Elections are here
again, declared nine months before the expiry of the actual term of the Lok
Sabha. The media has been trying to whip up hysteria against the Naxalites
because of their call to boycott elections. In Andhra Pradesh Naxalism is the
major election issue, while in many parts of the country Naxalites have taken up
a big campaign to boycott the elections. The Central and state governments and
some columnists in a section of the media seek to portray this as the most
undemocratic act and that the Naxalites are anti-democracy and anti-development.
They say that the gun can never solve the problems of the people. But then who
can?
Will the host of film
stars who have descended on the electorate in this election, solve the acute
problems of the masses? Will any of the parliamentary parties solve the problems
when all are united on implementing the policies of economic reforms, which is
the chief cause for pushing the masses further into the abyss of destitution?
Which party has the backbone to stand up to the US vultures that are swarming
over every aspect of the country’s life, to say "GET OUT"? Which party has the
guts to stand up for the sovereignty of the country and demand the kicking out
of all the foreign robber barons taking control of the entire finance, commerce
and industry of the country? Which party is prepared to stand up against state
terror and the inhuman massacre of innocents through curable diseases, poverty,
hunger and starvation and now even suicides? And which party is willing to
oppose the massive funds extorted in the name of elections and as future members
of Parliament and the legislatures?
For whatever may be
the reasons, none of the parties are willing to stand up for any of the above
and much more. So the question before us is not merely that of voting or
boycotting, but the very future of our country and the possible method of
realizing it. If boycott is then the most practical alternative during the
electoral process to take the masses on to a new path for their emancipation why
should not the people of this country have as much democratic right to boycott
as to participate? Why should the powers that be get so paranoiac when someone
begins campaigning for the people to boycott the elections? Surely if they say
that there is free choice, there should be equal rights to participate or to
boycott.
As revolutionary
Marxists, (not terrorists) in this article we seek to analyse the political,
ideological and also the practical reasons for the Naxalites to boycott the
forthcoming elections, the reasons behind their boycott and the alternatives
they seek to put forward before the people of this country. We start here with
the background to the debate.
Way back in 1871 Marx
made a devastating criticism of parliamentarism. The parliament as a body is
formed once in three or six years to decide which member of the ruling class was
to represent and repress people. Lenin wrote that professional Cabinet Ministers
and parliamentarians, the traitors to the proletariat and the "practical"
socialists of his day had left all criticism of parliamentarism to the
considered bourgeois anarchists, and, "on this wonderfully reasonable ground,
they denounce all criticism of parliamentarism as "anarchism"!!"[V.I.Lenin,
State And Revolution, In Marx Engels Lenin, On Historical Materialism, p.355].
Lenin added this in a mood of exposure: "To decide once every few years which
member of the ruling class is to repress and crush the people through parliament
– this is the real essence of bourgeois parliamentarism, not only in
parliamentary – constitutional monarchies, but also in most democratic
republics." [Ibid, p.355].
The ‘Mainstream’
and Death of Poor Women
Ironically, on
April 12, at exactly the same time that Vajpayee was appealing to Naxalites to
join the ‘mainstream’ and giving up violence; 26 (official) innocent women and
children were mauled to death in the heart of his own constituency in a
stampede caused by the distribution of free saris in Lucknow city BJP chief,
Lalji Tandon during his birthday bash. An unknown number were seriously
injured. This then, is the character of Vajpayee’s non-violent ‘mainstream’.
Earlier thirty policemen were killed in a landmine blast by the MCCI. For
these fascists, terrorism is only seen when their mafia kin are eliminated;
when poor are killed in such fashion it is not terrorism. In "shining India"
peoples lives are so desperate the there can be stampede for mere saris; what
would happen if they distributed food? In an editorial in The Statesman on
April 14th entitled "Birthday and Deaths" it was aptly said: The
Lucknow tragedy grimly highlights a most unprepossessing aspect of Indian
politics — that of chaotic, poorly organized patronage functions for the poor,
where recipients are treated no better than political sheep. That the deaths
occurred in the Prime Minister’s constituency and in an event organized by
Vajpayee’s most trusted political aide serves to reinforce the grimness,
indicating that even the most high profile political venues are not immune
from the disregard that is at the root of entirely avoidable loss of life. The
loss of hundreds of lives of the poor is considered a non event. But the loss
of even one life of their class brethren is considered ‘terrorism’.
Lenin bitterly
criticized the revisionist cowards of Russia who opposed the steady
revolutionary preparation for insurrection. He wrote: "One of the most
vicious and probably most widespread distortions of Marxism resorted to by the
dominant "socialist" parties is the opportunist lie that preparation for
insurrection, and generally the treatment of insurrection as an art, is "Blanquism".
[Ibid. p.579]. Lenin adds that Bernstein also accused Marxism of
Blanquism. [Ibid. p.579]. Blanquism means the ‘seizure of power by a
minority’. It is an utterly revisionist view preached by Indian revisionists
that the actual preparation for the revolution will start when the majority of
the people switch over to the revolutionary front. The situation for the
revolution in Russia was created by the objective condition and mainly by the
bold non-parliamentary preparations made by the Bolsheviks. Even in April 1917
Lenin anticipated two possibilities: "Possibly the peasantry may seize all
the land and all the power" and that "…. It is possible that the peasants will
take the advice of the petty-bourgeois party of the Socialist-Revolutionaries,
which has yielded to the influence of the bourgeoisie, has adopted a defencist
stand, and which advises waiting for a Constituent Assembly…" [From
V.I.Lenin, Letters on Tactics, Marx Engels Lenin, On Historical Materialism,
Ibid. P.517.] Comrade Lenin did not bother when the Socialist Revolutionaries
charged the Bolsheviks with Blanquism for making the preparation for the
materialising of the upsurge.
Lenin’s Bolshevik
Party participated in elections in the European context but such participation
was not obviously for ‘providing relief’ from within the exploitative system but
to root out the illusion of bourgeois parliaments. Indian social democrats like
the CPI, CPI(M) etc. have had enough of experience in parliaments, legislative
bodies in India but is there any voice heard to expose parliamentary democracy?
Rather we find the reverse i.e. how to add to the dangerous illusion itself.
They even dream a false dream of social change by using the Parliament in India.
Could anyone hear any real voice or a semblance of protest and/or a public
awareness campaign from the CPI(M), etc., against the politics of rigging
elections? They cannot launch such a campaign in order to tenaciously cling to
the politics of winning seats, be it in parliament, or the state legislative or
in the Panchayats. The CPI, the CPI(M), etc. have also joined the ministry in
the crisis-ridden semi-feudal, semi-colonial set-up.
When the Socialist
Revolutionary Party and the Mensheviks joined the bourgeois ministry Lenin made
a devastating criticism. Lenin said "…Revolutionary democratic phrases to
lull the rural simple simons, and bureaucracy and red tape to ‘gladden the
hearts’ of the capitalists this is the essence of the ‘honest’ coalition".[Ibid
p.557, Emphasis by Lenin]. This is also the actual role of Indian social
democratic parties. And if one ransacks the huge body of CPI or CPI(M)
literature one hardly finds such Leninist critiques of parliamentary politics.
Revisionists cannot change themselves. They only justify participation in the
so-called democratic process of semi-colonial semi-feudal India, which actually
needs agrarian revolution through protracted people’s war.
Political parties
emerged in the age of capitalism. And every political party represents
particular class interests. A communist party in this sense is the advanced
detachment of the proletariat. However, some parties under a communist signboard
do not necessarily represent proletarian class interests. A revolutionary
communist party must carry on class struggle, fight for revolution and must be
prepared for the violent overthrow of the existing society based on exploitation
and ruled by the exploiting classes. A communist party also may degenerate into
a revisionist organisation by serving the existing system and maintaining the
stability of the exploiters rule preaching class peace and the non-violent
parliamentary path. Only a revolutionary communist party can lead the masses
in revolutionary battles to save a country like ours from chronic crisis and
build up an alternative democratic system moving towards socialism.
Hitler attempted to
capture power in Bavaria in the early 1920s by a coup when the communists
enhanced their strength formidably in parliament and outside parliament. But he
resorted to constitutional electoral means plus terror tactics with the
full-throated backing and material support of racist sections of the
bourgeoisie. Thus pushing aside and traumatizing the communists and other
anti-Fascist forces, the Nationalist Socialist Party of the Nazis became the
largest party in the Reichstag in 1931 and 1932, and was installed as chancellor
by President Hinesburg in 1933. And then the edifice of the bourgeois
parliamentary system exposed the skeletons in the cupboard when electoral
competition was finally abolished. Obviously this was an extreme situation of
acute crisis of the capitalist system. And it should be stated that Hitler had
already Storm Troopers and Mussolini’s party had set up fascist militia.
How communist parties
allow erosion of strength and support their base, can be best illustrated by the
example of the Communist Party of France (CPF). Like other Western European
Communist Parties, the CPF had long attached far more importance to winning
parliamentary elections. The CPF was against the Gaullists. This party’s
electoral performances also nose-dived over years with its inactive policy of
parliamentarism.
The present
parliamentary system that emerged prominently in England and European countries
during the anti-feudal struggles played some role during bourgeois democratic
revolutions. Such parliaments at that stage reflected some democratic
aspirations of various classes of people. Those parliaments have long past lost
their old roles and people also bother least about elections.
The most fundamental
task of elections is legitimizing the right of some parties and individuals by
any means to serve the existing system. An atmosphere is created by the state
and all parliamentary parties in India including the CPI, CPI(M), that the
upcoming election brings in Himalayan responsibilities on the people to exercise
their precious right and as if their failure shall push them towards doom’s day.
The Indian people have grown habituated to such rhetoric during every election.
Even after so many elections in quick successions and the general trend of a
steep rise in negative (called anti incumbency) voting in absence of a powerful
alternative, it continues to act as a ‘safety valve’ to divert the masses from
the path of struggle.
Elections, stability
of the system, providing a semblance of democracy are all state matters. No
class rule behind the state can afford to ignore the very crucial task of
winning the support of the people. ‘Participatory democracy’, Parliamentary
democracy’, ‘Greatest democracy’ and all such rhetoric have come up to
strengthen the stability of the existing class rule. We can not also ignore the
fact that with all sorts of corruption, rigging, winds of communalism,
booth-capturing, media coverage and brinkmanship by criminal politicians to
create a ‘Sonia wind’ or ‘Feel-good’ satisfaction etc. the Indian body polity
has been immensely successful to win by rewards or by force many of the contrary
forces into the so-called parliamentary mainstream. From the Central Home
Minister L.K.Advani to the CPI(M) C.M. Buddhadev Bhattacharee, the very common
denominator lies in the love for the parliamentary stream. Those fellows repeat
the old cries urging the North East militant nationality forces, the CPI(ML)
People’s War, MCCI or such others who reject these parliamentary politics of
stability of this system, to join the ‘mainstream’
How to Misinterpret
Lenin
Social democrats
preaching revisionism cleverly try to make it a point that many people in India
do still have expectations from the existing parliamentary system to deliver the
goods. Well, we do accept that despite frequent elections and all their murky
features many people still cast their votes. Several factors lie behind such
false consciousness and it is a fact that the reactionary parliament will still
continue.
Firstly, the
state, the political parties in parliamentary politics and particularly the
crude parliamentarism preached by the CPI, CPI(M) like parties are to be held
responsible for such misplaced hope.
Secondly, the
lack of a strong revolutionary alternative will take some sections of the masses
to the polling booths or are coaxed into voting by the leaders of the ruling
class parties and even forcibly led to the polling booths by their goons.
Thirdly, in the
stage of protracted people’s war with the existence of two state powers, one the
highly powerful Indian state of the ruling classes and the other the burgeoning
alternative revolutionary power centers in the villages, expected to gain
strength through battles with the former, many people, except the conscious
sections, shall not altogether reject the existing state along with its organs
at one go, particularly the legal, administrative and parliamentary system.
Fourthly, and
what is most important is, in the path of people’s war in a country like India
with extreme unevenness in the economic, cultural, social and political spheres,
it does not lead to a simultaneous explosion of the crores of oppressed people
throughout the country, or to a series of revolutionary upsurges within a short
span of time in the early stage. In the long-drawn armed struggle, the
parliamentary system of the bourgeois-feudal classes, particularly in a country
like ours, will continue with all its perverted as well as increasingly
refurbished features for many years like caste, communal and varied other
factors. Here it is in order to state that even after the great October
Revolution in 1917 capturing the main power centers in the cities, the
revolution had taken a few more years to crush the remaining bourgeois power
centers in the villages.
It is an utterly
revisionist view preached by the Indian revisionists and neo-revisionists that
the actual preparation for the revolution will start when the majority of the
people switch over to the revolutionary front. The situation for the
revolution in Russia was created by the objective condition and mainly by the
bold non-parliamentary preparations made by the Bolsheviks. Even in April
1917 Lenin anticipated two possibilities: "Possibly the peasantry may seize
all the land and all the power" and that "…. It is possible that the peasants
will take the advice of the petty-bourgeoisie party of the
Socialist-Revolutionaries, which has yielded to the influence of the
bourgeoisie, has adopted a defencist stand, and which advises waiting for a
Constituent Assembly…" [From V.I.Lenin, Letters on Tactics, Marx Engels
Lenin, On Historical Materialism, Ibid. P.517.] Comrade Lenin did not care when
the Socialist Revolutionaries charged the Bolsheviks with Blanquism for making
preparations for materialising the upsurge.
