Don’t waste your votes, give it to us, Buddha tells BJP

In a new twist to the ongoing politics prior to the civic polls, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Wednesday asked BJP supporters to vote for the Marxists. Bhattacharjee made this appeal while addressing a public meeting in Bansdroni, on the southern fringe of the city.

“I appeal to those who support the BJP and vote for that party, do not spoil your vote. Vote for us, I assure you that we will work for the city,” said Bhattacharjee.

The BJP has fielded 92 candidates in the upcoming Kolkata Municipal Corporation elections and in the last parliamentary elections its vote share was 6.36 per cent. The party can play a vital role in the victory of any candidate in Kolkata and other civic bodies.

An angry BJP retaliated: “They have come to our doors with a begging bowl. It shows we are important to both the CPM and the Trinamool. Following the split between the Congress and the Trinamool over seat sharing, the Trinamool had also asked for our votes. They are mistaken because a BJP voter will never vote for any other party,” said Rahul Sinha, party’s state unit president.

Sources in the CPM said that the Congress has a 16 per cent vote share, but a section of Congress voters will vote for the Trinamool and thereby harm prospects of the Left Front candidates. “If a section of BJP voters cast their votes for the Left candidates, it will be easier for us to contest Trinamool candidates,” said a leader.

Former chief minister Jyoti Basu had appealed to the Congress supporters in the state to vote for the Left Front candidates in the Assembly bypolls held in December 2009. However, his appeal did not work and Left Front candidates were defeated in nine out of the ten constituencies.

Two more CPM workers killed by Maoists in Jungalmahal

The Maoists continued their mayhem against Marxists in Jungalmahal by killing two more CPM workers today.

In Dudhpatri village of West Midnapore, 20-year-old Sujit Mallot was hacked to death by suspected Maoists. According to a senior police officer, Mallot was killed early today by a group of 20-25 Maoists who attacked the house where Sujit and other party colleagues had taken shelter.

The Maoists had beaten up other CPM members too, who ran away from the area.

In another incident a body was found near the Bhalukbasa forest, which was later identified as that of Kamal Ahir, 38, resident of Kadambandhi village. Ahir was a CPM local committee member, who was abducted by Maoists three days ago. He was stabbed to death by the Maoists.

“It seems Ahir was picked up by PCAPA members who killed him later. However, no Maoists poster was found near the body,” said an officer.

Now, Buddha asks for BJP votes

In a new twist to the ongoing politics prior to the civic polls, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Wednesday asked BJP supporters to vote for the Marxists. Bhattacharjee made this appeal while addressing a public meeting in Bansdroni.

“I appeal to those who support the BJP and vote for that party, do not spoil your vote. Vote for us, I assure you that we will work for the city,” said Bhattacharjee.

The BJP has fielded 92 candidates in the Kolkata municipal election and in the last parliamentary elections its vote share was 6.36 per cent. The party can play a vital role in the victory of any candidate in Kolkata and other civic bodies.

An angry BJP retaliated: “They have come to our doors with a begging bowl. It shows we are important to both the CPM and the Trinamool. Following the split between the Congress and the Trinamool over seat sharing, the TMC had also asked for our votes. They are mistaken because a BJP voter will never vote for any other party,” said Rahul Sinha, party’s state unit president.

“If a section of BJP voters cast their vote for the Left candidates, it will be easier for us to contest TMC candidates,” said a CPI(M) leader.

Mamata Banerjee hits out at Leftists

New Delhi, Sept 16 (ANI): Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee hailed the good showing of Trinamool Congress in civic polls in Darjeeling district as victory over state-sponsored terrorism.

In the 47-member district council, the Trinamool Congress and the Congress combine bagged 15 seats each. The Left Front, led by the Communist Party of India (Marxists) won 17 seats.

“I think this is a victory of democracy against state-sponsored terrorism, the autocracy and every day they are making conspiracy against the United Progressive Alliance and the central government and the central ministers also. This is their habit. This fort was absolutely the red fort and you know how Darjeeling … it is a prestigious district. It is a very prestigious victory,” Banerjee told reporters in national capital New Delhi.

Banerjee also accused the State Government of not helping the Central Government’s efforts to curb Maoists.

“P. Chidambaram is very correct. He said he was trying his best but he was not getting any help from the State Government. When the Central Government is trying to do something, then the state police are giving information to the Maoists that the Central police are coming. They did not allow the Central police to come to the actual area where they exist,” said Banerjee.

Maoists have formally been labelled as a terrorist group by the Central Government. (ANI)

Anand Margis seeks judicial probe into killing of their monks in 1982

Kolkata, May 1 (ANI): Around 500 people belonging to Anand Marg, an occult sect, participated in a silent procession here on Thursday.

