Wednesday, July 30, 2008

[Marxistindia] On EPF Contributions Being Handed Over for Speculative Purposes

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 30, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) strongly opposes the decision of the Trustees of the Employees Provident Fund at the behest of the Central Government to hand over the huge amounts of workers Provident Fund contributions to finance companies for speculative purposes in the Stock Exchange. By this decision around 2,40,000 crore rupees in the corpus fund and another 30,000 crore rupees of the annual incremental fund will be literally gifted to the corporates. While the companies can make profits, there is no guarantee of minimum returns to the workers. Thus the savings of workers over years of hard work can be wiped out through speculation. This decision reverses a hard won gain of the working classes over years of struggle for a minimum guaranteed return on their contribution, post-retirement.

This decision marks the beginning of a process of privatisation of workers and employees savings which had been strongly opposed by the CPI(M) which had ensured that the UPA Government did not go ahead with this anti-worker policy. Even now, the decision was pushed through in the most undemocratic way in spite of the opposition by the majority of workers representatives. The reported late selection of Reliance Capital as one of the fund managers is an indication of the cost of support to this tainted Government.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) extends its support to the protest struggles against this decision by workers and employees. It demands that the Government should refrain from implementing this anti-worker decision.

eom


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080730/3da39c9d/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Sunday, July 27, 2008

[Marxistindia] PB on WTO talks

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 28, 2008

Press Release

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

Do Not Capitulate to US Pressure in WTO Talks

Efforts are on by the developed countries led by the US to force an agreement in the WTO talks in Geneva, which will be inimical to the interests of the developing countries. The latest draft released by the WTO Director General on 25th July reflects glaring inequities in Agriculture and NAMA. While the developed countries like the US and EU would be able to retain much of their huge subsidies, the developing countries would be forced to undertake steep cuts in agricultural and industrial tariffs. The provisions for protecting developing countries' agriculture through designation of Special Products and Special Safeguard Mechanism have been diluted to such an extent that they are rendered meaningless. Such an outcome would make a mockery of the "development" dimension of the Doha Round.

The US is exerting pressure upon India to fall in line and facilitate the adoption of an iniquitous agreement. The US President had called up the Indian Prime Minister in this connection. The UPA Government should not compromise India's stand at the WTO talks in Geneva. Capitulation to US pressure would amount to another betrayal of national interest.

eom
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080728/bf8f1c5d/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] PB on Ahmedabad blasts

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 27, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) condemns in the strongest terms the terrorist elements who have engineered multiple blasts in Ahmedabad leading to a large number of deaths and injuries to over a hundred people. The utterly diabolical nature of the attacks can be seen in the way bombs were blasted in two hospitals, including a trauma centre hitting the most vulnerable. Coming just a day after the Bangalore bomb blasts and the earlier blasts in Jaipur it is evident that the terrorist network is bent upon a course of destabilization and causing communal discord in the country.

The country wants to know from the Central Government why it has failed, even after so many attacks, to track down and nail the terrorists. What are the weaknesses in the intelligence set-up, in the coordination with State Governments, in the urgent steps which are required to be taken.

The CPI(M) while expressing its deep grief and condolences to the families of those who have been killed in the blasts, calls upon the people to maintain calm and peace and foil the nefarious designs of the terrorists to create communal divisions among our people.

eom
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080728/96ce1295/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Friday, July 25, 2008

[Marxistindia] Bangalore blasts condemned

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 25, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

Bangalore Blasts Condemned

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) strongly condemns the explosions in Bangalore city which have killed a woman and injured six persons. The pattern of the blasts indicate that this is a terroristic attempt to disrupt life in the city.

Coming soon after the Jaipur blasts, it confirms that terrorist groups are still active. It is a matter of deep concern that the Central government has so far failed to uncover the network behind these nefarious activities. It is high time that the intelligence and security agencies track down the culprits responsible.

eom
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080725/cfb4bc38/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

[Marxistindia] On Expulsion from Party

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 23, 2008

Press Release

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

Expulsion from Party

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has unanimously decided to expel Somnath Chatterjee from the membership of the Party with immediate effect. This action has been taken under Article XIX, clause 13 of the Party Constitution for seriously compromising the position of the Party.

eom
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080723/4a07711b/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] Left parties on trust vote

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 23, 2008

Press Statement

The leaders of the Left parties - Communist Party of India (Marxist), Communist Party of India, All India Forward Bloc and Revolutionary Socialist Party - met on July 23, 2008. They have issued the following statement:

On Trust Vote

The Manmohan Singh government has won the vote of confidence in the Lok Sabha but the entire country has witnessed how parliamentary democracy has been subverted. Reports of bribery, intimidation and horse-trading have been proved true by the cross-voting and abstentions engineered by the Congress and the Samajwadi Party. It is by such means that they got a majority. In this connection, the tape submitted by a television channel about a bribery episode should be made public.

The Congress leadership is mistaken if it considers this vote as one that has provided legitimacy to the government. The moral authority of the government has been compromised. The debate in the Lok Sabha has shown up the sharp division on the nuclear deal. This is no mandate for going ahead with the deal.

The Left parties will continue the struggle against the Indo-US nuclear deal. They will step up their opposition to the anti-people policies of the Congress-led government and strive to build the widest movement against the failure of the government to tackle price rise, the problems of the farmers and the rural poor due to the agrarian crisis. The Left parties will join hands with other like-minded parties to take up these issues.

The Left parties decided to extend their full support to the call of the Central trade unions for a general strike on August 20, 2008. They appealed to all sections of the working people to participate and join the strike.

Sd/-

Prakash Karat A.B. Bardhan

General Secretary, CPI(M) General Secretary, CPI

Debabrata Biswas T.J. Chandrachoodan

General Secretary, AIFB General Secretary, RSP
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080723/7bf93090/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Sunday, July 20, 2008

[Marxistindia] C.C. Communique

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 20, 2008

Press Communique

The Central Committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) met in New Delhi on July 19-20, 2008. It has issued the following statement:

Withdrawal of Support

The Central Committee fully endorsed the decision of the Polit Bureau to withdraw support from the UPA government on July 9. The Central Committee wished to record that for three years since the Indo-US nuclear deal was announced, the CPI(M) and the Left parties have waged a resolute struggle against the nuclear deal with the United States. It is shocking that the Manmohan Singh government went to the Board of Governors for approval of the draft Safeguards Agreement without revealing the text to the country. The 123 agreement with the United States was similarly signed without taking the country into confidence.

The most recent betrayal by the Manmohan Singh government has been the going back on its public commitment not to approach the Board of Governors of the IAEA without facing the trust motion in the Lok Sabha.

The Manmohan Singh government does not deserve to remain in office for this blatant violation of the Common Minimum Programme and for its criminal neglect in tackling price rise and inflation.

Trust Motion

The Central Committee appealed to all secular and democratic parties to vote against the confidence motion being brought by the UPA government. The Congress and the Samajwadi Party are desperately trying to mobilise the support of Members of Parliament using money power and unscrupulous methods. Even MPs who are convicted of serious crimes are being brought in support.

The Central Committee welcomed the efforts to bring various non-BJP, non-Congress parties together to fight against the nuclear deal and the UPA government.

Public Censure

The Central Committee publicly censured Comrade Subhas Chakraborty, member of the State Secretariat of West Bengal for making statements challenging the Party line. He should conform to the norms of the Party.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080720/501e3824/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Saturday, July 19, 2008

[Marxistindia] Misconceptions About Nuclear Deal --Dr. P. K Iyengar

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
Ten misconceptions about the nuclear deal

P. K. Iyengar
Chairman (Retd.), Atomic Energy Commission

In spite of the fact that the Indo-US nuclear deal is not in the national interest, many in the country, and in Parliament, support it because of misconceptions about the deal, which need to be clarified.