VOTES AT GUN-POINT
The April 14 issue of The Hindu reported from
Paderu, Andhra Pradesh, situated in the hill tract of the Eastern ghats : "
The tribals regularly see handwritten posters put up by the PW which says
‘boycott the farcical elections’. The police have also put up big blue-coloured
posters telling the people ‘Your vote is valuable. The Constitution has
given you this right. The ballot is more powerful than the bullet and
landmine. Elect your representative to usher in development’. The
authorities, in a bid to instill confidence amongst the villagers, have
deployed platoons of the BSF to hold flag marches and encourage the tribals
to exercise their franchise. Air Force helicopters have also been
requisitioned to take the troops to the hamlets cut off from the mainstream
because of inaccessible terrain. Accompanied by the BSF jawans, the local
police launch patrols in the forest areas to prove their point that the PW
militias are no threat to them. ….. At an impromptu gram sabha held by them,
the police officers explain to villagers the need to ignore the boycott call
if they want to derive more benefits of the government’s development
schemes. … The naxalites are not sitting idle either. To counter the
police’s new strategy the PW recently took a select group of reporters to
Koyyuru, on the border of Vishakapatnam and East Godavari districts where
they have called for a bandh on April 19 and 20th. The naxalite AOB (Andhra-Orissa-Border)
military commission commander, Vinay, also released photocopies of street
fights and fisticuffs by politicians over their failure to get tickets to
contest elections. ‘How can such leaders serve you, he asks’….".
When the police and paramilitary are the main force to
campaign for votes against the boycott campaign on can understand the
importance that the ruling classes attaches to elections to maintain their
exploitative rule!!
Here in India, the
great worshipper of parliamentarism, the CPI(M), reiterate formulas senselessly
learned by rote to kill Marxism by presenting a somewhat soft, state-friendly
version of Marxism in the name of these great Marxist founders. In 1964-65 after
its formation, at least on paper, the CPI(M) occasionally roared against
revisionism particularly of the CPI. When the Naxalbari upsurge brought forward
the Chinese path for making Indian revolution rejecting participation in
parliament, a barrage of charges were let loose against Naxalbari politics. The
CPI(M) leaders resorted to the cunning way of quoting from Lenin’s book
"Left-wing" Communism – An Infantile Disorder, written against the wrong tactics
of some European parties working in a specific context, deciding to skip
participation in the bourgeois parliament. Such revisionists never pointed to
the wealth of Lenin’s Writings concentrating on building a revolutionary party,
making preparations for revolutions and also the need for boycotting elections
during the revolutionary upsurge. Even in that valuable book meant for
correcting the mistake of the West European Marxist parties (i.e. in the
insurrection path), comrade Lenin stated the possibility for such participation
in parliament "to expose, dispel and overcome these prejudices…"
[‘bourgeois-democratic and parliamentary prejudices" of the peasantry and
workers [V.I.Lenin, "Left-Wing" Communism – An Infantile Disorder, In Marx,
Engels, Lenin. On Historical Materialism, Ibid. p. 656] This too was in the
context where the seizure of power by armed force was the central task of the
revolution and any occasional participation was linked to it. Besides, in the
Russian experience the Bolsheviks sometimes participated sometimes boycotted,
utilizing whatever tactic served the central task best — ie preparations for the
armed uprising. But here, the revisionists while utilizing Lenin’s quotes,
participate day-in and day-out in all parliamentary/legislative elections
without any link to the armed struggle.
Leave alone the
question of revolutionary preparation, have the CPI, CPI(M) and such parities,
using Lenin’s name to pass themselves off for communists, any mentionable
history, over 50 years of participation in parliamentary politics, done anything
to really expose, dispel and overcome the parliamentary prejudices of the masses
in India? Just the reverse. They have been more charmed and sedated by the rosy
prospect of parliamentary politics than the common backward masses in India. All
such parties CPI, CPI(M), CPI(ML)(Liberation) etc; even nurture a fond hope of
overhauling the existing system using the Indian parliamentary system. The CPI
and CPI(M) have further revised their programmes to join even at the central
government. Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin and Mao – all the great Marxists
repeated that states in the class society serves to coerce the exploited masses
and so they gave the call for the need of destroying such states. Indian
revisionists, as devoted follower of Bernstein or Kautsky, never focus on this
basic fact on the question of state and the need for its destruction by force.
Comrade Lenin had this to say, "This definition of the state (as given by
Marx and Engels) has never been explained in the prevailing propaganda and
agitation literature of the official Social-democratic Parties. More than that,
it has been deliberately ignored, for it is absolutely irreconcilable with
reformism and a slap in the face for the common opportunist prejudices and
philistine illusions about ‘peaceful development of democracy’." [V.I.Lenin,
The State and Revolution, in Marx, Engels, Lenin . On Historical Materialism,
Ibid. p. 539].
Unfortunately some
rightists within the M-L movement also think that they can use the election
platform in India to further the revolution. Though most of them have little
mass base, they feel that the masses can be prepared for revolution through such
participation. But, the essence of their political line is not to prepare for
the "seizure of political power by armed force" (the central task of any
revolution) but to indefinitely continue the ‘preliminary tasks’ of ‘exposure’,
‘propaganda’, ‘agitation’ around partial demands, etc etc with no qualitative
leap towards armed formations and armed struggles. Even their mass struggles are
generally kept within the confines of ruling-class-set legality, restricting
them from the intensification of the class struggle. The last two decades
experience has shown how far they could advance utilizing this parliamentary
line compared to those leading people’s wars!!
What is People’s War?
Way back in 1926
Stalin summed up that the Chinese revolution was fighting armed
counter-revolution. Mao developed his theory of People’s War on the basis of the
peculiarities of the Chinese society in the light of Stalin’s formulation. This
was a development of Marxism in regard to its successful implementation in
backward countries. This people’s war is not related to the politics of
participation in parliament. The leaders of the CPI never gave proper importance
to Mao’s twin-theory of People’s Democratic Revolution and People’s War. The
CPI(M) speaks of People’s Democratic Revolution but such acceptance on paper is
dismissed by justifying the Transfer of Power in 1947 as ‘national freedom’ and
thereby, like the CPI, since its formation in 1963 the CPI(M) began to plunge
into electoral politics supposing it to be an expansion of democracy by the new
rulers. What the CPI(M) suppresses or hates to consider is that the present
Indian parliament is basically a blessing of the colonial rulers with their
stamp of approval to the Government of India Act 1935. However, the question of
boycott of electoral politics lies in the very line of People’s War.
Electoral politics is the reverse of People’s War.
The question of
tactics is very important and it is dependent on the obtaining situation.
Tactics are subject to change. Marxism teaches us that tactics are resorted to
by a Marxist party with the sole aim of serving the strategy for the unleashing
of attacks on the ruling classes and the state machinery (i.e. the seizure of
political power by armed force). But, there are tactic and tactics. Some may
change very fast, changing with the fast changing situation, others may assume a
long-standing character. Such tactics naturally appear like strategy. If it is
accepted that Indian revolution has to pass through a long period of protracted
people’s war and that such question of war of different dimensions have to be
initiated from the very beginning against class enemies and their protectors,
the very question of participation in parliamentary politics – the issue of the
degree of democracy or the nature of parliament and its emergence, etc. are
irrelevant – does not simply come up.
Simultaneously, it is
to be made clear that boycott of elections does not mean abandoning myriad forms
of people’s struggles. Nor does it mean not intervening in the on-going
electoral political process. It only means that instead of supporting this or
that party, or putting up candidates, one widely propagates the politics of
boycott. Practice has shown there is enormous response to this propaganda, even
if people finally go and vote due to lack of an alternative. The level of the
campaign depends on our subjective strength in a particular area, and will
assume various dimensions. In the areas of intense struggle, with popular
support of the people, and its armed detachments, the boycott call would be an
action slogan concretely resisting the farcical electoral process through a mass
upsurge (like what is often seen in Kashmir). Here, the Old Power will be sought
to be smashed and the New Power established. In areas where the movement for
alternative people’s power has developed and the enemy forces are actively
locked in battles with the revolutionary forces, the boycott call will mainly
assume the form of an agitation slogan. On the other hand, in other areas where
revolutionary movements are at a low ebb or yet to take shape, the election
boycott, for a period of time will be a mere propaganda slogan. But in all areas
the political focus will be the same.
In addition to this,
struggles of the workers, peasants, youth, women, nationalities would be
organized to link up with the ongoing people’s war. The slogan of election
boycott and the relentless exposure of Indian parliamentary democracy, which
merely means who amongst the rulers will rule for a certain period, is not a
negative approach. The alternative would have to be put forward and people be
taught the path of people’s war and through it the call for replacing the
present fake democracy with the setting up genuine people’s democratic power as
the only positive (and possible) alternative to the existing ridiculous game of
elections.
The political
propaganda will go in tandem with various levels of movements of the people.
This political propaganda against the electoral farce would always have to
contain the strategic presentation of developing alternative democratic peoples’
power in the form of peoples’ committees elected through gram sabhas, where the
masses exert their right to recall. This is an ideological/political battle to
uproot the peoples’ wrong concept of ‘democracy’, drilled into their minds
day-in-and-day-out by the establishment. As the path of people’s war is a
protracted one, there will be many twists and turns, set-backs and leaps.
Whatever may be the situation, there does not arise the question of
participation in elections in the course of the continuing people’s war. And in
the course of the people’s war there will be overlapping forms of boycott in the
obtaining situation and contexts. After all, it must be realized that in a
country like India the holding of elections (or imposing elections) has been
considered by the ruling classes as the most suitable and effective means to
continue with this highly exploitative system in acute crisis. One just has
to take the example of Kashmir, where the rulers are just desperate to get the
people to vote, whoever may be candidate.
In this connection,
it is a very relevant question to consider as to where lies the major strength
of the Indian State. In the post-second world war period, in many erstwhile
colonial countries, power was transferred to the neo-colonial rulers to continue
unabated imperialist exploitation in new forms while semi-feudal relations
continued exploiting the people in various ways. The ruling exploitative classes
and even the colonial rulers always try to get state affairs going as smoothly
as possible. Everywhere the ruling classes try to win over as many people as
possible by eliciting their consent through a complex network based on economic,
social and cultural ties; and the state, which is an instrument of class
oppression, must simultaneously resort to other means to neutralise the
agitations and demonstration of anger of the people. And here lies the very
important role of the parliamentary system. In India the rulings classes have
excelled in refining and smoothing this system far surpassing the ruling classes
in many other countries. When the parliamentary system, even in the advanced
capitalist countries show off glaring signs of gross failures and uselessness,
the Indian ruling classes have been putting in great efforts to save this system
as a tested arena to diffuse one after another crisis of the Indian state
itself.
History has belied
the CPI(M)’s off-repeated articulations particularly after the ruthless dance of
death by the Indira-led fascist forces in 1975, that the Indian ruling classes
shall dismiss the parliamentary system itself. It is the brazen truth that the
CPI, then the CPI(M) and later the renegade CPI(ML)Liberation and some small
outfits in the name of Marx and Lenin have rendered yeomen’s service to the
state by generating and buttressing the false hope of democracy under the
parliamentary process in India. The Congress, the traditional party of the
ruling classes, in the 1950s arrogated to itself many of the slogans of the CPI,
and the battle-fearing CPI came to glorify the Congress role and the possibility
of change in a peaceful way through this so-called democratic system. The CPI(M)
was born out of the disgruntlement of the militant activists amidst a chronic
crisis more and more engulfing the country. The CPI(M) betrayed revolution,
under a string of left verbiages, incorporating in its 1964 Programme not only
its faith in peaceful change but also the politics of alliance and dalliance
with the Indian big bourgeoisie and their parties.
The CPI(M) Polit
Bureau member P.Sundaraiah, soon after the CPI(M)’s formation derived glorious
satisfaction to keep it on record that he had dispelled the unnecessary fear of
the then Congress Government by personally meeting the Central minister
Guljarilal Nanda. Sundaraiah assuringly told him not to believe in police
reports. "We are not thinking about any armed struggle" said he, adding
that the CPI(M) was not going underground to once again resurrect the Telangana
type of armed movement. [Sundaraiah Answers Nanda, People’s Democracy, September
19,1965] The latest entrants in this anti-Marxist way of deceiving the masses
with the shameless acceptance of the parliamentary way as against the arduous,
painstaking and glorious path of armed struggle are the CPI(ML) Liberation, the
COI(M) of Kanu Sanyal, etc.
Indian Troops get out of Bhutan and Nepal
India troops have already massacred hundreds in the name of
the Royal Bhutan Army. Now the Indian Government is raising a hysteria that
Nepali Maoists plan to infiltrate into UP during the elections, so they have
sealed the borders and started joint patrolling with the Royal Nepal Army.
The argument is ridiculous. What would the Nepali Maoists
have to do with the Indian elections? It is only a pretext for Indian troops
to enter Nepal directly to fight the Maoists.. They are also trying to whip up
a hysteria that there was a joint attack by revolutionaries from India and
Pakistan on a Nepali border police post. In the name of countering this
so-called infiltration they have announced joint military patrolling. This is
just the beginning for direct Indian involvement in the internal affairs of
Nepal to counter the Maoists there. With the beleaguered RNA facing blows
after blows, mere training by US and Indian officials will not be sufficient,
Indian troops will soon be pushed into action.
