Tuesday, September 30, 2008

[Marxistindia] Tragedy at Chamunda Devi, Jodhpur

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September 30, 2008

Press Statement

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

The Polit Bureau expresses its deep shock and sorrow at the death of 140 people due to the stampede at the Chamunda Devi temple near Jodhpur in Rajasthan. 60 other people have been injured in the incident.

The Polit Bureau conveys its heartfelt sympathy to all those who have lost their family members in this tragedy.

Coming in the wake of the Naina Devi Temple stampede in August, this incident underlines the necessity for regulating the flow of pilgrims who gather in large numbers at places of worship and on religious occasions. The National Disaster Management Agency should be entrusted with formulating regulations to be observed in all states in order to avoid such manmade disasters.


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[Marxistindia] Observe Black Day on October 4

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September 30, 2008

Press Release

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

Observe "Black Day" On Nuclear Deal Signing

The US Congress is adopting legislation approving the Indo-US nuclear cooperation agreement.

The Act to be adopted by the Senate includes all the retrograde provisions of the Hyde Act and also puts further constraints on full civilian nuclear cooperation in India. There is no uninterrupted fuel supply assurance, no provision for strategic fuel reserve, no transfer of nuclear technology and steps to be taken against Iran. Any self-respecting government would have refused to sign the deal and operationalise it after this.

It has been announced that Condoleeza Rice, US Secretary of State, will be arriving in New Delhi to sign the nuclear agreement on 4th October, 2008.

In order to protest against the signing of the nuclear deal during Condoleeza Rice's visit on 4th October, the Left parties call for the observance of a `Black Day' against this surrender to US imperialism.

The day will be observed by hoisting of black flags, demonstrations with black flags and the wearing of black badges. The Left parties appeal to all other democratic parties and organisations to join in this united protest against the Manmohan Singh government's betrayal of India's sovereign interests.


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Monday, September 29, 2008

[Marxistindia] True colours of the nuclear deal, PK Iyengar Sep 30.

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True colours of the nuclear deal
P K Iyengar

The US House of Representatives has passed a bill (H. R. 7081) that approves the 123 Agreement, but which is contradictory to the assurance given by the Prime Minister to the nation. An identical version is before the US Senate for voting. Even as late as 26 September 2008, the Prime Minster was seeking an agreement that would 'satisfy India'. This has not come to pass, and it will be interesting to see how the Indian government and the Indian media will 'spin' this into a victory for India. The Indian side is supposed to have been unhappy with the language. The fact is that one is not worried about the language, but the content and compulsions of the Bill.

Why is the House bill not satisfactory? Even the title of the Bill, 'United States-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Nonproliferation Enhancement Act', makes it clear that they seek to press their non-proliferation agenda. The Bill makes a number of things explicitly clear, and reveals the true colours of the nuclear deal.

(1) The 123 Agreement is subject to the provisions of the Hyde Act and the Atomic Energy Act, and does not supersede them.

This is said, in so many words, twice in the Bill. Section 101 (page 3, lines 16-21) says that: "The Agreement shall be subject to the provisions of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, the Henry J. Hyde United States-India Peaceful Atomic Energy Cooperation Act of 2006, and any other applicable United States law." Section 102 (page 6, lines 8-12) reiterates that: "Nothing in the Agreement shall be construed to supersede the legal requirements of the Henry J. Hyde United States-India Peaceful Atomic Energy Cooperation Act of 2006 or the Atomic Energy Act of 1954." Therefore there is now no question of differences in the 'interpretation' of the 123 Agreement. Irrespective of what we think we are bound by, the Americans have made it abundantly clear that they are bound by the Hyde Act and the Atomic Energy Act, and the 123 Agreement does not supersede either of them. If we conduct a test it is now abundantly clear that, as per the provisions of the Hyde Act and the Atomic Energy Act, it is the end of the nuclear deal.


(2) In the event of a disruption of fuel supply from the US, the Americans will not help arrange for fuel from another country.

Article 5(b-iv) of the 123 Agreement says that in the event of fuel disruption the US will help India get fuel from 'friendly supplier countries'. But it seems that the Congress is having none of this. Section 102 (page 5, lines 4-12) of the Bill explicitly states that in the event of fuel disruption, not only will the US not help arrange for fuel from other countries, but it will also "seek to prevent the transfer to India of nuclear equipment, materials, or technology from other participating governments in the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) or from any other source." Since this sentence is not in the 123 Agreement, the Indian government will probably claim that we are not bound by it. However, the simple reality is that if there is a disruption of fuel from America, for whatever reason, the Americans will work hard to ensure that we do not get it from any other source.


(3) There will be no transfer of enrichment technology, and even permission for reprocessing imported fuel may be denied.

This is the most disturbing clause in the Bill. Sec. 204 of the Bill (page 14, lines 11-19) says explicitly that before the 123 Agreement enters into force (according to Article 16), the President has to certify that the US will work with NSG countries to "agree to further restrict the transfers of equipment and technology related to the enrichment of uranium and reprocessing of spent fuel". So, one of the major advantages we were expecting from the NSG waiver and the 123 Agreement will not be forthcoming. But this Bill goes even further. Section 201 makes it very clear that any future proposal for reprocessing needs explicit approval from the US Congress, and the Congress retains the right to refuse (page 13, lines 1-4). This is a new twist, and extremely dangerous, because it leaves us completely at the mercy of the Congress. The same section also says that the US will pursue efforts with other countries to ensure that reprocessing of fuel from those countries will also be governed by 'similar arrangements and procedures'. This seems to suggest that the US would even like the existing arrangements with Russia for the Kudankulam reactors to be modified along the proposed lines. The same would also apply to any other supplier. It is surprising that in spite of our being a 'strategic partner', the US wants to restrain our fuel-cycle developments. This shows, again, that India is not being treated as an equal, in spite of the fact that for decades India has developed reprocessing and enrichment technology on its own, and produced plutonium for fast-breeder reactors as well as enriched uranium for the submarine reactor.


These explicit statements in the House Bill only reaffirm what many of us have been saying for a long time. The 123 Agreement does not supersede, and is constrained by, the Hyde Act and the Atomic Energy Act. The House Bill has added new constraints. The entire Indo-US nuclear deal, which must now be taken to comprise of the Congress Bill, the 123 Agreement and the Hyde Act, is in contradiction to the July 2005 Joint Statement, because it doesn't give India the status of an advanced nuclear state enjoying the same obligations and benefits as others. The nuclear deal does not allow cooperation in enrichment or reprocessing technology. The nuclear deal does not guarantee fuel supplies or a fuel reserve. In the event of a breach of the 123 Agreement, the US will not work with its allies to find alternate solutions – on the contrary it will pressure them to act against Indian interests. 'Full cooperation' in civil nuclear power is meaningless without assurances of fuel supply and technological cooperation in the fuel cycle.