(1) The nuclear deal is an agreement between India and the US for the US government to supply nuclear fuel and reactors to India.

Contrary to common perception, the nuclear deal or the 123 Agreement is not a commitment on the part of the US government to provide us with uranium or nuclear reactors. Presently American law prohibits nuclear cooperation with India because we have not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). All the nuclear deal does is to grant a 'waiver' from that law, so that American companies can now pursue nuclear trade with India. However, if India conducts a test at any time, the waiver is revoked.

(2) Imported uranium and nuclear reactors will be cheap and cost-effective.

Even if the nuclear deal is made operational, the actual sale of uranium and nuclear reactors will be governed by market forces - there are no guarantees of cheap or competitive nuclear power. To the contrary, there is every reason to believe that it will be expensive. The cost of uranium in the international market has gone up four-fold in the last few years, and will rise further with further demand. The same is true of the cost of steel and other materials used in a reactor. Manpower costs are much higher in the West. The example of the Dhabol power plant has already shown us that importing power plants from the West is not necessarily a viable option. We would do well to learn from that experience.

(3) The nuclear deal will safeguard our energy security.

It is true that nuclear energy is green energy, and therefore essential for our long-term energy security. But this does not translate into the nuclear deal will ensure our energy security. Power from the nuclear reactors that we buy will definitely be more expensive than indigenous nuclear power. Further, to keep the reactors running, we will always be dependent on imported uranium, which is controlled by a cartel - the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). Therefore, the nuclear deal, by making us dependent on the cartel, will only compromise our energy security. Only our indigenous nuclear power programme can truly ensure our energy security. And in any case, for the next few decades, nuclear power will not exceed 6% of our total electricity production.

(4) Importing nuclear plants is a quick-fix solution to the present power crisis.

Nuclear technology is sensitive. Even if the nuclear deal goes through, it will take time to buy and setup new reactors. We have examples of the French reactors in China, and the Russian reactors in Kudankulam, India. It will actually take longer to setup foreign reactors compared to indigenous ones. Just the negotiations and legal formalities could take years. It will be at least eight years before we see the first power. So importing reactors is certainly no quick solution. For the short term, we will still have to rely on coal and hydroelectricity.


(5) The nuclear deal does not stop India from further nuclear testing, and therefore does not compromise our national security.

It is very clearly stated in the 123 Agreement it will be subject to national laws, and the Hyde Act is a law of the US. Therefore, the 123 Agreement is certainly circumscribed by the Hyde Act, which very clearly states that if India tests a nuclear device, all further nuclear trade is to stop, and the nuclear materials that have already been sold to us have to be returned. No future Indian government would dare to jeopardise such a huge investment in nuclear power, by testing. So, for all practical purposes the nuclear deal caps our strategic programme - which is precisely what the Americans intend.

(6) We can pass a national law to counteract the Hyde Act, and this will protect our strategic programme.

Just as the Hyde Act is not binding on us, our laws are not binding on the US. We can certainly amend our Atomic Energy Act to enable participation of the private sector in nuclear power. But if we pass a law saying that we will retain the right to test, it will have no influence on the actions of the US. If and when we test, they can simply quote the 123 Agreement and the Hyde Act, and pull out all their nuclear materials, leaving us devastated. The only option here is to renegotiate the 123 Agreement and have the clause inserted there. However, the Americans are unlikely to agree to this, since it goes against their non-proliferation policy.

(7) The nuclear deal and the safeguards agreement give India the status of a nuclear power.

While the 18 July 2005 Joint Statement did indeed talk about India being treated as an equal by the US, neither the 123 Agreement nor the IAEA Safeguards Agreement, have borne out those optimistic statements. In fact, the IAEA safeguards agreement that has been negotiated is closely based on the model agreement that IAEA has for non-nuclear weapon states. The safeguards agreements that the nuclear weapon countries have signed with the IAEA require them to put very few reactors under safeguards, and allow them to take reactors out of safeguards. India, however, will have to place most of its reactors under safeguards for perpetuity. Therefore we are certainly not being treated as a nuclear weapons country.

(8) Without the nuclear deal, we cannot get adequate uranium for our domestic nuclear programme.

The Department of Atomic Energy has always maintained that we have enough indigenous uranium for 10,000 MW of nuclear power for 30 years. We are not yet close to that number. The present mismatch in uranium availability for operating reactors is a consequence of poor planning, and inadequate prospecting and mining. There is talk of importing 40,000 MW of nuclear power, which will cost not less than $100 billion or Rs. 4 lakh crores. If even 10% of this money were spent on uranium mining in existing mines in Andhra Pradesh and Meghalaya, on searching for new uranium deposits, and negotiating with non-NSG countries, there will be enough uranium for a robust indigenous nuclear power programme, until such time as thorium reactors takes over.


(9) The safeguards agreement with the IAEA guarantees fuel supplies even if India conducts a nuclear test.

The safeguards agreement only notes, in the preamble, that India's concurrence to the safeguards is linked to getting fuel supplies. However, the IAEA has no role in this matter, and certainly, no such commitment is given in the safeguards agreement. It also notes that India may take 'corrective measures' in the event of a disruption of foreign fuel supplies. It does not specify what these measures will be, it does not provide for any role for the IAEA in this, and it does not bestow legitimacy on any such measures that India may take. It may well be that any such measures that we suggest, such as importing fuel from another country, will be disallowed by the nuclear cartel (the NSG). The only tangible corrective measure is for India to explore and mine more uranium, and to enhance the enrichment capability to provide fuel for those reactors. The latter is subject to uncertainty.

(10) The nuclear deal has no impact on our foreign policy.

The Hyde Act states clearly that it is the policy of the US to secure India's cooperation on a number of issues involving Iran, including its capability to reprocess nuclear fuel (in spite of the fact that Iran, as an NPT signatory, has the right to enrich uranium for use in light-water reactors). This has nothing to do with the nuclear deal, and can only be related to influencing our foreign policy. Recent statements by Gary Ackerman, Chairman of the US House Foreign Affairs Committee, regarding Indo-Iran gas pipeline, only add fuel to such suspicions.

It can therefore be seen, that the Indo-US nuclear deal is not in the national interest. It presents the very serious danger of capping our strategic programme. That alone is reason enough not to go forward with the deal. Additionally, it does not guarantee the energy security that we are seeking, and, in fact, may only end up making us as vulnerable to the nuclear cartel, as we are today to the oil cartel.

It is easy to see why the US wants this deal so badly. At virtually no cost, since there is no commitment towards fuel supplies, they can cap our strategic programme, bring us into the NPT net, through the back door, as a non-nuclear power, keep a close eye on our nuclear activities, including R&D, through intrusive IAEA inspections, and subjugate us to the wishes of the nuclear cartel. If there were no cartel, we could have easily extended the Kudankulam agreement for more reactors, and avoided the present situation. If these are not reasons enough not to go ahead with the nuclear deal, then there are no reasons that reason can find.


Get an email ID as yourname@ymail.com or yourname@rocketmail.com. Click here.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080720/b87977e6/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] appeal from nuclear scientists

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
Appeal from former nuclear scientists published in some papers today:

Appeal to the Members of Parliament

On

The India-US Civilian Nuclear

Co-operation Agreement

We were part of a group of senior nuclear scientists who had in the past expressed our grave concerns and objections to India entering into a nuclear co-operation agreement with the US under the aegis of the Hyde Act 2006. We had written earlier to the Parliamentarians on this matter, and the Prime Minister had given us an opportunity to meet with him and discuss our views.

