Sunday, January 16, 2011

JYOTI BASU CENTRE FOR SOCIAL STUDIES & RESEARCH

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MURSHIDABAD DISTRICT: NREGA FUND MISAPPROPRIATED BY PANCHAYATS LED BY CONGRESS

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JALPAIGURI: MSCREANT KILLED IN FIRING

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COLLEGE SQUARE, KOLKATA: BANGLA SANSKRITI MELA TO START

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DOCUMENTARY FILM ON ICHAMATI RIVER

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MITRA INSTITUTION: SFI DISTRIBUTES TEST PAPERS AMONGST STUDENTS

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KOLKATA METROPOLITAN DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY: CONTRACTUAL WORKERS DEMAND REGULARISATION

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TO INTELLECTUALS SUPPORTING MAMATA BANERJEE

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PARIVARTAN IN WEST BENGAL STYLE

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POEM TO MAMATA BANERJEE

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BANGA BANDHU SK. MUJIBUR RAHAMAN

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MID DAY MEAL: HOW UPA GOVERNMENT DESTROYS THIS SCHEME

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NETAI VILLAGE-LALGARH, WEST BENGAL: HOW CONSPIRACY WAS EXECUTED

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DR. INDRAJIT ROY, SHERIFF, KOLKATA REMEMBERS DR MADANMOHAN CHOWDHURY

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INTELLECTUALS SUPPORTING MAMATA-MAOIST-SUCI-CHIDAMBRAM-MEDIA NEXUS SHED THEIR SKIN

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GANASHAKTI ON NEXUS BETWEN MAOIST BUTCHERS AND GOONS OF MAMATA BANERJEE


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SOUTH 24 PARGANA ZILLA PARISHAD: MOST CORRUPT AND INEFFICIENT ZILLA PARISHAD

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ALIPORE: DEPUTATION TO THE DISTRICT MAGISTRATE, SOUTH 24 PARGANAS

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BAHARAMPORE: NEW BUILDING OF CENTRE OF INDIAN TRADE UNIONS

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ANDHRA PRADESH: DEATH TALES

Most of the villages in the affected regions have witnessed deaths of affected farmers – either by suicide or by heart attack. With government coming out with a pittance of relief, the small farmers who borrowed at high interest rates to till the land taken on tenancy, saw no way out except taking their own lives. Others were so shocked at the loss that got heart attacks.

Below are brief accounts of some of those who perished due to the insensitivity of the rulers and their anti-agricultural policies.

REGALA SUBBAIAH

This young 27 year old small farmer hailed from Takkellapadu village in Dachepally mandal of Guntur district. With an enterprising spirit, this small farmer took on lease 5 acres of land and sowed chilli and cotton in 2 acres each while in the remaining one acre he cultivated paddy. He owned only 50 cents of land. He raised Rs 1 lakh as loan from private moneylenders. He had to pay Rs 50,000 as tenancy amount to the landowner. But Subbaiah's entire crop was devastated in the December rains. With the money lenders at this door to repay the amount, this young farmer found no way to pay back the amount. Even the meagre releif provided by the government would reach him only if the landowner is benevolent as there is no record of his tenancy. In this background, Subbaiah hanged himself to death in his hut on December 24.

NAKKA SUDHAKAR

This 35 year old farmer in Kollipara village in Guntur district committed suicide by consuming pesticide. He took on lease 2.5 acres of land in the village and cultivated paddy. He took Rs 16,000 as loan from a local cooperative bank and another Rs 10,000 from local self help group. He further raised an amount of Rs 20,000 from friends and relatives. There was an outstanding of Rs 17,000 to be paid to local fertiliser shop. On top of this, he had to pay 55 bags of paddy as tenancy (at the rate of 22 bags per acre). In this background, he naturally had high hopes on the crop he was so assiduously cultivating. Electing an auspicious day in the first week of December, he harvested the crop and was contemplating transporting the same when the untimely rains damaged his entire harvest. Owing money to so many sources, apart from the payment in kind to the landowner, this hard working farmer decided to consume pesticide as a way out of the debt trap.