The Indian people must roundly condemn the role of the
India expansionists in military intervention in neighbouring countries and
demand the return of all troops from Bhutan and officers from Nepal.
Indian Army Hands off Nepal!
The Vinod Mishra-led
Liberation group abandoned armed struggle and conceived of a "Left and
Democratic Confederation" and even rallying the CPI, CPI(M) like parties
towards forming a "single communist party". What is notable is that in
the grand programme for such merger of rotten social democrats Vinod was
blatantly frank not to consider non-parliamentary revolutionary
Marxist-Leninists, i.e. the communist revolutionaries, as communists fit for
such a dream scheme. It was natural and effortless for the new lover of
parliamentarism to recant Naxalbari politics and its followers. Like the CPI or
the CPI(M) leaders the Vinod Mishra group announced, in its 1992 Calcutta Party
Congress, that "social change and revolutionary transformation are not on the
national agenda". As an alternative, the CPI(ML)Liberation jumped on to the
bandwagon of stressing "legal and parliamentary forms of struggle."
[Frontier December 20, 1992]. And recently its leader Dipankar Bhattacharyee
disclosed about Vinod Mishra’s topsy turvy, "… For the best part of the 1970s
he in fact made his best efforts to resurrect Naxalbari. Even when he became
convinced of the impossibility and futility of such attempts, and the focus
shifted to what he called the rectification movement…" [Liberation, December
2000, p.9]
The Kanu Sanyal group
which now feels relieved to forget all about the armed path of Naxalbari
declared way back in 1993 to form "a broad based front of all Leftist and
other parties truly committed to democracy and secularism". [Telegraph
January 2, 1993]. They are all in the same boat for saving and justifying the
parliamentary system as a counterpoise against the revolutionary path of
protracted people’s war. Such an alternative parliamentary path stands
diametrically opposed to Naxalbari politics for the fundamental change of this
system through developing protracted armed peasant struggle in the vast
countryside to set up democratic people’s power. It is note worthy that despite
some convenient left vocabulary and occasional howling against this or that step
of the Central or State governments all the fellow travelers of the social
democratic path, the organizational structures, demands, etc. basic activities
are oriented to electoral gains. Be it the CPI or the CPI(M) or the CPI(ML)
Liberation the very common thread that binds such organisations is the firm
belief about the impossibility of implementation of the fundamentals of Marxism
and Leninism in India at present and even in the immediately unfolding decades.
While petty bourgeois restlessness leads to a rash drive for completing
revolution here and now (as was the line of the Liberation in the late 1970s),
the perennial petty bourgeois (or bourgeois) fear of revolution deliberately
thwarts and stabs such movements for revolutionary change, by projecting for
India the efficacy and glory of the parliamentary ‘mainstream’.
Parliamentary Marxism
sometimes raises the question of immature condition of the revolutionary
struggle, sometimes posits the Indian parliamentary system as provider of ample
scope for establishing an alternative system and even sometimes shows acutely
keen interest in saving the parliamentary system if people or some groups
disdainfully refuse to join the electoral process. The tamasha of the Kashmir
elections is a case in point. The holding of elections there under the military
boot is quite known. In Punjab, elections were held in the 1990s through
pressure tactics. In Naxalite influenced areas the state wields all its armed
might to ensure the holding of elections. Important ruling class parties and
media go on a massive propaganda drive asking the people to cast their votes.
What is notable is the role of the parliamentary Marxists, which lend their
voice to this effort. So, parties like the CPI(M) frequently appeal to the
boycottist Naxalite forces to join the parliamentary mainstream. The CPI(M)
Chief Minister of West Bengal surpasses all others by making frequent calls to
the revolutionary Naxalite forces like the CPI(ML)People’s War and MCCI. to
abandon the path of armed resistance and mingle with the mainstream i.e. the
parliamentary ‘democratic process’. In India such politics of capitulation only
strengthens the exiting exploitative system under the signboard of parliamentary
democracy as if it were a means to resolve the problems facing the people. Over
the last 50 years it has been quite clearly seen that none of the people’s
problems have been solved (or even reduced) through parliament.
Comrade Mao
repeatedly spoke of the importance of building and strengthening the people’s
army. The communist party will have different fronts and during people’s war all
such fronts shall ultimately serve the forward march of such a war. In such a
strategy, struggle will pass through periods of ups and downs and it depends on
the communist party leadership to transform temporary defeats into glorious
victories. Such strategy cannot afford to take recourse to legal, parliamentary
participation, disband armed units and expose the secret core of the party. It
is the duty of the communist party to redouble its efforts in order to
strengthen its armed forces and restart attacks on the enemy with renewed vigour.
Obviously this does not mean adventurism. It is based on the line of people’s
participation and people’s war. However, the parliamentary Marxists crying
hoarse against the existing system, colonial or semi-colonial, shall brand all
militant activities as adventurism. In the strategy of people’s war in general,
there is no room for participation in parliamentary elections in India. In the
strategy of people’s one we concentrates activities in the areas of strategic
importance in order to spread and ultimately encircle the cities.
Imperialism’s Boon: Indian Constitutional Process
It should be
remembered that the leaders of the Congress considered that British rule was
necessary and a boon for India. The colonial government supported by the
opportune-seekers portrayed a rosy picture of the ‘British sense of justice and
fair play’. Under the growing pressure of the freedom movement, in the year
1861, the British government decided to install a legislative body in India. The
Indian Council Acts, 1861 came into being. Right in the following year emerged
India’s first legislature. In a state like Bengal, the Legislative Council of
Bengal was born in 1862 and within 30 years its membership rose to 20, out of it
7 were elected. The colonial government introduced the process to derail the
mounting militant outbursts and diffuse the tensions. The Congress leadership,
by preaching non-violence and demanding even dominion status with some limited
law-making rights under colonial supervision, further smoothed the process of ‘democratisation’.
The significant steps that followed were (i) Morley-Minto Reforms (1909)
enabling one Indian to be a nominated member of the Governor General’s Executive
Council, along with an increase in the representatives, to the central and state
legislatives. (ii) The Montague Chelmsford Reform of 1919-20 creating two
central houses and delivering some limited responsibilities to some Indians
along with allowance of some responsibilities to the Indian ministers as regards
states, an improved dual-rule system and (iii) the most important, the
Government of India Act 1935 — ironically that also constitutes two-thirds of
the so-called free Indian’s Constitution — bringing about a change for greater
participation of the natives in India. The 1935 Act, under the colonial system
based on Lord Linlithgow proposals, was initially opposed by the CPI and the
Congress but soon accepted as a step forward, marking a non-violent path to
freedom and democracy. Indian business magnets and Gandhian leaders soon jumped
at the prospect of ministry-making under this Act, with all its limitations,
even "remaining silent about Dominion Status" [Sumit Sarkar, Modern India,
Macmillan India Limited, New Delhi, p.338].
In the age of finance
capital, imperialism, particularly stung by the world wars and national
liberation struggles in Asia, Africa and Latin America, changed its tactics to
retain its control. This new tactics was evident in imparting formal
independence to Egypt in 1922 and to Iraq in 1927 even by stationing the British
army on its soil. After World War II this technique was seen in many countries
like the Philippines in 1947, in Jordan in 1946, in Burma in 1947, etc. British
imperialism saw its power decline significantly through the Second World War
when US imperialism not only emerged prominently on the scene it also made
inroads into British controlled states.
Terror Reigns in
Gujarat
An Editorial in the
April14th issue of The Statesman said: Gujarat is becoming more and more
fascist under Chief Minister Narendra Modi, where ordinary citizens
campaigning for peace and communal harmony are manhandled, beaten up, abused
and threatened. Freedom of expression is no longer allowed in Modiland, and
opposition to Moditva is not brooked from any quarters, intolerance reigns
supreme. A group of 27 youth, led by Shabnam Hashmi are undertaking a tour of
40 towns across the country to promote peace and communal harmony, but this is
not the message that goes down well in Modi’s Gujarat which survives on
preaching hate. The group were first heckled by partisan journalists as they
addressed a press conference, then the goons of the VHP burst into the room
and manhandled and abused the activists. The aim was obviously to intimidate
activists in Vadodara, their second stop, so that they would not visit any
more towns in the state with their message. They threatened women with rape
brazenly holding that they would meet the same fate as was inflicted on Muslim
women, during the riots. The edit further adds: If violent intimidatory
tactics are used on outsiders who are simply passing through the state, then
one shudders to think what fear and intimidation is faced by anyone — Hindu or
Muslim — who does not believe in Hindutva but lives in the state.
What obviously the
writer does not say, given the limitations of his liberal outlook, is that
fascist hoodlums can never be defeated by promoting peace and communal
harmony. History has proved this time and again from the days of Hitler
and Mussolini to the Zionists of today. If these Hindutva fascists have to be
beaten back they have to be met head on by the revolutionary violence of the
organised masses. Meanwhile, let it not be forgotten that Modi has the backing
of the pillars of the establishment, wherein the BJP top-brass at Delhi pamper
him, the courts exonerate his mafia, and big business fund him to carry on his
mafia plans. Where is the democracy? After all when he was re-elected to power
after the genocide was he not decorated by all — from businesses, represented
by the likes of the Ambanis to the so-called anti-manuvadi chief ministers
like Mayawati, to film stars and not the least the prime minister himself,
went to Gandhinagar to put the crown on the head of this killer chief
minister.
On the very next day
of the RIN revolt, on 18th February 1946, the British Prime Minister Attlee
announced the formation of a Cabinet Mission comprising Lord Pethic Lawrence,
Sir Strafford Cripps and Mr. A.V. Alexander. The Cabinet Mission declared a plan
on the future Indian constitutional set-up prior to the transfer of power. On
June 26, 1946, P.G.Griffiths, leader of the European Group in the Indian Central
Legislative Assembly, said in a speech: "India, in the opinion of many, was
on the verge of a revolution before the British Cabinet Mission arrived. The
Cabinet Mission has at least postponed, if not eliminated, the danger". On
6th July 1946, the Congress Working Committee approved the Cabinet Mission Plan.
Later, on 5th March, 1947, Stafford Cripps said in the British Parliament that
there were two alternatives before the British Government either to maintain
British direct power in India by a considerable reinforcement of forces or to
make a political transfer of power on the 1947 settlement. Cripps was candid to
declare that the second option was the best possible option. This alone could
ensure British presence through transfer of power to the Indian reactionary
classes, making them junior partners in defending British interests and avoiding
an anti-imperialist revolution.
The inter-war period
also was characterized by the beginning of the transition from India’s
‘unilateral dependence’ on Britain to its ‘multi-lateral dependence’ on several
advanced capitalist countries with US imperialism at the forefront. Great
Britain was also by then losing the monopoly hold over India with the entry of
other imperialist countries, particularly US imperialism. So, US imperialism too
was keenly interested for a change in Britain’s direct rule over India.
British imperialism
studied the gravity of the situation. The February Declaration of 1947 led to
its expected end by dishing out the notorious Mountbatten Plan to grant Dominion
Status with the partition of India. The February Declaration made it clear that
no constitution for India drawn up by a Constituent Assembly be acceptable if
not "in accordance with the proposals" contained in the Cabinet Mission
Plan. Revealingly it further warned that if the Indian Constitution is not
approved by Britain, the British government would have to "consider to whom
the powers of the Central Government in British India should be handed over".
This notorious
Declaration of February 1947 was the significant policy statement for the
peaceful transfer of power on 15 August 1947. This makes it clear what role the
Constituent Assembly in India could play, lacking in any power of formulating a
Constitution for India. The very Constituent Assembly was also not formed on the
basis of universal suffrage of the Indian people in a condition free from
imperialist pressures, conditions and manoeuvres. It was not the sovereign will
of the people and the preliminary preparations for the formation of the
Constituent Assembly were carried out by the governors of provinces according to
the directive of June 16, 1946 from the British Governor General. The
legislatures formed under the Government of India Act 1935, had the so-called
elected representatives based on property and qualifications along with
membership of Princely states. What is notable is that the provincial governors,
acting on the strength of the Government of India Act 1935, called the
provincial legislatures into session to elect representatives to the Constituent
Assembly. The more ridiculous side of this farcical democratic basis of "free
India" is that the most important personalities like Jinnah, Nehru, Ambedkar,
etc. were not even ‘elected’ members of such legislatures formed and dictated by
the colonial rulers.
A few words are
necessary to shed light on the CPI role vis a vis the above farcical process.
Soon after the operation of the Government of India Act 1935 the CPI joined the
anti-revolutionary process and could send, in 1937 itself, its leader Bankim
Mukherjee to the united Bengal legislature. In 1945, Jyoti Basu, Rup Narayana
Roy and Ratan Lal Brahman could become the members of the Bengal Legislative
Assembly. And then the CPI had sent Soam Nath Lahiri to the Constituent
Assembly. The training in the notorious colonial "democratic" process, in
however small way, had ultimately helped in opening the floodgates of
parliamentarism in the future. With no programme as such, revolutionary or
otherwise, the CPI preferred to drift with the current of the British-dictated
fake democratic policy of planting parliamentary "democracy" in India. In any
case, the CPI won 9 seats and 7 lakh votes (People’s Age, May 12, 1946). The CPI
leadership had shown a most servile role in this period. It is reflected in the
1946 C.C. meeting of the CPI, which bluntly stated, " The proper
characterization of the Congress and League ministries is that they are popular
ministries…" [P.C.Joshi, Sesh Sangramer Ahban, cited in Amalendu Sengupata,
Uttar Challish, Asamapata Biplab, Calcutta, p.118].