1.. At this critical juncture, when the Government is about to rush the safeguards agreement through the IAEA, there is a great deal of disquiet among the scientific community at large in this country. Should the country be entering into such a long term binding arrangement without a detailed and rigorous examination of the IAEA Safeguards? Should a Government, based at best on a wafer thin majority and a divided Parliament, commit the country in this manner? We, therefore, are strongly of the opinion that the Government should not proceed to seek IAEA Board approval for the current draft safeguards agreement, until its implications are debated more fully within the country, and with a group of experts who were not party to the IAEA negotiations.
2.. The government is enthusiastically pushing the Deal on the basis that it will bring about energy security to India, since it will enable the import of foreign nuclear power reactors. But, analysts have convincingly and quantitatively shown that this additional power will come at a much higher cost per unit of electricity compared to conventional coal or hydro power, which India can generate without any foreign imports.
3.. Once the Deal is in place, it is also clear that India's commercial nuclear interactions with the US, as well as with any other country, will be firmly controlled from Washington via the stipulations of the Hyde Act 2006 enforced through the stranglehold which the US retains on the Nuclear Suppliers Group. Any argument to the effect that the Deal will be governed only by the bilateral 123 Agreement is untenable, because this Agreement in turn is anchored in US domestic laws, which include the Hyde Act. And, the Hyde Act contains several stipulations which are extraneous to the issue of bilateral nuclear co-operation, including foreign policy behaviour which India needs to adhere to if the Deal is to be kept alive. The real issue facing India, therefore, is whether or not we want this mythical extra 'energy security ' through this Deal, paying two to three times the unit capital cost of conventional power plants, with the additional burden of subjugating the freedom to pursue a foreign policy and indigenous nuclear R&D program of our own.
4.. The nuclear Deal could also have other serious repercussions, including a potential weakening of India's nuclear deterrent and an inability to protect & promote indigenous R&D efforts in nuclear technology. A combination of the extreme secrecy with which the government has carried forward this deal, the media hype they were able to generate in its favour, the parochial interests of opportunistic individuals & organizations, and the unfortunate ignorance of the issues involved among the general public have put the country on a dangerous path, likely to lead to the detriment of the current & future generations of Indians. Today's urgency to rush to the IAEA Board, in consonance with the American timetable, to get the safeguards agreement approved and thereafter clinch the Deal during the tenures of the current governments in India and the US must, therefore, be replaced with an openness & introspection that is vital for a serious debate which the situation demands.
5.. The central issue about the IAEA safeguards agreement has been the doubt as to how "India-specific" these are. In particular, since it is distinctly clear from the Hyde Act and the 123 Agreement that no uninterrupted fuel supplies have been guaranteed in these documents for reactors which India will place under safeguards, the Government had assured that this defect will be corrected in the safeguards agreement. Since the IAEA was all along known to be no fuel-supply guarantor, it is not surprising that Indian negotiators have failed to obtain any assurance in this regard. All that the IAEA Agreement states in its preambular section is that it notes uninterrupted fuel supply and support for a strategic fuel reserve is the basis of placing Indian facilities in safeguards. It places no obligation on the IAEA other than merely noting this. The corrective measures, indicated in the preambular section, have nothing that anchors them to any section in the operative part of the agreement. Against such unspecified and vague mention of corrective measures, India's obligations are clear and binding. In effect, India has agreed to place its facilities that it will list out in the Annex under perpetual safeguards without any link to an uninterrupted fuel supply.
6.. The Government is asserting that the IAEA safeguards have "provisions for corrective measures that India may take to ensure uninterrupted operation of its civilian nuclear reactors in the event of disruption of foreign fuel supplies. Taking this into account, India is placing its civilian nuclear facilities under India-specific safeguards in perpetuity". The nation would like to know clearly what these "corrective measures" are, before plunging headlong into this Deal. India being merely allowed to withdraw the Indian-built civilian PHWRs from safeguards , and that too after stripping them of all spent & fresh fuel and components of foreign origin , is no corrective step at all because such action does not ensure uninterrupted operation of these civilian nuclear reactors in the event of disruption of foreign fuel supplies. Even here, Article 32 of the Safeguards Agreement appears to stand in the way of any such withdrawal. Besides, this relaxation does not apply to the imported power reactors, which will use up the bulk of our investments in nuclear power; these units will perpetually stay under safeguards, even after fuel supplies are denied. The Hyde Act prohibits the US Administration from directly or indirectly (through the IAEA or other countries) assisting India with life-time fuel supplies after suspension of the Deal. Therefore, the Government owes a clarification to the Parliament and the public about how they intend to avoid the consequential huge economic loss from the non-operation of these extremely costly imported reactors, as a result of fuel denial.
7.. The 123 Agreement states that the imports under the Deal "shall be subject to safeguards in perpetuity in accordance with the India-specific Safeguards Agreement between India and the IAEA and an Additional Protocol, when in force". While the actual draft of the Additional Protocol (AP) applicable to India may have to be negotiated and agreed to at a later date, it is absolutely necessary that a prior agreement between the IAEA and India on the essential features of such an Additional Protocol must be reached simultaneous with the finalization of the safeguards agreement and certainly before signing it. The most intrusive actions under the IAEA safeguards are always taken on the basis of this protocol, including the "pursuit clause" which permits interference with our non-civilian programs on the basis of unsubstantiated suspicion. India needs to make it clear what the limits are beyond which we will not entertain any IAEA action or intrusion, and it should be clear that a standard Model Protocol applicable to non-nuclear weapon States will not be acceptable to India. The leverage to debate and get the kind of restricted Additional Protocol we want will be entirely lost once a safeguards agreement alone is first put in place and the installations put under safeguards. As we understand, the limitations within which India is willing to enter into the Additional Protocol regime was neither discussed by Indian negotiators at the IAEA nor do they appear in the safeguards draft or its attachments. In this context, the Government needs to clarify their thinking on the Additional Protocol, before entering into the safeguards agreement.
8.. Reprocessing the spent-fuel arising from burning fresh imported fuel in our civilian reactors provides us valuable additional plutonium, which in turn can be recycled into future civilian fast breeder reactors (FBRs) or advanced heavy water reactors (AHWRs). Reprocessing, therefore, is at the core of India's plans to build long-term energy security.
The government had all along pledged to secure an unqualified right to reprocess spent-fuel and even termed India's right to reprocess "non-negotiable". But, in the 123 Agreement, what has finally been obtained is merely an empty theoretical right to reprocess. The actual permission to reprocess will come after years, when a dedicated state-of-the art reprocessing plant is built anew to treat foreign fuel, along with a host of allied facilities. There will be a large number of safeguards & Additional Protocol issues related to this, and all these hurdles will have to be crossed to reach the beginning of reprocessing. Much of the fundamental basis on which all this will be done has to be discussed and settled now at the outset, while the overall safeguards agreement is being finalized. But, the Government has not done this exercise during the recent set of negotiations with the IAEA, and this deficiency will come to haunt India in future unless it is rectified.

10.. Similarly, there are many other key safeguards-related issues of crucial importance which have not been addressed in the current draft. Furthermore, none of the issues included presently has been handled adequately or in an acceptable manner. We therefore appeal to the Members of the Lok Sabha to direct the Government not to proceed further with the current safeguards agreement, and ask the Prime Minister to initiate wide-ranging and structured deliberations on the Indo-US Nuclear Co-operation Agreement, both within Parliament and outside, to develop a broad consensus on this Deal among political parties and the general public, before proceeding any further.
SIGNATORIES:

1.. Dr.P.K.Iyengar, Former Chairman , Atomic Energy Commission

2.. Dr.A. Gopalakrishnan, Former Chairman, Atomic Energy Regulatory Board

3.. Dr.A.N. Prasad, Former Director, Bhabha Atomic Research Center


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080719/a4d68e9d/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Thursday, July 17, 2008

[Marxistindia] Congress Taking Help of Convicted Criminals

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 17, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

It is reported that some of the Lok Sabha members who have been convicted for serious crimes and who are in jail are being mobilized to support the confidence vote in the Lok Sabha.