The House Bill also makes it clear that the US continues to impose on us the existing non-proliferation regime, and is not ready to recognize India as a nation with advanced nuclear technology. President Bush may have made many promises, but he will not be around to fulfill them. The reality is that the nuclear deal will not bring us as equals to the nuclear table. It will only serve to tighten the non-proliferation regime around us, make us dependent on the nuclear cartel for fuel, and completely cripple our strategic programme.

If the government's intention is to import nuclear reactors and fuel, a simple bilateral agreement, which guarantees application of safeguards to the reactors, the fuel, and the end products of reprocessing the fuel, would have been sufficient and meaningful. There is already a precedent for this. In the nuclear deal with Russia, the irradiated fuel from the Kudankulam reactors can be reprocessed in India, provided this is done under IAEA safeguards. The plutonium that is produced in these reactors, when separated, will also attract IAEA safeguards. This is perfectly understandable, and India has accepted this. Why this should not be applicable in a more friendly agreement with the US, is incomprehensible.

In 1974, when India was less developed and had a bleaker future, Indira Gandhi was able to stand firm in supporting a strategic programme, in spite of ominous warnings of the retribution that would follow. It is ironic that in 2008, when India is in a much stronger position, economically and geopolitically, her own party is ready to betray her legacy and put on nuclear shackles, for a few dollars more.

30 September 2008



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

.
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[Marxistindia] The Democratic Socialism

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Reflections by Comrade Fidel Castro

THE DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISM

I did not want to write a third consecutive reflection, but I can not leave that for Monday.

There is one accurate response to Bush's "democratic capitalism": Chavez's democratic socialism. There wouldn't be a more accurate way to express the big contradiction that exists between North and South in our hemisphere, between the ideas of Bolivar and those of Monroe.

Bolivar's great merit was having stated so at a time when modern communication media did not exist -not even the Panama Canal did. There was no US imperialism. There were just the English speaking Thirteen Colonies which, united, gained their independence in 1776 with the support of France and Spain.

The Liberator, as if he were capable of seeing through centuries ahead of his own time, proclaimed in 1829: "The United States seems destined by Providence to plague America with misery in the name of liberty."

Hugo Chávez is a Venezuelan soldier. In his mind, Bolivar's ideas germinated only naturally. Suffice it to observe the way in which his thinking went through different political stages, starting from his humble origin, the school, the military academy, his readings of History, the reality of his country and the humiliating presence of the Yankee domination.

He was not a General; he didn't have any armed institution under his command. He didn't perpetrate a coup d'état; nor could he do so. He did not want to wait; nor could he. He rebelled himself; he took up full responsibility for the events and turned the prison into a school. He conquered the sympathy of the people and gained their support for his cause while being out of government. He won the elections under a bourgeois Constitution. He took an oath under that agonizing document and swore allegiance to a new Constitution. He clashed with both right and left preconceived ideas and started the Bolivarian Revolution in the midst of the most difficult subjective conditions in the whole Latin America.

For ten years, from the presidency of his country, he has not ceased to sow ideas inside and outside his homeland.

No honest person should have any doubt that in Venezuela there is a true Revolution in progress, and there is also an exceptional struggle that is being waged against imperialism.

It is worth mentioning that Chávez does not rest, not even for a single minute. He struggles inside Venezuela and at the same time he systematically travels to the capitals of the Latin American countries as well as important nations of Europe, Asia and Africa.

He keeps permanent communication, hour after hour, with the national and international press. He is not afraid to address any issue; he is listened to with respect by the main leaders in the world. He makes a correct and efficient use of the real power his country has -the biggest proven oil reserves in the world, in addition to abundant gas- and he is designing an unprecedented national and internationalist program.

With the signing of an association agreement between Gazprom, from Russia, and PDVSA, from Venezuela for the prospecting and exploitation of hydrocarbons, he created a consortium in that field that is equal to no one in the world. His economic association with China and Russia, some countries of Europe and others of Latin America and Africa with abundant resources, has released the liberating forces that will pave the way towards a multipolar world. He did not exclude the United States from the energy supply or the commercial exchange programs. That is an objective and balanced conception.

He thinks about a socialist revolution for his own homeland, without excluding important productive factors. At this historical juncture, after being hit by Nature and the criminal ravages of the decadent empire, our country is truly privileged o be able to count on Chavez's solidarity.

We never heard a more internationalist and fraternal phrase as the one he said to our people: "The country of Venezuela is also your country!"

Imperialism is trying to get rid of him politically or eliminate him physically no matter the cost, without realizing that his death would be a catastrophe for Venezuela as well as for the economy and stability of all other governments of Latin America and the Caribbean.

My conversations with him are characterized by one point of view I defend: at this point in time, the most important thing is to save Venezuela from the political onslaught of the US government. During his last visit we discussed the magnitude of the assistance he is giving to us as well as the assistance he wishes to give to us, and our suggestion that he should concentrate the biggest possible amount of resources on the domestic battle that he is waging today against the offensive launched by the media and the conditioned reflexes that imperialism has been creating for many years.

Starting from now until November 23, the battle to be waged will be of great transcendence, and we don't want his support to Cuba to be used as a pretext to damage the Bolivarian Revolution.

The 92 Venezuelan construction workers who are members of the Socialist Voluntary Work Brigades, who were sent to build houses in Pinar del Río, are a symbol of our times.

We are living through very important moments. The popular referendum to approve the new Constitution in Ecuador the day after tomorrow will be of great significance. Chávez will meet with President Lula in Brazil on Monday. Tonight there is a televised debate between Obama and McCain. These are all important news.

That is why I did not want to leave the writing of these lines for Monday. Tomorrow Saturday, Chávez will be back to his country and on Sunday he will be addressing his people. He always makes use of some excerpts of these reflections in his battle.

Fidel Castro Ruz

September 26, 2008

5:56pm


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Saturday, September 27, 2008

[Marxistindia] test

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The list is undergoing repairs.
This is a test message.
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Friday, September 26, 2008

[Marxistindia] test

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this is a test msg. please ignore
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[Marxistindia] on nanavati commission report

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September 26, 2008

Press Statement

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

On The Nanavati Commission Report

The findings of the Justice Nanavati Commission report on the Godhra train fire and the subsequent communal carnage in Gujarat has been presented in a piecemeal fashion with the second part slated to be released in December 2008. The fact that the report has come after an abnormally long delay and that too in a piecemeal fashion raises many needles of suspicion.

The piecemeal delivering of the report tends to justify the action-reaction theory propagated by Narendra Modi and the RSS-BJP-Bajrang Dal-VHP. These findings completely contradict the report of the former Supreme Court Justice U.C. Banerjee Committee which established on the basis of forensic reports that the fire in Coach S-6 of the Sabarmati Express at Godhra was accidental. The findings of the Nanavati report also contradict the fact that in the ongoing criminal proceedings against the Godhra accused no charge has so far been established by the concerned courts. These findings also run in the face of the contradictory admissions made by various players in the Gujarat carnage as exposed by the sting operation of a private channel, "Operation Kalank".

