WEST BENGAL ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS-2011

RE-ELECT ELECT LEFT FRONT GOVERNMENT OF WEST BENGAL FOR 8TH SUCCESSIVE TERM

Sunday, December 19, 2010

BARUIPUR, SOUTH 24 PARGANAS: STUDENTS OF BARUIPUR COLLEGE ON THE STREETS TO PROTEST AGAINST BUTCHERS, RAPISTS, DACOITS AND EXTORTIONISTS OF MAMATA C


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ULUBERIA, HOWRAH: STUDENTS ON THE STREETS TO PROTEST AGAINST ATTACK ON STUDENTS BY BUTCHERS PATRONISED BY MAMATA BANERJEE AND PSEUDO INTELLECTUALS


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KOLKATA: STUDENTS ON THE STREETS AGAINST CRIMES PERPETRATED BY BUTCHERS OF MAMATA BANERJEE, MAOISTS, SUCI AND MEDIA AGAINST STUDENTS COMMUNITY OF WB


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NEW DELHI: ALL INDIA DEMOCRATIC WOMENS ASSOCIATION DEMANDS FROM CHIDAMBRAM PROTECTION FOR WOMEN

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NEW DELHI: A TRUE STORY

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NEW DELHI: WOMEN IN DELHI SUFFER FROM PANIC AND TERROR


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UPA GOVERNMENT OF MANMOHAN SINGH AND MAMATA BANERJEE UNABLE TO GIVE FOOD SECURITY TO THE NATION



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MAVLANKAR HALL, NEW DELHI: NATIONAL CONVENTION ON MUSLIM RIGHTS

Albeena Shakil & Roshan Kishore

A national convention on Muslim rights was held on December 4, 2010 at Mavlankar Hall, New Delhi. It was organised jointly by the Democratic Forum for National Integration (Kolkata), Muslim Intelligentsia Forum (Delhi) and Awaaz (Hyderabad). The convention had two sessions, the first one on the implementation of the Ranganath Mishra Commission recommendations and the second one on four years after the Sachar Committee report. Speakers in the convention included several eminent and distinguished experts, parliamentarians and activists who, over the course of over four hours, contributed to a vibrant discussion. The convention began with an enchanting musical rendition of Faiz Ahmed Faiz’s poetry by vocalist Vidya Shah.

ON RANGANATH MISHRA COMMISSION REPORT’S IMPLEMENTATION

Subhashini Ali, former MP, invited the panellists of the session on the Ranganath Mishra report to the dais. Dr Anwar Pasha, faculty JNU, chaired the session and provided a brief overview of the historic importance of the Ranganath Mishra report and the need for its implementation.

Moinul Hasan (MP, Rajya Sabha) initiated the discussion by emphasising the need for taking decisive steps for redressing the backwardness of Muslims for the cause of strengthening democracy in the country. He called for rebuffing the approach wherein any measure directed towards the upliftment of Muslims is viewed as appeasement. He said that the National Commission for Religious and Linguistic Minorities headed by Justice Ranganath Mishra had submitted its report to the government on May 10, 2007. However, it was tabled in parliament only in December 2009, that too without any action taken report. Among other significant recommendations, the commission called for providing 10 per cent reservations for socially and educationally backward Muslims in education and jobs and also for removing the discrimination on the basis of religion in the reservation for the Scheduled Castes. It also recommended reservations for all religious minorities, including Hindus in the union territory of Lakshadweep, and the states of Jammu and Kashmir, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland and Punjab. However, the union government seems to have developed cold feet over the commission’s recommendations. In reply to a question in July 2010, the minority affairs ministry has informed the parliament that the report is still ‘under examination’. He called for an immediate correction of this approach and the need for its immediate implementation, especially in view of the positive developments in Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal vis-a-vis ensuring reservations for backward Muslims in their states.

K Rehman Khan (deputy chairman, Rajya Sabha) noted that all earlier government commissions dealt with the condition of ‘minorities’ as a whole, but the Sachar Committee and Ranganath Mishra Commission were notable because they had made specific recommendations for the Muslim minority. He elaborated on the case of Karnataka, where four per cent reservations for Muslims were instituted in 1993 after a state-wide census of one million families along 65 parameters of backwardness, when he headed the state’s Minorities Commission. He said that the exclusion of Muslim and Christian dalits from the SC list was difficult to accept. He also highlighted the dilemma regarding the Supreme Court ruling that the total percentage of reservations must not exceed 50 per cent. He called for a structured debate in parliament on the recommendations of the two reports and expressed his hope that it may be possible in the forthcoming budget session. He underscored that minority rights are inherent in the constitution and cannot be ignored.

