Sunday, October 31, 2010

EDITORIAL OF PEOPLE’S DEMOCRACY: US IMPERIALISM’S FACE EXPOSED YET AGAIN

THE sustained release of secret US war documents by the whistle blowing website WikiLeaks has exposed the true face of US imperialism. This self-appointed champion of the `free world’ ever enthusiastic to comment on so-called `human rights violations’ in other countries, especially its political opponents is exposed as an administration that resorts to the worst expressions of inhuman crimes. The recent release of nearly four lakh secret US documents on the Iraq war by WikiLeaks details deaths of nearly one lakh ten thousand innocent civilians in Iraq, pushing the number of such murders up exponentially.

These documents chronicling the US military occupation and war in Iraq from 2004 to 2009 clearly show the barbaric manner in which the US and allied troops unleashed gory violence against the Iraqis. There are graphic accounts of the manner in which US established puppet Iraqi government and its armed forces attacked and eliminated those resisting US military occupation. While the abuse of Iraqi war prisoners by the US forces, particularly at the Abu Ghraib prison, shocked the world, these WikiLeaks documents detailed an even more lurid sequence of abuses by the US supported Iraqi forces.

WikiLeaks has made these documents available to The New York Times, the British daily The Guardian, the French newspaper Le Monde and the German magazine Der Spiegel. The consequent exposure has shocked the world’s moral conscience. These leaks are being termed as the largest classified military leak in the history of the USA.

The United Nations has called on Barrack Obama to order a full investigation of the US armed force’s involvement in human rights abuses in Iraq, on the basis of these documents that detail accounts of torture, summary executions and war crimes. The UN’s chief investigator on torture, Manfred Nowak, said that these documents point to clear violations of the UN Convention against Torture. The Obama administration, therefore, has an obligation to investigate them. The new British coalition government has described these leaks as `extraordinarily serious’ and `shocking’. The deputy prime minister of UK, Nick Clegg, has said that the Tony Blair government’s decision to join the US in the March 2003 invasion of Iraq was `illegal’.

These documents show that the US war in Iraq also relied on private contractors previously unknown in US imperialist wars across the globe. The documents described the outsourcing of combat and other duties once performed by soldiers that grew and spread to Afghanistan to the point that there are more contractors than soldiers. In all probability, it is these armed elements which are, today, spreading violence in Afghanistan giving sustenance to the Taliban. This, in turn, is being used by the USA as the excuse to mount additional troops in its war in Afghanistan.

US imperialism must be made to answer for such gross abuses of human rights and worst incidents of war crimes in modern times.

When president Obama comes visiting us shortly, India must raise these issues and remind him of the unanimous resolution of the Indian parliament which disapproved (not condemned, as the Left had demanded) US military invasion in Iraq. India must also raise with US president the issue of David Headley who confessed his involvement in the Mumbai terror attack of 26/11. It has now been shown that he was working as a double agent for both the Al Qaeda through the Lashkar-e-Toiba and US intelligence agencies while he was receiving training at terrorist camps in Pakistan. It must be noted that the decision to arrest Headley was taken only after he shifted his attention from India to Europe and not on the grounds of his involvement in 26/11. Headley has pleaded guilty to all twelve terror charges under a plea bargain. The New York Times (NYT) reported that two of Headley’s three wives had warned US authorities first in 2005 and then again in 2008 of his links with the Lashkar-e-Toiba and the plot to strike Mumbai. The NYT indicated that the reason why USA did not follow up on these warnings may have been to avoid a line of investigation that could lead to evidence of its key ally Pakistan’s involvement in these attacks which Pakistan’s ISI vociferously denies.

The Obama administration must be made to come clean on this issue and give India a categorical assurance that it will demonstrate zero tolerance to terrorism in India and take action against those who plot against India from its soil. However, history has once again demonstrated that US imperialism acts only in accordance with its interests. A leopard never changes its spots.
All its excuses justifying its war against Iraq have been proved to be false and untenable. Yet, on this basis, US imperialism has revealed, once again, to the world its inhuman face. All freedom loving people who cherish fundamental human rights and civil liberties must not merely condemn US imperialism but demand accountability for the sake of humanity at large.

(October 27, 2010)

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

Friday, October 22, 2010

BOOK ON 'MAOISTS' RELEASED

CPI(M) Polit Bureau member and chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee was confident that the Trinamul Congress would never be able to turn Bengal into a ‘killing field’ with help from the ‘Maoists.’ The dream that the Trinamul Congress indulged itself in, hand-in-hand with the left sectarians would never fructify and succeed.

He spoke to media at the Muzaffar Ahmad Bhavan after releasing a book book on ‘Maoism’ and its political bankruptcy written by CPI (M) central secretariat member Nilotpal Basu. The chief minister pointed out that the ‘Maoists’ believed in and practised individual assassination and terror-tactics, and they are aided in the condemnable work of theirs by the Trinamul Congress. That the 'Maoists' helped in turn the forces of reaction was clear and proved from the position and function of the Trinamul Congress.

