For The Record
'A CPI(M) Public Relations Coup'
Response to Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn et al on Nandigram: "At this critical juncture it is crucial to articulate a Left position that is simultaneously against forcible land acquisition in Nandigram and for the right of Taslima Nasreen to live, write and speak freely in India..."
For The Record
This statement was originally published in the Hindu on November 22, but since then one of the signatories, Susan George, has dissociated herself from it.
Noam Chomsky, Tariq Ali, Howard Zinn, Susan George, Others, Victoria Brittain
We read with growing dismay the statement signed by Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn and others advising those opposing the CPI(M)'s pro-capitalist policies in West Bengal not to "split the Left" in the face of American imperialism. We believe that for some of the signatories, their distance from events in India has resulted in their falling prey to a CPI(M) public relations coup and that they may have signed the statement without fully realising the import of it and what it means here in India, not just in Bengal.

We cannot believe that many of the signatories whom we know personally, and whose work we respect, share the values of the CPI(M)--to "share similar values" with the party today is to stand for unbridled capitalist development, nuclear energy at the cost of both ecological concerns and mass displacement of people (the planned nuclear plant at Haripur, West Bengal), and the Stalinist arrogance that the party knows what "the people" need better than the people themselves. Moreover, the violence that has been perpetrated by CPI(M) cadres to browbeat the peasants into submission, including time-tested weapons like rape, demonstrate that this "Left" shares little with the Left ideals that we cherish.

Over the last decade, the policies of the Left Front government in West Bengal have become virtually indistinguishable from those of other parties committed to the neoliberal agenda. Indeed, "the important experiments undertaken in the State" --the land reforms referred to in the statement--are being rapidly reversed. According to figures provided by the West Bengal state secretary for land reforms, over the past five years there has been a massive increase of landless peasants in the state due to government acquisition of land cheaply for handing over to corporations and developing posh upper class neighbourhoods.

We urge our friends to take very seriously the fact that all over the country, democratic rights groups, activists and intellectuals of impeccable democratic credentials have come out in full support of the Nandigram struggle.

The statement reiterates the CPI(M)'s claim that "there will be no chemical hub" in Nandigram, but this assurance is itself deliberately misleading. This is the explanation repeatedly offered by CPI(M) for the first round of resistance in Nandigram --that people reacted to a baseless rumour that there would be land acquisitions in the area. In fact, as the Chief Minister himself conceded in the State Assembly, it was no rumour but a notification issued by the Haldia Development Authority on January 2, 2007 indicating the approximate size and location of the projected SEZ, which triggered the turmoil.

The major factor shaping popular reaction to the notification was Singur.

Singur was the chronicle of the fate foretold for Nandigram. There, land was acquired in most cases without the consent of peasant-owners and at gun-point (terrorizing people is one way of obtaining their consent), under the colonial Land Acquisition Act (1894). That land is now under the control of the industrial house of the Tatas, cordoned off and policed by the state police of West Bengal. The dispossessed villagers are lost to history. A fortunate few among them will become wage slaves of the Tatas on the land on which they were once owners.

While the CPM-led West Bengal government has announced that it will not go ahead with the chemical hub without the consent of the people of Nandigram, it has not announced any plans of withdrawing its commitment to the neo-liberal development model. It has not announced the shelving of plans to create Special Economic Zones. It has not withdrawn its invitation to Dow Chemicals (formerly known as Union Carbide, the corporation responsible for tens of thousands of deaths in Bhopal) to invest in West Bengal. In other words, there are many more Nandigrams waiting to happen.

In any case, the reason for the recently renewed violence in Nandigram has been widely established to have nothing to do with the rumour or otherwise of a chemical hub. Print and visual media, independent reports, the governor of West Bengal (Gopal Gandhi) and the State Home Secretary's police intelligence all establish that this round of violence was initiated by the CPI(M) to re-establish its control in the area. We all have seen TV coverage of unarmed villagers barricaded behind walls of rubble, while policemen train their guns on them.