Invoking the sacrifices made by Mahatma Gandhi and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, Maulana Anisur Rehman Qasmi (member, All India Muslim Personal Law Board), expressed his disappointment over the historic discrimination entailed in the 1950 Presidential Order for Scheduled Castes. He said that the discrimination among the backward and weaker sections of different religions needs to be combated by forging unity of all people wanting justice. He said that it was unfair to place the burden of Muslim backwardness on the Muslim community. He insisted that this was an outcome of 60 years of silence and apathy by successive governments, with no major debate on the matter in the parliament. In a country that is already affected by Naxalism in 13 states, it would only be wise to discuss the Ranganath Mishra Commission report in parliament, and implement it without delay.

Ali Anwar Ansari (MP, Rajya Sabha) said that despite four attempts to demand a comprehensive discussion on the Ranganath Mishra Commission report in the Rajya Sabha, the efforts have not met with success. He shared that the report of the Ranganath Mishra Commission was finally tabled in parliament in December 2009, only subsequent to a media leak which led to a privilege issue. He said that as far as the development of the Muslims is concerned, the Sachar Committee provides the ‘diagnosis’, while the Ranganath Mishra Commission provides the ‘prescription’. Both reports along with previous reports of the Kaka Karlekar, Mungerilal, Gopal Singh and Mandal Commissions, prove the point that Muslims are not a monolith or homogenous community. The recognition of this differentiation within Muslims is central to any measure for the upliftment of Muslims in India. The continued exclusion of Muslims and Christians from the purview of the 1950s Presidential Order on Article 341 pertaining to reservations for the Scheduled castes needs to be removed. He emphasised the need for amending the constitution for removing the Supreme Court ceiling of 50 per cent on reservations and said that the centre needs to be pushed in this direction.

P S Krishnan (former member secretary, National Commission for Backward Classes) elaborated on the need for strengthening social justice in the country within the contours of SC, ST and OBC reservations. Citing the example of Andhra Pradesh, he said that four per cent reservation was granted to backward sections within the Muslim community, leaving out the dominant Syed community. He said that many Muslims felt that all Muslims must be covered under the purview of reservations. However, constitutional provisions for social justice allow for covering almost 80 per cent of the Muslim population of the country under reservations. He also emphasised the need for finding solutions for the poor among Muslims and the Hindu upper castes. He said that a social consensus must be forged to achieve some immediate gains from among the Ranganath Mishra Commission recommendations. This includes ensuring that state level lists of OBCs are revised to include Muslim OBCs and these in turn are included in the central list without delay. He said that one of the concerns regarding granting SC status to Muslim and Christian dalits was the prevailing apprehensions among Hindu dalits. Removing the 50 per cent ceiling on reservations could provide a possible solution in this regard.

Two eminent members from the audience also spoke at the end of this session. Abdus Sattar (minister of state, minority affairs and madrasah education, government of West Bengal) spelt out the need for a 15 per cent budgetary sub-plan for implementing the Sachar Committee recommendations which was being demanded by the West Bengal government since the time of the 11th Plan consultations. He shared details of the recent implementation of 10 per cent reservation for backward Muslims in jobs in West Bengal. The chief minister announced the government’s intent in this regard on February 8, 2010. A process involving study of census reports since 1901, inspections by state OBC Commission in combination with survey was undertaken in the state. 53 Muslim communities were added to the OBC list, thereby bringing 1.72 crore Muslims, ie, over 85 per cent Muslim population under the purview of reservations. The process of obtaining OBC certificates has also been simplified. The government now intends to extend the same reservation in higher education as well as panchayat bodies. Abdus Sattar further elaborated upon the initiatives of the West Bengal government vis-avis minority development. Aliah University has been started in the state for Muslims. While a total of Rs 560 crores has been earmarked for madrasahs in West Bengal, the corresponding central government allocation is just Rs 50 crores for the entire country. The performance of the West Bengal Minorities Development Finance Commission (WBMDFC) is consistently the best in the country. He demanded that along with a debate in parliament, consultation must also be held by the union minority affairs minister with his state level counterparts for the effective implementation of the Sachar Committee report.