The findings of the Nanavati report have been solely based on the report filed by the investigating officer in the Godhra train burning case Noel Parmar. The Supreme Court has rejected the Parmar report and on March 26, 2008 constituted a police team headed by R.K. Raghavan, former CBI director to investigate the post Godhra violence. Clearly, by delaying the second part of the report, the Nanavati Commission attempts to negate the apex court's directions.

The timing of the release of the report is indeed suspicious given that it comes on the eve of the elections to some state assemblies in November and the second part is slated to be released on the eve of the coming General Elections. This also comes at a time when the country as a whole is bracing to meet the challenge posed by the series of terrorist attacks. It tends to reinforce the communal stereotype and prejudices rather than strengthening the need to pursue unbiasedly and impartially the antinational criminals who are perpetrating such terrorist attacks.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) is of the opinion that these findings must be kept aside and the country must await the directions of the apex court and the contingent investigations ordered.


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[Marxistindia] On The Nanavati Commission Report

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September 26, 2008

Press Statement

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

On The Nanavati Commission Report

The findings of the Justice Nanavati Commission report on the Godhra train fire and the subsequent communal carnage in Gujarat has been presented in a piecemeal fashion with the second part slated to be released in December 2008. The fact that the report has come after an abnormally long delay and that too in a piecemeal fashion raises many needles of suspicion.

The piecemeal delivering of the report tends to justify the action-reaction theory propagated by Narendra Modi and the RSS-BJP-Bajrang Dal-VHP. These findings completely contradict the report of the former Supreme Court Justice U.C. Banerjee Committee which established on the basis of forensic reports that the fire in Coach S-6 of the Sabarmati Express at Godhra was accidental. The findings of the Nanavati report also contradict the fact that in the ongoing criminal proceedings against the Godhra accused no charge has so far been established by the concerned courts. These findings also run in the face of the contradictory admissions made by various players in the Gujarat carnage as exposed by the sting operation of a private channel, "Operation Kalank".

The findings of the Nanavati report have been solely based on the report filed by the investigating officer in the Godhra train burning case Noel Parmar. The Supreme Court has rejected the Parmar report and on March 26, 2008 constituted a police team headed by R.K. Raghavan, former CBI director to investigate the post Godhra violence. Clearly, by delaying the second part of the report, the Nanavati Commission attempts to negate the apex court's directions.

The timing of the release of the report is indeed suspicious given that it comes on the eve of the elections to some state assemblies in November and the second part is slated to be released on the eve of the coming General Elections. This also comes at a time when the country as a whole is bracing to meet the challenge posed by the series of terrorist attacks. It tends to reinforce the communal stereotype and prejudices rather than strengthening the need to pursue unbiasedly and impartially the antinational criminals who are perpetrating such terrorist attacks.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) is of the opinion that these findings must be kept aside and the country must await the directions of the apex court and the contingent investigations ordered.


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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

[Marxistindia] Support to Striking Bank Employees

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September 24, 2008

Press Statement

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

The Communist Party of India (Marxist) extends its support to the strike by bank employees against further liberalization of the banking sector. The two-day strike call has given by the United Forum of Bank Unions representing employees and officers of the banks.

The Polit Bureau warns that in the light of the global financial crisis, such reforms will only make India more vulnerable. The country has been able to stave off this crisis only because the UPA government could not go ahead with these measures owing to the stiff resistance from the Left parties.

The Polit Bureau cautions the government against proceeding with such reforms

eom
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Saturday, September 20, 2008

[Marxistindia] Halt the New Pension Scheme

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September 20, 2008

Press Statement

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

Halt the New Pension Scheme

The Finance Minister's recent statements in the aftermath of the financial crisis in the US, reiterating the Government's commitment to carry forward financial sector reforms show a stubborn refusal to learn proper lessons. His assertion regarding the ability of India's financial regulators "to keep regulations one step ahead of innovation" does not carry any conviction.

The UPA Government should abandon forthwith all moves to put the pension funds of Government employees into the stock market. The Government has refused to assure a minimum guaranteed pension for the Government employees under the New Pension Scheme. The pension funds of the employees must not be left to the mercy of the speculative forces, which have played havoc in stock markets across the world. The Government will be held squarely responsible for any erosion of the hard earned savings of the employees owing to a stock market meltdown.

The CPI (M) demands that the interim step announced in January 2007, allowing upto 5% of pension funds under the New Pension Scheme to be invested in the stock market, be immediately rescinded. The CPI (M) also demands that the PFRDA Bill, which enables investment of employees' pension funds into the stock market, be discarded and the Pension Scheme for Government employees reworked to ensure minimum guaranteed pension.

eom
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[Marxistindia] Clandestine Deals with US Nuclear Power Companies exposed

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20 September 2008

Press Statement

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

Clandestine Deals with US Nuclear Power Companies Exposed

The UPA Government seems to have already decided to place orders with the American nuclear power companies for supplying a large number of nuclear reactors without any debate in the country regarding the cost of such imported reactors, or the safety of their designs. William Burns, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, while testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on September 18, 2008 stated:

The Indian government has provided the United States with a strong Letter of Intent, stating its intention to purchase reactors with at least 10,000 Mega Watts (MWe) worth of new power generation capacity from U.S. firms. India has committed to devote at least two sites to U.S. firms. India also has committed to adhere to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage.

Each 1000/1,100 MW reactor from US companies like Westinghouse or GE, by latest estimates, will cost at least $7 billion each. This translates to approximately Rs. 28 crore per MW, which is 7 to 8 times the capital cost of coal fired thermal power plants of equivalent capacity. The 10,000 MW figure stated by Burns implies India putting in around Rs. 280,000 crore of Indian money to bail out the US nuclear industry that has failed to secure any domestic order for the last 30 years. If one misguided Enron project could sink the Maharashtra State Electricity Board owing to exorbitant costs, such expensive imports of nuclear reactors can sink the entire power sector of the country.

Of even greater concern is the mention by Burns of India's commitment to adhere to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage. Shorn of verbiage, this means that in the case of any Bhopal type disaster, the Indian Government will take over all liabilities from the suppliers and the operators. The suppliers of nuclear reactors have demanded a no-liability regime for supplying equipment, which the UPA Government seems to have accepted without any public debate.

The entire Indo-US Nuclear Deal has been shrouded in secrecy, lies and half lies. A number of these have already been unravelled with the Presidential Determination submitted to the US Congress making public the US interpretation of the 123 Agreement. Now it appears that there is much more about this deal that the UPA government is hiding from the Indian people. Large purchases from US based nuclear power companies have already been committed in a clandestine manner.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI (M) opposes these underhand deals struck by the UPA Government. A proper exercise regarding the costs and benefits of nuclear power must be carried out by an independent body before key decisions regarding energy policy in the country are taken. The energy policy of the country should not be held hostage to the demands of the Indo-US Nuclear Deal.

eom
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Friday, September 19, 2008

[Marxistindia] Observe September 25 as Protest Day

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September 19, 2008

Press Statement

The Communist Party of India (Marxist), Communist Party of India, Telugu Desam Party, All India Forward Bloc, Revolutionary Socialist Party and Janata Dal (S) have issued the following joint call:

Observe September 25 As Protest Day

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is visiting Washington on September 25 to formalize the India-US nuclear deal. The nuclear deal compromises India's sovereignty and vital interests. The Prime Minister has gone back on his assurance that he will come back to parliament after getting the clearance from the IAEA and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. The parliament has been convened only on October 17, well after the nuclear deal will be sealed in Washington.

