People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 04 January 27, 2013 |
Towards a Seventh Left Front Govt in Tripura
Prakash
Karat
THE Left Front in
Tripura held a
central rally in Agartala on January 20 to launch its election
campaign. The state
assembly elections are on February 14. I participated in this
rally which saw
one lakh people attending, a huge number, considering that the
total population
of the state is only 37 lakhs.
Tripura is in the
north-eastern part
of the country. It is surrounded on three sides by Bangladesh.
It was here in
the nineteen forties that the Communist party worked among the
tribal people
and organised them to fight against the Maharaja and his
feudal rule. Nripen
Chakraborty, Dasarath Deb and Biren Datta were the pioneers of
the Communist
movement. The first two later served as the chief ministers of
the state.
Tripura has had a
Left Front
government since 1978. In the first two terms of the Left
Front government,
there were two major achievements: the implementation of land
reforms and the
setting up of the Tripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District
Council under the
sixth schedule of the constitution. There was a break only in
1988-93 when
there was a Congress regime. The Congress came to power
through a rigged
election with the help of the central government headed by
Rajiv Gandhi. This
was one of the most sordid episodes in Indian politics.The
five year period saw
semi-fascist terror unleashed against the CPI(M) and hundreds
of the Party
members and supporters were killed. It was after an arduous
struggle that the
Congress was isolated and the Left Front regained office in
March 1993.
Since then, in the
three subsequent
elections in 1998, 2003 and 2008, the Left Front won with a
two-thirds
majority. All in all, the Left Front has been in government
for six terms since
1978, except for the one term in 1988-93.
The history of the
Left Front
government in the last two decades is a remarkable and
inspiring one. In the
first decade, in the nineties, the state was still affected by
the violent
insurgency by armed extremist tribal groups. Their attacks had
begun in the
early eighties. Sheltering in camps across the border in
Bangladesh, these
groups wreaked havoc in the tribal and hill areas. They were
financed and
equipped by imperialist agencies and the ISI of Pakistan. They
demanded an
independent Tripura. Thousands were killed in the three
decades of terrorist
violence and hundreds of CPI (M) tribal cadres and supporters
laid down their
lives defending the unity of the people and the country.
The Left Front
governments could
tackle this armed insurgency by adopting a three pronged
approach. First, the
political one, of preserving the unity of the tribal and
Bengali communities
which was sought to be disrupted. Second, by raising and
equipping a state
armed police (Tripura State Rifles) which could effectively
counter the armed
gangs. Third, the government stepped up its development and
welfare activities
once the violence was curbed in the tribal areas. The Tripura Tribal
Autonomous District
Council was revitalised for this purpose.
Today Tripura is a
peaceful state and
there is harmony and unity between the majority Bengalis and
the minority
tribal people. Tripura stands out in the entire north-east for
achieving this,
whereas there is ethnic and tribal strife in other states like
Assam, Manipur,
Meghalaya and Nagaland. The CPI(M) and the Left’s role is the
key factor in
Tripura.
The record of the
Left Front
government under the leadership of Manik Sarkar is also
outstanding in the developmental
and welfare activities. It is acknowledged by all that Tripura
is the best
governed state in the north-east. In the 2001 census, Tripura
was in terms of
the literacy rate the 11th among all states; in the 2011
census,Tripura had
reached the 4th position with 88 per cent literacy. There were
no farmers
suicides and no starvation deaths in the last ten years.
Tripura has an
excellent record in
the delivery of various schemes. Tripura stood first in the
country in 2011 by
generating 86 average man days under the rural employment
guarantee scheme
(MNREGA). Tripura has also done justice to the tribal people
by being in the
forefront in implementing the Forest Rights Act. By mid 2012,
1,19,342 pattas
had been distributed to forest dwellers securing their land.
There are 16
pension schemes that cover almost all BPL families.
As far as
infrastructure is
concerned, 90 per cent of the total of 8,312 habitations are
electrified. 90
percentage of irrigable land has been brought under irrigation
facilities and
50 per cent of the total cultivable land is now irrigated.
The biggest step
taken by the current
Left Front government was the introduction of 35 kgs rice at
Rs 2 per kilo for
all BPL card holders which is 2 lakh families. In the
north-eastern states,
rice is supplied at Rs 5 to 6 per kilo due to the higher
transportation costs.
It was so in Tripura too till August 2012. The supply of rice
at Rs 2 has been
welcomed by all sections of the people. The Tripura government
is bearing the
cost of the increased subsidy.
The Left Front was
the first to
announce its list of candidates for the 60 assembly seats, 20
of which are
reserved for scheduled tribes. The CPI(M) is contesting 55,
the CPI-2, the
RSP-2 and the Forward Bloc-1.
The Congress party
finalised its list
of candidates among squabbles and open rifts. It has
maintained its alliance
with the tribal organisation, the INPT which is the body which
incorporated the
TUJS and some other tribal groups. The Congress traditionally
had no base among
the tribal people. It therefore allied first with the TUJS and
later the INPT.
These tribal organisations have had separatist platforms at
various points of
time. The Congress had the dubious record of encouraging the
tribal separatist
and extremist forces just to isolate and weaken the CPI(M)’s
strong base among
the tribal people.
Today, these tactics
stand
discredited before the people. The Left Front stands for
unity, peace, progress
and development – a platform which is attracting the youth in
large numbers.
At the rally on
January 20, wave
after wave of people, marched into the ground raising the
slogan “We will bring
the Seventh Left Front
Government”. This is a pledge which will be in all
certainty fulfilled on
February 14.