With the plans it has for the future, regaining control over Nandigram is vital for the CPI(M) to reassure its corporate partners that it is in complete control of the situation and that any kind of resistance will be comprehensively crushed. The euphemism for this in the free marketplace is ‘creating a good investment climate'.

The anti-Taslima Nasreen angle that has recently been linked to the Nandigram struggle against land acquisition is disturbing to all of us. However, we should remember that it is largely Muslim peasants who are being dispossessed by land acquisitions all over the state. There is a general crisis of confidence of the Muslim community vis-à-vis the Left Front government, inaugurated by the current Chief Minister's aggressive campaign to "clean up" madarsas, followed by the revelation of the Sachar Committee that Muslim employment in government jobs in West Bengal is among the lowest in the country. While we condemn the attempts to utilize this discontent and channelize it in sectarian ways, we feel very strongly that it would be unfortunate if the entire anger of the community were to be mobilized by communal and sectarian tendencies within it. Such a situation would be inevitable if all Left forces were seen to be backing the CPI(M).

This is why at this critical juncture it is crucial to articulate a Left position that is simultaneously against forcible land acquisition in Nandigram and for the right of Taslima Nasreen to live, write and speak freely in India.

History has shown us that internal dissent is invariably silenced by dominant forces claiming that a bigger enemy is at the gate. Iraq and Iran are not the only targets of that bigger enemy. The struggle against SEZ's and corporate globalization is an intrinsic part of the struggle against US imperialism.

We urge our fellow travellers among the signatories to that statement, not to treat the "Left" as homogeneous, for there are many different tendencies which claim that mantle, as indeed you will recognize if you look at the names on your own statement.

Mahashweta Devi,
Arundhati Roy,
Sumit Sarkar,
Uma Chakravarty,
Tanika Sarkar,
Moinak Biswas,
Kaushik Ghosh,
Saroj Giri,
Sourin Bhattacharya,
Nirmalangshu Mukherji,
Sibaji Bandyopadhyay,
Swapan Chakravorty,
Rajarshi Dasgupta,
Anand Chakravarty,
Apoorvanand,
Shuddhabrata Sengupta,
Nivedita Menon,
Aditya Nigam
For The Record
This statement was originally published in the Hindu on November 22, but since then one of the signatories, Susan George, has dissociated herself from it.
Noam Chomsky, Tariq Ali, Howard Zinn, Susan George, Others, Victoria Brittain
 
Daily Mail
COLLAPSE COMMENTS :
HAVE YOUR SAY
Dec 01, 2007 12:00 AM
10
Ganpat Ram

CPM is strong in 3 states. What about Orissa, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Jharkhand, MP, Rajsthan,NE states etc? There is no CPM. Why these states are under developed? Do you have any idea about poverty in these states? There is either BJP or Congress after independence. Could you please tell about this? Why farmers are committing suicide in Maharastra, Andhra daily?During election we have to choose best among the worsts which is true for every states. In Bengal still CPM is the best among the worsts. Mamata Banerjee is just horrible lady, BJP is nowhere in Bengal.
You might feel glad by telling Bengal as a ‘gonner’, but Bengal is a sleeping giant and its sleeping is getting broken in last 4-5 years. We have best brain, good agriculture, have industry. Due to CPM’s trade unionism and bad centre state relation we lost capital. But those are things of past now. Thanks to Buddhababu. About eggs in chicken farm at some stage there must be eggs.