The plan is that the ‘Maoists’ shall ‘clear’ the ground and then the Trinamul Congress shall go and hoist the ‘political ’petard of theirs, there. The return of the people who had been made homeless proved that the qualitative change in the situation was assuming the form of inevitability, signalling the defeat of all attempts to the contrary of democracy and development.

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

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

EDITORIAL OF PEOPLE’S DEMOCRACY DATED 10-10-2010 - UPON SUPREME COURT NOW, TO DELIVER JUSTICE

THE three-member Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad High Court rendered its judgement on the 60 year old cases that sought the adjudication of the title deed of ownership of the disputed Babri Masjid/Ramjanmabhoomi land. The three learned judges have given three separate judgements which cumulatively run into thousands of pages. This judicial pronouncement is seen by many as more of a political adjudication than a legal one. Many questions are being raised. Elsewhere in this issue, some of these are discussed. It is only natural that in a modern secular democratic republic as ours, many such questions will find place in a legal appeal over this judgement in the Supreme Court.

The public reactions after the delivery of the judgement clearly establishes the near universal acceptance of the judicial process as the only way of arriving at a solution over this dispute. This is both welcome and is in accordance with the rule of the law that is derived from our Republican constitution.

However, the people’s faith in the rule of law cannot be interpreted to mean that people unquestioningly accept law that is based on faith. It is precisely this that Mr Advani, who spearheaded the Ramjanmabhoomi agitation by leading the infamous `rath yatra’ that culminated in a bloody trail of communal riots and the eventual demolition of the Babri Masjid, seeks when he says that, “the situation no longer is faith vs law, it is faith upheld by law”. The Allahabad High Court was to adjudicate on contesting claims claiming title over the disputed land. Having dismissed these petitions as being time barred, the Lucknow Bench proceeded to deliver the judgement proposing a three way division of the land based more on `faith’ and `belief’. This raises some very serious questions. For instance, would the judgement have been the same if the Babri Masjid was not demolished and continued to stand today? This is relevant in the sense that when the petitions were filed before the court, the Babri Masjid stood on that very spot. Does this judgement, therefore, justify the demolition? This demolition was universally condemned and is seen as the biggest disfigurement of secularism which the apex court decreed as a fundamental feature of our constitution.

Likewise, what about the FIR lodged by sub inspector Ram Dube of Ayodhya police station stating that a group of 50-60 people stealthily placed the idols of Ram and Sita in the central dome of the Masjid in the night of December 22-23, 1949. The later sequence of events are vividly recorded by the Supreme Court in its judgement in Ismail Faruqui vs Union of India (1994). Can the courts adjudicate on matters of `faith’ and `belief’?

Post judgement slowly but steadily the shrillness is mounting asking the Muslims to give up their one-third of the land and join the `building of a grand temple’ in a gesture of reconciliation. When the hated apartheid regime was defeated in South Africa, the Nelson Mandela government had to confront this issue of reconciliation between the victims and perpetrators of inhuman crimes. After wide debate, the conclusion that they arrived at was that justice was a pre-requisite for reconciliation rather than an alternative to it. Thus was constituted the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The truth is that the Babri Masjid existed for over four centuries. The High Court relied on the `faith’ of the people who believe that Lord Ram was born on this very spot. Separate legal proceedings are pending on cases related to the demolition of the Babri Masjid. Justice must be delivered on these matters.

The Supreme Court will now have to deliver justice upholding the people’s `faith’ in the rule of law. It needs to be reiterated that this judicial process is the only recourse that people have to seek a solution to such disputes. It is, therefore, incumbent upon all to thwart all efforts that seek to sharpen communal polarisation and forcibly attempt to pressurise the Muslim community into parting with their share of the land which the court has granted them for the construction of a Masjid. This judicial process must be allowed to come to its conclusion and deliver justice without any pressures being mounted that can weaken the secular democratic foundations of modern India.

Courtesy: www.pd.cpim.org

Saturday, October 2, 2010

DELHI UNION OF JOURNALISTS' SEMINAR FLAYS PAID NEWS IN AN AGE OF INEQUALITY - By Special Correspondent

MEDIA experts, working journalists, editors and students of journalism, along with a good number of writers, artists, deans and professors, received with applause a straight call for ending the pernicious practice of the paid news syndrome, as it is replacing journalism by trivia while blacking out the rural India and the real India of the masses. It was an about three hour discourse amidst pin drop silence.

A gathering with a difference was there at the Speakers Hall at the Constitution Club on Friday, September 24, to hear P Sainath, the rural affairs editor of The Hindu, now in his 30th year of journalism, charge that there was a “structural compulsion to lie” in the media and that the paid news syndrome was a severe blot on our civilisation, in an age of grim inequalities.

Chaired by renowned historian Professor Romila Thapar, the meeting was organised by Delhi Union of Journalists (DUJ) in coordination with the Popular Education and Action Centre and the Delhi Media Centre for Research and Publications Trust. The meeting was laced with a spirit of discourse, a firing line of twenty questions from a bunch of journalists that included Mr Paranjoy Guha Thakurta who spotlighted the issue in the Press Council, leaders of the Indian Journalists Union, social activists and a rush of journalists, teachers and media students. The venue was overflowing on the occasion.