K T Jaleel (MLA, Kerala legislative assembly) stressed on the contribution made by the Left parties during the tenure of UPA-I, when two commissions were constituted to study and recommend measures for improving the condition of Muslims in India. The two reports have helped combat the fascist propaganda regarding appeasement of Muslim minorities. He spoke of the success of the decades old 12 per cent reservations for backward Muslims in Kerala.

FOUR YEARS SINCE THE SACHAR COMMITTEE REPORT

Sehba Farooqui, AIDWA leader, invited the panellists on the dais for this session. The session was chaired by Zahiruddin Khan, managing editor, Siasat, Hyderabad, who provided a brief outline of the condition of the Muslim community in India.

Mohammed Salim (chairperson, WBMDFC) initiated the discussion on how the Sachar Committee report had generated many hopes among the Muslims about systemic changes. However, the report which was tabled in parliament in 2006 has not even been discussed in the parliament till now. It was listed three times for discussion, but somehow, no discussion actually materialised on the report. Rather than a concrete ATR, a ‘Follow Up Action’ consisting mostly of the formation of more committees, task forces and inter-ministerial committees was presented by the then minority affairs minister before the parliament in August 2007. Since then the reality of the implementation of the Sachar Committee is that just 0.32 per cent of plan allocation of the budget is being spent on the development of all minorities of the country. This stands out in stark contrast to the demand for a 15 per cent budgetary sub-plan for the minorities. Even this meagre expenditure is being implemented through faulty policies like the MSDP, wherein, the benefit of the expenditure does not necessarily reach the concerned minorities. He blamed the notion of ‘minority appeasement’ that has pervaded public consciousness at the behest of the right wing parties over the last two decades for this situation. He noted the proactive role of the West Bengal and Kerala governments in creating regional centres of the Aligarh Muslim University in their states.

Syeda Saiyidain Hameed (member, Planning Commission) praised the Sachar Committee report for elaborating on the condition of Muslims in the country and giving concrete suggestions and recommendations. She said that the government has started implementing the recommendations of the report and while many criticisms may be true, it is possible to see the glass as half full or as half empty. Only a few of the aspects relating to the Sachar Committee rReport are invested with the Planning Commission. Different ministries of the government are following up different aspects of the implementation of the report. She said that the ‘inclusive growth’ slogan of the government contained the scope for the benefit of all deprived people including the Muslim minority. She recalled that the West Bengal CM had made a demand for a 15 per cent budgetary sub-plan for the Muslim minority during the regional consultations held by the Planning Commission for the 11th Plan. She said the approach paper for the 12th Plan was now underway, and invited the organisers to make suggestions for a sub-plan or for ‘blocks’ as the unit for the implementation of the MSDP at this stage. She expressed solidarity with all grass root level activists of the country and said that while striving for the development of the Muslims, the question of Muslim women must also be kept in sight. She also suggested that the resolutions of the convention can include issues relating to the approach paper to the 12th Plan.

T K Hamza (former MP, Lok Sabha) from Kerala elaborated on the measures undertaken in his state with respect to the Sachar Committee report. A state level committee was formed by the government under the chairmanship of Paloli Mohammad Kutty. On May 6t, 2008 the committee submitted its report and gave several state level recommendations. The recommendations pertain to general education, security, reservation, economic progress, efficiency and development and Wakf properties. As a result, several steps have been undertaken like spending Rs 178 crores on educational institutions, opening up of 136 training centres or ITIs, three coaching centres for IAS & IPS, formation of welfare board for madrasah education and pension for madrasah teachers, ten thousand new scholarships for Muslim girls, formation of a non-resident Keralites’ board, recognition of 41 higher secondary schools, granting of 300 acres of land for the formation of an off-campus centre of AMU etc. He expressed his solidarity with the efforts to intensify the struggle for the upliftment of the Muslims in the country.