http://in.news.yahoo.com/071130/203/6nxaj.html


You think about your own state CM. Does he speak English at all? Forget about aweful English. You people are getting some investments due to 16% tax relaxation, nothing more. Please remember that.
Biplab
Kolkata, India
Dec 01, 2007 12:00 AM
9
I do not think the people of Bengal will listen to these craps. They, the people of Bengal, are hard nuts to crack. But let these pseudo intellects keep on trying. They can bring thousands of Medha/Mamata/Mahasweta and the magazines can publish thousands more article like this, but people knows the best. Do not belive me? Wait until the next electios, be it panchayet or lok sava or assembly. My question is this: when these people Mahasweta Devi, Arundhati Roy, Sumit Sarkar, Uma Chakravarty, Tanika Sarkar, and others will stop barking.
Arati Das
Houston, United States
Nov 28, 2007 12:00 AM
8
This struggle can not be against SEZs and nuclear deal at all.
And Taslima is not a discussable point right now at all.
Pradeep Sharma
Mumbai, India
Nov 28, 2007 12:00 AM
7
Actually some Leftist people are jealous to Buddhababu. After independence Bengal got its right leader. Bengal’s actual economic development has started now under his leadership. He has vision, ambition, dream which he has been trying to materialize. He understands leftism/communism won’t work at all, it is a failed ideology. At this juncture I think he is following Chinese model. Communism is in administration, but everywhere it is capitalism. He understands that he has to develop Bengal by any way. CPM implemented Gandhiji’s idea like development of rural India through Panchayet, Land reform, better irrigation. Today Bengal is in top position in rice, vegetables, fish production in the country, second in potato. Bengal is in 3rd position in per hectre foodcrop production in the country, after Punjub and Haryana. Please check position of Bengal in country’s GDP. Bengal’s SDP growth rate is second in the country, after Karnataka. Actually Leftism is curse for Bengal. Whatever CPM was doing earlier and now Mamata is doing both are Leftism.If we delete 5 items like Leftism, CITU (CPM trade union), Mamata, Strikes and traffic jam in Kolkata from Bengal it would be number 1 state in the country. We have full fertile land, only 2-3% land is non fertile, but we have huge population, we have to feed them. Only agriculture can’t do this job. We need massive industry which has been going on now. That is why all problems are getting created. Why Buddhabau will tell Tata to go to other state? Earlier it happened, now it won’t. Now we see lot of investments from every corner of industry, nobody can resist it. Why Buddhabau will tell Tata, Dow Chemicals, Du Pont to go back? If he tells they will go to other state. What would happen to Bengal? It would never happen now. Dow Chemicals, DuPont, Shell will come to Nayachar mega chemical hub definitely. Salim will come. Now Kolkata is one of the hottest IT destinations. Who made it? Buddhabau. All kinds of industry, investments are welcome to Bengal now. We want to see Bengal as such kind of a state where Industry and agriculture will co exist. It won’t be like such kind of state where one side is industry and another side farmers will be committing suicide. Buddhabau is the right man to do this job. Forget about Leftism, we have to fill our stomach by any way. He is the man who is showing the way. As a result Nandigram happened. I am sure this is first and last. Another Nandigram won’t happen in Bengal that much I can tell you.
Biplab
Kolkata, India
Nov 28, 2007 12:00 AM
6
To these so called personalities of left ideology

