[nasional_list] [ppiindia] Indian communists hold power balance

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 01:35:55 +0100

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**http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/C12A9205-2C26-4730-B1EB-ADEF29558C70.htm

Indian communists hold power balance
       By Jagpreet Luthra in Delhi, India  


Thursday 05 January 2006, 8:02 Makka Time, 5:02 GMT    

           
            The left in India bats above its weight, says D Raja
           
     
     



In just one year, the political left in India has seen its influence grow to 
the point where it is now the power- broker in the United Progressive Alliance 
(UPA) coalition government of Prime MInister Manmohan Singh.


The four-party Left bloc, comprising the Communist Party of India-Marxist 
(CPM), the Communist Party of India (CPI), Forward Bloc (FB) and Republican 
Socialist Party (RSP), rules only three Indian states and is less than 
one-ninth of the 545-member people's house of parliament, the Lok Sabha.

Last year's parliamentary elections did not yield a clear winner, forcing the 
Indian National Congress (INC) at 145 seats, to ally with 14 regional parties 
and form the UPA.

But it still fell short of a simple majority in the Lok Sabha, paving the way 
for the Left bloc to hold the wild card. 

With its record 62 MPs, the left is considered the crutch on which the 
government stands, even though it has not been included in the UPA government.

D Raja, CPI National Secretary, said: "It is the first time that the left has 
emerged as an influential partner in governance. Today, its ideological and 
political influence is quite vast, way beyond its electoral strength."  

Leftist powerhouse

In June, the UPA cabinet cleared a proposal for the partial privatisation of a 
profit-making giant, Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited, one of the 13 such 
multi-million dollar units controlled by the government, only to shelve it 
later under the left's pressure. 

The left has forced a freeze on privatising such public sector units even 
marginally.

     
      Professor Aijaz Ahmed says the 
      left is making front page news
     

July saw the Left block flexing its muscle over a sensitive political issue. 
But for the pressure of the Left parties, the INC would not have removed 
powerful party members, Jagdish Tytler and Sajjan Kumar, from the government 
after an official commission of enquiry hinted at their involvement in the 1984 
genocide of Sikhs. 

Nearly 5000 Sikhs, India's second largest religious minority after Muslims, 
were massacred all over India, allegedly, with the overt and covert support of 
INC leaders, in the aftermath of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's assassination 
by two of her security guards - both Sikhs.

The left block clashed with the government for the second time in July over a 
deal Singh signed during his US trip - for the import of civilian nuclear 
technology. 

The left is opposed to any strategic tie-up with America.  

The following month, because of the left's vociferous protests in and outside 
parliament, multinational Honda Motors had to reinstate 57 workers it had 
earlier sacked. 

In September, the left forced the government to amend labour laws after it 
organised nationwide strikes of government employees protesting at job cuts and 
loss of pension benefits.   
 
In October, the Left mobilised the country's top scientists, retired diplomats 
and intellectuals to unanimously oppose the government's vote against Iran on 
the nuclear issue at the International Atomic Energy Agency's September 
meeting. 

This was followed by fire-and-brimstone public rallies on this issue for three 
long weeks in November, and the government had to finally commit itself against 
participating in any IAEA exercise that refers Iran to the UN Security Council.

India, which had earlier voted for the European Union-sponsored resolution 
condemning Iran for non-compliance with the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, 
lobbied for Iran at the IAEA's last meeting, mainly because of the Left's 
pressure.

Opposing US policies
 
Simultaneously, the Left bloc opposed India's joint air exercises with the US 
Air Force at the Kalaikund air base in West Bengal in November. Although the 
12-day operation did not face any physical disruption, scores of thousands of 
workers of the Left participated in the anti-America protests outside the 
airbase.
 
     
      Relatives of killed Sikhs protest 
      against the UPA government
     
In their latest row with the government, the Left parties have objected to the 
appointment of a pro-US security analyst K Subramanayam as chairman of a 
government task force on global developments. 

They claim the task force is the government's "underhand way of providing 
sustenance and rationale for the India-US strategic tie up".

In the ongoing session of parliament, the left is pressing for a formal debate 
on foreign policy and hopes to get a categorical commitment from the government 
on an independent foreign policy that keeps India firmly away from the US camp.

Power base

The left's political base is largely confined to the states of West Bengal 
(where it has been in government for a record 28 years), Tripura in the east 
and Kerala in the south. 

However, its opposition to the INC-led coalition government, especially in the 
past six months, has given the Left high visibility in the rest of the country.

     
      Jaipal Reddy, a minister from the
      Indian National Congress party
     
Aijaz Ahmed, visiting professor at Delhi's prestigious Jawaharlal Nehru 
University, the cradle of many left leaders in India, said: "Thanks to their 
vocal opposition to the INC government, news and views about the economy and 
India's foreign and defence policy - rather than contentious, communal issues - 
have moved to the front page today."

If the INC is uncomfortable about the Left's surging role in national politics, 
its leaders are careful not to show it.

Jaipal Reddy, senior INC minister in the UPA cabinet, said: "The Left parties 
took a very lofty position by extending support to a coalition led by the INC 
which is its main rival in all its three stronghold states, and they did it to 
protect and nurse the secular Indian polity.

"Our differences with the Left parties are not those of perspective but of 
detail," he said and described the INC-Left alliance as "solid and fairly 
stable".
 
Janaradhana Dwivedi, INC general secretary, agreed: "Our relationship with the 
Left parties is not as unhappy as it looks."

Tabs on government

The relationship between the INC and the Left has moulded the latter into the 
modicum of a government watchdog.

Providing checks and balances while also supporting the government, according 
to Ahmed, is "an onerous task". 

     
      Prakash Karat: Support for 
      government not zero-sum game
     
"At best, the Left parties are like a court of higher appeal to which [faulty] 
government decisions can be referred."

The Left may have also sidelined the main opposition group, the Bharatiya 
Janata Party (BJP), which led the country for six years until 2004.

"Agreement between the INC and the Left parties on neo-liberal policies is so 
great that the BJP cannot function as an effective opposition," said Ahmed.   

Prakash Karat, general secretary of the CPM that heads the Left block, said: 
"Our support to the government is not a zero-sum game. We have a commitment to 
the people of India, given before and after the election, that we will put in 
place a secular government - and keep it in place."

While enjoying its growing role in India's domestic and foreign policies, the 
Left keeps itself grounded in reality. "We are 10 years too far from power, 
even at the head of a coalition government," Karat said


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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