The refusal to call parliament comes at a time when the country has suffered a series of terrorist blasts, attacks on Christian minorities, continuing price rise and the adverse impact of the US financial crisis. To protest against the signing of the nuclear deal and the bypassing of parliament, we are giving a call to the people of the country to observe September 25 as a Protest Day.

All over the country rallies and protest demonstrations will be held against this surrender to the United States.

Mass Dharna in Parliament

On the same day Members of Parliament belonging to all our parties will be holding a mass dharna on the premises of the Parliament House against the gross contempt and violation of parliamentary democracy.

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Thursday, September 18, 2008

[Marxistindia] Attacks on Christian Community in Mangalore

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September 18, 2008

Press Statement

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

The CPI(M) strongly condemns the continuing violence against Christian minorities in Karnataka. It is a matter of deep concern that instead of controlling the violence against the Christian community in Mangalore the BJP State Government is providing patronage to the criminals of the Bajrang Dal who are spreading the violence to other areas across the State. It is shameful that the violence has continued for days, religious functionaries including nuns are being attacked, and churches and houses of prayer and idols sacred to the community are being broken. Instead of arresting the culprits the State Government is threatening members of the Christian community who were protecting the churches and has subjected them to brutal police lathi charges in which scores including women have been injured.

The violence and threats against the Christians is an assault on the Constitution, yet the Central Government appears to be a silent spectator with not even a statement leave alone any action emanating from senior Government functionaries. The violence in Orissa and now in Karnataka by the Bajrang Dal in the context of the clear evidence of their guilt in making bombs and planning communal attacks calls for immediate action against the Bajrang Dal by the Central Government. The Manmohan Singh Government has to answer the people why it is utterly failing to protect the security of minority communities mandated by the Constitution.
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Tuesday, September 16, 2008

[Marxistindia] Repudiate the 123 Agreement

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September 17, 2008

Press Statement

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

Repudiate the 123 Agreement

The documents submitted to the US Congress by the US President along with the Presidential Determination on Indo-US civil nuclear cooperation have made it amply clear that the terms of the 123 Agreement are fully in conformity with the Hyde Act and violate the crucial commitments made by the Indian Prime Minister in Parliament. The time has come for the Indian Government to repudiate the 123 Agreement, which is not in India's national interest. The Government has no other option, as the argument that India has a different interpretation of the 123 Agreement is meaningless. The US as a supplier of nuclear equipment and materials will undertake such supply only under the terms of what it calls a "framework agreement." A different interpretation of the 123 Agreement by India will in no way bind the US as a supplier.

The Left Parties have repeatedly pointed out the provisions of the 123 Agreement, which are inimical to India's interests:

Ø India will not have any uninterrupted fuel supply assurance;

Ø India will have to place its civilian reactors under IAEA safeguards in perpetuity without such a fuel supply assurance;

Ø India will not have any assurance regarding stock piling fuel reserve for the life time of the reactors;

Ø Whatever corrective measures India may contemplate vis-à-vis fuel supply disruption, taking the reactors out of IAEA safeguards will be impermissible;

Ø India will not have access to full civilian nuclear technology;

Ø The consent to India's reprocessing of spent fuel is only notional;

Ø The US can terminate the 123 Agreement at will and stop all supplies immediately;

Ø India will have to align its foreign policy to that of the US, particularly on Iran.

All these points raised by the Left Parties have been confirmed by the documents accompanying the US Presidential Determination and have exposed the hollowness of the claims made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in Parliament.

Fuel Supply Assurance and IAEA Safeguards: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had made a solemn commitment in Parliament on March 7, 2006 that India would place its civilian nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards in perpetuity only on the basis of strict reciprocity vis-à-vis the US guaranteeing uninterrupted fuel supply in perpetuity. In case the US defaults on its fuel supply agreement (as it did in Tarapur), it would ensure that other members of the NSG would take over its obligations. In a signed covering note to the Presidential Determination (President's Transmittal of Text to Congress) George Bush has made it clear that the fuel supply assurance in the 123 Agreement is not legally binding. It states:

"In Article 5(6) the Agreement records certain political commitments concerning reliable supply of nuclear fuel given to India in March 2006. The text of the Agreement does not, however, transform these political commitments into legally binding commitments because the Agreement, like other US agreements of its type, is intended as a framework agreement."

This categorical denial of any legally binding fuel supply assurance in the 123 Agreement by the US President is accompanied by a specific observation contained in the Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act Regarding Civil Nuclear Cooperation with India accompanying the Presidential Determination, which states:

"Once a facility is listed in the Annex, safeguards will continue indefinitely unless 'India and the Agency have jointly determined that the facility is no longer usable for any nuclear activity relevant from the point of view of safeguards'.Thus the facilities and materials subject to safeguards.are under 'safeguards in perpetuity in accordance with IAEA standards, principles, and practices'."

This clearly shows that India can never withdraw its civilian nuclear facilities from IAEA safeguards unilaterally, even the indigenously built reactors, in the event of a disruption of fuel supply or if the 123 Agreement is itself terminated. The Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act has also left the quantity of nuclear material transferred under the 123 Agreement undefined. Therefore the US is under no obligation to help India build up adequate fuel reserves for life time operations of the reactors.

Full Co-Operation in Civilian Nuclear Technology: The Prime Minister in a suo moto statement to Parliament on July 29, 2006 had stated:

"...we committed ourselves to separating the civilian and strategic programme. However this was to be conditional upon, and reciprocal to, the United States fulfilling its side of the understanding. steps to be taken by India would be conditional upon and contingent on action taken by the United States...Before voluntarily placing our civilian facilities under IAEA safeguards, we will ensure that all restrictions on India have been lifted."

However, the signed covering note to the Presidential Determination clearly states:

"It (the 123 Agreement) does not permit transfers of any restricted data. Sensitive nuclear technology, heavy-water production technology and production facilities, sensitive nuclear facilities, and major critical components of such facilities may not be transferred under the Agreement unless the Agreement is amended."

This is also reiterated in the Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act. Clearly, India will not have access to the full fuel cycle and all sensitive technologies are denied under the above. The bar on access to the full nuclear fuel cycle technology is still very much a part of the technology denial regime of the US. Thus India is being asked to place its civilian reactors under IAEA safeguards in perpetuity without all restrictions being lifted.