PUNEM HANMANTHU

Belonging to Metlagudem village in Karepally mandal of Khammam district, this 48 year old medium farmer made a loan of Rs 1.20 lakh from private moneylenders to cultivate cotton, pulses and paddy in his seven acres of land. He already had a debt of Rs 1.80 lakh. With his entire crop damaged in the rains, and seeing no hope from the government, this farmer also committed suicide by consuming pesticide on December 16.

NAGAIAH

This 40 year old peasant in Lolla village in Rayavaram mandal of East Godavari district took 2.5 acres of land on lease and cultivated paddy. He invested Rs 30,000 raised as loans from private moneylenders. He already owed Rs 1 lakh raised for marriage of his daughter. He hoped that with the harvest he could repay at least part of the money. But the entire crop was damaged. He hanged himself to death on December 18.

(INN)

Courtesy: www.pd.cpim.org/

ARMS BAZAAR: US ON A SELLING SPREE - Yohannan Chemerapally

THE year 2010 was a great year for the merchants of death. The extradition of the notorious Russian arms dealer, Viktor Bout, to the US by the government of Thailand had put the spotlight on the nefarious global arms trade. Bout is being described in the western media as an individual arms dealer with few scruples who sold his lethal supplies to the highest bidder. According to the Americans, who had put Bout on the most wanted list, the former Russian naval officer had supplied arms to groups on Washington’s so called terror list like Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the Taliban and insurgent groups in Somalia. The US has given the Colombian armed forces 5 billion dollars in military aid since the late nineties. Many more billion have been spent in Afghanistan in the continuing efforts to defeat the Taliban.

REAL DEATH VENDORS

However the real “merchants of death” are the big arms companies, based mainly in the US and Europe, that sell weapons worth billions to the countries in the developing world. Companies in the US have led the pack. The latest arms deals signed by the US with Saudi Arabia and other states in the West Asian region will see the profits of Lockheed-Martin, Boeing and Northrop Grumman soaring in the next fiscal. The global arms trade is a 60 billion dollars annual business. The country consistently topping the list of arms suppliers is the US. The other nations in the list of the top ten arms exporters are Russia, Germany, France, the UK, Israel, China, Sweden, the Netherlands and Italy.

In 2009, the US share of the global defence market was 39 per cent, followed by Russia with around 20 per cent sales. China was the third biggest exporter. India has been among the top purchasers of military equipment. In 2008, India along with Pakistan, Algeria and Malaysia were among the top five buyers of weapons. In 2009, Brazil emerged as the biggest recipient of arms with 7.2 billion dollars in purchases, followed by Venezuela which spent 6.4 billion dollars in arms deals. For the period between 2002 and 2009, Saudi Arabia has led the pack of recipient nations having inked arms deals worth more than 39.9 billion dollars, followed by India which had entered into arms deals worth 32.4 billion dollars.

This year the US is likely to break a record in arms sales world wide. The Financial Times has reported that Gulf Arab states have ordered US weapons systems worth 123 billion dollars “to counter Iran military power.” The biggest deal is with Saudi Arabia. The deal worth 60 billion dollars was formally announced in October this year. Among other things, the US will be supplying the Saudis 85 new F-15 jet fighters and will be upgrading another 70 fighter planes. Washington expects to reap an additional 30 billion dollars when the Saudi navy is upgraded in the near future. American commentators have said that the Saudi deal is a “huge bail out” for American military contractors.

US MILITARISING WEST ASIAN REGION

Many West Asia watchers are of the opinion that the region is already overflowing with arms. Saudi Arabia, many military experts have opined, is already over-armed and have military capabilities in excess to their legitimate needs. The Obama administration, however, seems determined to further militarise the tense region, regardless of the consequences. The US is also sending a strong signal to its enemies that despite its declining superpower status it proposes to remain the major power in the region. “This proposed sale has tremendous significance from a strategic regional perspective,” said Andrew Shapiro, the US assistant secretary of state for military affairs, while announcing the arms deal with the Saudis. “It will send a strong message to the countries in the region that we are committed to support the security of our key partners and allies in the Arabian Gulf and the broader Middle East,” said Shapiro.

