People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
02 January 10, 2010 |
AIKS 32ND CONFERENCE BEGINS WITH
A CALL TO
Build United Struggles against
UPA Govt�s Anti-Peasant Policies
N
TERMING
the
present UPA government at the centre as 'the worst anti-peasant and
anti-agriculture government that India has ever seen', the 32nd all
India
conference of the All India Kisan Sabha called upon the peasantry to
build
powerful, united struggles in resistance to the most anti-peasant and
anti-agriculture policies of this government. It also highlighted the
unprecedented
distress among the peasantry in the country as a result of skewed
policies
pursued by the ruling classes since independence and suggested concrete
alternatives to overcome this situation.
S
Ramachandran Pillai,
president of AIKS, gave this call in his presidential address to the
conference, which began in
In
his presidential
address Pillai at the outset expressed happiness at the conference
being held
in Andhra Pradesh that has a long history of Kisan Sabha playing an
important
role in the freedom struggle, struggles against landlordism, for
formation of
state of Andhra Pradesh on linguistic basis etc. He recalled the
history of
peasant movement in the state which began as early as in 1923 and
included such
glorious chapters as the march from Itchapuram to Madras in 1937, the
heroic
Telangana armed struggle during which more than three thousand villages
were
liberated and over ten lakh acres of lands belonging to landlords were
distributed among the people. The continuation of that legacy in the
form of
militant struggles by the Kisan Sabha in the state against debt burden,
for
remunerative prices, against high power tariffs imposed at the behest
of World
Bank etc were pointed out.
The
AIKS president
underlined the grim situation facing the peasantry not only in
In
Pillai
traced the
present agrarian crisis to the skewed nature of capitalist path of
development
pursued by the ruling classes since independence. The State-sponsored
phase of
capitalist development till 1991 and the State-withdrawal or the
neo-liberal
phase since 1991 have totally failed to solve the problems of the
peasantry and
agriculture in
Pillai
went on to list
some of the recent measures taken by the government in agricultural
sector to
prove this point. The Seed Bill, introduced in parliament, seeks to
take away
the birth right of the peasantry to produce, preserve and transfer
seeds among
themselves. The government now wants to hand it over this right to
corporates
and MNCs. The proposed amendments to the Land Acquisition Act of 1894
and the
provisions contained in the Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill
contain many
loopholes and do not adequately protect the interests of the peasantry.
The
AIKS, among other things, sought a provision enabling the affected
persons to
get a share in the increased income arising from the change in land
use. The
government has not accepted this demand. He also cited the recent
ordinance
brought by the UPA government amending the provisions of the Essential
Commodities Act in order to reduce the remunerative prices for
sugarcane
farmers. It sought to protect the interests of traders, exporters and
mill
owners, he charged. Similarly the case of approving the environmental
release
of Bt Brinjal without conducting appropriate and adequate experiments.
The
gameplan is to handover the production of seeds to Indian corporates
and MNCs.
AIKS
president has also
warned the UPA government against rushing into any new agreement
related to WTO
and criticised its over-enthusiasm in trying to remove the so-called
road block
in the
Strongly
opposing the ongoing land grab in the name of Special Economic Zones,
he said
�It is a fact that industrialisation and modernisation of
infrastructure is as
essential for economic development as is the development of
agriculture. A
planned, balanced and harmonious development of industry and
agriculture, not
one at the cost of another, is necessary in the present situation�.
Further
elaborating on the alternative approach being advocated by the AIKS,
Pillai
said the government must concentrate upon the production conditions
from the
point of view of the agrarian classes rather than the quantity of
commodities
produced by them. He sought greater State intervention in promoting
peasant
agriculture. It should make greater investments in irrigation,
electricity,
rural development etc. It should provide debt relief and remunerative
prices
for crops. It must also take measures for value addition and
diversification in
agriculture. The government must increase direct and indirect subsidies
to
agriculture in tune with what most developing and developed countries
are
doing. All these, Pillai underscored, would help in coming out of the
present
agrarian crisis and to achieve this there must be a radical change in
the
approach of the UPA government.
Earlier,
N K Shukla,
joint secretary of AIKS, placed the condolence resolution. The
conference paid
rich tributes to Comrade Harkishan Singh Surjeet, veteran kisan leader,
freedom
fighter and former general secretary of CPI(M). He led the
anti-betterment levy
struggle of farmers in