At first I must tell that the way CPM recaptured Nandigram that is totally undemocratic and illegal. At the same time what has been going on in Nandigram in last 11 months led by BUPC (Trinamul, Naxal, SUCI, Jomiot Ulema e Hind, Maoist) that is also totally undemocratic and violent movement. The day Govt. announced this SEZ project from that day itself Mamata Banerjee started her gameplan. She knows her party can’t get majority in the election, she has been trying to create a chaos in our state for long time, she got it in Nandigram. The land acquisition was concerned in 4-5 panchayets only. At least 30-40% people were in favor of SEZ. But what did we see on 3rd Jan2007? Central team came to visit clean village program. But BUPC supporters spread rumour and provoked thousands of people with arms (we saw in the TV, you people might not see) destroyed roads, bridges, culverts, CPM supporters were driven out and CPM party offices were torched, after that day by day BUPC had been capturing one by one village in the adjoining areas with arms and total Nandigram I block was under control of BUPC.Definitely it was preplanned by Trinmul leader Shubhendu Adhiray. They were running a parallel administration.What you people would tell about this capturing? Did you ever condemn this kind of destruction? SEZ was related to only 4-5 panchayets, not full block. 3M(Mamata Banerjee, Medha Patkar and Mahasweta Devi) know everything, purposefully supported this movement with arms. Total block was a liberated zone, panchayets, Govt programs, schools, pulse polio everything was closed by so called BUPC gundas. Police tried to enter on 14th March, then we know what happened. I condemn police and CPM cadre action, but I condemn also those BPUC leaders who forced women, children to gather in front of police and they were behind the procession with arms. Everybody knows, only these people don’t know!!!!!!!!!!! After this again BUPC captured half of Nandigram II block. Net result was thousands of CPM supporters were driven out. Did these people condemn this? Are these farmers not human being? Or they are CPM supporters, so they are not farmers, they are gundas!!!!!! Violance is violence whoever has done. If CPM with arms does violence that is violence and if BUPC with arms does violence that is mass movement!!!!!!! How funny it is? Could you please tell which dictionary it is written? But so many so called leftist people supported this so called mass movement with arms. They gave money, and those BUPC leaders used to buy arms using those money, they also bought arms by selling Jelingham project factory goods of Burn Standard in Nandigram illegaly. It is now open that at some stage BUPC got linked to Maoist to dislodge CPM. West Bengal CPM is one of the most powerful party organizations in the world at present. They can’t be a mute spectator at this situation. Finally they hit back. I know so many CPM supporters have been telling that local MLA, MP, Panchayets, Govt. are of left, but thousands of CPM supporters are homeless, getting cornered. How it is tolerable day by day? CPM published names of 27 party workers killed in the violence from the beginning. Why don’t you publish all names of killed BUPC members? You people told hundreds of people got killed on 14th March clash? Where were those people? How many rape, torture on that day clash did you prove? Could you please tell about that liberated zone inside a country? Who will tolerate? No country, no state.
Biplab
Kolkata, India
Nov 27, 2007 12:00 AM
5
I have been wondering for a long time ... whether the Desi (especially the bengali variety and possibly to a lesser extent the Malyalee variety) was so special that we could have "democratic communists" (which seems to be an oxymoron in the experience of the rest of the world) OR we were just as usual being "alice in wonderland" and reality would eventually catch up.

It appears to me reality just caught up. We Desi's aren't so special after all (especially the Bengali variety) - can't have democratic communism.

Could it mean a future non-communist left (quite like in parts of Western Europe) emerging?
Arun Maheshwari
Bangalore, India
Nov 27, 2007 12:00 AM
4
"Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn and others advising those opposing the CPI(M)'s pro-capitalist policies in West Bengal not to "split the Left" in the face of American imperialism."


http://www.indianexpress.com/story/243656.html

CNTD

Do they approve this too :

1 "Eight days after gangrape FIR, police write to victim: Give us the clothes you wore that night--

BIDYUT ROY & SUBHAM DUTTA

TAMLUK (WEST BENGAL), November 26: A full 13 days after she was allegedly gangraped by CPM cadres, the Nandigram police have delivered a letter to the victim asking her to produce the clothes she wore on the night of the incident. This, despite the fact that the police are aware that the victim Sabina Begum (name changed) has been lying in the Tamluk Subdivisional Hospital, yet to recover from her injuries.

Said Neeva Kanwar, member of the visiting team from the National Commission for Women: “The police in Nandigram are not acting at all. The victim in Tamluk hospital (Sabina) could name five people who raped her. We learnt that these people are roaming around freely in the village...Sabina told us how she got raped, with 30 people surrounding her house.”

In all, Kanwar said, the NCW team received three rape complaints during their recent visit. “We could not talk to a large number of women, but among those we met in the relief camp in Nandigram, villages and hospitals we received three complaints. Three months earlier, when we came here, we received four complaints of rape. One of the victims we met at the refugee camp and another at Tamluk hospital (Sabina). We will submit a report and take necessary steps, including recommendations to the Centre, for the rehabilitation of these victims.”Indian Express

Do these Intelectuals want us to condone the rapes by CPM cadres ?