M A A Fatmi (ex-MoS, HRD ministry) narrated his experience in the HRD ministry, when he travelled across the country, of the deep penetration of communal ideas in the psyche of the administration. He said that combating communalism and changing the psyche of the people is essential for the proper implementation of the Sachar Committee report. He highlighted the discrepancy of a Muslim population of 14 per cent having only 5 per cent representation in the Lok Sabha. He also stressed on the importance of the role of the media. He elaborated on the findings and recommendations of the Fatmi Committee formed on education under his chairmanship. However, the scale of implementation of his report was highly inadequate with very meagre budgetary allocation. For instance, as against the requirement of Rs 500 crores for expanding higher and technical education in Urdu medium by opening five campuses of Maulana Azad National Urdu University, only about Rs 25-30 crores had been released by the UGC so far. Or, despite opening more Kasturba Balika Vidyalayas in minority concentrated districts, the admission of Muslim girls was still an uphill task. He stressed that the suggestion for reservation of Muslim students in Kendriya Vidyalayas must be taken up. His committee had recommended off-campus centres of AMU in five states. However, only West Bengal and Kerala governments have taken concrete steps in this regard. He called for intensifying the efforts for the advancement of the Muslim community and hoped that the Planning Commission would make adequate budgetary allocations for this purpose.

Two more members from the audience spoke at the end of this session. Anisur Rahman (panchayat and rural development minister of West Bengal) spoke about the steps being undertaken in his state to extend the scope of 10 per cent reservations for OBC Muslims to education as well as panchayat bodies. He also elaborated on other steps regarding madrasah education, housing schemes, construction of second Haj house, distribution of land pattas, women empowerment programme through SHGs, construction of hostels for Muslim boys and girls, and other steps targeted at the Muslim minority in the state.

Shafiqur Rahman Nabi, former minister, Bihar government, expressed solidarity with the efforts for the implementation of the Sachar Committee and Ranganath Mishra Commission reports.

RESOLUTIONS

The convention ended with the passage of two resolutions on the implementation of the recommendations of the Ranganath Mishra Commission and Sachar Committee. Subhashini Ali proposed that the suggestion given by Syeda Hameed regarding the approach paper to the 12th Plan be included in the resolution on the Sachar Committee report. This amendment was accepted by all present.

The national convention for Muslim rights demanded that:

The union government stop dragging its feet over the Ranganath Mishra Commission report and implement 10 per cent reservation for socially and educationally backward Muslims without delay.

Extending the benefits of reservation enjoyed by the Scheduled Castes among the Hindus, Sikhs and Buddhists to their counterparts among the Muslims and the Christians.

The union government initiate the process for a constitutional amendment to provide reservation above 50 per cent.

Initiate a comprehensive review of the implementation of the Sachar Committee recommendations including a full debate in parliament.

The union government adopt more firm and decisive policies for the advancement of the Muslim minority, including, a minority sub-plan without delay.

Several people from different walks of life as well as from across the country participated in the convention. Eminent members of the audience included Prakash Karat, general secretary, CPI (M), Brinda Karat, Rajya Sabha MP, former MPs Hannan Mollah and Nilotpal Basu, several MLAs and state level ministers, university teachers, media persons and others. The participation of Muslim youth in the convention was notable.

Courtesy: People’s Democracy

Thursday, December 9, 2010

S P RAJENDRAN WRITES ON THE INDIAN COTTON TRADE

"The continual rise in the prices of raw cotton begins at last to seriously react upon the cotton factories, their consumption of cotton being now 25 per cent less than the full consumption. This result has been brought about by a daily lessening rate of production, many mills working only four or three days per week, part of the machinery being stopped, both in these establishments where short time has been commenced and in those which are still running full time, and some mills being temporarily altogether closed. In some places, as at Blackburn, for instance, short time has been coupled with a reduction of wages..."

Karl Marx started with these words his article, "The British Cotton Trade," which was published in the New York Daily Tribune on September 21, 1861.

The same situation is prevailing in the Indian cotton trade now.

The UPA government at the centre has allowed cotton exports from November 1. As shipments resumed, a major portion of the commodity is heading towards China, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Indonesia, and the rest is going to the international speculative markets based in various cities of the USA and Europe.

World cotton cash and futures prices have surged in the past month, showing extraordinary volatility and exceeding all previous historical records. Several developments have contributed to this run-up in prices, including the decreased world production in the three previous seasons; adverse weather damaging the cotton crop in China and Pakistan, and speculative pressures from the New York market.

In this background, world market wants more cotton imports from India, which is expected to produce more this year. Production of cotton in India, the second biggest producer and exporter of the fibre, may reach a record 37.5 million bales, above the September estimate of 34.5 million and the last year’s output of 29.5 million bales.