The CPI not only
accepted such ‘democracy’, it also considered, in June 1947, that the notorious
Mountbatten Plan for India was "important concessions to India’s nationalist
aspirations and (it) opened up new opportunities for national advance…." [In
R.P.Dutta, The Mounbatten Plan for India, Labour Monthly, 7th July 1947, Cited
in Sandanand Talwar, Under the Banyan Tree, The Communist Movement in India,
1920-46, New Delhi, 1985, p.249].
The transfer of power
or ‘freedom by consent’ by the already weakened British power materialized on
15th August 1947. The ingenious formula of retaining British interests by
recourse to transfer of power to trusted native hands was implemented in one
after another country after the Second World War. British imperialism effected
responsible government from ‘self-Government in Malaya’, ‘from responsible
Government to Dominion Status’ in Australia; and ‘from Dominion status to
Commonwealth partnership’ in India. Incidentally all the above countries became
members of the Commonwealth.
Solliloque of a
one-time top Parliamentary Marxist
Hiren Mukherjee,
one of the most important parliamentarians who received accolades from various
quarters of the parliamentary stream for his oratorical capability, reflected
on his 25 years in the Lok Sabha in an article he wrote in the CPI Bengali
journal "Kalantar" (October 2001). Though he speaks within the
limitations of his parliamentary outlook it would be worth many a revisionist
to draw on what he says as his experience. Below we give a translation of
extracts from that article :
"I represented
the party getting elected to Parliament 25 years in a row…. Today, the very
word ‘politics’ sounds ‘dirty’ to human ears. The conduct and demeanour has
come to such a pass, the enormity of corruption has increased to such a
degree, and the stigma associated with blemish-filth of electoral politics,
has spread so widely that one wonders how the country will tide over this
distressing situation.
…. By way of sheer
participation in parliamentary elections in order to beef up public opinion
and then to take recourse to successful implementation of some tact and
tackles in Parliament and legislative assemblies with a view to attain things
at one go in the battle for social change — such thought is frivolous as well
as dangerous. This entails an apprehension about deviation from the aims of
revolution. Bourgeois thinkers themselves used the words ‘labour lieutenants
of the capitalist class’. It was Lenin who repeatedly warned against the
emergence of people from amongst the communists ‘contemplating the posterior
of the bourgeoisie’ and ‘tailism’. There is a tendency to become accustomed to
parliamentary life as an obsession. There are lots of instances in many
countries that such ‘obsession’ has crippled socialism with its all-engulfing
power. Such danger lay hanging in our case and it exists even today….Is it not
a fact that we too have strayed into that trap? It goes without saying that
the ‘disease’ has contracted us."
Since then India
changed its status from direct control under British imperialism to dependence
on different neo-colonial powers. However, the prominent British presence and
dependence basically on it continued for some years, only to come mainly under
the US grip and later under the Soviet Union; and now, after the fall of the
Soviet Union, mainly under the US neo-colonial stranglehold. Soon after power
transfer in 1947 Britain ensured India’s remaining under the Commonwealth,
presided over by the British Queen or King. More than that, after 15th August
1947, two Dominions, India and Pakistan emerged and lord Mountbatten became the
first Governor General of the Indian Dominion. Nehru became the head of the
Interim Government formed before the transfer of power. Dhirendra Nath Sen, the
prominent scholar, wrote the following bitter facts in his book from Raj to
Swaraj that, "Under British rule we were all British subjects, and not
citizens; and if some of us had franchise, we had it as subjects of His
Britannic Majesty. That was our position when the transfer of power took place
in 1947. It continued until the inauguration of our new Constitution in January
1950, when for the first time the term ‘citizenship’ was introduced as part of
our law… On the transfer of power India was an ‘independent dominion’ in terms
of the Independence Act, but it was, curiously enough an independent of Dominion
of British subjects. It had no citizens in a technical legal sense. Gandhiji
died as a distinguished British subject, and precisely in that capacity Pandit
Nehru led the Government of India as our first Prime Minister for about four
years…" [Dhirendra Nath Sen, From Raj To Swaraj, Vidyodaya Library Private
Limited, Calcutta, pp.43-44].
US’s Fake Democracy & Revisionist
Betrayals Worldwide
In February 2004 the
Indian dailies published the news that the United States is not too happy with
the functioning of Indian democracy. It is really intriguing that U.S.
imperialism, the notorious destroyer of all democratic norms in Iraq, in Haiti,
and all over the world, sheds crocodile’s tears for the weaknesses of India’s
parliamentary "democratic" functioning. The real concern of the US is about it,
smooth functioning of the parliamentary system and the maintenance of the façade
of democracy in India against the forces growing stronger in India, Nepal and
some other countries poised for the destruction of this edifice.
This suspicion is not
without foundation. Just within one month of that report of the U.S. concern
about Indian democracy the Kolkata Statesman highlighted the visit of U.S.
secretary of State Gen.(retd) Collin Powell to provide India "a cache of
futuristic weaponry for commandos fighting behind enemy lines and related
equipment from the U.S.A." The report states, "The new purchases will be
of different kind and purchases will include weapons rarely used by the armed
forces in India and not manufactured here". The pertinent question is
Powell’s visit to South Asia is related to "Afghanistan’s nascent democracy",
"India-Pakistan peace process", "furthering the Indo-US strategic
bilateral partnership", nuclear proliferation, etc. [The Statesman 15 March,
2004]. It goes without saying that commando operations in the Indian
sub-continent is now basically related to tackling insurgents, be it in Kashmir,
North-east or Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Dandakaranya and such other Naxalite
influenced states.
It is in order to add
that U.S. imperialism has already devastated Iraq, massacred thousands of
Iraqis, destroyed the political sovereignty of Iraq under the rolling U.S. tanks
and occupied Iraq. This terrorist imperialist no 1, the U.S.A., now shows its
acute concern to impose a "democratic set-up" after its choice. The U.S.,
like the British in India, is busy fashioning a Constitution for occupied Iraq
and its subjected people recognising "freedom of expression, assembly,
religion and free elections".
With the signing of
the Constitution by the U.S. lackeys it is declared to the world that "sovereignty
will pass on to the Iraqi people on 30 June as planned by the USA, though its
military presence will continue for an indefinite period. The interim Iraqi
government will hold election by 31 January 2005 for a new national assembly,
which will be charged to frame a permanent Constitution." [The Statesman, 17
March 2004. All emphases added are ours] what a beneficent and democratic spirit
of U.S. imperialism anxious to give democracy a chance!
Right at this moment
freedom loving Iraqis have been unleashing one after another attacks on the
occupation army. Iraqi guerrillas are now fighting a powerful resistance
movement against the barbarous occupation armies. What will India’s
parliamentary CPM, CPI, Librationetc. who bark against the US attack on Iraq
from a safe distance say to the Iraqi people? Should the Iraqi people resist
imperialist armies or accept the American conspiracy to impose the so-called
democracy and its Constitution?
Alongside class
divisions, Iraqi society is riven by such identities like Shias, Sunnis,
Assyrian Christians, Kurds, etc. The terrorizing American imperialism is
desperately trying to pit one section against the other and utilizing
anti-Saddam elements for this Constitution-making process. A section of Iraqi
population will also be readily available, another section will also be
persuaded to join this ‘participatory democracy’ under Uncle Sam’s supervision,
and still another section will be coerced into joining this fake democratic
process and electoral fray. Many people will reject the U.S. sponsored farcical
electioneering game. Yet the resistance against imperialist forces and their
agents will continue unabated. Iraq is a third world country with the
forthcoming elections under imperialist domination. Only flunkeys, pro-U.S.
forces and parties against anti-resistance, will submit to the drama of
American-sponsored spurious democracy.
The scenario has some
similarity with post-world war II India, when the Indian National Congress,
Muslim League and the CPI, etc., fearing revolutionary struggle to destroy
imperialist presence in India, swallowed the British sponsored arrangement of
Constituent Assembly and elections to lend apparent legitimacy to the democratic
farce and opposed the forces rejecting all such maneuvers. The ideologically
crippled CPI obviously dished out the argument that the majority of the Indian
population were not prepared for an alternative violent path to real freedom. In
an extremely uneven country with disparate identities alongside class divisions,
India could well have chosen the Chinese path to revolution. The weak
ideological foundation, cowardice of the CPI leadership and the gripping spirit
of Bernstein and other social democrats stood in the way to embark on a
revolutionary course for the emancipation of the Indian people.
Revisionism in the
grab of parliamentarism was also obvious in France and Italy after the rout of
fascism in World War II. During the period of the anti-fascist war, the
French Communist Party organized a 500 thousand (five lakh) people’s armed force
at the one time liberated Paris. Thorez, the modern revisionist general
secretary of France (CPF) returned to France in November 1944 after a period of
self-exile abroad and handed the armed forces to the bourgeois classes in
exchange for an official covetous post of vice-premiership and participated in
the elections. It was the first National Assembly in November 1945 under the
auspices of the de Gaulle government. France was, till then, seething with wrath
against the new set-up. The CPF did not ask the people to boycott elections, it
participated in it and formed the "Left majority" in the Assembly. But the fond
hope of the revisionist leaders was shattered within years with the amendments
to the electoral law by the ruling French bourgeoisie. The CPF saw a downturn in
the elections of 1951 securing 103 seats but lost 79 seats. In the ensuing
elections in 1958 with a further revision of the electoral law and the loss of
the earlier militant role of the CPF, it secured only 10 seats. In 1968 when the
youth movement spread to France the CPF lost its prestige and credibility
further by its calculated indifference and evasive role. The CPF, which had a
glorious role in the anti-fascist resistance struggle, is now a paralytic
parliamentary force in the arena of electoral politics.
Like Thorez in
France, Togliatti and his trusted coterie in the Italian Communist Party
derailed a great prospect of advancing towards socialism after the fall of the
fascist regime of Mussolini during the World War II and after. The Italian
Communist Party boasted of a 256,000 strong armed guerrillas and insurgent
workers. They liberated Milan, Venice and more than 200 other large and small
cities and executed fascist chieftain Mussolini. Like Thorez, Palmiro Togliatti,
the general secretary of the Italian Communist Party, returned from abroad after
18 years to Italy and began to preach the dangerous capitulationist line of
bringing in socialism "not by resorting to force and insurrections" but
by going through the process of reforming the social structure. His
parliamentarism, like that of Thorez, later received the praise from Khrushchev
and other revisionist parliamentary parties like the CPI in our country.
Togliatti too destroyed the huge potential of advancing towards socialism after
the heroic resistance by the party’s armed force and militant workers against
the fascist Mussolini regime.
The Chinese
Khrushchev Liu Shao-Chi too advocated a similar line after the war of resistance
against Japan ended in 1945. He too preached that "armed struggle in general
has come to a stop" and that "the main form of struggle in the Chinese
revolution has now become peaceful and parliamentary, this is a legal struggle
and parliamentary struggle" and "all political issues should be solved
peacefully". [Quoted in Satya Ghosh, "Boycott Elections" some Lessons of
Recent History, Liberation, 3 January 1969]. Had Mao Tse-tung and the
revolutionary leaders of China not bitterly fought and rejected such
capitulationist parliamentary politics China would not be transformed into a
People’s Democratic Republic on 1 October 1949. It is necessary to add here that
the new parliamentary revisionism everywhere argued that the balance of forces
had gone in favour of socialism after the emergence of a number of communist
party-led states through the earth shaking victory of the Soviet Red Army
against fascism. Khrushchev theorized his peaceful parliamentary path to
socialism citing the above convenient argument.
So also the
revisionist leadership in the CPI readily accepted such a capitulationist theory
in 1950s and then the CPI(M) too theoretically and practically accepted such
parliamentary revisionism adding some catchy left phrases. And now Indian
parliamentary revisionism of the CPI or of the CPI(M), etc. has grown into a
dangerous enemy of revolution in this country. When the CPI(M) or the CPI cries
for saving and strengthening ‘Left’ governments in West Bengal or Kerala it
actually furthers the cause of parliamentarism in India. In the course of
history from the stream of ML parties the CPI(ML)Liberation and CPI(ML)New
Democracy, etc. too abandoned revolutionary Marxism and joined the opportunist
stream of electoral politics.
Role of the CPI, CPI(M) and
Parliamentarism
The CPI guided by the
British Communist Party leaders R.P.Dutt and Bradley and their thesis, known as
the Dutt-Bradley thesis, signally changed its earlier stand to plunge the party
into electoral polities. With the elections round the corner in 1936 the CPI
leadership readied itself for the experiment in electoral politics, a position
that spelled doom for the Marxist movement in India. The CPI argued with great
jubilation "….we want to utilise the election for furthering the
anti-imperialist struggle and raising it to higher level that we want to utilise
the occasion clarifying the issue before the masses to sharpen their
consciousness and make elections a lever for consolidating the forces of
anti-imperialist masses". ["On Election, Circular No. 5, PBCC", In Arindam
Sen and Partha Ghosh (eds), Communist Movement In India, Vol. I (1917-1939), A
CPI(ML) Liberation Publication, 1991, p.613]. The CPI also laid down its vague
policy to oppose reactionary candidates like Zamindars, communalists, Justices
and liberals who stood in opposition to the Congress because the latter "are
more progressive than others." [Ibid, p.614].