2 "CPI (Moribund) :Diptosh Majumdar

Both Nandigram and the nuclear deal frame the Indian Left’s predicament: it clings to an obsolete version of itseLF--

The Left recapture of Nandigram with its scant respect for the rule of law and the Left veto on the nuclear deal are born out of the same dilemma haunting the Marxists for more than a decade now. It is about the inability to come to terms with a world where traditional Left ideology is no longer in ascendance. If the Nandigram brutality has resulted from blindly following an extra-constitutional model of governance perfected in the 1970s, the rigidity on the nuclear issue stems from a stubborn refusal to discuss imperialism in the changed global power scenario. In both cases, the Indian Left has avoided what Marxist jargon would describe as ‘engaging with reality’.--

" Instead, Prakash Karat became a regular invitee to the court of Hugo Chavez. The Chavez brand of Communism does not have the ideological sanction that Fidel Castro’s Cuban socialism possessed. Venezuelan oil-rich Communism can be equated with superficial anti-Americanism, an ideological brand that traditional Marxists would have abhorred. The Chinese Communists kept in touch with the Indian Left and while their October party congress a month ago didn’t utter a word against American neo-imperialism, Karat and his colleagues continue to write volumes against so-called evil American designs. For them, any mention of a strategic alliance with the US implies reducing India to a banana republic. The Left appears unconvinced about the strength of Indian democracy and its expertise in negotiating a good bargain. Communists refuse to accept that neo-imperialism "

a k ghai
mumbai, India
Nov 27, 2007 12:00 AM
3
Some questions to these self proclaimed leftists:

1. Where were you when thousands of villagers who were driven out of Nandigram (just because they happened to be CPM supporters) were not allowed to enter their houses for about 8 months?

2. What do you want the people of Bengal to do now? Vote Marxists out of power and bring back Mamata and her friends? Do you really believe that NDA or Congress would be better than CPM in solving the problems of farmers in Bengal?

3. Will Congress and NDA help us in the fight against SEZs and corporate globalisation?

4. If you are for the right of Taslima Nasreen to live, write and speek freely in India, why are you supporting those people who indulged in violence and arson to kick her out of Bengal?

5. Do you really think that electronic media like CNN-IBN, Time Now (Reuters), Star TV (Murdoch) and the other assorted American cronies are criticising CPM because of their love for farmers in Bengal?

6. Why do you think Singur is peaceful now?

7. Has this sudden, orchestrated outrage against CPM by the Capitalist Media in India anything to do with their opposition to Nuclear Treaty with USA?

8. Do you really expect us to believe the following statements in your letter?

(i) "We all have seen TV coverage of unarmed villagers barricaded behind walls of rubble, while policemen train their guns on them."

(ii) "to share similar values with the party today is to stand for unbridled capitalist development, nuclear energy at the cost of both ecological concerns and mass displacement of people"

(iii) "Singur was the chronicle of the fate foretold for Nandigram. There, land was acquired in most cases without the consent of peasant-owners and at gun-point."

Your letter sounds like an advance copy of the Election Manifesto of Trinamul Congress! Dont expect the general public to fall for it.
Ramesh Kumar
Mumbai, India
Nov 27, 2007 12:00 AM
2
While the dictatorial and high-handed methods of CPI(M) must be condemned, the thrust toward industrial development and economic growth are not at fault, provided they are implemented judiciously and in a democratic manner.
Ghulam Y Faruki
New York, United States
Nov 26, 2007 12:00 AM
1
"and the Stalinist arrogance that the party knows what "the people" need better than the people themselves"

As though these guys dont share that feeling. And moreover, it is a Marxist and Leninist arrogance to think that masses need to be told what they should do. And it is an arrogance shared by all intellectuals.

Because historically that is what qualifies one to be an intellectual-a belief that man can be molded into a certain form by controlling the environment he lives in and by controlling what he perceives thro' his senses. The works of John Locke and Helvitius forms the basis for modern day intellectualism and it is a trait shared by all lefties.

But whats the big deal? In a year or two, the CPM will acknowledge that it made a historical blunder in Nandigram. And all these people will forgive the CPIM and join forces to fight the great Satan. That is how this drama will end.
Ganesan
Nj, USA
COLLAPSE COMMENTS   
Post a Comment
You are not logged in, please log in or register
ABOUT US | CONTACT US | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISING RATES | COPYRIGHT & DISCLAIMER | COMMENTS POLICY