Underlining the highly volatile situation in the world cotton trends, Indian cotton industry alarmed the central government to preserve the raw material in order to avert the scarcity in the domestic market. There are 1834 big spinning mills, 1249 small scale spinning mills, 184 exclusive weaving mills, nearly 5 lakh powerloom units and lakhs of handlooms units throughout India. The Rs 55,000 crore textile industry of the nation is one of the most labour intensive industries and employs crores of people.

The very life of the industry and its workers is now under attack due to the unprecedented and continuing rise in the prices of cotton and cotton yarn. This is because of the blind policy of the government on raw material exports.

The most common Shankar–6 variety of cotton is trading at Rs 44,000 per candy (I candy = 356 kg) now, compared to Rs 23,000 in the same period last year. The price hit a record high of Rs 46,200 earlier this month. This near doubling of the cotton prices has caused an increase in yarn prices, imperilling the powerlooms and handlooms as well as the hosiery and garment sector. The price of 40s combed cotton yarn for hosiery, a widely used category, has risen from Rs 185 per kg in August to a record Rs 240 kg. As a result, fabric prices have also shot up 38 to 90 per cent, leading to higher prices of apparel products.

In Tirupur, production dropped 15-20 per cent due to the frequent rise in yarn prices in the last six months. Around 25,000 workers have lost their jobs.

So there is no way other than banning cotton exports to control the rising prices in the domestic and export markets.

The entire textile industry in India and the trade unions have put forward this demand to the government. Major organisations in the industry like the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI), South India Mills Association (SIMA) and South India Spinners Association (SISPA) based at Coimbatore; TEA, TEAMA, SIHMA, KNITMA, and TEKPA all based at Tirupur; Clothing Manufactures Association of India, Ahmadabad; South India Textiles Manufactures Association (SITMA), Erode, which is representing powerlooms in India; Kerala Textile Export Organisation, based at Kannur, the major hub of the industry in Kerala; Federation of Hosiery Manufactures Association (FOHMA), based at Kolkata --- all are demanding an immediate halt to the cotton exports.

They blamed the government’s announcement permitting cotton exports even before the new crop reached the market for paving the way for this unprecedented increase in cotton prices and causing an artificial scarcity of cotton. "The future of the entire textile industry, particularly the hosiery, apparel, knitwear, powerlooms and handlooms are at stake and millions will be jobless in the country if necessary action is not taken," they warned.

To save the industry and the interests of the workers, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee raised this issue with the centre. On November 16, Buddhadeb wrote to the prime minister seeking a ban on cotton exports from the country and saying that the commodity was needed to meet the domestic demand and to protect the employment of millions engaged in the textile industry.

G Ramakrishnan, Tamilnadu state secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), has demanded that the government put cotton under the Essential Commodities Act in order to curb the futures trading in cotton. He charged that the government policy of exporting cotton, without maintaining sufficient stock for meeting the domestic cotton requirement, was responsible for the current scenario.

Even though the situation is alarming, political issues of unprecedented corruption in 2G spectrum and CWG are keeping the UPA government busy without any time to concentrate on other affairs. Union minister for textiles Dayanidhi Maran is not ready to address the cotton crisis issue and is busy in getting his own name cleared in the spectrum scam.

So to press their demand, the entire garment industry of the country went on a nationwide strike on November 19. The strike which was pan-India, saw the manufacturing activity in Tirupur, the knitwear capital of the country, come to a standstill, while Bhiwandi, Asia’s largest handloom cluster, witnessed a complete shutdown. Hosiery units in West Bengal and textile and apparel clusters in Coimbatore, Ludhiana, Ahmadabad, Bangalore, Delhi, NCR Region, Erode, Karur and Kannur experienced total strike. 0

This nationwide strike has been observed within one and a half months of the regional 48 hour bandh on September 24 and 25, observed at Tirupur. More than one lakh people, keeping their political differences in abeyance, gathered to fast in Tirupur on the same day, organised jointly by all the manufactures’ organisations and trade unions including the Centre of Indian Trade Unions.

This is the second warning from Tirupur!

Source: People’s Democracy

VIJAY KANT THAKUR WRITES ON YET ANOTHER HORROR STORY FROM DIARA LAND, BIHAR

IN Bihar, the area known as Diara, stretching from Lakhisarai to Mokamah, has been for ages ruled over by the landlords and dreaded criminals who are masters of the entire area and enjoy the protection and backing of the ruling establishment.