There are three such members:

1. Rajiv Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav has been convicted for the murder of Ajit Sarkar, CPI(M) MLA. He has been sentenced to life imprisonment.

2. Mohd. Shahabuddin has been convicted in a case of kidnapping with intent to murder. He has been sentenced to life imprisonment. He is also facing charges in the case of the murder of Chandrasekar, a former President of the JNU Students Union and a CPI(ML) leader.

3. Suraj Bhan has been convicted in a case of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.

While legally they may get the right to attend parliament and vote there is a question of political morality involved. The Congress leadership will be seen by the entire country as taking recourse to convicted criminals for sustaining their government.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080717/fdc4bb76/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] On Upcoming WTO Mini-Ministerial Meeting

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 17, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:


On the Upcoming WTO Mini-Ministerial Meeting

The Union Commerce Minister is going to participate in a mini-Ministerial meeting at Geneva from 21-25 July 2008, convened by the WTO Director General. This mini-Ministerial is being held in order to push ahead with the Doha Round negotiations, which have remained inconclusive, even after seven years. Two texts on Agriculture and Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA) issued on 19th May 2008 will form the basis of the negotiations. These texts reflect the efforts of the advanced countries led by the US to tilt the outcome of the Doha Round, which was supposed to be a "development" round, decisively against the interest of the developing countries.

The revised text on Agriculture requires the developing countries including India to reduce tariffs on agricultural products by 36%, which if agreed upon would harm the interests of the small and marginal farmers. In India, out of the 715 tariff lines in agriculture, only 8% of tariff lines will be eligible to be treated as Special Products, out of which only 3.2% of the tariff lines will be subject to no tariff cuts and 4.8% of tariff lines will be subject to an average cut of 15%. Considering the multiplicity of India's agricultural product range and the crucial importance of these products for the livelihood of a vast majority of Indians, the range of protection available under Special Products is too narrow and too weak. The Special Safeguard Mechanism envisaged in the text is also too restrictive and ineffectual. The developing countries, including India, have committed a mistake by agreeing to negotiate on the Special Safeguard Mechanism, rather than insisting on the right to impose quantitative restrictions. The developed countries led by the US have ensured that the protection for agriculture in the developing countries envisaged under the Special Products and Special Safeguard Mechanism are diluted to such an extent that they are rendered meaningless. On the other hand the huge agricultural subsidies provided by the US and other advanced countries will remain.

The NAMA text also proposes huge cuts in the bound tariff levels of the developing countries. India's current level of applied industrial tariff is, on average 10%, and the bound level average is 34%. The proposed cut in accordance to the Swiss formula will lead to a drastic reduction of India's bound tariff level, which will preclude any possibility of providing protection to domestic industries in future. There is also an attempt to push for greater financial liberalization in developing countries under the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). No progress has been made on the outstanding implementation issues, particularly with regard to the amendment to the TRIPS Agreement in order to protect the interests of the developing countries.

The Bush administration does not have the authority from the US Congress any more to conclude the current WTO negotiations in a credible manner, with the 'fast-track' authority having lapsed in July 2007. The US Congress has also enacted the Farms Act in May 2008, which further increases the agricultural subsidies in the US, overriding the veto of the US President. The US negotiators at the WTO do not have any credibility left after this.

India stands to loose immensely from the proposals on the table. The CPI (M) demands that the Indian Government should reject the revised drafts in the upcoming WTO mini-Ministerial meeting at Geneva. The Indian Government should not yield any further ground in Agriculture or NAMA and the matter must be discussed in the Indian Parliament.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080717/e69da4fb/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] Stop Deal -- Defeat Trust Vote -- P.D. Editorial

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
Editorial

(fORTHCOMING ISSUE OF PEOPLE'S DEMOCRACY -- jULY 20, 2008)

Stop Deal

Defeat Trust Vote

THE Manmohan Singh government will now take a trust vote in the Lok Sabha at the end of a two-day session on July 22 to prove its majority, thus, legitimacy. It requires this legitimacy to provide political and moral legitimacy to the India-US nuclear deal which will be set on an auto-pilot course once the IAEA Board of Governors approves the Safeguards Agreement with India.

For precisely this reason, the government needs to be defeated in order to ensure that the India-US nuclear deal does not get this required legitimacy. Those of us opposing this deal on its own content and, more importantly, as it serves as the conduit to trap India into the US imperialist web of global strategic designs, will have to vote in full strength to ensure this.

This, naturally, raises the question whether the CPI(M) and the Left would like to be seen on the same side as the BJP and the communal forces in voting against the Manmohan Singh government. Particularly since the Left's outside support to this UPA government, based on a Common Minimum Programme, was aimed at keeping the communal forces away from the reins of State power.

The moot question here is to protect the country from the consequences of this India-US nuclear deal which imply protecting India's sovereignty, independent foreign policy and independence in dealing with our security concerns. This requires that this government be defeated in this trust vote. The Left will, thus, discharge its responsibility in our national interest by voting against the government.

This objective is not and can never be contingent upon who else is voting against this government and for what reasons. There is a popular analogy : as a passenger in a train, one cannot determine or choose who the other co-passengers are. However, because of the co-passengers, one cannot abandon the objective of reaching one's destination. The Left is clear. It shall work to achieve its objective of upholding our national interests and preventing India from becoming a subordinate ally of US imperialism.

The BJP, indeed, has its own reasons for voting against the UPA government, in its restless urge to return to power. The process of strengthening the strategic relationship with US imperialism was, indeed, begun by the BJP-led NDA government. Unfortunately, the UPA government carried this forward. The BJP's main grouse may well be that such an India-US nuclear deal should have been concluded under the patronage of its government and not by Manmohan Singh. This is obvious from the fact that during the entire tenure of the 14th Lok Sabha, the BJP, as the principal opposition party, did not even move the customary no-confidence motion. If it was so strongly opposed to this deal, then it could very well have moved in such a no-confidence motion. The fact that it chose not to do so clearly shows that it does not wish to displease the US Bush administration.

By now it is clear that the prime minister had made serious efforts to rope in the support of the BJP for the deal. By describing the former prime minister Vajpayee as the `Bhishma Pitamah' of Indian politics, he negotiated and it is widely believed that he had allayed the BJP's objections to the deal in writing. If the media reporting are true, then it is the BJP and its leadership that backed out after accepting the PM's assurances in the background of the fact that the BJP had scarcely played the role of the opposition on any issue against the Manmohan Singh government. The BJP, thus, may well be opposing the trust motion for its own reasons of enforcing early elections which it may consider to provide it some electoral benefit. None of this, however, can constitute any reason for the Left to reconsider its decision and, thus, permit and facilitate India's strategic relationship with US imperialism as the latter's subordinate ally.

It must be borne in mind that in the Left-ruled states of West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura, the BJP does not have a single elected MLA, leave alone a Lok Sabha MP. The CPI(M)'s consistent and unequivocal opposition to communalism is there for all to see. Even after winning 54 of the 61 Left MPs to the 14th Lok Sabha by defeating Congress candidates, the Left did not hesitate to support a secular UPA government from the outside led by the same Congress party. The Left, hence, requires no certificates from anybody for its secular credentials.

On the contrary, look at the record of the Congress party. During these last four years, in 13 state elections, many of them being ruled by the Congress and its allies, the BJP and its allies have been able to defeat the Congress and form governments. It is the failure to implement alternative policies by the Congress that renders it helpless to stop the popular discontent arising out of its own policies from benefiting the communal forces.

