BMS also opposes disinvestment of PSUs, but no joint action with other Central Trade unions.

Brijesh Upadhyaya, General Secretary BMS has called upon the BMS workers to organise ‘March to Delhi’ on 17th November 2017 demanding equal pay for equal work, social security for all workers and against disinvestment of PSUs etc. But it is also reported that BMS will not join the joint programme of three days dharna of the 10 Central Trade Unions – INTUC, AITUC, HMS, CITU, AIUTUC, TUCC, SEWA, AICCTU, UTUC and LPF along with All India Federations mostly on the same demands being organised from 9th November 2017.

A joint programme by all the Central trade unions including BMS is the need of the hour. It is to be noted that all the CTUs including INTUC and BMS organised joint programmes on the workers’ demands while Congress was in power.

Powerful Struggles alone can build an alternative – Sitaram Yechury

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” Secular Democracy in India has never come under such a severe strain as we are witnessing today. Only the fighting unity of the Indian patriots can overcome this challenge and take India forward towards the creation of a better India for our people. It is this unity in struggles of the vast majority of our people which will create the alternative people’s narrative to the current Modi narrative.” – Sitaram Yechury, General Secretary, CPI(M) in ‘People’s Democracy’ dated 13th August 2017.

Stop Manual Scavenging, the most degradation of human beings.

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Of course, there are laws in the country against manual scavenging. But in actual practice, it still continues in many parts of the country. Human beings are compelled to do this degrading job. Recently, in two incidents in the Delhi and a nearby place a total of 7 workers have been killed while cleaning the sewers. There are clear orders that machines should be used for the cleaning, but the Contractor and the Engineer of the Delhi Jal Board compelled them to clean it manually.

The government should order an inquiry in the matter and punish the culprits. The families of the dead workers should be financially compensated.

BJP got 89% of Corporate Donations!

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BJP has created history by managing to get 89% of the total political donations from the corporates in the country.
According to the report of the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), BJP got Rs. 705.81 crores ( in the donations of more than Rs. 20,000), while Congress got only Rs. 198.16 crore, NCP Rs. 50.73 and CPI(M) 1.89 crore. The total of such donations is Rs. 956.77 crores.

The corporates have donated maximum to BJP and they will ensure that they get maximum favours from the government. The decisions taken during the three years after Modi came in to power clearly show that the Corporates have been showered with benefits more than hundred times for the donation received from them.

This government is certainly a Government of the corporates, for the Corporates, by the corporates! Working class and the people at large has to realise this naked truth and fight for getting justice to the common people and the downtrodden.

PPP not suitable for Metro and Light Metro – E.Sreedharan

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The decision of the central government to make private participation mandatory for all metro projects has been severely criticised by E.Sreedharan, who has been the architect of most of the metro projects in the country.

Metro is a service to the people and not based on high profits. That is why the Delhi Airport Metro line which was handed over to Reliance did not function well and Reliance left it and escaped. Now again it has started running.

The government decision making private participation mandatory in Metro projects is sense less and has to be abandoned. Metro system can not be destroyed by the love of the government for the private corporates.

WFTU expresses solidarity with Iraqi workers

Iraq: WFTU in solidarity with the Iraqi workers and their federations against the new law on social security.
15 Aug 2017IRAQ, MIDDLE EAST
The World Federation of Trade Unions, which represents more than 92 million members in 126 countries all over the world, firmly supports the workers of Iraq, who are opposing the new law on social security approved on 1st of August 2017 by the Iraqi cabinet.

This law does not meet the international labor standards which protect the rights and needs of workers and retirees and appears to have been based on suggestions of the World Bank to the Iraqi government, pressuring the government to pass it as a pre-condition so that Iraq can receive new loans.

According to the Conference of Iraqi Federations and Workers Unions [CIFWU] the new law integrates the Pension and Social Security Fund with the National Pension Fund, raises the retirement age of workers from 63 to 65 in all work sectors, does not allow retired workers to access the privileges approved by Law No. 39 of 1971 and includes other negative regulations that seriously affect the lives of Iraqi workers.

As class oriented world trade union movement, we are joining our voice with the workers of Iraq and their Trade Union Federations, demanding the withdrawal of the draft law and we are calling them to continue their struggle for dignified work with social security rights.

Where is the Federalism? – Brinda Karat.

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I am giving below an article by Com. Brinda Karat on two incidents on Independence Day.
What Mohan Bhagwat’s I-Day Outing In Kerala Proves
                                                   –  Brinda Karat

On the 70th anniversary of independence, two incidents took place at opposite ends of the country, one in Kerala and the other in Tripura, which symbolize much of what is wrong with the functioning and approach of the present central regime and the politics it represents.

Let’s take the incident in Kerala first. Mohan Bhagwat, the RSS chief decided, that he was going to hoist the national flag in Kerala in a government-aided school in Palakkad district. There are certain protocols and rules that the central and state governments follow for the hoisting of the flag on ceremonial occasions.

 In Kerala, too, the concerned department issued necessary instructions on August 5, 2017, that Independence Day should be celebrated appropriately in all educational institutions. It stated that the national flag should be hoisted by the head of the institution.
This is a perfectly rational order and the state government is well within its rights to issue such an order. Mr. Bhagwat is not the principal of the school. The institution Mr. Bhagwat heads is far away in Nagpur. But Mr. Bhagwat chose to violate this order.
The UP government headed by Mr. Bhagwat’s chosen Chief Minister, Yogi Adityanath, had also issued a circular. It concerned the raising of the national flag followed by the singing of the national anthem in all madrassas in the State.
 They were warned of strict action if instructions were not followed. Principals were asked to film the function as evidence that the government’s instructions were being followed.