US Defence officials have said that Tel Aviv did not object to the sale of sophisticated weaponry to Saudi Arabia as “it will not affect Israel’s upper hand in the region.” But just to make sure, the Obama administration has announced that Israel would be given F-35 Joint Strike Fighters, the most expensive fighter plane developed so far, costing 184 million dollars apiece. Israel will get 20 of these planes between 2015 and 2017. There are also reports that the Obama administration’s offer of the F-35 jet fighters was in lieu of the Israeli government’s decision to once again “freeze” the building of settlements on the West Bank and go back to the dialogue table.

The UAE has recently signed military contracts worth 35.6 billion dollars with the US. The purchases include that of a high altitude missile defence system called Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (Thaad), which is still in the development stage and Patriot anti-missile batteries. The UAE had also purchased 80 American made F-16 jet fighters. An US Governments Accountability Office (GAO) Report accessed by the media in September faults the Obama administration for concluding multi-billion dollar arms deals with Gulf countries without establishing whether they were in the national interests of the US. The GAO, which reports to the US Congress, had looked into American defence deals conducted with the Gulf States from 2005 to 2009. The Obama administration has disagreed with the GAO’s contention that US national interests were not prioritised. US officials had told the GAO that arms sales to the Gulf “support the US defence industrial base” and represent “a key component of the US security relationship in the region.”

The US has been seeking for a long time to make the Gulf a frontline against Iran. The huge military sales to Saudi Arabia are also meant to make the biggest Gulf country a strategic buffer between Israel and Iran. The US and Saudi Arabia share a close strategic relationship for the last seven decades, based on oil and security. Though relations between Riyadh and Teheran have vastly improved, the Saudi monarchy seems to be in Washington’s corner as for as the nuclear dispute is concerned.

Vice Admiral Jeffrey Wieringa, director of the Pentagon’s Defence Security Cooperation Agency, has predicted that the US weapons sales would cross the 50 billion dollars mark this year. Oman and Kuwait are likely to place orders with the US to replace and upgrade their air forces. Oman has reportedly earmarked 12.3 billion dollars and Kuwait, 7.1 billion dollars for arms purchases from the US. In September the US signed a deal with Iraq to sell weapons worth 4.2 billion dollars. They include 18 F-16 fighter aircraft, Sidewinder air to air missiles, laser guided bombs and reconnaissance equipment.

ARM TWISTING OTHER GOVT’S FOR ARMS DEALS

The other recent notable arms sales concluded by the US include a 3.2 billion dollars sale of F-16 to Egypt, 7 billion dollars worth of Boeing F-18 bombers to Brazil and 134 billion dollars in Chinook helicopters to Morocco. The arms deal the US signed with Taiwan in January this year triggered a diplomatic row between Washington and Beijing. Under the deal, the US will sell advanced weaponry worth more than 6.3 billion dollars to the island, which China considers as its province. In retaliation, China had suspended military exchanges with the US and had warned that the deal would have an adverse impact on bilateral relations. In 2008, the US had sold Taiwan aircraft and missiles worth 6.4 billion dollars.

Wieringa has made eight visits to India so far. India is now emerging as a key market for the US. He boasted in a recent blog post about the huge strides the US has made in weapons exports. The Indian defence market was so far virtually monopolised by Russia and Israel. A major thrust of the Obama visit to India was to sell American weaponry. The Obama administration is reportedly “investigating” on ways to make the selling of defence weaponry easier to countries like India. While signing this year’s military budget, President Obama said that the document takes “necessary steps towards reshaping priorities of America’s defence establishment and changing the way the Pentagon does business.” WikiLeaks documents have shown that Washington has been arm twisting various governments around the world to buy Aerican weaponry. The US administration, the leaked documents have revealed, has been strenuously lobbying for companies like Boeing.