Further, in the post-Babri Masjid demolition period, when a secular United Front government was formed in 1996, the Congress extended outside support. Within a year, under the threat from the Congress' withdrawal of support, the UF government had to change its prime minister. Within the next year, however, the Congress withdrew support from this government paving the way for the Vajpayee government to rule the country from 1998 to 2004. Not only did it facilitate the coming to power of the communal forces, the Congress party, on both occasions, sided with the BJP in the parliament in destabilising the UF governments. Thus, hurling charges against the Left for helping the return of the communal forces, is a classic case of the pot calling the kettle black!

The experience of the past four years has shown that the growing popular discontent due to the economic burdens imposed on the people as a result of the policies pursued by the Manmohan Singh government is presenting the communal forces a big electoral advantage. The inability to contain the run away inflation and rising prices of essential commodities, the inability to alleviate the misery in rural India due to the deepening agrarian distress and the inability to mount a sharp ideological and political offensive against communalism by the Congress-led UPA government is today the biggest reason for the communal forces to feel emboldened.

The CPI(M) and the Left, while relentlessly combating communalism, will work to ensure that India is not reduced to the status of a subordinate ally of US imperialism.

END
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080717/0cf0ce75/attachment.html
_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

[Marxistindia] Disinformation Campaign on inclusion of Speaker's name

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)

July 16, 2008

Press Statement

Sitaram Yechury, Member of the Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

A disinformation campaign on the issue of the inclusion of the Lok Sabha Speaker's name in the CPI(M) MPs list submitted to the President of India, is doing the rounds.

What I had said is that the Speaker's name should be included in the CPI(M) list as he was elected as a CPI(M) candidate but with an asterisk denoting that currently he is the Lok Sabha Speaker, as is the normal parliamentary practice.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080716/8ad9da2b/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Monday, July 14, 2008

[Marxistindia] stay clear from corporate wars

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
resending with a small correction

July 15, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

Stay Clear From Corporate Wars

The corporate houses are openly in the fray to lobby their interests in the run-up to the confidence vote. A dangerous precedent has been set with the Prime Minister being asked to personally intervene to mediate between the two Ambani brothers.

The Prime Minister's office should not become the conciliation office for warring corporates, however desperate the ruling party may be to retain power.


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080715/d41eb42e/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] threat of military attack on iran

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 15, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

Threat of Military Attack on Iran

The grave concern expressed by the Government about statement from Israel and the United States threatening military action against Iran is timely. While the Ministry of External Affairs has taken note of the imminent threat of military attack by Israel and the United States on Iran, this concern would have been credible only if the UPA government had not helped Israel's military capabilities.

In January this year, ISRO launched the Israeli spy satellite TecSar. This advanced satellite produced by Israel and the United States jointly is being used to conduct surveillance of Iran. If there is a military attack by Israel on Iran, the TecSar facilities will be invaluable.

If the Manmohan Singh government is really concerned about the military attack on Iran, it should forthwith cancel the launch of two more satellites in this series. It should forthwith stop all military collaboration with Israel.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080715/cac05f67/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] Prakash Karat on media speculation on the position of speaker

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)

July 14, 2008

Press Statement

Prakash Karat, General Secretary of Communist Party of India (Marxist), has issued the following statement:

A lot of speculation is going on in the media regarding the position of the Speaker of the Lok Sabha, Comrade Somnath Chatterjee.

I have already stated that any decision will be taken by the Speaker himself. This has been reiterated by the Speaker through a statement by his office on July 10, 2008.

We do not want the office of the Speaker being dragged into any unnecessary controversy.

eom
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080714/448e1ebc/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Sunday, July 13, 2008

[Marxistindia] Prakash Karat meets Ms. Mayawati

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 13, 2008

Press Release

Prakash Karat, General Secretary of the CPI(M) met Ms. Mayawati, President of the Bahujan Samaj Party and Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh on July 13, 2008.

Prakash Karat appreciated the stand taken by Ms Mayawati on the nuclear deal. He stressed that since the deal is against the country's interests, both parties should cooperate to fight against the nuclear deal with America.

Ms. Mayawati reiterated her opposition to the deal. It was decided that there should be cooperation to stop the deal and the fight against the UPA government in this regard.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080713/5cf3b880/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Saturday, July 12, 2008

[Marxistindia] Fabricated Reports in Media

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)

July 12, 2008

Press Release


The reports appearing in the Indian Express (a known mouthpiece of American interests in India) and some other media that Com. Jyoti Basu does not agree with the Party's decision to vote against the UPA government are fabricated. Such motivated reports are being floated to hamper the rallying of all the forces who are committed to oppose the nuclear deal and bring to book the UPA government's failure to tackle price rise and other problems of the people.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080712/ef7a7e22/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Friday, July 11, 2008

[Marxistindia] On IAEA Safeguards Agreement

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 11, 2008

Press Statement


The Left parties have issued the following statement:

On The IAEA Safeguards Agreement
Why the Text was Hidden till Submission to the IAEA?

The Left Parties had opposed the operationalisation of the Indo-US Nuclear Deal after the passage of the Hyde Act. After the 123 agreement was finalised, it was pointed out that the agreement was in conformity with the Hyde Act. The Left Parties had then asked the UPA Government not to take further steps to operationalise the nuclear deal.

In the UPA-Left Committee, the UPA claimed that they should be allowed to proceed with the IAEA Safeguards Agreement, which would incorporate uninterrupted fuel supplies and various corrective measures, which the Government had failed to secure in the 123 agreement. The Left Parties were skeptical about these issues being resolved in the IAEA. The UPA refused to show the negotiated text for the last four months.

The text of the Safeguards Agreement has now become public. It is clear that the text was hidden from the Left Parties and the Indian people in order to suppress the fact that India is about to bind its entire civilian nuclear energy programme into IAEA safeguards in perpetuity without getting concrete assurances for uninterrupted fuel supply, right to build strategic reserves and right to take corrective steps in case fuel supplies are stopped.

IAEA Safeguards in Perpetuity without Concrete Fuel Supply Assurance
The text of the draft "Agreement Between the Government of India and the International Atomic Energy Agency for the Application of Safeguards to Civilian Nuclear Facilities"; the so-called 'India-specific Safeguards' agreement sent to the IAEA Board of Governors on July 9, 2008, makes it clear that the repeated assurances made by the UPA Government in Parliament and outside, on securing uninterrupted fuel supply assurances and strategic fuel reserves have not been fulfilled. There are no concrete corrective measures in the main enforceable body of the Agreement, only a vague mention of "corrective measures" in the preamble.

Under the Hyde Act, IAEA safeguards are to be imposed on India's civilian nuclear facilities in perpetuity. The UPA government had repeatedly claimed that India would put its civilian reactors under safeguards under the strictly reciprocal condition of assured fuel supply. If fuel supply was disrupted, as happened in Tarapur, India would have the right to take corrective measures, including taking reactors out of IAEA safeguards.

The key question therefore with respect to IAEA safeguards is: how to ensure that once India's civilian reactors go under safeguards in perpetuity, the country would not be blackmailed by the withholding of nuclear fuel supplies, as the United States did in Tarapur following Pokhran-I?

The preamble to the Safeguards Agreement notes that India is offering its civilian nuclear facilities for IAEA safeguards on the "essential basis" of "the conclusion of international cooperation arrangements creating the necessary conditions for India to obtain access to the international fuel market, including reliable, uninterrupted and continuous access to fuel supplies from companies in several nations, as well as support for an Indian effort to develop a strategic reserve of nuclear fuel to guard against any disruption of supply over the lifetime of India's reactors." The real point is that the preamble merely 'notes' India's intentions in these respects. IAEA has neither any obligation regarding fuel supplies or building strategic reserves nor does this noting India's basis for this offer give India any additional rights through this agreement. Therefore to read into this clause either a guarantee for fuel supplies or IAEA's support for building up a strategic reserve is misleading the people.