Even at that time,
being too eager to choose the peaceful parliamentary stream, the CPI arrogantly
criticised "The policy of boycotting the present elections as sectarianism."
To fall in line with the Dutt-Bradley Thesis, the CPI made another turnaround by
affirming its faith in "The Constituent Assembly As an expression of The
Unity Movement." One can imagine the most favourable national and
international revolutionary situation after the fall of Fascism, the emergence
of revolutionary governments in East Europe, the march of the Red Army over vast
areas in China, armed struggle and successes in Vietnam, outbursts of the Indian
masses every where. Instead of giving the call for freedom from the colonial
yoke, the CPI called upon the cadre and masses to court the British-sponsored
Constituent Assembly!
The crucial as well
as trend setting aspect was the way of argumentation for electoral politics in
the colonial period. The same vocabulary the Indian masses became too familiar
with in the post-47 period in each and every election was repeated, all in the
name of Marxism. With the 1935 Act for so-called democratisation of the
electoral process there also came the ruthless Defence of India Act in 1939. The
CPI leadership perpetually remaining in an aimless, programmeless state,
however, mastered the art of occasional roars against the anti-people steps and
war efforts. So without any preparation and revolutionary spirit during the
out-break of the World War II, later gave verbal calls to "Break through the
shackles of Gandhian technique" and to "Raise national struggle to a
revolutionary level", etc. to arouse the masses. [Statement of the Politburo
on the CPI Policy and Tasks in the Period of War, In Subodh Roy(ed), Communism
in India, Unpublished Documents 1935-1945, National Book Agency, Calcutta 1976,
pp. 134-135].
Electoral politics,
occasional (hypocritical) calls for the need for revolutionary struggle, without
any preparation or effort for such a preparation, making lashing verbal attacks
on Congress or other parties’ leaders for misdeeds, etc. have continued for
several decades. The CPI’s and later the CPI(M)’s hobnobbing with the Congress
has a long history. Parliamentarism, support to the ruling classes and their
parties, betrayal of the people’s just movements, are all the hallmarks of
Indian revisionism. With the change in the CPI line on World War II, the
CPI’s ‘Memorandum on Communist Policy and Plan of Work’ only expressed the
desires of "the Indian Communists" to "do all they can to co-operate
with the existing war efforts under the present government…"[Party Letter
no. 56, Resolution of the Politburo, December 13, 1941, In Subodh Roy (ed).
Communism in India… Ibid. p. 269]. As a result, the British government soon
lifted its ban on the CPI and its representative Sir Stafford Cripps came to
India with another basket of constitutional proposals. The CPI without taking
any lessons from Chinese or Vietnamese Communist Parties greeted the Cripps
proposal "as a suitable basis for a settlement, inadequate though they are"
and appealed to the Congress and the League to set up a "national government"
to rally the people for defence. [Quoted in Suniti kr. Ghosh, India and the Raj,
1919-1945, Research Unit for Political Economy, Bombay, 1995, pp 335-36]. Such
government formation under the colonial yoke or the support to the Congress
during Nehru, Indira Gandhi periods and much later in the early 1990s the
decision taken first by the CPI and later by the CPI(M) to join the Central
government, obviously a hotch potch coalition with reactionary ruling class
parties, were all the culmination of parliamentary revisionism in India.
All politicians must
Publicly Declare Not to Send Troops to Iraq
All electoral
parties are silent on the Iraq issue. The BJP-led government had prepared
17,000 Indian troops to send to Iraq, but because of public pressure and fear
of its impact on the elections, it was forced to retract. Still, for over one
year now, over 1000 Indian civilians are assisting the US forces in Iraq. The
BJP-led govt was one of the few in the world not to outright condemn the
assassination of Hamas leader by Israel; they merely were "appalled’’
by it — that too two days after the event.
Now, with the Iraqi
resistance hitting massive blows at the US-led occupying forces the Bush
regime is desperate. They have begun hiring mercenary killers from Latin
America at a gigantic cost of $1,000 per day. Quite naturally troops from
India/Pakistan would be a mere fraction of the cost. Recently the servile
Musharraf government has announced its willingness to send troops. US pressure
(and baits for contracts to Indian big business) on the Indian rulers to send
troops have never reduced. After coming to power, with no concern for public
opinion, will the winning party oblige and send Indian troops as cannon fodder
for US interests? All parties must publicly assure the Indian people that they
will not send troops to Iraq to do America’s dirty job.
Comrade Mao pointed
out that "protracted people’s war was possible in a country like China
because of its uneven development, turbulent political situation, its backward
economy and its decentralized system of communication. He contrasted these
conditions with those in advanced capitalist countries, which require protracted
legal struggle to precede armed revolution." [ Mao And People’s War,
Vanguard Multi-Media Foundation, India, 1999, p.3]
Vietnam, a small
state having an area of 330,000 sq.km. and a population of 3 crore under the
leadership of its communist party started armed struggle against colonial rule
since the beginning of the World War II. To paraphrase General Giap’s words:
The Indo Chinese Communist Party was formed in 1930. After 10 years of
relentless political struggle, at the beginning of the World War II the party
directed to get prepared for armed struggle. Direction was also given to embark
on guerrilla struggles for establishing base areas against Japanese imperialism
for national freedom. Thus the party reached the glorious days of August
Revolution in 1945. [Bho Naguen Giap, Jana Yuddh o Ganafauz, Bengali
Translation, Nabajatak Prakashan, Kolkata, 1973, p.23]
The CPI rejected the
Chinese path of People’s War. It also refused to learn from the experience of
Vietnam.
With the end of World
War II, the Labour Monthly carried an article strongly projecting the CPI view
by the Communist Party of Great Britain for "A Constituent Assembly for India"
as a lasting democratic solution to India’s problems. [Michael Carriot, "A
Constituent Assembly", Labour Monthly, November 1945, pp.342-45] And the
Constituent Assembly was also sponsored by the British Government with the
elected member of political parties, including the CPI, by the consent of a
microscopic representation of basically rich, educated people, princes and royal
families under paramountcy. The Indian Constitution that emerged from the
apparently fierce debates in the Constituent Assembly took great care and
precision to retain two-thirds of the Government of India Act 1935. The central
pillar of India’s farcical democracy is this Constitution. It was also a time
when rumblings of anti-British movements and unleashing of attacks on the
colonial state literally scared British power. The Tebhaga struggle, Telangana
uprising, revolt of the peasants in Punnapra-Vayalar, The RIN Mutiny, Struggles
of the Warli Adivasis, peasant revolt in Burma Valley, Tripura tribal movements,
country-wide unprecedented working class strike actions etc. shook the British
empire. The CPI still had firm faith in the Congress and Muslim League to lead
India to freedom. The CPI not only toed the Congress and Muslim League, it
betrayed the Indian people’s outbursts in the form of volcanic eruptions.
It is curious to note
that U.S. imperialism and its agents are now vocal against guerrilla violence
and the resultant bloodshed in Iraq in the name of restoring ‘democracy’ and
electoral politics. Indian deputy prime minister and criminal, communalist
L.K.Advani during his Rathyatra in Andhra Pradesh on 18th March 2004 "lashed
out at the Naxalites and called on them to shun violence and join the mainstream"
[The Telegraph, 19 March, 2004].
On the same day the
CPI(M) Chief Minister of West Bengal and the great worshipper of parliamentary
mainstream, Buddhadev, told the West Bengal Assembly that the Centre had
recently set up a cell comprising Andhra Pradesh, Orissa, Jharkhand and Bihar to
rein in Naxalites of the People’s War and MCCI. "We have also joined the cell,"
added Buddhadev [The Telegraph, 19 March, 2004]. What a common concern for
‘democracy’, ‘parliamentary politics’ and about how to crush all resistance
against imperialism and /or neo-colonial states among people like Bush, Advani
and Buddhadev!
The CPI leadership
never shrank to give the vague, practically impotent calls like "Break with
the British", "Clear Road For Final Assault", "Forward To Freedom"
and so on. Against the path of the parliamentary road, the Andhra comrades
fought their way to implement the Chinese model through the Telangana Uprising.
And it should be kept in mind the Telangana struggle was opposed by many leaders
in the CPI. So this struggle was stabbed in the back by the CPI leadership
itself from within, when Indian military butchers, peasants along with Nizam’s
Razarkrs were, at that time, massacring the ordinary peasants.
The founder and
prominent leader of the CPI(M), A.K.Gopalan, in his press statement on 23
October, 1951 on behalf of the CPI C.C. advised the "fighting partisans to
stop all partisan action to mobilise the entire people for an effective
participation in the ensuing general election to rout the Congress at the polls"
[Cross-roads, 26 October, in Mohit Sen (ed) Documents of the History of the
Communist Party of India, Vol. VIII, 1951-56, People’s Publishing House, New
Delhi, pp.59-60]. The journey in the path of social democracy had already
started and so the CPI adjusted itself to the post-1947 semi-colonial,
semi-feudal situation marvellously rapidly and the CPI secretary Ajoy Ghosh
watered down the revolutionary spirit of the post-war rebellious mood and
sacrifices of the peasants, workers and other sections by declaring on 7
November, 1952, to focus on the "Key issue of democracy as the structure of a
democratic state", etc. [Ajoy Ghosh. "Some of Our Main weaknesses, In For a
People’s Democracy" 7 November 1952 In Mohit Sen(ed), Documents, Vol. III,
1951-56, Ibid. p.185]. The extended plenum of the CC of the CPI, held from 30
December 1952 to 10 January 1953, ‘inspiringly’ stated "The entire party went
in the election campaign" immediately after the all-India party conference
held in October 1951 and that "Not only party members but tens of thousands
of supporters and sympathisers plunged into the election campaign…" [The
Extended Plenum of the Central Committee", in Mohit Sen(ed) Documents, Vol. III,
1951-56, Ibid. p.199.].
Thus the Telangana
model, or in other words the Chinese path, was abandoned in favour of the
parliamentary path for India. The CPI had already chosen the opportunist way of
both extending support to the Nehru government on some fundamental issues and
criticism on some others. The Madurai Party Congress of the CPI in 1953-54
officially endorsed this position what the CPI, and then the CPI(M), had
ludicrously followed in the following decades even after the death of Nehru and
during the Indira regime and thereafter. It is wrong that the 20th Congress of
the CPSU in 1956, officially pleading for the parliamentary path to socialism,
only inspired the CPI leadership to put the CPI on the rails of parliamentarism.
The trend was already visible as stated above. The CPI had already enjoyed
resounding victories in the 1952 elections particularly in the regions swept by
the Telangana uprising and Tebhaga struggle with Ravi Narayana Reddy (from
Telangana) and Kansari Haldar (from 24 Paraganas in West Bengal, where Tebhaga
movement was assuming the dimension of a mini Telangana) receiving the maximum
number of votes in India. P.Sundaraiah, who later became general secretary of
the CPI(M), declared that in consideration of the electoral victory in Andhra
that "we are confident of forming a government" [P.Sundaraiah, For
Victory in Andhra, CPI Publication, 1955, New Delhi, p.41].
"If I lose, hard
work will stop"…… Naidu
Thus spake the
arrogant fascist butcher, the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, in an
exclusive interview to The Statesman, dated April 14, 2004, sensing rejection
by the electorate, dumping him into political wilderness in this battle for
power. This self-styled CEO of AP, after pushing the state to a miserably
messy condition courting Uncle Sam, corruption, and the politics of murdering
revolutionaries and democrats, is now in a state of panic. His hands, filled
with the blood of hundreds, have gathered fortunes by servilely implementing
orders of his imperialist bosses.
The much-hyped
reforms, under the dictates of the World Bank, WTO, etc. have already run into
deep water. In the last five years the Naidu government has closed 25 ‘sick’
industries owned by the state. The government has increased the price of
electricity nine times in the past 5 years, pushing the farmer to destitution.
During these five years he has received Rs.35,000 crore rupees, ostensibly to
expedite the so-called development process, but in fact mortgaging the state
to the imperialists. While Cybabad shines the rest of AP has been pushed to a
situation of intense darkness. But Naidu, will no doubt, continue to keep
working hard — nay slaving — for his imperialist bosses. If he looses,
terrified of the people’s wrath, he may flee to some tax haven abroad.
The CPI was by then
well committed to parliamentary politics and expected government formation in
states. And with the Khrushchev’s line of peaceful, parliamentary path to
socialism in the 20th Congress of the CPSU going public, the CPI 4th Congress in
1956 endorsed that dangerous line affirming faith in the "fundamental social
change" in a number of "capitalist and former colonial countries"
through "winning a stable parliamentary majority backed by a mass
revolutionary movement" of the working people. The CPI general secretary
went a little further while endorsing the parliamentary path, adding clearly
that such a peaceful path was applicable "even in a country like India and
Indonesia". [Report of Ajoy Ghosh in "The Palghat Congress on 20th Congress
of CPSU," The 4th Party Congress documents, In Mohit Sen(ed) Documents, Vol.
