People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No.
15 April 15, 2012 |
COMRADE
S Ramachandran Pillai, president
of the inaugural session, Comrade A B Bardhan, veteran leader of the
Communist
Party of India, Comrade delegates and observers, guests and friends,
I
hereby declare open the 20th Congress
of the Communist Party of India (Marxist). I convey my warm greetings
to all
the delegates, observes and special invitees assembled here. I welcome
Comrade
A B Bardhan who has come here after the completion of the 21st Congress of the Communist
Party of
India at
Comrades
and friends,
The
Party Congress is being held in Kerala after a gap of 22 years. Kerala
blazed a
new trail by electing the first Communist ministry in 1957. The CPI(M)
in this
period has grown stronger and led many popular struggles in defence
of the interests of the working people. On this occasion, I greet the
lakhs of
Party members and supporters.
We
are
holding our Congress in
It
was
in this city that the first Communist Party unit was formed in 1937. It
consisted of four members – P Krishna Pillai, EMS Namboodiripad, K
Damodaran
and N C Sekhar.
We
pay
tribute to the eight valiant Communist martyrs of Onchiyam who died in
police
firing in 1948. We salute the memory of all those who laid down their
lives in
the anti-imperialist and anti-feudal struggles in Malabar.
Comrades
and friends,
The
four years since our last Party Congress in 2008 have been marked by a
global
capitalist crisis, the severest since the great depression of the
1930s. This
first prolonged crisis of capitalism in the 21st century marks a turning
point. It has
underlined the unsustainability of finance-driven capitalist
globalisation. The
impact of this crisis has hit the people of the advanced capitalist
countries
in Europe and the
The
working class and other sections of the working people, including the
youth and
students, are protesting and there have been widespread struggles
against the
attacks on their livelihoods and living standards. The general strikes
in
Imperialism
led by the
Our
Party extends its support and solidarity with all the Left, democratic
and
progressive forces in the countries of
Comrades
and friends,
It
is
nearly three years since the UPA-2 government came into office after
the Lok
Sabha elections. These three years are a dismal record of continuous
price rise
of food and essential commodities which constitutes a savage assault on
the
poorer sections; once again, there is the recurrence of farmer’s
suicides in
different parts of the country with no respite from the agrarian
crisis. The
exploitation of workers has intensified sharply with the share of wages
in the
net value dropping steadily. Hunger and malnutrition among children are
a
shameful blot on our society.
The
UPA
government in its pursuit of neo-liberal policies has heaped more
burdens on
the working people. It seeks to deny the reality of poverty by fixing
fraudulent poverty lines. It refuses to bring a food security bill
which can
guarantee a minimum quantum of foodgrains under a universal public
distribution
system. It allows speculation in food and essential commodities through
futures
trading by which private companies and traders are heaping huge profits
by
pushing up prices.
The
two
decades of liberalisation has led to unprecedented increase in
inequalities. As
a result,
The
CPI(M) considers the fight against the neo-liberal policies as a
central task.
It will, in the coming days, endeavour to widen and intensify the
struggles of the
working people who are bearing the brunt of these attacks. The February
28
general strike by the central trade unions and the national federations
saw the
militant response of the working class and employees all over the
country. This
should be the precursor for united struggles of different sections of
the
working people. The Party Congress will discuss how we should undertake
this
work in the coming days.
The
UPA
government has set a new record in high level corruption. In the eight
years of
the UPA rule, corruption and the loot of natural resources have reached
unparalleled heights. This is an outcome of the neo-liberal regime.
There is a
nexus of big business, ruling politicians and bureaucrats who are
siphoning off
public funds and the loot of scarce resources. There is a need for an
effective
Lokpal Bill to curb corruption among public servants, but that alone is
not enough.
The fight against corruption should be directed against the neo-liberal
regimes
and the corrupt nexus which facilitates the loot of public funds and
scarce
resources. The CPI(M) and the Left alone have the credibility to fight
corruption. The Left-led governments that existed in
Comrades
and friends,
The
Hindutva forces have an agenda which is inimical to the
secular-democratic
system and values. The minorities face constant attacks and suppression
of
their rights in states where the BJP is in government like Karnataka,
Madhya
Pradesh and
The
Manmohan Singh government has pursued a foreign policy which is
influenced by
its strategic ties with the
The
CPI(M) will resolutely fight against the strategic alliance with the
The
CPI(M) and the Left suffered serious reverses in the Lok Sabha
elections in
2009 and subsequently in the
For
the
past three years,
Our
Party has examined and identified the shortcomings and weaknesses in
the
political and organisational spheres that are there and taken steps to
correct
them. Our Party is going to the people and mobilising them on their
issues. The
CPI(M) in
Comrades
and friends,
There
is no difference between the Congress and the BJP as far as economic
policies
are concerned. Both are wedded to neo-liberalism. There is nothing to
choose
between the Congress and the BJP as far as corruption is concerned. The
BJP
government’s nexus with the mining mafia and the loot of mineral
resources in
Karnataka reveals the same pattern of high level corruption as the 2G
spectrum
scandal under the aegis of the Congress-led government at the centre.
Comrades
and friends,
The
recent political developments show the failure of the two combinations
– the
UPA and the NDA – to consolidate and grow. The assembly elections to
the five
states have reflected this trend. As more and more the bankruptcy
and
venality of the present order becomes apparent, the people are looking
for an
alternative.
According
to us, such an alternative can be provided only by the Left and
democratic
forces. In order to build the Left and democratic alliance and forge
such an
alternative, it is necessary first of all to strengthen the CPI(M),
expand its
base and influence all over the country. A strong CPI(M) can strengthen
Left
unity and thereby rally other democratic forces to present a Left and
democratic platform. In order to do so, the CPI(M) will take up all the
issues
of the working class, the peasantry, the agricultural workers, youth,
and other
sections of the working people to launch struggles and united
movements. It
will relentlessly champion the cause of the dalits, adivasis, women and
minorities
who suffer from social oppression.
The
Party will cooperate and have joint actions with other democratic and
secular
parties on people’s issues, defence
of federalism and defence
of secularism.
The
CPI(M) has always believed in applying Marxism-Leninism to the concrete
conditions of
Let
us bend all our energies and resources to develop a strong
all-India Party. The entire Party should be geared up to go to the
people and
take up their causes. The 20th Congress
will provide us the ideological purpose and the political direction to
do so.