"Corrective Measures": Vague and Ineffective
The preamble of the IAEA Agreement notes: "India may take corrective measures to ensure uninterrupted operation of its civilian nuclear reactors in the event of disruption of foreign fuel supplies." Neither the "corrective measures" nor the precise relationship between these "corrective measures" and the in-perpetuity imposition is spelt out in any meaningful terms in the text. This means that should India for any reason decide to take the items subject to the Agreement out of IAEA safeguards on the contention that the "essential basis" no longer applies, it will open itself to the serious charge of violating an international agreement. In this connection, it is worth remembering that although India claims the right, under the provisions of the 1963 Indo-US agreement on Tarapur, to reprocess the considerable quantities of Tarapur spent fuel that have accumulated to India's great inconvenience and expense, it has not been able to enforce the claimed right to reprocess, which has long been disputed by the United States.

As against the vagueness of the "corrective measures" figuring in the preamble, what is spelt out clearly in the body of the agreement (Paragraph 32) is that India can withdraw its facilities from safeguards only if it is (a) jointly agreed between India and IAEA, and (b) if these facilities are no longer usable for any nuclear activity. What does this mean? It can only mean that India can withdraw any facility it wants out of IAEA safeguards only if it strips it of all capability of producing nuclear energy and that too only after the IAEA determines that "the facility is no longer usable for any nuclear activity relevant from the point of view of safeguards."

Even if the Agreement is terminated by mutual consent, the termination of safeguards on the items subject to the Agreement [these are material and facilities as defined in Paragraph 11(a)] would stay in place in accordance with GOV/1621 till all the conditions of GOV/1621 are met. The conditions of GOV/1621 are so stringent that the rights and obligations of the parties continue to apply on all nuclear materials till they have been returned or all fissionable materials supplied or produced goes out of the inventory - that is, until all the facilities and material, nuclear or non-nuclear, supplied to the country under these safeguards are either returned or consumed or no longer usable for any nuclear activity. Therefore, this provision will not allow a single reactor to be taken out of safeguards.

Preambular References Non-Enforceable

It is well established in international law that the preamble is a part of the treaty or international agreement and it can be used to give colour and tone to the interpretation of the operative part of the treaty/agreement. This does not however mean that it can be used to create additional rights or obligations that are not contained in the clauses of the Treaty/Agreement.

The text of the IAEA Draft Agreement makes clear there are no corrective measures identified in the operative of the clauses of the Agreement. The mention of corrective measures is only in the preamble and here too, no concrete corrective measures have been defined. Unless there are specific provisions in the operative clauses, a phrase such as "corrective measures" inserted in the preamble cannot create either omnibus rights or obligations outside the text of the treaty. A similar example is for instance the TRIPS Agreement in WTO. The preamble states that it recognizes "the underlying public policy objectives of national systems for the protection of intellectual property, including developmental and technological objectives". However, can any country use the "public policy objectives" to override, for instance, the need for providing product patents as contained the body of the TRIPS agreement?

The way a facility can be withdrawn from safeguards has been spelt out in the main body of the draft agreement. Therefore, if the UPA government is trying to argue that the preambular statement of "corrective measures" gives India some kind of overriding right over all clauses in the body of the Agreement, it is committing a deliberate fraud on the people.

The final arbiter with regards to any interpretation of the Agreement and dispute settlement is the Board of Governors of IAEA. The Board of Governors decision is final in this regard and if India is held to be non-compliant, even though it is not so by its own interpretation, India can be referred to the Security Council for action including sanctions. The Iran case is an example. Though many countries including India had publicly endorsed Iran's right to the fuel cycle, it was referred to the Security Council for violation of its Safeguards Agreement by the Board of Governors at US's instance.

Left Parties' Concerns Not Addressed
The Left Parties, on July 8, 2008, asked the UPA government to spell out the following:

v In case the US or other countries in the Nuclear Suppliers Group renege on fuel supply assurances for imported reactors, will India have the ability to withdraw these reactors from IAEA safeguards?

v If the US/NSG countries renege on fuel supply assurances, can we withdraw our indigenous civilian reactors from IAEA safeguards?

v If we have to bring nuclear fuel from the non-safeguarded part of our nuclear programme for these reactors in case of fuel supply assurances not being fulfilled, will we have the ability to take it back again?

v What are the corrective steps India can take if fuel supplies are interrupted by the US/NSG countries?

v What are the conditions that India must fulfill if the corrective steps are to be put into operation?

What is clear now is that every one of these concerns remains, and that the unspecified "corrective measures" inserted in the preamble of the Safeguards Agreement will not address any of them.

India to be treated as a Non-Nuclear Weapons State for Safeguarded Facilities
Except for the preamble, which explains the context in which India is entering this Safeguards Agreement and outlines the basis of India's concurrence, the main body of the Text is a true copy of INFCIRC-66/Rev.2 (1968), which is the standard agreement applicable to all Non-Nuclear Weapon States of the NPT. The India-specific part comes not from INFIRC 66 but from the fact that India has kept a part of its nuclear programme out of IAEA safeguards. But for the facilities it proposes to put under IAEA safeguards, it will be treated as a Non-Nuclear Weapon States. Clearly, India will not have any special rights in its safeguarded facilities and this directly contradicts the assurances given by the Prime Minister to Parliament. Nuclear weapon states, as defined in the NPT, have the right to take any facility out of safeguards, a right India will not have for the reactors it is offering to IAEA for safeguards.

Against India's Interests
It is clear that the IAEA Safeguards Agreement does not address the fundamental problems in the Hyde Act and the 123 Agreement. As a result of operationalising the Indo-US Nuclear Deal, India will place its costly imported reactors under perpetual IAEA safeguards and risk their permanent shutdown in case it fails to toe the US line on foreign policy issues. Thus going ahead with the Safeguards Agreement will be harmful to India's interests.

Prakash Karat A.B. Bardhan

Debabrata Biswas T.J Chandrachoodan
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080711/078f1bbb/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

[Marxistindia] Betrayal of Public Commitment

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 10, 2008

Press Statement

The Left parties have issued the following statement:

Betrayal of Public Commitment

The Minister for External Affairs, Shri Pranab Mukherjee, announced on July 8, 2008 at a press conference that the government would send India's safeguards agreement to the International Atomic Energy Agency Board for approval only if it won the trust vote in parliament. "I cannot bind the government if we lose our majority", he said.

He also stated that he had consulted the Prime Minister who was in Japan, in this regard.

Coming hours after the announcement that the Left parties had decided to withdraw support to the government, this was a solemn commitment to the country that the government would not proceed to the Board of Governors of the IAEA till the government proved its majority in parliament.

It is shocking that less than twenty four hours of such a statement, the IAEA has announced that at the request of the Government of India, the text has been submitted to the Board for its consideration. (Annexure - press release of the IAEA).

This is a blatant violation of the assurance given by the government, a betrayal of a moral commitment to the country.

What transpired in the meeting of the Prime Minister with President Bush which led to this going back on a public pledge?

The Prime Minister owes an answer to the people and the country.

Text of the Safeguards Agreement

The Left parties had on July 8, 2008 asserted that it is the Government of India which is keeping the text confidential and not the IAEA. This has been confirmed by spokespersons of the IAEA in the last twenty four hours.

Subsequently, the text of the Draft India Safeguards Agreement is now available in the public domain. The Left parties will study the Draft of the Safeguards Agreement and come out with our analysis and stand.