VIII, 1951-56, Ibid. p.505 and p.508]. While in India parliamentarism swallowed
the CPI, CPI(M), etc. in Indonesia lakhs of communists were massacred by the
U.S. lackey Suharto regime in 1965. In Chile the parliamentary path i.e. winning
a majority in the parliament was a miscarriage, with the killing of President
Allende and his followers in 1973.
The same argument has
been adduced again and again by the CPI, CPI(M) and now even the CPI(ML)
Liberation, adding some left phraseology. In any case when E.M.S. Namboodiripad
became the Chief Minister in 1957 in Kerala, the revisionists in the CPI were
further inspired and the Kerala model was projected as the ideal in India for
people’s relief and democracy in the bourgeois set-up. The CPI was split after
1962 but the new party, the CPI(M), never abandoned the Kerala model and the
fundamentals of the CPI were retained under cunningly woven left phrase
mongering. The pivot of parliamentarism, fashioning the CPI(M) Programme of
1964, soon became obvious with the formation of the United Front government in
1967 in West Bengal and Kerala. The years from 1965 to 1967 witnessed the
bursting out of people’s spirited mood through strong anti-Congress hatred and
unfolding waves of movements of workers, peasants and other sections. The new
party, the CPI(M), which emerged ostensibly to fight the rightist position of
the CPI, exposed its insatiable hunger for ministry making in West Bengal with
parties ranging from the openly pro-jotedar Bangla Congress, a splinter outfit
of Congress, to the communalist Jan Sangh, the present BJP. The kitchri
coalition led by the CPI(M) – the largest party in the U.F. – unmasked its
revisionist reactionary character by sending state armed forces to gun down the
struggling peasants of Naxalbari. Parliamentarism led the CPI(M) to commit
reactionary acts of directly putting down the heroic peasant movement of
Naxalbari in league with the Indira Gandhi-led Central government. And now it
has pushed it into the lap of the BJP Deputy Prime Minister communal fascist,
L.K.Advani, to crush the peasant movement, particularly in West Bengal.
Rightist Turn of some earlier
Naxalites
The politics of
elections is a dangerous illusion that has caused incalculable harm to the
communist movement in India. Instead of taking up the Maoist path of initiating
armed struggle from the beginning to gradually develop local parallel power
centres the CPI, CPI(M), etc. have always spun theories conveniently using some
quotations from Lenin’s or Stalin’s writings to participate in elections.
The Indian communist
movement was vertically split when armed agrarian revolution was launched on
Maoist lines in 1967, through the Naxalbari uprising. Thus it also initiated the
great ideological battle between two lines or two paths i.e. between the
parliamentary path and the path of people’s war. The CPI(ML) that emerged, soon
under the leadership of comrade Charu Mazumdar correctly analysed the Indian
condition and announced the path of people’s war, giving the clarion call of
boycotting the farcical elections in India. Before Naxalbari, only for a brief
period, was the path of people’s war practiced in Telangana in 1946-51 by the
revolutionary communists, but the CPI leadership made a forced withdrawal of
that glorious struggle for participation in elections in 1952.
Even after the set-back in the CPI(ML)-led struggle in 1972 some frustrated and
nervous leaders like Satya Narayana Sinha once again raised the old argument of
tactics in Lenin’s name to join parliamentary politics. Even after Naxalbari
people like Nagi Reddy, Pulla Reddy, etc. dished out the same old argument of a
preparatory parliamentary phase towards armed struggle.
With mounting state
repression the CPI(ML)Liberation also withdrew from protracted armed struggle in
the 1980s. The same alibi in the name of tactics was submitted by this group
disbanding its armed squads in Bihar to join the parliamentary mainstream.
Lessons form the past
60 years make it clear that parallel power can exist fighting against the more
powerful state machinery receiving all support from imperialism. The small
countries, Vietnam, Kampuchea, Laos in the 1970s, indubitably proved how such
alternate power can exist, develop and ultimately win victories. Closer home,
the LTTE in Sri Lanka, though not a Marxist organisation, has proved how it
could grow from strength-to-strength fighting military battles against the Sri
Lankan State due to its method of arming the entire masses for the armed
struggle.
Where the State can go to the extent of using its paramilitary
and police forces to campaign for the people to VOTE (in those areas where mass
consciousness has risen to the level of boycott), one can understand the
importance attached to elections for the rulers of this country. Yet some
so-called revolutionaries insist on participation. By doing so, they render
yeoman service to the establishment.
Way back on 27th
January, 1950 in the editorial of the organ of the Cominform, For a lasting
Peace, For a People’s Democracy it was clearly stated, "The path taken by
the Chinese people …. is the path that should be taken by the people of many
colonial and dependent countries in their struggle for national independence and
people’s democracy..".
While Indian
revisionists always fought shy of accepting such a path, the neo-revisionists
who identify themselves as Naxalites like the CPI(ML) Liberation, COI(ML),
CPI(ML) New Democracy, etc. now deceive the people with the bait of
parliamentary politics after their betrayal of the path of Naxalbari and pinning
faith in electoral politics. It is not beside the mark to say that even in
western countries elections after many decades of practice in parliamentary
politics have been reduced to a lack-lustre, useless game with minimum interest
of the common people. Turnout numbers even in the western countries clearly show
that people over there feel little urge to cast their votes. Only 40% Canadians,
41% of Britishers and Germans and 48% of American voters bother to exercise
their franchise. [The Times of India, March 29, 2004]. Use of comrade Lenin’s
name for mere participation in electoral politics and practice has equated the
parliamentary Marxists with Fabian socialists or social democrats of the 2nd
International. The International situation has changed; people’s movements also
nowhere remain within the confines of parliamentary politics. This reality
cannot be ignored. The gigantic anti-war demonstrations in the West are witness
to this.
Yet there is a world
of difference between the bourgeois democracies of the West and those of
countries like India that have not been through any bourgeois democratic
revolution. Also, in the path of insurrection electoral tactics may have some
relevance, if it is linked to the question of the preparations for the seizure
of power by armed force. If not that too will lead to atrophy of the movement.
But in countries like India where there is no relevance whatsoever for so call
Maoists to partake in elections, under the guise that the conditions have not
ripened is a plain hoax. For, situations do not ripen on their own; however good
the objective situation, unless the strategy and tactic are not linked to
concrete preparations for people’s war, there will be no advance of the
revolution.
Specious arguments
are often given that in this period when, according to the right-wing Maoists,
the conditions have not yet ripened for revolution, participation in elections
can and must be used to dispel constitutional illusions, is suspect. Suspect
because most of these groups do not seem to be making any real preparations for
the armed struggle for the seizure of political power — neither politically by
intensifying the class struggle nor seeking to focus on the agrarian revolution;
and even organizationally by preparing the party and cadres (even leaders for
that matter) to take on the state machinery, which inevitably means underground
functioning, if it is to survive. In addition the ground reality can clearly be
seen that those who boycott elections and prepare the masses and the Party for
armed revolution have continued to advance their movement inspite of loosing a
large number of their cadre and even leaders to state repression. On the other
hand those for participation continue to be fringe groups, that continue their
splitting, with little mass base. So without going into any theoretical
arguments it is evident even to a child that those who boycott and advance the
class struggle have been more effective in winning over the masses to
revolution.
Besides, if the path
of protracted people’s war is accepted as the path to actualize the
establishment of people’s democracy in India, there is no question of
participating in a long legal process, including participation in elections.
Many of the arguments put and their method of functioning smack of the path
adopted in developed countries (do they do not say so) where these groups seem
all set to work in the same fashion legally for an indefinite period, focusing
primarily on urban work. The actual work at the grass roots of most of these
groups is confined to reformist and economistic functioning, with occasional
bouts of political propaganda to prove their political existence. Generally even
militancy is lacking. They often say fascism is around the corner, but make no
realistic preparations, either politically or organizationally, to face it — let
alone preparations for revolution.
The Tamasha of Indian Parliamentary ‘Democracy’
The forthcoming
elections to the parliament and some state legislatures have been imposed at a
time when the economic crisis is a stark reality despite the ‘Shining India’
propaganda. The extent of people’s desperation was to be seen in Vajpayee’s own
constituency at the sari-for-votes road-show where a stampede killed a minimum
of 30 people and injured many more. The NDA government has gone on overdrive to
suppress the fact that under the BJP dispensation the national income has
increased at the rate of 5.3%, not 8% as claimed. Agricultural growth has
actually decreased below 2% and the employment sector records only downturns. [Ananda
Bazar Partrika, 13th March 2004] Regular elections, at huge expense, with no
real change in people’s lives only creates frustration and hopelessness,
reflected in various forms of people’s demonstration of anger, which are evident
everywhere. Organised and Unorganised protests against attacks of the capitalist
class are found in many parts of the country. While the government has been
spending many hundred crores on false propaganda of the country’s progress, the
ruling classes desperately need this constitutional safety valve of this
democratic smoke screen for the preservation of the status quo in a country like
India.
Growing unemployment,
lockouts, lay offs, decrease in actual wages, automation related hiring and
firing, etc. are assuming dangerous dimensions. The per-capita consumption of
textile in 2002 at 19 meters was below the world average. 60 percent of Indian
households don’t have bank accounts (In rural India, that is 70 percent,
according to the Census of India household survey). And where tens of millions
of farmers live and die in debt. The fastest growing sector in India is not IT
or Software, textiles or automobiles but acute poverty and inequality. At the
height of misery in rural Andhra Pradesh in 2002, the hungry were forced to buy
rice at Rs. 6.40 a kilogram. This is in drought-hit regions at a time when India
exported rice at Rs. 5.45 a kg. [Frontline Feb. 28 - March 12, 2004, p.5]
Prof. Utsa Patnaik
gives some devastating facts: " The average family is absorbing annually
nearly 100 kg. less of food grain today than a mere five years ago. (That is) a
phenomenal drop…. never have seen before the last century in India’s history"
[quoted in Front Line, Ibid, p.6].
Prof. Utsa has shown,
the absolute amount of per capita food availability for the year 2002-03 was
lower than during the time of the Bengal famine. Hundreds of millions of Indian
poor are now consuming less calories than before. Despite a set of
methodological fiddles in the measurement of poverty, it is an indubitable fact
that more or less half of the Indian population is below the poverty level. In
the year from 1996-97 to 2000-01, close to 9 lakh organized sector jobs
vanished. In just the single district of Anantpur in Andhra Pradesh, over 2000
farmers in debt committed suicides from 1997 to 2001. In the next two years the
number of suicides mounted further in 2002. The Punjab CM told the press that
about 600 farmers’ lost their lives from suicide in 2001 itself, while The
Tribune placed the numbers of suicides in Punjab at 3000 annually. In U.P. it is
the sugarcane farmers, in Maharastra it is the cotton growers who have been
committing suicide. [Frontline Ibid. p.9]. Now in West Bengal under ‘Left Front’
rule the potato growers have stepped into this path of ending lives.
All the above glaring
instances are the mere tip of the iceberg. The crisis is all round – political,
economic, cultural and social. For the general people already a firm belief has
set into their minds that the change of ministers are not going to bring about
any change of the situation. Yet many crores of people still cast their votes,
particularly the freshers enjoying this so-called right. Caste, community and
factors and factors such as the choosing the better of two evils prompt people
to vote. The ‘Parliamentary Marxists’ instead of exposing the façade of
parliamentary politics have joined with other reactionary parties to create a
false consciousness about the state-sponsored and nurtured parliamentary
edifice. No parliamentary party can alter the situation deteriorating further
each and every day. It is only by replacing the crisis-ridden and
poverty-generating system through the people’s war India that the masses can
come out of this morass.
According to the
Central Statistical Institute, the incidence of crimes against women has gone up
sharply in the 10 years between 1990 and 2000, from 68,867 cases in 1990 to an
alarming 161,373 in 2000. The reality is much more. The sharpest rise was in the
incidence of cases of torture, which went up from 13,450 to 45,778. This was
followed by molestation cases, which went up from 20,194 to 32,940. The victims
of rape show astounding figures between 1999 and 2000 with an almost threefold
increase in the number of victims aged above 50 years. [The Statesman, 6 March
2004]. The patriarchal system coupled with vulgar consumerism increasingly
produces such victims. What is noteworthy is the alarming drop in the man woman
ratio in the combined rural and urban figure from 1000: 97.2 in 1901 to 1000:933
in 2001. [The Statesman 6 Mach, 2004] All this shows the increasing death-rate
of adult women as well as the girl foetus in the patriarchal set-up reinforced
by inhuman ‘modernity’ creating a dangerous mind-set. The Brahminical set-up and
the existing order of things make women easy victims.
In the so-called
shining India in the past six years GDP growth fell by 2.2 percent, industrial
growth by 5 percent and 5.1 million persons lost jobs or were turned away from
the organized sector. [Hindustan Times, February 27, 2004]
The ballot will get a
leg-up from business in these general elections, as is always the case. The
Telegraph dated 13th March writes "Two leading groups – the Tata Group and
the Aditya Brila group – have decided to revive their electoral trusts to
contribute to the poll process. The head of the Confederation of Indian
Industries (CII) Rahul Bajaj has already decided to fund political parties. Not
only that, with a view to saving this dirty parliamentary democracy he has
suggested the government also fund the major parties during elections." [Thehelka,
March 20, 2004] Along with the Congress(I), BJP and the like, the CPI(M) is also
receiving monetary blessings from the captains of industries. Already the main
trading centre in Kolkata, the Burrabazar Businessmen’s Association has declared
even to join the campaign for electing the CPI(M) and other ‘Left’ Front
candidates. Similar support is extended by the United Textile Merchant
Association [Sanbad Pratidin, 1 April, 2004]. The parliamentary political
party–capitalist/ rich trader nexus is not new. In every election it is
glaringly evident.