Consent to Reprocess: The Nuclear Proliferation Assessment Statement accompanying the Presidential Determination states:

"Subsequent to India's March 2006 separation plan, the Indian government decided to pursue development of a new civil facility dedicated to reprocessing material under safeguards. Development of this facility (and agreement with the United States on arrangements and procedures related thereto) will be required to bring into effect the "programmatic consent" in Article 6 of the Agreement."'

Therefore, the supposed consent for India's right to reprocess spent fuel contained in the 123 Agreement is only a "programmatic consent" as per the US. It clearly states that till the arrangements and procedures are agreed to by the US in the subsequent period, this consent cannot be brought into effect. This also belies the claims made by the Government in this regard.

Extraneous Issues Tied with Nuclear Cooperation: The Prime Minister had categorically stated that tying any extraneous issues with civil nuclear cooperation will not be accepted to India. It is clear from the documents accompanying the Presidential Determination that extraneous issues have been coupled with the nuclear deal, which have also been accepted by India.

Iran: The Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act approvingly talks about India aligning with the US on the Iran question both in the IAEA and the UN and that India "maintained a strong public line of support for P5+1 and U.S. diplomatic efforts to resolve international concerns with Iran's nuclear program". This is contradictory to the position stated earlier that India supports the right of Iran to the full nuclear fuel cycle. The issue of nuclear weapons and the right to enrichment are two different issues and India has always maintained a public distinction between the two. However, with the External Affairs Minister's statement, India has formally changed its position and opposed Iran's fuel enrichment, a right which Iran has under Article IV of the NPT.

Missile Technology Control Regime: India has already pledged its unilateral adherence to the MTCR regime of which it is not a part. According to the Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act mentions that India has written a letter stating its "adherence to the MTCR and its annex in a letter dated September, 9, 2008, to Mr. Jacques Audibert, the MTCR Point of Contact in Paris".

All this makes the 123 Agreement almost identical to the Tarapur one, where India had been forced to run from pillar to post for fuel after the US unilaterally terminated the Tarapur 123 Agreement. India still continues to hold spent fuel as the US has never given its consent to reprocessing, even though such a "programmatic consent" was there in the Tarapur 123 Agreement also. It is with the experience of Tarapur that India had sought fuel supply assurances and various other terms including the right to reprocess spent fuel. With the documents accompanying the Presidential Determination, the US has made its intentions clear - this 123 Agreement is no different from the earlier Tarapur one, with all the Tarapur problems. And India can again land into the Tarapur mess, as the right of the US to terminate the agreement is an unfettered one.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI (M) demands that the Prime Minister fulfil his pledge to the nation that he will walk away from the Nuclear Deal if it does not meet India's expectations.

eom


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[Marxistindia] Lessons of the Financial Crisis Afflicting the US

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
September 16, 2008

Press Statement

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

Lessons of the Financial Crisis Afflicting the US

The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, the fourth largest investment bank in the US, marks a considerable deepening of the financial crisis in the US, which was precipitated by the collapse of the real estate bubble. Another large investment bank, Merrill Lynch, was bought over by the Bank of America at a throwaway price while insurance giant AIG (American International Group) is struggling to raise funds and desperately seeking a bailout package. This latest round of financial stress in the US comes in spite of the recent nationalisation of the housing mortgage companies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the state-sponsored bailout of another investment bank, Bear Stearns, earlier this year.

It is clear by now that even the US Government, with all its resources, is finding it impossible to bailout these failing financial giants with public funds, given the sheer extent of their losses. The deregulated financial system of the US, which has been held up by the advocates of globalisation and financial liberalisation as a model to be emulated by all countries, has been badly exposed for its inefficiency and unviability.

The Manmohan Singh government needs to learn the proper lessons from these momentous events. It has been pursuing harmful steps for financial liberalisation. Legislations like the Banking Regulation Amendment Bill, IRDA Bill and the PFRDA Bill, which seek to further deregulate, privatise and open up the banking, insurance and pension funds to foreign finance capital, should be withdrawn immediately. Reckless lending to volatile sectors such as real estate should be curbed. The renewed attempts to make the capital account convertible and deregulate the capital markets should also come to an end. The Indian financial system must not be allowed to become a happy hunting ground for speculative finance capital to the detriment of financial stability.

eom
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Sunday, September 14, 2008

[Marxistindia] blasts in delhi

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
September 14, 2008

Press Statement

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

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) denounces the terrorist network that has perpetrated the series of blats in Delhi which has so far claimed 25 lives and injuries to scores of others. That the capital has been hit by blasts which are similar to those which occurred in Ahmedabad, Bangalore and Jaipur this year, indicate that the capacity of the terrorist network to strike has not been curbed despite claims of arresting some of the main culprits after the blasts in Ahmedabad.

Given this latest outrage in the capital, it is imperative for the Central Government to explain why the intelligence and security set up have failed to identify and dismantle the terrorist groups that are operating.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) demands that the Central Government convene parliament immediately and submit a report on the matter to it.

It is evident that the main need is for an effective intelligence and investigating system which can uncover the persons behind these activities and not draconian detention laws which have proved ineffective in the past.

The Polit Bureau conveys its heartfelt sympathy to the families of all those who have been victims of the blasts.


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Friday, September 12, 2008

[Marxistindia] US Presidential Determination

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
September 12, 2008

Press Statement

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

US Presidential Determination

Once More Exposes Manmohan Singh Government

The Presidential Determination sent to the US Congress contradicts the claims made by the Government of India that it has got guarantees for permanent fuel supplies and on perpetual safeguards. The covering note of the Determination states that there are no legally binding assurances on the US for fuel supplies. 'ara 2 of the determination also makes clear that the IAEA safeguards are in perpetuity and not as Indian officials have claimed. Thus while the US does not guarantee assured nuclear fuel supplies, India has accepted its safeguards in perpetuity. Further, it will be recalled that the Hyde Act had a specific condition regarding India's cooperation with US policy on Iran.

The Government had stated that the Hyde Act was not binding on it. The NSG waiver, quoted Pranab Mukherjee's Sept 5 statement that India would join international efforts to stop the spread of enrichment and reprocessing technologies, an obvious reference to Iran. The Presidential Determination reiterates this. It states "India will now support the United States and international efforts to prevent the spread of enrichment and reprocessing technologies to any State that does not already possess full-scale, functioning enrichment or reprocessing plants." Clearly India has succumbed to US pressure to deny Iran the rights it has as a signatory to the NPT. On all these issues it is the Hyde Act which has prevailed. This is precisely what the Left parties have been saying. The Bush Determination once more proves that Government of India has consistently misled the people of this country.

eom


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Tuesday, September 9, 2008

[Marxistindia] memorandum to President on jettisoning the monsoon session of parliament

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
Memorandum Submitted to Hon'ble President of India

September 9, 2008

Dear Respected Rashtrapathiji,

We, the undersigned leaders of political parties represented in the Parliament, register our strong protest against the decision of the government to jettison the monsoon session of the Parliament. This, we consider, is a deliberate manipulation of established traditions concerning the sessions of Parliament since independence.