Sd/-

Prakash Karat A.B. Bardhan Debabrata Biswas

General Secretary, CPI(M) General Secretary, CPI General Secretary, AIFB
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080710/c652134f/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] On Withdrawal of Support to the UPA Government

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 9, 2008

Press Statement

The Left parties have issued the following statement:

On Withdrawal of Support to the UPA Government

The Left Parties have withdrawn support to the UPA Government. The UPA Government came into existence in 2004 with the support of the Left parties on the basis of its Common Minimum Programme. The aim was to fight the communal forces and undo the damage they had done to the secular polity of India in their years in office. This required a set of interlinked policies to bring relief to the people, to protect India's integrity and to pursue an independent foreign policy. By going ahead with the deal at a time when there is the crushing burden of price-rise and galloping inflation, the Manmohan Singh Government has clearly shown that it is more concerned about fulfilling its commitment to the Bush administration rather than meeting its commitment to the people of India.

The Indo-US Nuclear Deal is against India's vital interests. The Congress-led government has embraced a strategic alliance with the United States. This dubious deal with President Bush is the centerpiece of a number of agreements like military collaboration and concessions to US capital in the retail sector, education etc.

The nuclear deal will not provide India energy security. Since it is anchored in a US law, the Hyde Act, it will hamper an independent foreign policy and restrict our strategic autonomy.

The Manmohan Singh government is guilty of gross violation of the Common Minimum Programme, which does not provide for a strategic alliance with the USA.

The Left parties cannot support such a course which is harmful for the people and the country's sovereignty.

· The Prime Minister gave assurances in Parliament in August 2006 on safeguarding India's interests in the nuclear deal. These were nullified by the Hyde Act passed by the United States' Congress in December 2006.

· Yet, the Prime Minister insisted on going ahead with the negotiations on the 123 agreement despite strong opposition from the Left and other political circles. A substantial section of the scientists' community also opposed the deal.

· The Prime Minister has shown contempt for Parliament by disregarding the clear views of the majority as expressed in the debate in the two Houses of Parliament in December 2007.

· Now the Government wants to keep the country in the dark on the so-called "India Safeguards Agreement" and proceed to seek approval of the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

· The Congress leadership has violated the understanding arrived at with the Left parties in November 2007, wherein the outcome of the talks with the Secretariat of the IAEA was to be presented to the UPA-Left Committee on the Nuclear Deal.

· The text of the Safeguards Agreement was not given to the Committee to study. So, there can be no findings of the Committee on the basis of which the government can proceed further.

The Prime Minister has gone to the G-8 Summit in Japan and before meeting President Bush announced that the government will be going to the IAEA Board very soon. But nothing was told about this to the Left parties and the people. It has become evident to the whole country that we have a Prime Minister whose priority is to fulfill his commitments made to President Bush. The problems faced by the people and the country can wait.

The Congress-led government was supported by the Left parties on the basis of a commitment that it would follow an independent foreign policy in contrast to the pro-American stand of the BJP led Government. That commitment has been violated. Hence, the Left parties will have to disassociate from the government.

Betrayal of Aam Admi

The Congress leadership promised to ameliorate the conditions of the aam admi - the common people. After four years of the UPA government, the people are groaning under an unprecedented price rise. The prices of rice, wheat, edible oil, dal, vegetables and other essential commodities have all shot up. For example, between 2004 and 2008, the retail price of rice has increased by over 46 per cent, wheat by 62 per cent, mustard oil by 42 per cent, chana dal by 47 per cent and even salt by 42 per cent.

The government has increased the prices of petrol and diesel seven times in the last four years. Petrol has gone up between 2004 and 2008 by 50 per cent, diesel by 60 per cent and LPG by 58 per cent.

The government has refused the Left parties' demands to:

a.. universalize the Public Distribution System, so that everyone has a ration card
b.. stop forward trading on essential commodities
c.. curb hoarding and speculators.
d.. reduce the tax burden on petroleum products
e.. impose windfall taxes on private refineries.

By pursuing a neo-liberal agenda the Congress led Government is following the same policies of the previous BJP Government. These policies are squarely responsible for the distressing spectacle of agrarian crisis, farmers' suicides, mass poverty, price rise and unemployment. This is in stark contrast to the obscene growth of billionaires and the superrich.

The Congress is determined to go ahead with a further rightwing shift in both foreign and domestic policies. This situation is providing fertile ground for the communal forces.

Since the Congress led Government is wilfully disregarding the Common Minimum Programme, the Left parties have decided to withdraw support from such an anti-people government.

Face Parliament

With the withdrawal of support by the Left parties, the government has lost its majority and legitimacy.

The Prime Minister must face the Lok Sabha and seek a vote of confidence.

Sd/-

Prakash Karat A.B. Bardhan

General Secretary, CPI(M) General Secretary, CPI

Debabrata Biswas T.J. Chandrachoodan

General Secretary, AIFB General Secretary, RSP


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080709/690a3d1b/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

[Marxistindia] IAEA Text -- Why Keep it Secret?

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 8, 2008

Press Statement

The Left Parties - Communist Party of India (Marxist), Communist Party of India, Forward Bloc and Revolutionary Socialist Party - have issued the following statement:

IAEA Text - Why Keep it Secret?

The UPA Government has refused to submit the draft text of the IAEA Safeguards Agreement to the UPA-Left committee. As the experience of the 123 agreement has shown, the claims of the Government made prior to the negotiations are not borne out by the actual text. Thus the full text of the agreement is necessary to clarify the major issues involved.

The first major issue relates to the possibility of the US terminating civilian nuclear cooperation with India for any reason in the future. India already had such an experience, when the US suspended nuclear fuel supplies to the Tarapur Atomic Power Station in 1983, reneging upon a thirty year contract signed in 1963. In the present case, the IAEA safeguards would continue even in such a scenario, since they are applicable in perpetuity to the entire civilian nuclear energy sector. The text of the 123 agreement has very ambiguous references to India taking "corrective measures" if nuclear fuel supplies from abroad are discontinued. Therefore, the text of the IAEA Safeguards Agreement needs to be made available to see whether any corrective action is possible on India's part, if the US discontinues the fuel supplies.

Secondly, the 123 agreement claimed that the US would join India in negotiating with the IAEA an "India-specific fuel supply agreement". However, it is well-known that the IAEA is not at all concerned with fuel supply but only with the imposition of safeguards on nuclear equipment and material. Therefore, it is important to know how the IAEA Safeguards Agreement provides for the fuel supply assurances in the case of India as claimed in the 123 agreement.

The key concerns expressed by the Left Parties regarding the IAEA Safeguards Agreement and which have not been addressed by the UPA are the following:

v In case the US or other countries in the NSG renege on fuel supply assurances for imported reactors, will we have the ability to withdraw these reactors from IAEA safeguards?

v If US/NSG countries renege on fuel supply assurances, can we withdraw our indigenous civilian reactors from IAEA Safeguards?

v If we have to bring nuclear fuel from the non-safeguarded part of our nuclear programme for these reactors in case of fuel supply assurances not being fulfilled, will we have the ability to take it back again?

v What are the corrective steps that India can take if fuel supplies are interrupted by the US/NSG countries?

v What are the conditions that India will have to fulfill if the corrective steps are to be put into operation?

Once the text of the Safeguards Agreement is approved by the IAEA Board of Governors, which is what the UPA Government seeks to do now, the subsequent steps require no participation at all by the Government of India. It is the US Government that takes the next steps - moving the NSG countries for the waiver and then placing the 123 Agreement before the US Congress. Therefore, it is critical for the country that the IAEA Safeguards Agreement is discussed with full transparency and not kept secret.

Why is the Manmohan Singh government keeping the draft of the IAEA Agreement secret from the people of India?

