By M
Girija
People's Democracy, November 24,
2013
COMMEMORATING
the birth centenary of Comrade Jyoti Basu, a great communist leader, the
Coimbatore district committee of the CPI(M) organised a convention on November
18, with the party’s general secretary, Prakash Karat, delivering the main
address. While celebrating the birth centenary of Comrade Jyoti Basu, Karat
said, we should draw lessons from the life and work of this great revolutionary.
India has seen many communist leaders who made great contributions and
sacrifices. But Comrade Jyoti Basu was one of the few leaders who stand tall
among them. He spent 70 years in the communist movement. He joined the
Communist Party in 1940 and passed into history in 2010. In these seven decades
of communist life, this great leader made very significant and pioneering
contributions. He returned from London as a barrister but began to work as a
trade union functionary among the railway workers in Bengal, becoming the
secretary of the railway workers’ union of Bengal. Though he was the chief
minister of West Bengal for about three decades, he had his association with
the trade union movement intact, and remained a leader of the CITU till the
end.
JYOTI
BASU IN LEGISLATURE
The
second major contribution of Comrade Basu was in legislative sphere. He got
elected to the Bengal Assembly in 1946, before independence, from the railway
workers’ constituency. From 1946 to 2010, except for a period of five years
following the rigged elections in West Bengal in 1972, he remained a member of
the West Bengal assembly, and showed how a communist should function in a
legislature. While he was a leader of the opposition, he led many struggles and
echoed the voices of struggling workers and others inside the assembly. In all
the major struggles, Comrade Basu made it a point to personally lead them, both
within and outside the legislature. Once he stayed inside the premises of the
assembly for three days lest the police should arrest him, in case he came out,
for leading the teachers’ struggle.
When
he became the chief minister of West Bengal in 1977, we saw how he carried
forward the land reforms there. After being a part of continuous struggles when
he was the deputy chief minister in United Front government earlier, he told
the peasants and Kisan Sabha members to go and occupy the lands the landlords
were holding illegally. Through this combination of outside struggles and
legislative action, Jyoti Basu showed the way as to how communists could
utilise such avenues. Between 1967 and 1969, when he was the home minister of
West Bengal, he told the police would not interfere with any strike conducted
by workers, nor it would be used to stop the peasants from occupying the surplus
lands in landlords’ illegal possession. His lasting legacy as the chief
minister of Left Front government is of the land reforms that were implemented
in Bengal, when 11 lakh acres of surplus land were taken over and distributed
among the landless farmers and 1.5 crore tenants got security of tenure by
registration.
Karat
further said: “History will also remember him as a leader who was most
consistent in the defence of secularism. Everyone knows that after the
assassination of Smt Indira Gandhi in 1984, Sikhs were killed in thousands in
the whole of North India. But Comrade Basu did not allow a single attack on the
Sikh community in Calcutta or West Bengal. Similarly, in the 1990s, when
communal forces began the movement for Ram temple in Ayodhya and communal riots
broke out all over the country after Advani’s rathyatra, Jyoti Basu said not a
single person would be allowed to be attacked in West Bengal, and that he was
ready to invite the army if necessary.” Comrade Basu was not only a communist
leader; he was a symbol of the Left, democratic and secular forces in our
country. That is why today, when we are observing his birth centenary, we must
pledge to continue to uphold the values, principles, politics and ideologies
which he represented, Karat added.
Speaking
on the current politics, Karat said today in our country we have a government
which is following policies that are causing great sufferings and distress to
the people of the country. In this context, he touched upon issues like the
excruciating and unabated price rise, especially in case of food items and
other essentials; favours being meted out to the big capitalists and foreign
multinationals; agrarian crisis and the farmers’ sufferings, rising
unemployment etc, with education, housing, healthcare etc all going beyond the
reach of the common man. Unless we are able to reverse these harmful
neo-liberal and anti-people policies being pursued by the UPA government, there
can be no real relief and no real development and progress for the people of our
country. “That is why the CPI(M) and other Left parties have put forth
alternative policies,” Karat added.
In
the context of the Lok Sabha elections which are nearing, Karat also attacked
the Bharatiya Janata Party which claims to be an alternative to the UPA and the
Congress, while Narendra Modi is going around the country posing as if he is
already the prime minister elect of the country. But, Karat said, the BJP is
not a whit different from the Congress in terms of policies, and that we have
seen in practice, e.g. in the BJP’s support to the UPA government on the issue
of banking laws, privatisation of the pension funds etc.
Karat
further said if the BJP today, under the leadership of Narendra Modi, is
claiming to be better than the Congress, it is better in only one way ---
Narendra Modi is a more ardent and vigorous supporter of the big business
houses of our country. They talk about the Gujarat model of development for the
country. But what does the Gujarat model mean?
Under Modi, all the big business houses – from Ambanis to the Tatas,
Essars, Adanis –have been given huge concessions, free land, free electricity,
tax exemptions and other concessions so that they could make super profits.
This is the model of development which Narendra Modi wants to implement in the
whole country. Another aspect of the Gujarat model, which Modi and BJP do not
talk about, is how they organised attacks on and carried out the most heinous
pogrom against the Muslim minorities in Gujarat in 2002, under the auspices of the
Gujarat government.
The
CPI(M) leader also pointed out that even though the Congress and the BJP both
say they would lead the government after the Lok Sabha elections, they have,
taken together, not been able to get 50 percent of the votes in the last two
Lok Sabha elections. As for the non-Congress, non-BJP parties, they command
substantial support among the people and are successfully running many state
governments. So we are confident that in the coming days the people will reject
the UPA for its wrong policies and massive corruption and also the BJP for its
equally corrupt practices in the states it is ruling and its communal politics.
What is required is people’s mobilisation and struggle to demand alternative
policies that are different from those of the Congress and the BJP. In this
context, Karat also referred to the recent Delhi convention of 14 non-Congress
secular parties and its significance.
Referring
again to Comrade Jyoti Basu as an architect of land reforms in West Bengal,
Karat said more and more people are losing their land today. According to the
latest census figures of 2011, in the last ten years 35 percent of peasants
have become agricultural workers, which means 35 percent more people have lost
their land. That is why we say we have to still implement the land reforms and
distribute lakhs of hectares of surplus land among the landless people and give
housesites to lakhs of families. These are some of the alternative policies
required in the country today.
Talking
of the contours of a policy alternative, Karat included in it a minimum wage of
Rs 10,000 per month for unskilled workers, more government spending on
education and health, and taxing the rich for adequate resource mobilisation,
among other things. It is through struggles on these issues that a political
alternative to the Congress and the BJP would emerge, he added.
Concluding,
Prakash Karat expressed confidence that the efforts of the CPI(M) and other
Left parties would find a reflection in the coming Lok Sabha elections, and the
non-Congress, non-BJP forces would get substantial electoral support.
CPI(M)’s
Tamilnadu state secretary G Ramakrishnan and its Central Committee member A
Soundararajan, MLA, also addressed the convention. Both of them recalled the
memories of Comrade Jyoti Basu.
The
convention was presided over by U K Vellingiri and inaugurated by V Ramamurthi,
secretary of the CPI(M)’s Coimbatore district committee. S Krishnamurthi
welcomed the participants and Kesavamani proposed the vote of thanks.
Earlier,
a sum of Rs 10,08,500 was handed over to Prakash Karat by the Coimbatore
district committee as the second instalment of the election fund donated by the
people.
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