For a variety of important reasons, such manipulation of Parliament sessions has serious implications. It violates the basic principle of governance established under our system. Central to India's constitutional structure is that the sovereignty rests solely with the people. "We, the people" expresses itself in the executive's accountability to the legislature, which, in turn, is accountable to the people. The absence of the Parliament session negates the legislature's right and the executive's obligation. This is a serious compromise with the concept of sovereignty as enshrined in the Constitution.

Further, this is happening when the executive's accountability is required on a variety of events that are plaguing our country and the people. A series of reports have appeared suggesting that the assurances made by the Prime Minister to the Parliament and the country on the Indo-US nuclear deal have been violated. Worse, there are reports that suggest that crucial information was concealed regarding details of the deal. These are serious matters concerning the sovereignty and security of India and its independent foreign policy. The Parliament, therefore the people, are being deprived of their fundamental right to make the government accountable and answerable on these matters.

There is this runaway inflation which the government has failed to control. Agrarian crisis remains acute continuing to claim lives of farmers through distress suicides.

Serious unrest disrupted peace and normalcy in the state of Jammu & Kashmir. As the state is under the President's rule, the Parliament is the only forum where efforts to resolve could be made.

The river Kosi has changed its course after three centuries virtually wiping out large tracts of Bihar rendering millions homeless. The breach in its embankments is the apparent cause for this havoc, at the Kosi barrage in Nepal. India has a 199 year lease to maintain this barrage. The country would, surely, like to know what went wrong where for this ravage. The people are robbed of this right with the Parliament session not being convened.

In Orissa, innocent tribal Christians are being subjected to inhuman atrocities. The protection of the life and security of the tribals is the responsibility of the Central government as much as it is the right of the state governments to maintain law and order. Where else can these issues that affect will determine the future of our country and its people be discussed, except in the Parliament?

It is only in the Parliament that the people, through their elected representatives, can exercise their sovereign right to make the government accountable and answerable on all these issues.

We, the undersigned, therefore, appeal to you as the custodian of the Indian Constitution to intervene urgently to prevent such a subversion of our Constitutional scheme. We demand that the monsoon session of the Parliament be immediately convened. The winter session must, as is the practice, convene in the second half of November.

We hope that in exercise of the authority vested in you by the Indian Constitution, you will discharge this important duty.

With regards,

Sd/-

Basudev Acharya Sitaram Yechury

Leader, CPI(M), Lok Sabha Leader, CPI(M), Rajya Sabha

Rajesh Verma Satish Chandra Misra

Leader, BSP, Lok Sabha Leader, BSP, Rajya Sabha

Gurudas Dasgupta D. Raja

Leader, CPI, Lok Sabha Leader, CPI, Rajya Sabha

Yerran Naidu Mysoora Reddy

Leader, TDP, Lok Sabha Leader, TDP, Rajya Sabha

Joachim Baxla Debabrata Biswas

Leader, RSP, Lok Sabha Leader, AIFB, Rajya Sabha

Daanish Ali Abani Roy

General Secretary, Janata Dal (Secular) Leader, RSP, Rajya Sabha
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Monday, September 8, 2008

[Marxistindia] Brinda Karat's letter to Home Minister on Bajrang Dal and VHP

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

Press Release

We are herewith releasing the letter addressed to Home Minister Shivraj Patil by Brinda Karat, MP, urging strong action against the Bajrang Dal and the VHP for their terroristic activities.

(Hari Singh Kang)

For CPI(M) Central Committee Office

8th September, 2008

Dear Shri Shivraj Patilji,

I am writing to you on an important issue of national security. I strongly urge the Government to put the Bajrang Dal and Vishwa Hindu Parishad on the watch list of organizations indulging in terrorist like activities. Recent events in Orissa have highlighted the use of violence by these two organizations against the Christian community including the use of weapons, inflammatory material to burn homes, prayer houses and churches etc. In Bhubaneswar, it was reported that the son of a BJP leader and his accomplice, associated with one of these organisations were arrested when the bomb they were making exploded. Recently in Kanpur two Bajrang Dal activists were killed while making bombs and several were injured. There are reports of attempts being made to spread the violence to States such as Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan by these organizations. In addition their leaders are making the most rabidly communal speeches. These actions seriously undermine national security.

You will recall that on April 30, 2008 I had raised the issue of the Tenkasi bomb blast in the Rajya Sabha, in which, according to the investigation of the Tamilnadu police, known RSS men were involved. In the context of similiar incidents of bomb blasts in Nanded and the parcel bombs sent to Muslim religious leaders in Maharashtra I had asked for a CBI inquiry into all these blasts and incidents. You had said that the Tamilnadu investigations had not mentioned any connection between these different incidents. Unfortunately my demand was not accepted.

These incidents should not be seen in isolation. As revealed by the Anti Terrorist Squad (ATS) in Maharashtra it is a carefully prepared plan by the aforesaid organizations to create communal disturbances by (1) making bombs with a view to engineering bomb blasts ostensibly against the Hindu community to rouse communal passions. (2) by directly attacking minority community religious leaders and other functionaries.

I urge you to kindly take the severest action against the Bajrang Dal and VHP by applying the necessary procedures to check their terroristic activities.

With regards,


BRINDA KARAT
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Sunday, September 7, 2008

[Marxistindia] polit bureau communique

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

Press Communiqué

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) met in New Delhi on September 6-7, 2008. It has issued the following statement:

Surrender on Nuclear Deal

The waiver by the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) for India represents another surrender by the Manmohan Singh government in its journey to operationalise the Indo-US nuclear deal. The NSG waiver is neither clean nor unconditional. As in the case of the 123 Agreement and the IAEA Safeguards Agreement, the waiver by the NSG, organised by the United States, will bind India to all the conditions set out in the Hyde Act. All these steps have gone against the Prime Minister's assurances to parliament in August 2006.

The voluntary moratorium on testing has now become part of a multilateral commitment. Restrictions on transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technology will continue. India has become part of the non-proliferation regime which it always held to be discriminatory. The NSG waiver is in alignment with the 123 Agreement and India will not get any better terms from other countries supplying fuel or reactors.

The country is being subjected to an orchestrated barrage of propaganda terming the NSG waiver as a `historical' one. The reality has been mercilessly exposed by the US State Department's interpretation of the 123 Agreement which was sought to be kept secret. The people of India will see through the veil of propaganda and recognize the truth that the Manmohan Singh government has compromised India's national interests.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) will rally all the democratic and patriotic forces to fight back this strategic alliance with the United States and the surrender the nuclear deal entails. (Detailed statement issued separately)

Tata Project at Singur

The Polit Bureau heard a report on the situation in Singur consequent to the disruption caused by the Trinamool Congress-led agitation at the site of the Tata motor plant. Talks are being held through the Governor and the issue should be resolved, so that the Tata motor project goes ahead and measures taken for the rehabilitation of those affected.