They were demanding a judicial inquiry into the killing of 17 monks and a nun allegedly by the Communist Party of India (Marxists) goons in 1982.

The procession was organised by the Ananda Marga Pracharaka Sangha (AMPS), to pay homage to the 17 monks and a nun who were killed on April 30, 1982 in Kolkata.

“We want judicial enquiry into this particular incident. This particular incident still remains in secrecy. Nobody knows what happened, who has killed. Nobody has been given punishment. We want that the culprit should be given punishment,” said Acharya Kalyenvaranada Avadhuta, public relation secretary, AMPS.

As a protest against what they term to be the CPI-M’s tyranny that claimed the lives of the 17 monks and a nun, the Anand Margis have been holding this silent rally every year on April 30.

Claiming to be a spiritual movement, Anand Marg founded by P R Sarkar in 1960, is viewed as a cult since certain rituals practised by its followers are unusual and these include the use of skulls and allied occult traditions.

Anand Marg had been banned by the Supreme Court after there was a hue and cry by the public over its followers practising rituals with human bones, daggers and even snakes in the open.

This organisation was accused of killing of Central Railway Minister L N Mishra at Samastipur in Bihar in 1975. In the same year, a couple of Anand Margis were also arrested for hurling a bomb at the Chief Justice of India, A N Ray at a traffic intersection, near the Supreme Court. (ANI)

Sonia campaigns jointly with Mamata Banerjee, slams Left parties

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Jangipur (West Bengal), Apr 27 (ANI): Congress President Sonia Gandhi, who is sharing the dais with Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee for the first time in eight years, slammed the Left parties for their failure to support the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) Government on the nuclear deal issue. /pp
To meet the growing energy requirement, we went for the nuclear deal, but the Left parties opposed us saying it was not required, Sonia Gandhi said while addressing a joint election rally in Jangipur in West Bengal’s Murshidabad District on Monday./pp
Gandhi also welcomed Mamata Banerjee’s decision to tie-up with the Congress./pp
We are happy to have Mamata here with us, Gandhi added./pp
Gandhi had last shared the platform with Mamata Banerjee in Kolkata during the state Assembly Elections in 2001. /pp
Sonia Gandhi also criticized the West Bengal Government for ‘misusing’ the benefits of Central schemes./pp
The state government has not utilized central funds meant for the poor and the downtrodden, but had implemented certain central programmes that suited needs of their party leaders, she added./pp
The Congress president also lashed out at the Marxist government for forcibly trying to ‘grab’ poor farmers’ land at Singur and Nandigram. /pp
They (Marxists) have unleashed untold atrocities on the people in the name of acquisition of land for industry, she added./pp
Without naming the ‘Third Front’ and ‘Fourth Front’, Gandhi criticized the hordes of prime ministerial aspirants. /pp
These days it a fashion to aspire for prime ministership. But the Congress’ aim is to serve the country and its people, she added./pp
The Congress president also lashed out at the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), the Samajwadi Party (SP) and Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) for their purpose to get the chair of the Prime Minister. /pp
Gandhi appealed people to vote for the Congress-TMC combine to form a secular and stable government at the Centre./pp
I am sure you will vote for the combine to ensure a stable and secular government at the Centre, she added./pp
Meanwhile, Mamata Bannerjee said that she was confident that the Congress-TMC alliance would be able to oust the Left from the state./pp
On the occasion, senior Congress leader and External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee announced plans to set up an Aligarh Muslim University in Murshidabad District. (ANI)/p

CPI-M will not support Congress under any circumstances: Karat

London, April 14 (IANS) Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) general secretary Prakash Karat has ruled out supporting any Congress-led alliance after the elections – ‘whatever the circumstances’.

The Marxists will not support the Congress even if it were the only way to prevent the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) from coming to power, Karat told the BBC’s Hindi-language service in an exclusive interview.

‘That (preventing the BJP’s return to power at any cost) was our slogan in the 2004 elections. This time we are going to the people with an appeal to defeat the Congress as well.’

Karat said his stance had won the approval of the CPI-M Central Committee and denied the Third Front was an opportunistic alliance.

‘We have a shared ideology on [anti-economic reform] and we are all opposed to a strategic relationship with the US. Also we favour a truly federal structure in a country as vast as India.’

Ruling himself out of the race for prime ministership, he said, ‘Many leaders are competent. From our point of view we have no pre-conceived notions on who the prime minister should be. We are more concerned about the policies of the next government.’

‘I am very happy being the party general secretary and would rather retain this than have any other role in public life,’ he added.

