People's Democracy

(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)


Vol. XXIX

No. 32

August 07, 2005

  AIKS Gears Up For Countrywide Campaign

Kisan Council Meeting Held In Dehradun

 

THE All India Kisan Council of the All India Kisan Sabha, which met on July 23-24, 2005 at Dehradun, decided to organise countrywide campaign from September on various issues facing the farmers of the country. It has also decided to organise a countrywide protest action on September 29 as part of this campaign. The council congratulated the state units for crossing 18 million membership. The membership has increased by more than 16.5 lakhs from 1,71,78,872 last year to 1,88,47,270 this year.

 

The meeting was held in the  Dehradun, the capital of Uttaranchal state and was inaugurated by AIKS president S Ramchandran Pillai. In his inaugural speech he said that the last meeting held at Thiruvananthapuram in Kerala had adopted the updated version of the Alternative Agriculture Policy, which has since been widely propagated by the AIKS and AIAWU to lakhs of peasants and agricultural workers through out the country.

 

The last 19 months after that AIKS meeting has seen major political developments in the country. The most important being the defeat of the BJP led central government in which Left and secular forces played a sterling role.

 

The new UPA central government led by the Congress had promised many things to the peasantry and agricultural workers in the National Common Minimum Programme. This was in the context of unprecedented agrarian crisis in the country that resulted from the liberalisation policies of the BJP regime.

 

However, said Pillai, during the last 14 months of UPA regime, not a single of their promises made to the peasantry had been implemented and on the contrary the government was taking extremely severe anti-peasant measures. The seed bill proposed by this regime was aimed not at helping the peasantry but was meant to solely benefit foreign and indigenous big seed companies. Efforts were being made by the central government to pressurise the state government to enact new marketing laws that would enable multinational companies to invade the agricultural market. Giant corporations can now set up private markets, not regulated by the marketing committees.

 

Subsides for food and fertilisers were sought to be further slashed and efforts were on to put an end to grain procurement. The government was refusing to take parliament and people into confidence as regards the WTO negotiations, the ministerial meeting for which was due to be held at Hong Kong in December 2005.

 

In this back ground, concluded Pillai, this All India Kisan Council meeting would have to decide to launch massive struggles to bring pressure on the UPA regime and protect the interests of the mass of the peasantry and agricultural workers.

 

GEN-SEC REPORT

 

AIKS general secretary K Varadharajan placed the general secretary’s report before the council. Outlining the grave situation before the peasantry of the country today, he explained several aspects of the government’s onslaughts against Indian agriculture as a whole.

 

The peasants and rural poor had welcomed the outcome of the general election 2004, which resulted in the ouster of the BJP-led NDA regime. The vote against the NDA government was also a vote against neo-liberal economic policies that have been in vogue for the last fourteen years. He said that in this backdrop the people expected the UPA government to act without any delay and carry out the tasks of providing relief to the distressed masses of the country. But the track record of the UPA government in the last fourteen months in offices has rather been disappointing. Practically there is no difference between the NDA and UPA regime as far as economic policies are concerned, said Varadharajan.

 

Saying that the peasantry and the toiling masses of the country cannot countenance this all round drift, the AIKS general secretary called upon the entire organisation to gear itself for the struggles ahead. He also called upon AIKS members to ensure the success of 31st all India conference of AIKS which is to be held from January 28-31, 2006 at Nasik in Maharashtra. After discussion the secretary’s report was unanimously adopted.