Strong need for revival of the Left movement in Pakistan: Pak Editorial

Lahore, Apr 26(ANI): Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif had recently highlighted a significant issue concerning the Left movement in Pakistan, when he questioned the silence of the intellectuals who had vowed to bring a revolution in the country in the 1970s.

Sharif also claimed that inequitable and unjust distribution of resources is responsible for the present economic downturn in Pakistan.

“Where have those left-wing revolutionaries gone?” The Daily Times quoted Sharif, as saying.

According to a leading daily in Pakistan, the present day situation is worrisome, as the country’s Left movement has died down and the government has failed to tackle the Afghan jihad and religious extremism.

“Despite many hurdles, the progressive and leftist forces remained steadfast and greatly contributed to our culture and literature. Unfortunately, because of the demonisation of communists, the Left movement in Pakistan died a slow, but painful death,” an editorial in the Daily Times said.

“The new generation has no idea about socialism and the contribution of the Left. The fault partly lies with the old leftists who failed to leave any accounts of why their movement actually failed,” it added.

It further stressed that Pakistan has a preponderance of centrist political parties or right-wing parties, and to balance the political system there is a strong need for the revival of the Left.

“It is the only way to confront the religious bigots, bring a semblance of normalcy in our society, and revisit the political, economic and social paradigm of the Left for solutions different from a perennially crisis-ridden capitalist system,” the editorial said. (ANI)

Ex-King Gyanendra”s statement on monarchy a daydream, say Nepali leaders

Kathmandu, Mar 25 (ANI): Most Nepali leaders have described a recent statement by former Nepal monarch King Gyanendra that “the monarchy hasn”t completely ended” as a daydream.

Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal said on Thursday: “It is only a day dream to say that the monarchy still exists in the country. So, the meeting did not discuss about his remarks.

Tarai Madhes Loktantrik Party (TMLP) Chairman Mahantha Thakur expressed surprise over the former king”s remark and joked that the former king might have made such remarks in delusion.

Meanwhile, UCPN (Maoist) Chairman Narayan Kaji Shrestha claimed that the latest statement by former King Gyanendra has made it clear that counter revolutionaries are conspiring in the country.

“The deposed king gave his recent statement with the support from counter revolutionary forces, Kantipur quoted him as saying.

He remarked that yesterday”s statement of the ex-monarch that the monarchy could resurrect is an audacious attempt to disrespect the people.

Former king in an interview with a private television channel on Wednesday aid it is hypothetical to say that the monarchy has been abolished in the country.

The former king said that he does not think that the monarchy has ended. “While turning the pages of the country”s history, there are ups and downs..,” he said, adding that people will decide considering this and (all should) take this up.

In February 2005, Gyanendra Shah sacked Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and started ruling directly.

Following the royal takeover, the seven major political parties formed a broader alliance and joined hands with the rebels Maoists signing a 12-point understanding which paved way for the 2006 April movement (Janandolan II ) that eventually pulled down monarchy and carved out Constituent Assembly polls.

The 240-years monarchy got officially abolished in the first meeting the Constituent Assembly of May 28, 2008 and the country was baptized a republic. (ANI)

In Bihar even Maoists are played by casteism

Gaya (Bihar), Sep 14 (ANI): Rebels from a Maoist group in Bihar recently quit and joined another group after they alleged that the former group had high caste ideology.

Defected activists of the Communist Party India (Maoist), which operates in and around Bihar and Jharkhand, allege that the group had drifted away from communist ideology and they never worked for the betterment of farmers and peasants.

Caste issues had created a rift among the cadres, which prompted the activists to defect to the Sashastra People’s Morcha (Armed People’s Front), another Maoist group.

“We have come out to fight against the CPI (Maoist). They have caste issues inside the group. They are also against the locals hence we want to support us in return,” said Paramjeet, a commander of the front.

However, the (Maoist) said that many of the renegades lacked the revolutionary spirit.

“These men are not revolutionaries and that’s the reason they keep commenting like this. They get drifted to other parties and carry out such incidents,” said Advani, a leader of the CPI (Maoist).

Police are apprehensive that the law and order situation in the region could worsen if the new group starts revenge killing, inviting retaliation after the split.

Maoists have formally been labelled as a terrorist group by central government, which gives security forces more enforcement powers. (ANI)

1ST LEAD: Strong explosion rocks central Athens

Athens – A strong explosion shook central Athens after a car bomb went off Thursday on a busy avenue, causing serious damage but no injuries, the state news agency said.

The car bomb exploded outside the building of the State Property Company, a short distance from Athens’ central police headquarters and Greece’s supreme court, damaging nearby cars and buildings.

There was no warning prior to the explosion and no group claimed responsibility for it.

Greece has been plagued by daily bombings and arson attacks on banks and multinational businesses since the shooting of a teenager in December, which sparked the worst riots the country has seen in decades.

Experts fear that the militant group Revolutionary Struggle, which recently claimed responsibility for bomb attacks on two Citibank branches, and the new Sect of Revolutionaries have recruited fresh members since those riots and have acquired large quantities of arms and explosives.

Revolutionary Struggle has claimed responsibility for a number of attacks against government offices and police, including a rocket attack against the US embassy in Athens in 2007.

The violence has embarrassed Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis’ government, which has been criticized for its inability to protect citizens. dpa

China plans new stage show on Karl Marx’s Das Kapital

London, Mar 18 (ANI): China is reportedly planning to adapt Karl Marx’s Das Kapital into a new stage show.

Though revolutionaries have disregarded the bourgeois art form, the show’s producers insist that in the confident, modern-day People’s Republic, opera is a novel way to explain the proletariat’s triumph in the class struggle.

“The particular performance style we choose is not important, but Marx’s theories cannot be distorted,” the Telegraph quoted director He Nian as saying during an interview with China’s Wen Hui Bao newspaper.

He, best known for a stage adaptation of a martial-arts spoof, plans to open the production in Shanghai next year, and will borrow elements from Broadway musicals and Las Vegas shows.

There will, however, be no trivialisation of the book’s core messages: an economist from a local university has been asked to ensure that it remains intellectually respectful of Marxist doctrine.

To that end, audiences can expect a storyline that appears to be only marginally racier than the original Das Kapital, a dense, 1,000-page tract which has traditionally tested the commitment of even the most ardent Communist reader.

The opera’s plot will involve a business where workers begin to realise their boss is exploiting them. They then embrace the Marxist theory of surplus value.

Far from uniting to overthrow the established order, though, some of the chorus line mutiny, others continue as they are, while some engage in collective bargaining. He insists it will be “fun to watch”. (ANI)