CPI-M fumes at Congress’ West Bengal report card, Pranab

Kolkata/New Delhi, April 6 (IANS) A day after senior Congress leader Pranab Mukherjee released a report card on the Left’s three decades of ‘misrule’ in West Bengal, the Marxists refuted the findings and, launching an attack on Mukherjee, wondered at his ‘doublespeak’.

Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) leader Biman Bose, speaking in Kolkata, expressed surprise over the ‘development report card’ released by Mukherjee, the West Bengal Pradesh Congress president.

‘He is an experienced politician and a professor. I don’t know how he could give all wrong information about West Bengal,’ Bose, the state Left Front chairman, said at a press conference here.

Citing a number of newspaper reports, he said: ‘I could not correlate the information Mukherjee provided Sunday and the statements he had delivered during various programmes with Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee just a month ago.’

‘I am sure somebody must have given him the false figures and asked him to read that out in front of the media as per the party’s instruction.’

Asked if Mukherjee was playing a ‘dual role’ before the coming Lok Sabha polls, Bose declined to comment.

‘I just can’t say he’s playing a dual role. But he should not deliver such wrong information without cross-checking it properly,’ he said, adding that none of the figures provided by Mukherjee was correct.

The report titled ’30 years of Left Front rule in West Bengal: A development report card’ alleges that the CPI-M-led government failed to provide proper healthcare and education or generate employment in the state.

In New Delhi, CPI-M politburo member Brinda Karat expressed the communists’ ire over the report and at Mukherjee.

‘Pranab Mukherjee appreciated the West Bengal government on Feb 2 and March 2 for undertaking development programmes. This shows his doublespeak. He now has to answer why this double standard in just one month,’ she said.

Refuting the findings, Brinda Karat said: ‘The Congress document shows that the West Bengal government has been doing well enough on the indices of poverty, hunger and malnutrition and education. Selective statistics should not be looked and used for political motives.’

Taking on the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA), she said: ‘What is the report card of the UPA? Did they tell the people that Maharashtra has the highest number of farmer suicides. The Congress party has entirely ignored the agriculture factor and plight of farmers.’

Brinda Karat also criticised the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) for writing off the Third Front.

‘Both Congress and BJP have tried to scuttle the Third Front, but it finds regular mention by them. This shows their desperation for power. Their efforts of ensuring a two-party system has failed,’ she added.

Referring to the BJP fielding Jaswant Singh from Darjeeling and the party aligning with the Gorka Janamukti Morcha (GJM) for the polls, Brinda Karat said: ‘The BJP has fielded senior leader Jaswant Singh from Darjeeling constituency on the shoulders of an outfit which is out to divide Bengal on the basis of ethnic and linguistic identity.’

She also released the CPI-M’s audio CD for the poll campaign called ‘Aaina’.

Nandigram still simmers

The Talpati canal is still the border. On one side in Nandigram town, dotted by Trinamool Congress flags.

On the other is Khejuri, where the CPM’s hammer and sickle sign is visible everywhere. On the surface the area may appear normal, with its green paddy fields and bustling markets, but a little probing reveals that the wounds inflicted two years ago have yet to heal.

Nandigram forms part of the Tamluk Lok Sabha constituency, a CPM bastion which it has never lost since 1980, except in the 1996 Lok Sabha polls. For the last three terms it has been held by Laxman Seth, a CPM strongman of the area.

But this time may be different. In a hard fought contest the Trinamool’s Fatima Bibi wrested the Nandigram assembly seat in a by election in January this year.

Earlier the Trinamool had also won a sweeping victory in the panchayat polls. While voters in the other assembly segments of Tamluk may yet neutralise Nandigram and enable Seth to retain his seat, the contest will certainly not be easy for him.

The dramatic change of attitude towards the CPM follows the gory skirmishes of 2007, when local farmers dug in their heels and refused to part with their lands for an ambitious 10,000 acre chemical hub the CPM state government wanted to build there. Led by the Trinamool, under the banner of the Bhoomi Uchched Pratirodh Committee (BUPC), they cut off government access to the area, proclaiming it a liberated zone, refusing to relent even after the government announced it was abandoning its industrial plans there.

First in March 2007 and again in November, CPM cadres, backed by the state police, stormed the area and finally broke the BUPC’s resistance. “A bullet hit my throat while I was trying to rescue my sister on March 14,” said Abhijit Samanta of Sonachura village.

“I was in hospital for nine months, operated upon eight times. Even now I’m far from fit.

” His family used to be a CPM supporters, but no longer. “After what the Marxists did here, we have decided we want to throw them out of Nandigram,” said his brother Debjit.

Many are convinced that the CPM still has scores to settle with Nandigram residents. “If the CPM wins, it will try to paint Nandigram red again,” said Sankharani Gol, who was hospitalized for 25 days after CPM goons beat him up during the agitation days.

