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No turning point

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  • In an article in which he points out the ‘flaws’ with the Congress’s campaign for Gujarat, Prakash Karat also hits out at L.K. Advani’s ‘hopes’. “If some of the secular opponents of the BJP were mistaken in underestimating the deep communal impact in Gujarat, the hopes of L.K. Advani that Gujarat marks ‘a turning point’ in national politics is also misplaced. Advani cannot have forgotten what happened in 2003. After the BJP’s victories in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh, Advani and the BJP leadership decided to go in for an early Lok Sabha election. They expected the momentum of the assembly elections to carry them back into office. Instead, to their surprise, they faced defeat. Just as the Congress party is being punished by the people in the states where it rules, the BJP should be apprehensive of what it will have to face in states like Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh that go to the polls later in 2008. The record of the BJP governments in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh is one of misrule and corruption; of policies brazenly promoting the interests of the big capitalists and contractors, intimidation of minorities and repression of popular movements. The BJP government in Rajasthan has set a dubious record of 47 police firings in which 43 people died, including 16 farmers. Gujarat has escaped the pendulum shift between the BJP and the Congress precisely because it is an exception. Though Advani keeps talking about making Himachal Pradesh and other BJP-ruled states another Gujarat, the reality is that the BJP has pathetically failed to prove that there is even a semblance that it is a ‘party with a difference’”.

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    Back to basics

    The editorial in the latest issue of People’s Democracy says that the attack on Christians in Orissa should be seen in the context of the BJP’s victory in Gujarat.

    It says “In January, the RSS ostensibly observing Golwalkar’s birth centenary unleashed communal disturbances in Bangalore, Mangalore, Gorakhpur, Jabalpur, Tirur in Kerala, Mandsaur in Madhya Pradesh etc. The year is ending with the organised attacks on the Christian minorities in the Kandhamal district in Orissa where 15 churches were burnt down and properties of Christian educational institutions destroyed... These attacks come soon after the Modi-led BJP victory in the Gujarat assembly elections. This victory gives a powerful impetus to the trend that we had noted in these columns last week, that is, the RSS/BJP’s return to its basics.”

    Caste in stone

    B.V. RAGHAVULU, Politburo member of the CPM, says the atrocities on dalits are worst in AP and the state ranks second in terms of discrimination all over India. “Even after 60 years of Independence, the conditions have not improved for dalits socially and economically. The Congress party ruled continuously for 35 years in the state, but did not effect changes in the conditions of dalits, who were its major supporters. When Indira Gandhi was defeated elsewhere in the country, she was elected with a thumping majority in the state due to the support of the dalits”.

    Raghavulu says that during the freedom movement many Congress leaders in Andhra Pradesh initiated social reforms in dalit colonies. They built schools and hospitals for the dalits. These leaders later joined the Communist movement.

    At Nandigram

    A report on a rally at Nandigram which was addressed by Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and Biman Bose says “The Nandigram imbroglio, said Buddhadeb, was a new and unwelcome experience in the thirty years of pro-people and pro-poor continuum of the Bengal Left Front government. It was an instance of the length the opposition was willing to go to try to embarrass the CPM and the LF government. The foray of bombs and the gun culture that marked the Maoists out was no politics, but murder and terror... What they ended up with was a division of the poor. Now that the forces of evil and anarchy are driven out of Nandigram in large measure, the people must join hands and take part in the democratic struggles and movements.”

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