ANTI-MONOPOLY LAW NEEDED

With news media groups becoming corporate players in their own right, they need to be held to the same standards as any other corporate entity. So said P Sainath, rural affairs editor of The Hindu, who wrote a series of articles on the paid news phenomenon for his newspaper. The first step in fighting the paid news syndrome is to bring in an anti-monopoly legislation that would prevent monopoly companies from making investments in media business and media companies from investing in monopoly concerns.

To make his point that paid news — which is news paid for in cash or kind by interested parties — is essentially a fallout of unethical business practices, Sainath said while citingd a series of statistics in his lecture entitled “A Structural Compulsion to Lie.”

Indian media companies, today, have invested in at least 200 different sectors, including aviation, hotels, cement, shipping, steel, education, automobiles, textiles, education, cricket, information technology and real estate --- to name just a few.

For example, one of India's largest newspaper groups has 240 “private treaties” with various corporate houses. As a guarantee for advertisements and against negative coverage, newspapers pick up a 7 to 10 per cent stake in every company with which they sign such a treaty.

All of this leaves the journalists in these newspapers unable to honestly write about India Inc. “There is a structural compulsion to lie in a media so invested in stock markets and corporates themselves,” said Mr Sainath. “They simply cannot afford to tell the truth.”

The renowned journalist also recalled how, at the height of the economic recession in 2009, the editorial desks of at least two major English newspapers were given a strict fatwa against any use of the “R” word. It could be called a “slowdown,” but not a “recession,” simply because the economic future of these media groups depended on the market taking up, with an increase in the value of the shares they had purchased through private treaties.

In the course of his presentation, Sainath also charged that the Press Council had led the nation down by its failure to publish the report of the sub-committee guided by Mr Paranjoy and by releasing a truncated version of the report. He pointed out that the Press Council was suppressing the report despite every major political party in parliament demanding that it should be tabled in the house. The government too appeared to be in favour of such a step, but the matter had been left hanging as there were doubts about the exact legal position of the Press Council which is an autonomous body. The Press Council itself was not saying that it was killing the report. Its plea was that it was archiving it, which meant that anyone who wished to see the report must approach the Press Council every time they wanted to do so, Sainath added.

Sainath pointed out that with politics becoming ever more enmeshed with business interests, it was inevitable that the corporatisation of news would soon extend to the electoral space as well. This is a dangerous trend, he added.

TRIVIA RULE THE MEDIA

Lamenting the declining values in the country since globalisation, Professor Romila Thapar regretted that the media had virtually become a jamboree of vested interests that had little concern for the masses. She also expressed her concern at the attempts to whip up communal frenzy in the media and the day to day decline in public discourse, with the media highlighting trivia only. She added that even mainstream media has been missing out on covering the major issues of our times — growing hunger, an agrarian crisis, mass displacement, and the high inequality – a point well highlighted by Mr Sainath.

Professor Romila Thapar who chaired the entire session for over three hours, observed bitingly it seems we have two India’s --- one shining India and the other Gharib Bharat, one bristling with joy and the other screaming in gruesome poverty and dying in misery. The government should now stop to look at poverty as a statistical problem and treat it as a humane problem to be tackled on a war footing, she said amidst claps by the audience.

In a brief comment, Delhi Union of Journalists general secretary S K Pande pointed out that with the paid news syndrome the people’s right to right information was being eroded by the proprietors’ right to flood the market with business news and with more and more smut. Reasoned discourse was being flushed out for the sake of an imaginary world of dreams, far removed from the reality. “There are two faces of the media, one visible and the other not so visible, one of has more grab, more journalists and proprietors while in the other we see the grossly exploited journalists, victims of contracts of bondage without any security of service. He called for democratisation of the media, a wide-spectrum Media Council and a Media Commission of experts to look into all aspects of the media in the era of globalisation. He also called for an alternative information order in order to combat the present world of trivia in the name of journalism.

DUJ president Ms Sujata Madhok, in her vote of thanks, said this was the beginning of a series of programmes to be organised by the Delhi Union of Journalists to spotlight current issues, and indicated about some of the proposed programmes. She pointed out that P Sainath was part of a discussion group “Baatcheet” in the DUJ almost 30 years ago and had then called for a New Information Order. Social activist from the Popular Education and Action Centre, Anil Chaudhari, a contemporary student of P Sainath, recalled some old moments and memories. Media researcher Ms Durga Raghunath, who had been a student of Sainath, pointed out various facets of Sainath’s journey in the hurly-burly of rural reporting and highlighted some of his achievements.

Source: www.pd.cpim.org

Friday, October 1, 2010

WEST BENGAL CHIEF MINISTER TO ADDRESS MASS MEETING AT KAJORA, BURDWAN ON 10-10-2010

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

TEACHERS AND STUDENTS OF NORTH 24 PARGANAS IN WEST BENGAL PROTEST AGAINST ASSAULT OF COLLEGE PRINCIPAL BY TMC-CONGRESS-MAOIST HOOLIGANS

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