Price-rise

The Inflation rate (WPI) continues to remain over 12% with food prices rising. The relentless price-rise exposes the failure of the Central Government to take the corrective measures required to bring some relief for the people. The easing of international oil prices have had no effect on domestic inflation because of the high indirect taxes on petroleum products, which the UPA Government has stubbornly refused to reduce. The CPI (M) reiterates its demand to rescind the recent price hikes of diesel, petrol and cooking gas. CPI (M) also demands a reversal of the cuts in foodgrains allocations to the States and restoration of their quotas, in view of the better foodgrain procurement by public agencies this year.

The Planning Commission had constituted an Expert Committee under Prof. Tendulkar to review the flawed poverty estimates, which currently form the basis of the Targeted PDS. This Committee has failed to complete the review process so far and the inordinate delay is perpetuating the use of flawed poverty estimates for the PDS, leading to the exclusion of a large section of the poor from the PDS net at a time of high inflation. CPI (M) reiterates its demand for universalizing the PDS and delink all schemes for employment, health and education from the flawed poverty estimates.

Orissa Violence

The savage violence on the Christian community in Orissa by the RSS led sangh parivar, specifically the VHP and the Bajrang Dal is a national shame. The perpetrators of the violence have been provided patronage by the BJP as a coalition partner in the Orissa Government. It has added a black page in the shameful record of State connivance in violence against minority communities where the BJP has been in power. For over a fortnight Christians have been attacked, many of them brutally killed, thousands of homes burnt, churches and prayer halls reduced to ashes and yet the perpetrators of these crimes are free to roam around even today threatening the Christian community of further violence unless they renounce their faith. The Central Government has failed to act within the constitutional framework to direct the State Government to provide security to the community. It has remained virtually a mute spectator. CPI(M) demands steps to halt the violence in Orissa, full compensation and security to the affected community.

Strong Action Against Bajrang Dal

Earlier the Bajrang Dal has been indicted by official agencies including the anti-terrorist squad in Maharashtra of making bombs in a plan to incite communal violence. In Kanpur also recently two Bajrang Dal activists were killed in an explosion while making bombs. The CPI(M) demands that the central Government end its soft approach to the terrorist like activities of this organization and in the light of further evidence from Orissa, take stringent action against them.

WTO Talks

There are reports that in the last WTO mini-ministerial conference, out of the 20 issues 17 were resolved. These include issues affecting our national interests relating to the steep farm subsidies in the USA, regulating the green box subsidies and customs duties on imports. Only on three issues there was no agreement, related to the Special Safeguards Mechanism (SSM) on agricultural imports,cotton subsidies by USA and intellectual property.

The country should know the status of the issues that have been decided and those that are yet to be resolved. The Polit Bureau therefore demands that the government issue a white paper on this matter.

Call Parliament Session

The Polit Bureau expressed its strong disapproval of the way in which the UPA government has done away with the monsoon session of Parliament which should have begun on August 11. The government has now decided to hold a truncated session from October 17 and to do away with the winter session altogether. It is apparent that the government is afraid to face Parliament after the dubious way in which it got the trust vote.

The Polit Bureau demanded the immediate convening of the monsoon session. It should be followed by the holding of the regular winter session.

The President of India should advise the government not to abrogate Parliament's rights and functions in this brazen fashion.

Bihar Floods

The Polit Bureau expressed grave concern at the devastating floods in Bihar, the worst in its history, due to the Kosi river changing its course. It criticised the Central Government for its delayed response in tackling the disaster, given its enormous magnitude. Deployment of the army on a large scale is required.

The Polit Bureau approved plans for sending relief and medical teams to camps to be run by the Party in Bihar. The Polit Bureau exhorted all Party units to collect funds for the relief work.

Next Central Committee Meeting

The next meeting of the Central Committee will be held on October 12, 13 and 14, 2008 at Kolkata.

eom
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[Marxistindia] NSG WAIVER -- ANOTHER SURRENDER

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

Press Statement

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

On NSG Waiver: Another Surrender

The NSG waiver opening the door to nuclear trade for India after a three-day long meeting is neither clean nor unconditional and reflects the continuous concessions that India has made on this issue. Starting from the joint statement of July 18, 2005, India has given in steadily to US pressure, starting with the 123 Agreement, the IAEA safeguard and now finally the NSG.

The text of the waiver has converted the voluntary moratorium on testing into a multilateral committment. India has now agreed that any fuel supply agreement will be subject to periodic NSG review and subject to India's moratorium on testing. While India clearly does not have fuel supply assurances as claimed by the Government, the Safeguards on India's nuclear facilities will be in perpetuity. The restrictions on Enrichment and Reprocessing technologies will in effect continue, as prescribed in the Hyde Act, India Government's statements to the contrary not withstanding. The Hyde Act conditions will continue to bind India and its civilian nuclear program.

The Para 3 of the waiver text makes it clear that the Separation Plan outlined in July 18, 2005 and the Foreign Minister's statement of September 5, form the basis of the waiver. All bilateral agreements including the 123 Agreement are also a part of the para 3. The full implications of the 123 Agreement, which the Indian Government had hidden from the people, are now public after the State Department statement to the US Congress have been released by Berman, the Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Congress. It is clear from para 3 that all other Governments will now align with the 123 Agreement and India will not get any better terms from other countries supplying fuel or reactors.

With the Foreign Minister's statement of September 5, India has now committed itself to aligning with international efforts to "limit the spread ENR (enrichment and reprocessing) equipment or technologies to states who do not have them", an obvious reference to Iran and committing India to join the US efforts to deny Iran the fuel cycle. Joining US efforts on Iran is one of the conditions of the Hyde Act. With the September 5 Statement, India is now fully a party to the non-proliferation regime, which it has always held to be discriminatory and therefore unstable. Like all other nuclear weapon states, India will henceforth pay only lip service to the disarmament agenda.

On Enrichment and Reprocessing, the reference to NSG Guidelines paras 6&7 in para 3 a) makes clear that the restrictions on transfer of such technologies will continue. The National Statements of various countries including the assurances given by the US in NSG that it is not contemplating such transfers reinforces the paras 6&7 of the Guidelines. In addition, the reference to GOV/1621 in the waiver para 2 b) also ensures that India cannot withdraw its facilities from safeguards. It might be noted that adherence by India to GOV/1621 of IAEA is also a part of the Hyde Act.

Though India is not part of the NSG it has also agreed to an open-ended commitment that it will abide by all NSG guidelines including future changes irrespective of what these changes might be. Though the NSG Chairman may confer with India (the Waiver states "the Chair is requested to consult with India) on changes to the guidelines, India cannot participate in the NSG decision-making. It may be noted that the Hyde Act in Sec. 104 (b) (6) requires commitment of unilateral adherence to NSG guidelines as part of the presidential determination before the 123 Agreement is approved.

Similarly India has also agreed to abide by an Additional Protocol with the IAEA that is yet to be even finalised, let alone signed, as part of the basis for the waiver.