India has set aside 50 billion dollars for the next five years to modernise its armed forces. Ten billion dollars have been earmarked for the purchase of the 126 multi-role combat fighters. If an American company clinches this deal, the US could then emerge as India’s biggest defence partner and military ally. India has already gone in for some big ticket purchases, including cargo transport aircraft and long distance reconnaissance planes along with 145 US made howitzers this year alone. The deals are worth more than 5 billion dollars. India, unlike Pakistan, pays for the American weapons, from its budget. Countries like Pakistan and Israel pay for American weaponry from the huge defence aid they receive from Washington. The US counter-insurgency fund for Pakistan for the fiscal year of 2011 is to increase to 1.2 billion dollars.

Courtesy: www.pd.cpim.org/

Monday, January 3, 2011

DR AMBEDKAR UNIVERSITY, MAHARASHTRA: SFI WINS TWO SENATE SEATS - BHAUSAHEB ZIRPE

TWO months after winning the Student Council election held on September 27, 2010 in the prestigious Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University at Aurangabad in Maharashtra (a victory reported in these columns earlier), the Students Federation of India (SFI) won both the seats in the university’s Senate last month on November 23 after a bitter struggle. The election this year assumed added importance since the new university Senate will soon elect the new Management Council of the university.

The present system of the Senate election to the university is as follows: After students of the 395 colleges affiliated to the university elect their Student Parliament secretaries, 15 of them in the order of merit are elected. In proportion to the number of affiliated colleges, five out of these 15 are from Aurangabad district, four from Beed district and three each from Jalna and Usmanabad districts. (These are the four districts where the colleges are affiliated to the university.) These 15 secretaries then elect a president and a secretary, who then become the two student members of the University Senate.

This year, it was the first time that the SFI fielded its nominees for both these posts while an education baron belonging to the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) from Usmanabad district individually sponsored rival candidates for both these posts. The NCP’s student wing called the Rashtrawadi Vidyarthi Congress (RVC), the RSS-led Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) and the student wing of the RPI (Athavale group) also fielded their nominees. All of them united with the singular aim of defeating the SFI.

During the scrutiny of the nomination papers, however, the nomination forms of the RVC, the ABVP and the RPI student wing were all rejected, because the candidates of the NCP and RPI student wings had themselves proposed and seconded the nomination forms of the ABVP candidates. This foolish act exposed the unholy nexus between the three organisations.

This resulted in a straight fight between the SFI on the one hand and NCP education baron-sponsored candidates on the other. Tellingly, all the anti-SFI forces rallying behind the latter mentioned candidates. The SFI projected this contest as a straight fight between the students community and the rapacious private education barons of the state.

Efforts now began to force the SFI to withdraw its candidates, but the SFI did not budge. Hence, on November 15, 2010, the last day of the withdrawal of nominations, the anti-SFI forces engaged hoodlums of the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS led by Raj Thackeray) who physically attacked SFI activists Atul Chourpagar, Sunil Rathod and Farukh Shaikh. These SFI activists were severely injured. The hoodlums were arrested by the police and the vice chancellor called for their externment. The SFI replied to this attack by mobilising the students community against violence and in defence of democracy.

Triumphing over this culture of physical violence and the threats given to the 15 voters by the education baron lobby and the NCP legislators, both the SFI candidates won the election to the president and secretary posts by a margin of 8 to 7. This was the first victory of the SFI in the university Senate. Sandip Devkar from Aurangabad was elected president and Shaikh Zakeria from Beed was elected secretary. Both of them are activists of the Aurangabad SFI.

The SFI activists who worked indefatigably for this victory included Bhausaheb Zirpe, Sunil Rathod, Farukh Shaikh and Atul Chourpagar. Others who made valuable contributions were Dr Maroti Tegumpure, Yogesh Khosre, Pandit Shinde, Govind Dumne, Hanuman Lavhale, Rupesh Deshmukh and Manisha Nagargoje. It was their efforts that resulted in this historic victory.

Source: People’s Democracy