'Maoist' killers are on the defensive and on the run, he said amidst applause from the audience. Srideep explained the significant achievements of the Left Front in areas of land reforms, panchayat system, agricultural production, education and health sectors etc through facts and figures.

B V Raghavulu in his speech highlighted how myriad forces are conspiring to launch attacks against the Left-led governments in Bengal, Kerala and Tripura with the intention of weakening the Left in the country. They are doing this because once the Left is weakened they can merrily carry on their policies of loot and servility to imperialism. Unfortunately, the Maoists, who speak of revolution, are aiding this conspiracy, he said. He stressed the need for defending these governments by all democratic forces in the country and called for campaigning among the people on these issues.

S Sudhakar Reddy said the people of the country must ponder over the reasons why only the Left-led governments are being targeted for unprecedented attacks while the many other parties' governments in other states are spared. Different tactics are adopted in these attacks – individual annihilation in Bengal, efforts to break tribal-non-tribal unity in Tripura or denigrating the LDF in Kerala using CBI. He questioned how many permutations of fronts will be formed to weaken the Left in Bengal by referring to the TMC-Congress-BJP mahajot once and now TMC-Congress-Maoists. Referring to Maoists individual annihilation policy, he said we had earlier also appealed to them to leave this path when they killed many Left cadre in AP. “We reject their path and all democratic forces in the country must condemn this murder politics”, Reddy said.

Forward Bloc state secretary Muralidhar Deshpande and RSP state secretary Janaki Ramulu also expressed solidarity with the struggling people of Bengal. A well known poet Himajwala recited a poem he wrote in solidarity with the ongoing struggle of the Left in Bengal. Praja Natya Mandali troupe rendered songs on this occasion.

The CPI (M) held programmes elsewhere in the state as part of the solidarity campaign. On Septemeber 15, B V Raghavulu attended a convention held in Vishakapatnam while Central Committee members participated in meetings held in various parts of the state. Solidarity meetings and rallies were held in most of the divisions while in some districts the campaign was held at mandal levels also.

Courtesy: www.pd.cpim.org