As in the Hyde Act Presidential review of India's actions, the NSG will also closely monitor and review all nuclear transactions by regular exchange of information on all nuclear transfers with India. Further every plenary of the NSG will be an occasion for a full exchange of information regarding nuclear transfers (para 3c of the waiver text).

By Para 3e of the waiver text any NSG member may choose to call for consultations regarding the implementation of the terms of the waiver if they feel that occasion has arisen to do so.

It is clear that the terms of the NSG waiver afford every opportunity for any NSG country (through consultations under Para 16 of the NSG guidelines) to block separate deals that India may contemplate with countries like France or Russia that offer more advantageous terms on issues like cooperation in uranium enrichment and reprocessing.

As the NSG is an opaque body, one is not aware of what additional terms India might have agreed to. Given its track record for deliberate misinformation, as seen in the 123 Agreement, this is cause for concern. For example, what are the implications of the "auxiliary measures" that countries such as Austria have been referring to in the NSG? Are they additional NSG guidelines that are being framed keeping India in mind? It must be kept in mind that NSG is only a nuclear cartel and unlike international agreements, can change its waiver terms unilaterally.

The Hyde Act watered down many of the initial commitments in the 2005 Manmohan Singh-Bush Statement. The passage of the NSG waiver on the current terms is designed to make India adhere more firmly to the terms and conditions of the Hyde Act.

eom
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Thursday, September 4, 2008

[Marxistindia] Manmohan Singh Govt Exposed -- Prakash Karat

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
04 September 2008

Press Statement

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

Manmohan Singh Government Exposed

The Prime Minister has repeatedly assured the Parliament and the people of the following:

1.. Full co-operation on civilian nuclear technology, which would include the complete fuel cycle.
2.. We are placing our facilities in perpetuity as reciprocally US is also guaranteeing fuel supply in perpetuity. In case the US defaults on its fuel supply agreement (as it did in Tarapur), it will ensure that other members of the NSG will take over its obligations.
3.. Will have the right to build strategic reserves
4.. Will not compromise India's strategic interest
5.. Any termination of the agreement will be only after at least a year long process of consultation.

The Answers given by the US State Department to the House Foreign Affairs Committee makes it clear that on all these counts, contrary to what the PM and the UPA Government has said, the 123 Agreement contains provisions that are quite different.

(1) Answers to Questions 4,5 and 6 makes clear that the US will not give India access to either technology for enrichment & reprocessing (E&R) including the heavy water production or dual use technology. This means India can import reactors and uranium but cannot access any technology that will help in either the fast breeder program or the fuel cycle. Moreover, while India does not get access to such sensitive technology, it will open its fuel cycle and other such facilities for the civilian sector to intrusive IAEA Safeguards. This is nothing but a scheme designed to make India completely dependent on imported equipment and badly damage indigenous nuclear technology development.

(2) We had earlier stated that the fuel supply assurances that are in the 123 Agreement only covered market failures and did not pertain to a termination of the agreement. Question 15 of the Answers states:

"It is the understanding of the United Sates Government that the use of the phrase 'disruption of fuel supplies' in the article 5.6 of the 123 Agreement is meant to refer to disruptions in supply to India that may result through no fault of its own. Examples include (but are not limited to) a trade war resulting in the cutoff of supply, market disruptions in the global supply of fuel, and the potential failure of an American company to fulfill fuel supply contracts. We believe the Indian government shares our understanding of this provision. "

It is evident that the Indian Government was fully aware that the fuel supply assurances did not cover a termination of the 123 Agreement and they have deliberately mislead the country. The IAEA Safeguards are in perpetuity while the fuel supply assurances only cover market failures. The answer to Question 17 makes this even clearer. It states that the termination Clause 14 of the Agreement, if invoked, would make Article 5.6 (the so-called fuel supply assurance clause) "inapplicable".

(3) On strategic reserves, Answers 19, and 20 makes clear that the US has not agreed to India's building up of strategic reserves.

(4) Regarding the termination, the Left had stated that the termination clause in the 123 Agreement was not limited to India testing of nuclear weapons, but was an omnibus one allowing the US to immediately stop all nuclear supplies as and when it wants. This is now confirmed by the answers to questions 14, 17, 35 and 36 that the US can immediately stop all supplies and a nuclear test is only one such reason. This means that the US can stop all supplies even on extraneous reasons such as India's attitude to Iran. If India does not fall in line with the US on Iran, it could be construed to be a violation of its non-proliferation responsibilities and the US has the legal right under Article 14 to cease all cooperation. While the formal termination is with one year's notice, the cessation of all supplies is immediate and solely at the discretion of the US.

NSG Draft

The New Draft for the waiver on sanctions on nuclear trade placed before the NSG makes it clear that the Hyde Act conditions will be built into this waiver and not "clean" or "unconditional" as the UPA Government has lead the country to believe. The only issue being discussed is how explicit should these conditions be. In any case, unlike IAEA or the 123 Agreement, the NSG is a cartel and operates on its own rules. The inclusion of the 123 Agreement in the NSG draft means that all the above conditions are also built automatically into the NSG waiver.

eom
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Wednesday, September 3, 2008

[Marxistindia] Manmohan Singh Government Stands Exposed

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

Press Statement

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

Manmohan Singh Government Stands Exposed

The Chairman of the US House Foreign Affairs Committee, Howard L. Berman, has made public the correspondence between the US State Department and members of the US Congress on the Indo-US civil nuclear agreement. The US Congressmen had asked 45 questions to the Bush Administration seeking clarifications on various aspects of the agreement. The answers provided by the Bush administration was kept secret so far because it would have completely exposed the false claims being made by the Manmohan Singh Government before the Indian public regarding the terms of the nuclear deal. The 26-page letter made public yesterday reveals:

i. The US has given no binding fuel-supply assurance to India.

ii. There is no US consent to India's stockpiling of lifetime fuel reserves for safeguarded power reactors.

iii. Civil nuclear cooperation is explicitly conditioned to India not testing ever again.

iv. The US has retained the right to suspend or terminate supplies at its own discretion.

v. The letter makes clear that the 123 Agreement has granted India no right to take corrective measures in case of any fuel-supply disruption.

vi. The Bush administration's letter states that the 123 Agreement fully conforms to the Hyde Act provisions.

vii. The letter assures Congress that the US government will not assist India in the design, construction or operation of sensitive nuclear technologies, including enrichment and reprocessing.

The Left Parties had warned the UPA Government about these provisions in the notes submitted to the UPA-Left Coordination Committee, which have now been vindicated by this disclosure. Each of the commitments made by the Prime Minister in Parliament have been violated.

The Manmohan Singh Government stands thoroughly exposed before the country for compromising India's vital security interests. Proceeding with this deal will mortgage India's sovereignty and make India's civilian nuclear programme vulnerable to US blackmail for the next forty years.

CPI (M) demands that the UPA Government suspend all further moves to operationalise the anti-national nuclear deal.

eom
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