While the squandering
of crores of public money is going on, India’s outstanding debt as on December
9, 2003 stood at Rs. 2,10,648 crore. [Hindu 5 March 2004]. For holding the 2004
elections the state will require to spend public money of Rs. 1200 crore, more
than 3 times the spending during the 1991 elections. [Hindustan Times, 22
February, 2004].
Those in this country
who can read newspapers are being targeted by the government, with a sort of
systematic, relentless and unabashed extravagance, in its media campaign to
highlight the extraordinary promises and achievements of the NDA. An entirely
cooked-up version of reality is being spectacularly recreated in word and in
image through the sheer use of publicity rhetoric. It is an ethical outrage how
public money is spent to promote mostly dishonest and power-happy politicians.
Perhaps never before
has such an expensive campaign for parliamentary elections taken place. The two
major parties — the Congress and the BJP — show no restraint on propaganda. The
court verdict granting permission to political parties for advertisements on TV
has escalated the intensity of propaganda. Money flows like water; never mind if
millions are sarving!
A top brass involved
with the job of BJP propaganda has this to say: It costs rupees one crore to
telecast a 30-second advertisement through all channels. It requires between 25
and 30 lakh rupees to work out such advertisements through professional firms.
For full-page advertisements in premier national dailies it costs Rs. 2 crore.
For half-page the charge is 1 crore. The matter does not end at that.
The question before us is that in the past half century of
‘communists’ participating in elections, to what extent has it raised
consciousness against constitutional illusions, and instilled the consciousness
of the need to seize power by armed force. This is the central question that
needs to be answered by them.
A number of surveys
have been taken recourse to, by the political parties. The expenses for such
surveys also reach staggering figures. As a whole, for the opinion of a single
person it costs Rs. 100. In a parliamentary constituency, for even a small-scale
survey it requires 1 lakh rupees. The BJP, on this occasion, has conducted
pretty big surveys and at least 4 surveys have been made. In the competition,
the BJP and the Congress are regularly sending SMS…. In the meantime Vajpayee’s
message has reached 15 lakh telephone owners. The aim is beyond 1 crore. [Ananda
Bazar Patrika, 29 March 2004] Never before have the principal dailies made such
pointed reference to elections as in this year about the murkiest and most
ridiculous height the entire edifice that the election drama has reached in
India. Surveys conducted by the media in the newspapers, journals, letters sent
to the Editors of dailies, etc. unfold the increasing trend of faithlessness in
any political party, the farcical election promises, the disgust and yawning
surprise of the people at the squandering of money for buying votes and most of
all the loss of credibility of the electoral system itself in India.
In a massive survey
conducted by The Times of India in cities and towns found that 40% people
clearly and 30% not so clearly consider elections are a waste of time. [The
Times of India, March 29, 2004] The same source makes it clear that in 1999 60%
of the electorate turned to vote in India. One thing is clear that in towns and
cities about 40% clearly and 30% not so clearly state that elections are a waste
of public money. The same source also highlights the crucial fact that 50% of
women in cities and towns do not know who their M.P. is. And that 34% of men and
women could not recall the name of their parliamentary representative. [The
Times of India, March 29, 2004]. In the pre-poll advertisement splurge the BJP
led NDA expended Rs. 450 crore and this public money has already crossed Rs.700
crore. The Telegraph revealed that with Rs. 450 crore the government could build
2,25,000 houses for the poor, 652 100-bed hospital wards and 17,375 shallow tube
wells. [The Telegraph, 10 February, 2004]. When a defensive T.S.Krishnamurthy,
head of the Vajpayee appointed election commission, feebly spoke against the
misuse of public money under protests and media criticisms, the arrogant
Vajpayee stated that "But it is wrong to say…… tax payers’ money is being
misused. This (ad campaign) is a part of the government’s responsibility."
[The Telegraph, 10th February 2004] All such advertisement blitz only proves the
losing ground of this government who is desperate to hoodwink the people for
votes. Though it has not assumed such dangerous dimension some decades back, the
process started in quite a big way during Congress rule.
The BJP-led NDA is
head over ears in scams: the Tehelka disclosures about corruption in defence
deals; misdemeanours in petrol pump allotment under the petroleum minister Ram
Naik; prime plots in Delhi given to Sangh Parivar outfits; second stock market
scam with broker Ketan Parekh at the Centre; collapse of the Unit 64 scheme
affecting millions of investors; CD showing BJP minister Dilip Sing Judeo
secretly accepting money; allegations of improper advance of loans by Hudco to
companies and so on.
Regular murders of
the Kashmiris by the security forces, killings in North-East India, fake
encounter killings of hundreds of communist revolutionaries, arbitrary arrests,
killings of minorities, spreading communal politics and communal violence
reaching uncivilized heights, detention without trials and information, judicial
exoneration of fanatic Hindu killers in the Gujarat barbarities, corrupt
officials, killer politicians, poll violence as intrinsic part of electoral
politics, corruption in courts and the entire judicial system, restrictions of
religious freedom, saffronisation of the academic world, etc. have come up so
poignantly as a general practice that Indian ‘democracy’, is now identified with
and overwhelmed by these dark features. Despite a massive media propaganda
blitz, building of roads and bridges with foreign money and the infrastructure
built up first by the colonial rulers and then by our native ruling classes with
imperialist backing for the legitimisation of the political system and the
edifice of "Indian democracy" unfolds its horrible face each and every day. It
is notable that the Indian people also have got used to such hypocrisy in he
name of democracy.
The ruling classes
and their parties want to establish parliamentary politics as ‘the mainstream of
Indian democracy’. It is actually playing a hoax on the people. The democratic
mainstream can only be created and sustained by revolutionaries in India. Even
so-called democratic space can be achieved not by appeasing the fascists and
state terrorists, but by confronting them and creating parallel power centers of
the masses. The CPI(ML)People’s War, MCCI etc. are locked in bitter struggle to
establish this revolutionary and democratic mainstream in India.
Increasing instability and dirty
Parliamentarism
The favour shown by
the electorate to this or that party, say Congress(I) or the BJP or some other
formation in this election and some other in the next, only shows the
restlessness of the masses in absence of a strong alternative trend. A study of
the past elections has shown that the electorate in any particular election
throw out two-thirds of sitting MPs. In the past six years, out of 25 assembly
elections in states other than those of the North-east, only in five has the
anti-incumbency factor not decided the results – West Bengal, MP, AP, Gujarat
and Delhi. However in AP and MP, the incumbent barely managed to cling on.
[Hindustan Times, Feb. 27, 2004]. The West Bengal and Gujarat elections under
CPI(M) and BJP rule respectively, have only shown the sleazy and criminal face
of the so-called Marxists and saffron leaders to win elections, where the
rigging factor, absence of a real opposition in the fray and such other factors
etc played a major role.
The instability in
electoral politics is also obvious from the increasing trend of the loss of
seats in the same parliamentary constituencies by the same party. A statistical
analysis. [Tehleka, March 20, 2004] clearly shows that in the elections in 1991,
1996, 1998 and 1999, constituencies not re-electing the same party were in 231,
271, 272 and 263 number of seats respectively. With this trend, we have also to
count the very important fact that more or less 40% voters have never bothered
to cast their votes in each and every election in India. If the percentage of
rigged polls is taken into account the number of non-participants in so-called
democratic elections is a staggering figure.
What rises
prominently is the general unsteadiness, lack of faith in particular party(ies)
and the shifting sands on which the electorate stand in respect to the
parliamentary parties. Add to all such things, defections, floor crossing and
also forcibly keeping in segregation MLAs by this or that party lest they should
cross the floor, and such other dirty factors shown to what depths the electoral
system has degenerated. This election has seen an added factor of the vulgar
display of film heroes and heroines for vote-catching on a big scale.
In any case, all
political parties have, to a large extent, lost credibility in the eyes of the
masses. In addition, even the educated segments in cities and villages have
shown their shifting and unsteady support for those undesirable elements as
mentioned above. And so it is not unusual for the same electorate to support the
Congress(I) in this election and the BJP or any other party in the next election
and so on. This also substantiates the prevalence of a rich objectively
revolutionary situation needing proper subjective intervention.
For a backward
country like India, in many cases election campaigns reach a crescendo by
spending thousands of crores of rupees. Aggressive bands of toughs, popularly
called ‘cadres’ or karmis, appear to have no other work than
intimidating/funding people into attending meetings, thrusting flags and banners
into their hands to crowd the place for leaders’ addresses. The overactive
toughs may wear red headbands of the CPI, CPI(M) or carry portraits of Sonia
Gandhi or Vajpayee. Now, with the steady decline in support base of the masses
of the parliamentary Left or worshippers of Nehruvian politics, the cadres and
followers of the CPM appear to be of the same breed as those of the Congress or
the BJP. Whether the people, lured to vote meetings listen is not really taken
care of: the toughs need the masses to crowd the venues. Crores of rupees is
spent on posters, banners, loud speakers to din into the heads of the backward
masses the polished politics of a bright future and the virtues of good
government even when the country is passing through a veritable crisis. The
cacophony of the electoral process makes the common Indian voters puzzled and in
many cases are fooled into choosing between two or more undesirable leaders of
the parliamentary mainstream in India.
Now India can claim
to have the largest number of parties in the world operating in a single polity.
The Election Commission reports a total of 650 parties registered with it, of
them 169 contested the 1998 Lok Sabha elations. The 1999 Lok Sabha elections
were contested by seven national parties, 40 state parties and 122 registered
(un-recognised) parties. [Source Election Commission of India 1998 and 2002].
Though Congress’s one
party domination first took a massive beating in 1967 itself, since 1998, the
Indian political trend distinctly shows that a multi-party system has been
significantly present throughout India. In the 1980s and 1990s some
parliamentarians cried for the necessity of two-party system, the crisis of the
body polity, the assertions of regional demands, castes, religious, etc. have
silenced such voices. Unevenness in the Indian socio-economic-cultural system
shows its forceful presence negating the powerful and forcible homogenization
through Congress party rule in India. This also signals the weakening of the
reactionary unitary political process in India. This further augurs well for the
revolutionary camp. The routinised Congress dominance based on the pivotal role
of the comprador bourgeois and feudal classes could not sustain on the bedrock
of complicated religious, linguistic and caste cleavages in recent decades.
The situation has
changed. The 1989 Lok Sabha elections removed the Congress from the Centre
yielding power to the Janata Dal-led United Front government thus initiating a
clear era of hotch potch coalitions and minority governments, thus opening the
path towards minority governments in New Delhi. The endemic instability since
1989 – nine governments in almost as many years – can be formally described as
the failure of one party hegemony. It is notable that the two major parties –
the BJP and the Congress(I) – neither reach the majority mark and together
accounted for 49.09 percent of the votes and 60.65 percent of seats in 1996. The
comparable figures for the 1998 Lok Sabha elections were 51.35 percent and 59.37
percent respectively. [Source: Mahendra Prasad Singh, Whither Indian Party
System, The Electoral and Legislative Dimensions, In Indian Social Science
review, January-June 2001, p.83]. The Janata Party, actually a combination of
multifarious political outfits ranging from extreme rightist Jan Sangh to the
Lohiaites, bagged 41.2% votes and 54.42% of seats in 1977. The Janata Party then
broke and the unending splinters like BJP, JD-U, JD-S, RJD, Samajvadi Party, SJP,
Indian National Lok Dal, Biju Janata Dal and many other regional parties
emerged, only to prove the reality that the perpetual feud and contrast in
interests shall not allow hegemony of a big outfit. All this also indicates that
ruling class contradictions are growing by the day, with increasing dog-fights
for the declining economic cake.
India witnessed two
Central governments one of the National Front and the other of United Front in
1989 and 1998. What is notable is that the CPI and the CPI(M), along with other
‘Marxists’ or non-Marxist parliamentary parties, extended support to them.
Revealingly the BJP also supported the National Front; and the Congress the
United Front. Not only that, the then CPI general secretary Indrajit Gupta
became the Home minister of the U.F. government and the CPI(M) joined the
co-ordination committee of the ruling front. The murky and dishonest roles of
the parliamentary parties are too evident when many of the parties of the NF and
UF changed sides effortlessly to cement an alliance with the BJP to form the NDA
government later. The floor crossers are also now too active in the 2004
elections. What is also evident is that the Congress(I) leaders, the party on
which the CPI, CPI(M) repose full faith against the BJP, are in fact themselves
promoters of pro-Hindutva policies, in a milder form. And this process started
in the late 1980s itself. In fact, parliamentary politics has been getting
messier and messier with no substantial proof that even the social democratic
parties like the CPI, CPI(M), etc. can stick to their toothless reformist
positions against communalism, violation of democracy and steady attacks on
economic rights of the masses.