Recently, a horror story of death and destruction unfolded here on November 18, when the last leg of voting was yet to be completed.

On November 18, dreaded landlord Krishnachandra Prasad Singh and his armed gang raided Pithua village under Piparia police station of Lakhisarai district and destroyed the oilseed crops cultivated by the peasants of the village. When the hapless and aggrieved peasants tried with folded hands to reason with him, he immediately ordered his goons to open fire. While Bachchan Rajak, Kusheshwar Bhagat and Pramila Devi died on the spot, another person was seriously injured and was hospitalised in a critical condition.

The information comes from a CPI (M) team, led by its state secretary Vijay Kant Thakur, that visited the site of incidence soon after it took place.

State Kisan Sabha general secretary Awadhesh Kumar, the CPI(M)’s acting district secretary Moti Sao, state committee member Ravi Vilochan Verma, district Kisan Sabha secretary Shivdani Singh Bachchan and SFI state secretary Roushan Kumar Sinha were other members of the visiting CPI(M) team.

The CPI (M) team informs that there are six thousand acres of government land in Pithua village. In the year 1984, the government allotted 943 acres of land to the poor and 15,000 rupees per head to clear the land and settle there. They were the victims of land erosion by the rampaging Ganga river.

After clearing the land, the poor peasants settled there and erected something in the name of their houses. Thousand of people thus started a fresh life. With hard work thus put in by the peasants, the fertile Diara land started yielding bumper crops. Many such villages like Piparia, Koyalwa, Navki etc came up in that area and thousands of people have been living there. The government too opened primary schools in Koyalwa and Navki villages.

In Piparia village, seven thousand people are living. There is also a police station in the village. But the peasants of Piparia village have not been given land deeds and other legal papers for erecting houses.

The two dreaded landlords of the area --- late Baidynath Prasad and Krishnachandra Prasad Singh --- have been the real rulers of the area. Though Baidyanath Prasad is no more, his sons and relatives are carrying on his noxious legacy with same ruthlessness.

Of late, the landlords started evicting the peasants from the government land and making all these villages inaccessible to the villagers by erecting wire hedges and stopping the construction of roads leading to those villages. Electricity connections were cut off and the villagers were driven out. The unlawful activities of these two landlords knew no bounds. They are the law unto themselves. Their arrogance reached its peak when late socialist leader Jaiprakash Narayan visited the area but late Bauidyanath Prasad let his elephant loose in order to disturb his meeting.

Koyalwa and Navki villages have now been razed to the ground and the primary schools in those villages are being run in makeshift arrangements at other places. The entire ten square kilometre area is the private preserve of these two landlords.

Since then, much water has flown down the Ganga and the socialists of different shades and colours have occupied the seat of power but none dared to take action against the landlords. Five thousand families, who have purchased their plots from the government, have been left to fend for themselves as the landlords have dispossessed them from their home and hearth, disregarding their legal status. The murderers are roaming free while Nitish Kumar is basking in the glory of the massive mandate he received in the recently concluded assembly elections.

On the basis of its investigation on the spot, the state committee of the CPI (M) has put forward the following demands.

1) All the accused of the Pithua incident should be immediately arrested and its prime accused Krishnachandra Prasad should be booked under the Crime Control Act. The accused should be prosecuted through a speedy trial.

2) A police picket should be posted to look after the safety and security of the Pithua villagers.

3) Action should be taken against the negligence of duty by jawans of the Piparia police station.

4) The district administration was quite aware of the situation did not take any preventive action and allowed the situation to aggravate, resulting in the loss of three innocent lives. This criminal negligence of the district administration must be investigated and the erring officials brought to book.

5) The Mahadalits inhabiting the area must be provided adequate protection.

6) Those who possess purchase deeds should be given physical possession of the land. Those poor who till the land, they should be provided with legal possession.

7) The family members of the victims should be provided two lakh rupees as compensation and one member of each victim’s family should be provided a government job.

8) Those responsible for razing Koyalwa and Navki villages to ground should be brought to book and these village rehabilitated.

9) The government land measuring tens of thousands of acres should be distributed among the extremely poor Mahadalits.

The party has warned that it would have no option but to launch struggles to get the demands conceded if the government does not pay heed to them in a month’s time.

Source: People’s Democracy