Sd/-

(Prakash Karat) (A.B. Bardhan)

General Secretary General Secretary

Communist Party of India (Marxist) Communist Party of India

(Debabrata Biswas) (T.J. Chandrachoodan)

General Secretary General Secretary

All India Forward Bloc Revolutionary Socialist Party


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080708/2963691f/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] Letter sent by Left leaders to Pranab Mukherjee

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 8, 2008

Shri Pranab Mukherjee

Convenor

UPA-Left Committee on Indo-US Nuclear Cooperation

Dear Shri Pranab Mukherjee,

This is regarding your letter dated July 7, 2008. You have stated that a meeting of the UPA-Left Committee on Indo-US Civil Nuclear Cooperation will be held on July 10.

We wish to point out that in the sixth meeting of the Committee held on November 16, 2007, it was decided, regarding the talks with the IAEA, that: "The government will proceed with the talks and the outcome will be presented to the Committee for its consideration before it finalises its findings".

Till now, the "outcome of the talks", i.e., the text of the Safeguards Agreements negotiated with the IAEA Secretariat has not been made available to the Committee.

Without the text, the Committee cannot come to any findings.

Since the UPA has refused to provide the text to the members of the Committee, no purpose will be served by having a meeting on July 10.

Further, your proposal for a meeting on the 10th is rendered meaningless since the Prime Minister, while travelling abroad, has chosen to announce that the government will be going to Board of Governors of the IAEA "very soon".

As you are aware, the Left parties had decided that if the government goes to the IAEA Board of Governors, they will withdraw support. In view of the Prime Minister's announcement, that time has come.

(Prakash Karat) (A.B. Bardhan)

(Debabrata Biswas) (T.J. Chandrachoodan)
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080708/7d63dc71/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Monday, July 7, 2008

[Marxistindia] Comrade P Ramachandran No More

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)

COMMUNIST PARTY OF INDIA (MARXIST)

Central Committee

A.K. Gopalan Bhawan, 27-29, Bhai Vir Singh Marg New Delhi 110 001

July 8, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) expresses deep grief at the passing away of Comrade P Ramachandran, veteran leader of the Party and former member of the Polit Bureau. He died in a hospital in Chennai in the early hours of July 8, 2008.

P Ramachandran began his political activity as a young student when he joined the All India Students Federation in 1939. Participating in the struggle for independence, he joined the Communist Party in 1942.

He took a firm stand against revisionism at the time of the split in 1964.

Hailing from Tellicherry in Kerala, he devoted his life to building the Communist Party in Tamilnadu. He was Secretary of the Tiruchirapalli District Committee from 1964 to 1977. He served as a member of the State Committee of Tamilnadu from 1964 till 1989. He also worked in the trade union movement for one and half decades.

P Ramachandran was elected to the Central Committee in 1985 at the 12th Congress of the Party. He was elected to the Central Secretariat in 1988 and the Polit Bureau at the 14th Congress in 1992.

He worked at the Party Centre for nearly two decades and made an important contribution to organisation and Party education.

He spent four years in jail and three years underground.

PRC, as he was known, was a comrade who endeared himself to all. While adhering to Marxism-Leninism he always sought to imbibe new ideas and integrate it into his ideological outlook.

In his death the Party has lost a valuable leader. The Polit Bureau pays respectful homage to his memory. It conveys its heartfelt condolences to his wife Janaki, his sons, daughter and other family members.

(Hari Singh Kang)

For Central Committee Office
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080708/3aece3d0/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] Suicide Bombing Outside Indian Embassy in Kabul

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 7, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) strongly condemns the suicide bombing outside the Indian Embassy in Kabul. This attack has resulted in the death of five persons including diplomats and security personnel.

The Polit Bureau conveys its heartfelt condolences to the families of those killed.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080707/d8f5098c/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Friday, July 4, 2008

[Marxistindia] Left parties letter to Pranab Mukherjee

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 4, 2008

Dear Shri Pranab Mukherjee,

Various pronouncements are being made by leaders of the ruling coalition and some Union Ministers that the Government is going ahead with the nuclear deal.

We wish to know definitely whether the Government is proceeding to seek the approval of the safeguards agreement by the Board of Governors of the IAEA.

Please let us know the position by 7th July, 2008.

Yours

(Prakash Karat) (A.B. Bardhan)

(Debabrata Biswas) (T.J. Chandrachoodan)

Shri Pranab Mukherjee

Convenor

UPA-Left Committee on Nuclear Issue
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080704/ea9c582c/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

[Marxistindia] Left parties statement

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 4, 2008

Press Statement

The Left parties have decided to launch an all India campaign from the 14th of July to go to the people to explain their opposition to the Indo-US nuclear deal, against the government's refusal to take appropriate measures to tackle the runaway inflation, backbreaking price rise and against all anti-people policies.

The Left parties will staunchly expose and oppose the efforts of the BJP and its allies to whip up communal polarization with a view to gain political and electoral support. The Left parties appeal to all other secular forces to join us in this endeavour.

Sd/-

Prakash Karat A.B. Bardhan

General Secretary, CPI(M) General Secretary, CPI

Debabrata Biswas T.J. Chandrachoodan

General Secretary, AIFB General Secretary, RSP


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080704/84b7913b/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Thursday, July 3, 2008

[Marxistindia] on truck strike

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 3, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

On Truck Strike

The ongoing strike by the All India Motor Transport Congress is causing disruption of supplies and price rise of vegetables and other essential commodities.

The Central government should immediately intervene and hold talks with the truck owners and see that the issues are settled speedily.

eom
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080703/477839fd/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

[Marxistindia] On The Prime Minister's statement

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
July 1, 2008

Press Release

The Prime Minister has repeated once again that the government will seek the sense of Parliament after the Safeguards Agreement is approved by the Board of the International Atomic Energy Agency and the waiver is got from the Nuclear Suppliers Group.

What does this proposal amount to? Here are some of the facts:

· The 123 Agreement was signed between India and the United States in July 2007. This agreement was not put before Parliament before it was signed. As soon as the text of the 123 Agreement was made public, the Left parties and other political parties, which represent a majority in Parliament, came out against it.

· After the 123 Agreement was signed as per the Indo-US Nuclear Deal, the next steps to be taken to operationalise the agreement are : 1) India going to the IAEA for the Safeguards Agreement 2) the US approaching the Nuclear Suppliers Group for getting India a waiver from the guidelines.

· The government has gone to the IAEA and negotiated a Safeguards Agreement. The text of this agreement has not been shown either to the UPA-Left Committee or made public. The government now insists on going ahead for getting the Board's approval without anyone seeing the text or the UPA-Left Committee giving its concurrence.

· As per the Prime Minister's proposal, the government should be allowed to take the next step of getting the Nuclear Suppliers Group's waiver.

· After both the steps taken for operationalisation of the deal, the Prime Minister promises to take the sense of Parliament. This would mean a fait accompli, as the only step left would be the vote in the US Congress.

· We wish to point out that already in December 2007, both the Houses of Parliament comprehensively discussed the 123 Agreement. It is on record that except for the UPA parties, all other parties which constitute the majority expressed reservations about the 123 Agreement and urged the government not to proceed further.

Hence, the repetition of the proposal by the Prime Minister shows a disregard for Parliament. It reveals nothing but an obsession to fulfill the commitment made to President Bush in July 2005 in which the people of this country and Parliament had no say.

end
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://cpim.org/pipermail/marxistindia_cpim.org/attachments/20080701/1eb21ca4/attachment.html

_______________________________________________
Marxistindia mailing list
Marxistindia@cpim.org
http://cpim.org/mailman/listinfo/marxistindia_cpim.org
http://wwww.cpim.org