GJM joins NDA on Gorkhaland promise, but allies unhappy

New Delhi/Siliguri, April 3 (IANS) Promising a separate state of Gorkhaland, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Friday got a new ally in the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM), which is set to join the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) and support BJP candidate Jaswant Singh for the Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat in West Bengal.

Though the development lifted weeks of suspense over GJM’s political stand in the upcoming polls, it drew sharp reaction from its allies in the Darjeeling hills, who said supping with the BJP would not help the cause of Gorkahland.

Talking to reporters after the release of the party’s manifesto in New Delhi, BJP president Rajnath Singh said his party had always stood for smaller states, and had during the NDA rule created Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand and Jharkhand. ‘In future, we will work for Gorkhaland and Telangana (in Andhra Pradesh),’ he said.

The GJM is spearheading an agitation for what it calls Gorkhaland, a separate state to be formed out of Darjeeling and the foothills of the Himalayas that are now a part of West Bengal.

Singh said Jaswant Singh – the party’s leader in the Rajya Sabha – will be its candidate from Darjeeling.

Speaking at the same venue, BJP’s prime ministerial candidate L.K. Advani said the GJM decided to join the NDA after discussions with top Gorkhaland leaders.

GJM president Bimal Gurung and general secretary Roshan Giri have been camping in Delhi for the last two days to hold talks with the BJP leaders. The GJM, which earlier declared that parties or formations seeking its support for the Darjeeling seat would have to adopt a pro-Gorkhaland stance, had been deliberating with both the Congress and the BJP over the past few weeks.

At one point of time, the GJM even hinted at putting up its own candidate for Darjeeling.

The GJM leadership is understood to have impressed upon the BJP that aligning with it will prove profitable in around 10 seats spread over West Bengal and other neighbouring seats that have a significant Gorkha population.

However, in Darjeeling, Communist Party of Revolutionary Marxists (CPRM) expressed unhappiness at its ally GJM taking a unilateral decision to go with the BJP-led NDA.

‘Earlier, at an all-party meeting it was decided that a joint decision will be taken on this. But the GJM did not speak to us. We will hold a meeting Saturday to decide our next course of action,’ said CPRM central committee member I.K. Sharma.

Akhil Bharatiya Gorkha League (ABGL), a new GJM ally, said majority of the people in the hills did not like the BJP. ‘They will not vote for the BJP, which doesn’t have a base in Darjeeling,’ said ABGL central committee member Laxman Pradhan.

‘We will contact other parties and sit with them. The GJM has miscalculated.’

Pradhan said his party will also speak to Subhas Ghising, chief of the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF), who is now in neighbouring Jalapiguri district. ‘We will see if we can give a joint candidate.’

The state’s ruling Left Front major Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M), however, said it was not concerned at the latest development.

The Ghising-led GNLF was the dominant party in the hills till early last year, and ran the hill development body Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council (DGHC). However, the GNLF lost its clout to the GJM, which later used strongarm tactics to force Ghising out of the hills.

Since the 1990s, the Darjeeling seat has been won by the party that secures the backing of the dominant outfit in the hills.

Till the 2004 general elections, the GNLF was the determining factor in the seat. But this time the GJM’s backing is likely to make the BJP’s Jaswant Singh a formidable candidate in the constituency.

Kerala unit of Janata Dal-S in disarray

Thiruvananthapuram, April 1 (IANS) The Janata Dal-Secular, until recently an ally of the Left Democratic Front (LDF), is in trouble. One section has has quit the alliance while another wants to remain with the Marxists.

The problems confronting the JD-S came to the fore after its request that it be given the Kozhikode Lok Sabha seat was turned down by the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M), which heads the LDF.

The Kerala JD-S, led by media baron M.P. Veerendra Kumar, has over the years survived several splits. History is set to repeat itself with two of its five state legislators openly defying Kumar.

Kumar was elected to the Lok Sabha in 2004 from Kozhikode but the CPI-M told him this time to contest from Wayanad.

In protest, Kumar withdrew from the government of Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan JD-S nominee Mathew T. Thomas, Kerala’s transport minister. He also vowed to defeat LDF candidates all over Kerala.

On Wednesday, two legislators, former minister Thomas and Jose Thettayil, said they preferred to be with the LDF.

In New Delhi, JD-S spokesman Danish Ali announced that his party would continue in the LDF.

A delegation led by Thomas also met former prime minister H.D. Deva Gowda in Mangalore and asked him to convince Kumar to remain in the LDF.

K. Krishnankutty, the JD-S secretary general, told reporters that there was no going back on the decision of the state party to work against LDF candidates.

‘The CPI-M has ditched us. There is no question of reversing our decision,’ said Krishnankutty, a close aide of Kumar.