The CPI(M) has
further shown, during the last Panchayat elections in West Bengal, to what nadir
it too can reach by killing even the members of its own Left Front constituents,
intimidating the village people, effecting forced withdrawal of nomination of
the opponents at the grass roots level of electoral politics. All the above
bring to the fore the steady erosion of parliamentary politics in India and the
loss of democratic image of the parties and leaders in public estimation.
What baffles many
theorists of bourgeois democracy is, as to how the Indian political system
survives despite violations and rape of democratic values and practices, despite
scam after scam engulfing the parliamentary political process and despite
people’s actual loss of faith in the honesty and ability of those parties and
their leaders to deliver even minimum services. Some even express doubt about
the continuity of such a system pointing to acute poverty, widespread illiteracy
and extreme inequality. Their answer lies in spending crores of rupees to create
an electoral atmosphere, and the vast efforts to give social respectability to
the electoral process by political parties, particularly the CPI, CPI(M) and now
even the CPI(ML)Liberation, under the supervision of the state. And now, in the
present elections even NGOs, like the newly formed Medha Patkar outfit, are
seeking to lend credibility by their fielding so-called honest candidates.
Why Election Boycott Call?
Boycott of elections
is a positive call related to building up of a new democratic system in India.
It has both ideological and political implications. Ideologically this will
inspire the people to understand the necessity of destroying the existing state
system. Simultaneously, the practice in the form of destroying the limbs of the
state to set up alternate governing arrangements in the fields of economy,
politics and cultural, aided and protected by the people’s armed forces will
convince the people about rejecting the class state of the comprador bourgeoisie
and landlords, acting as agents of imperialism. Election boycott is closely
woven with this ideology and practice. If the boycott election call is not
linked up with those aspects it loses not only its cutting teeth and makes such
calls a ritualistic exercise.
In India the question
of people’s war is intrinsically linked up with the aspect of protractedness.
Many years may pass before there develops strong alternative power centers in
rural India. Now, with the growing strength of the Maoist parties, after
continuous battles with the armed might of the existing state and its agents in
various places in AP, DK, Bihar, Jharkhand etc., Maoists have gone into
developing an alternative power system to a degree. These are not obviously base
areas with total extermination of the existing state functions. So naturally
many people are mentally and practically split by simultaneously supporting
these organizational arrangements and the more powerful Indian exploitative
state system and its multiple bodies of governance. The boycott call is
direct intervention on the part of revolutionaries to make people understand the
futility of the Indian electoral farce as well as to uphold alternative politics
to destroy the existing set-up.
Yet, in nearby Nepal,
the Maoists have actually set up alternative power with a proper functioning
democratic process in the vast Base Areas of that country. It is a living
example and not any utopian dream. Here, peoples democratic power is being
asserted by the oppressed masses, led by the CPN(Maoists) and the exploiters and
oppressors and their entire instruments of rule (police, army, judicial system,
prisons, etc) have been smashed and a genuine democracy is there for all who
care to see.
Some people rightly
raise the very relevant question as to why our previous boycott calls have had
insufficient impact on the people particularly in the struggling areas. The
answer primarily lies in fact of the existence of two systems, a weak but
gradually strengthening system of the revolutionaries, and the other, a very
powerful state system controlled by ruling classes and guarded by a huge number
of armed forces. The latter is also dependent on their imperialist masters,
particularly the US, in all respects. Besides that, the illusion of
parliamentarism still sits grippingly in the minds of crores of people. The
strength of the parallel people’s democratic power centers and the strength of
the people’s army, and the relentless fight against dirty but illusory
parliamentary politics will gradually convince more and more people to reject
this tamasha of electoral politics in favour of the alternative system being
developed by the Maoists.
Some people hold a
wrong notion that politics begins and ends with parliamentary politics. People’s
movements are generally carried on outside the parliamentary arena and similarly
some states can run with some cloak of democracy without a parliament. The
present state in Nepal or Pakistan is a case in point. In fact, all existing
class-based states are run not by parliaments, though Parliaments are projected
as repositories of power, but through actual power wielded from behind the
screen by the ruling classes. This is lately more crudely seen in India where
policy is more openly being dictated by the US, multilateral institutions, TNCs,
the Ambanis, etc etc. This is not only becoming an obvious reality, but is also
a basic tenet of Marxism on the character of the state. The election boycott
campaign can teach the common masses about this fundamental truth.
The boycott election
call is being given by the Maoist Parties to the people, at a time when the
parliamentary democratic façade has already nosedived, reducing elections to a
comic drama staged with people’s money and muscle power of the state and
political gangsters. Right at this moment, Maoists have formed the People’s
Guerrilla Army (and PGLA), revolutionary mass organisations and revolutionary
committees to counter defeat enemy forces, free the people from the clutches of
the exploitative classes and to carry on economic, political and cultural
activities related to the existence and development of people’s democratic power
in India. The boycott of elections is a political call with a clear alternative
policy of establishing people’s democracy in India through a protracted people’s
war.
The call will be to
boycott the elections and build the alternative people’s democratic power at the
local level. This will be coupled with the exposure of the farcical character of
‘democracy’, the state terror on all sections of the masses, the democratic rise
of Hindutva fascist forces, etc. — all highly undemocratic.
Role of State Armed Forces, the Farce
of Democracy and Election Drama
The call for election
boycott stirs up the state into panic, and even if a section of the workers in
the tea-gardens of West Bengal or people in certain villages in some corner of
India decide not to cast their votes out of anger against the government,
newspapers hold focus on such events. In fact the news of staying away from the
electoral scene by a small population sends jitters in the state machinery. On
the contrary, when boycott calls go in tandem with positive demands, like
freedom of the Kashmiri people or for an alternative system of people’s
democracy as made by the CPI(ML) People’s War and the MCCI the state machinery
do not in any way tolerate it . People are subjected to brutal force for casting
votes to ensure India’s parliamentary ‘democracy’ running. Votes are got at
gun-point. Jammu and Kashmir has been under total military and para-military
control for many years now. Yet from Rajiv Gandhi to Vajpayee all the PMs in
India never compromised with the need for holding elections and re-establishing
parliamentary ‘democracy’ in Jammu and Kashmir. National dailies published
several photos and news items how military forces herd the boycottist people to
the polling booths.
This time around, out
of the estimated Rs. 1,200 crore (official figure) for state expenses for the
current ‘democratic’ general elections a big chunk will go into moving security
personnel particularly in the areas where the CPI(ML)PW and MCCI have been
actively involved in rejecting elections for setting up an alternative system.
Way back in 1991 and 1999-00 this cost alone was to the tune of Rs.158.16 crore
out of Rs. 360 crore and Rs. 350 crore out of Rs. 948 crore, respectively.
[Hindustan Times, 22 February 2004]. Now the dailies have been regularly
highlighting the news of dispatching of the military, CRPF, BSF personnel in
their hundreds to these areas in Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Dandakarnya,
West Bengal and other states where pitched ideological and military battles keep
going on against the existing system and the forcible imposition of the current
electoral farce.
In the name of
holding elections and civil govt., Bush is keeping his army in Iraq. To monitor
and supervise the so-called democratic functioning in many countries of Asia,
Africa and Latin American imperialist armies are regularly being sent under the
rubber stamp of the United Nations. In the last polls of the 13th Lokasabha,
state legislatures and even of panchayats, military, para-military and state
special and civil police were deployed in large numbers.
Once the forces were
deployed in the name of conducting elections in a ‘smooth’ manner automatically
a blanket certificate is also given to them to adopt the worst ever cruel
methods in the name of maintaining law and order. Even the parliamentary
opposition parties are not spared by the armed forces to safeguard the interests
of the party in power.
Maoist and
nationality movements have been facing such onslaught of the armed forces
regularly. Whenever elections come near the ruling parties sit up to send extra
forces to adopt crush-all-kill-all methods by letting loose all forms of state
terror tactics against such forces. In the CPI(ML)PW and MCCI influenced areas
open and legal activities of mass organizations also come under an undeclared
ban and supporters of the revolutionary nationality and democratic movements’
activities including intellectuals come under the watchful eyes of the special
forces. Every one’s movement has been restricted. When the poll schedule was
declared more and more forces kept pouring in. All the candidates particularly
who were exposed as anti-people will be given more security forces to counter
the people’s angry protests.
Threatening and even
ensuring rigged elections are carried on by the armed forces, whenever the N-E,
Kashmir and Punjab nationalities and Maoists called for the boycott of
elections, military and para-military forces played their vital role in rigging
in favour of the ruling party – whereas in AP, Maharastra , MP, Chattisgarh,
Bihar and Jharkhand, states where Maoists are active, it has been a common scene
since 1978 onwards to send heavy deployments in the name of countering violence
and stifling the boycott call of the Naxalites. Political propaganda by
Maoists, to express their voice as to why they are boycotting elections has been
never permitted by governments. All the polling booths will be now declared as
sensitive and deployment of forces will take place to crush the freedom of
speech. After all, even in this fake democracy people should have the right
whether to vote or not; whether to campaign for any candidate or for boycott.
But this too is being denied.
In the last assembly
elections to Chhattisgarh state 45,000 central forces and 35 army helicopters
were pressed into service only for the Baster district. The CM of AP asked for
40,000 forces and a dozen helicopters whereas the ‘Marxist’ Buddha, for the
forthcoming elections in West Bengal, asked for 5 to 10 battalions only for
South Bengal. After the dissolving of the assembly in AP, all civil rights have
been snatched and open mass organizations’ activists have been captured and
tortured in police stations. In the election speeches made by the PM to the CMs
certainly attack on Naxalites remain constant irrespective of the areas where
the meetings are held. To counter the boycott call of the Naxalites, one of the
main agenda for the parliamentary parties and for their security forces is to
stop the boycottists in the areas of struggle.
The
politician-mafia-police nexus provides lots of arms to all the parties to
control their domain in the polls. Muscle flexing plays a vital role in many
states and the BJP, CPM, RJD, Congress goons and criminal gangs in Bihar, West
Bengal, UP, etc. create havoc in the minds of the voters to elect their
candidates.
To resist these armed
forces, revolutionaries are acting against the deployment of the forces and some
times have been successful in pushing them back in strategical areas, where they
have mass support in favour of boycott. In the on-going drama of elections the
role of the state’s armed forces is the key. So, how come we call these bodies
as elected and democratic, when these never adopt and respect the democratic
values of the people? So the boycott call will be implemented by the people’s
armed forces, mass organizations, etc. and the high handedness of the parties
and government will be thwarted and opposed to establish real democracy in
India.
Conclusion:
The most fundamental
task of elections is legitimizing the right of some parties and individuals by
any means to serve the existing system. An atmosphere is created by the state,
and all parliamentary parties in India including the CPI, CPI(M) that the
upcoming election brings in the Himalayan responsibilities on the people to
exercise their precious right, as if their failure to do so shall push them
towards their doom. The Indian people have grown habituated to such rhetoric
during every election. Even after so many elections in quick successions and the
general trend of a steep rise in negative voting (the incumbency factor) due to
the absence of a powerful alternative, elections in India cannot be termed as a
pure democratic and conscious expression of people’s right.
Elections, stability
of the system, providing a semblance of democracy are all state matters. No
class rule behind the state can afford to ignore the very crucial task of
winning the support (hearts and minds, in LIC language) of the people.
‘Participatory democracy’, Parliamentary democracy’, ‘Greatest democracy’ and
all such rhetoric have come up to strengthen the stability of existing class
rule. We cannot also ignore the fact that with all sorts of corruption, rigging,
winds of communalism, booth-capturing, media coverage and brinkmanship by
criminal politicians to create ‘Sonia wind’ or ‘Feel-good’
satisfaction etc. the Indian body polity has been immensely successful to win by
rewards or by force many of the contrary forces into the so-called parliamentary
mainstream. From the Central Home Minister L.K.Advani to the CPI(M) C.M.
Buddhadev Bhattacharyee, the very common denominator lies their love for
parliamentary stream. Those fellows repeat the old cries urging North East
militant nationality forces, the CPI(ML) the People’s War, MCCI or such others
who reject this parliamentary politics of stability of this system, to join the
‘mainstream’.
The CPI(ML)People’s
War carries the legacy of the CPI(ML) by creatively implementing
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism in the concrete conditions of India. Organizations like
the CPI(ML)People’s War and the MCCI are in the battle ground and boycott of
elections is for carrying out people’s war to establish a real and genuine
democracy in India. It is the call of class struggle for the overthrow of this
highly exploitative system. To do this it is the task of the revolutionaries to
transform the ongoing struggle into an all India revolutionary movement and to
elevate the battlefronts of class struggle to greater heights into liberated
zones. This was planned by the CPI(ML[PW} in its 9th Congress as a practical
task. In the process the armed forces of the people would also get strengthened
further, which will enhance the advancement of the revolutionary war for a true
democratic system. For any genuine democrat, there is the utmost necessity to
reject this fake democracy and lend a hand towards the real democratic future
taking birth in the country under Maoist leadership.
Boycott sham
Parliamentary Elections! Build New Democratic Peoples’ Power
Advance Armed
Agrarian Revolution Throughout India!
People’s Army is the
Main Force, which will safeguard the interests of the oppressed masses!
Strengthen Mass
Political Movement Against Liberalisation-Privatisation-Globalisation!
Fight against the
Offensive War of the Fascist Hindu Communalist Forces!
Down with
Imperialism! Target the Enemy No. one of the World People, US Imperialism!
14-4-04
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