 As most of the press reported, this, in any case, what was being done for years in all UP schools including madrassas on Independence Day but it is quite normal for those inspired by Hindutva ideologies of the RSS to present a picture of minority-run institutions having to be coerced into respecting national emblems.

In UP, it was a highly-motivated circular; in Kerala, it was a normal one; but the governments of both states have every right to ensure its implementation. In Kerala, the order applies to everyone, not just Mr. Bhagwat. There was nothing to stop him from hoisting the flag at any other public place. So there is no question of Mr. Bhagwat being restrained from hoisting the flag as some media channels and papers have reported. No, Mr. Bhagwat is not the victim.

The question arises of why the RSS chief should come all the way to Kerala just to break a rule set by the state government. It is no secret that the RSS had strongly opposed the decision of the constituent assembly to choose the tricolor as the national flag.

It took 52 years after independence for the national flag to be unfurled by the RSS, and that too, only after the Vajpayee government took office. On the eve of independence, the official mouthpiece of the RSS, the Organiser, carried an article that stated “the people who have come to power by the kick of fate may give in our hands the tricolor but it will never be respected and owned by Hindus. The word three in itself is evil and a flag having three colors will certainly produce a psychological effect and is injurious to a country.”

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RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat unfurled the national flag at a school in Kerala’s Palakkad on Independence Day

The RSS has never disowned this understanding or its preference for the saffron flag as the national flag. So it was not love for the national flag which made Mohan Bhagwat go to that school in Kerala. What was he trying to prove?

 
That he is so powerful with his pracharak as Prime Minister that he can scoff at the orders of a state government which does not owe allegiance to his organization. In the context of the manufactured lies regarding the so-called victimization of RSS men by communists in Kerala, the RSS chief was being deliberately provocative against the LDF Government. It is a deliberate insult to the state government.


But that is not the only rule he broke. The second rule he violated concerns the national anthem. This time it was a rule of the central government. In 2002, the Vajpayee government adopted the Flag Code of India which specifies a detailed list of Do’s and Dont’s regarding the flag code and the conduct expected during ceremonial occasions.

 
 It was considered totally unnecessary by many at the time, but it became the rule of law. It has three parts. The second part details how educational institutions have to conduct ceremonies involving the unfurling of the flag.
 
 In section 2 clause 2.3 vi, it says “Flag salutation will be followed by the national anthem. Parade will be kept at attention during this part of the function.” But what happened in the Bhagwat-led function? It was not the national anthem, but Vande Mataram that was sung.
 

It was only after the assembly had started dispersing that suddenly someone reminded the school’s administration that the national anthem had not been sung! Everyone was called back and it was then sung. So much for the respect the RSS has for the national song.

 

Contempt for state government rules, utter hypocrisy and double standards – that’s what Bhagwat’s little outing on Independence Day showed.

In Tripura, it was another story. Here, the central government was directly involved in insulting an elected Chief Minister. Manik Sarkar, the Chief Minister, recorded his speech for broadcast on Independence Day with Doordarshan and All India Radio as is the usual practice.

 

 Shockingly, these organizations tried to censor his speech. When he refused to change a single word of it, the agencies refused to broadcast it. The letter sent to the office of the State AIR authorities states “..keeping in view the sanctity and solemnity attached with the occasion the broadcast is meant for the CEO Prasar Bharati was also consulted and the collective decision taken at Delhi advise that the broadcast may not go with its existing content.”

Manik Sarkar’s speech, available on the CPI(M) Facebook page, upholds constitutional values. It also posits the state government’s initiatives as opposed to the anti-people policies of the central government.

 
 Mr. Modi made certain claims. He criticized all governments before his as being corrupt. That is acceptable. But if an elected Chief Minister seeks to project the policies of his government, that is not allowed. This is the real face of the “cooperative federalism” that the Prime Minister claims to have established.
 

Who is this collective sitting in Delhi that has been given the power to stop the broadcast of a Chief Minister? Clearly the central government is trampling on the autonomy of DD/AIR and Prasar Bharati by such outrageous acts of censorship. This is an insult to the people of Tripura and to the rights of states.

While the Prime Minister was speaking from the ramparts of the Red Fort on democracy and good governance, on the ground, on that very day, these two incidents symbolized the wide gap between the hype and the reality.

(Brinda Karat is a Politburo member of the CPI(M) and a former Member of the Rajya Sabha .)

 
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Nobody to blame for Vemula’s death – Inquiry Commission

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The one man Inquiry Commission appointed by the government to inquire in to Hyderabad University research scholar Rohith Vemula, has has concluded in its report that no one was responsible for his death!

Wonderful report! Despite several proofs and evidences that Vemula was compelled to commit suicide due to the harassment and victimisation  of the University administration etc., the Commission has come to its present decision, which is nothing but a mockery of justice.

Is the judiciary subjugating  itself before the political masters?

Another Ministerial Group – this time for strategic disinvestment of PSUs

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Accepting the proposal of the ‘365 X 24 hours working’ Department of Disinvestment, the central government has constituted a Group of Ministers with Finance Minister, Minister for Road Transport and High Ways and Minister for Administrative Department to decide on the terms and conditions of the sale of the public sector units.

The Cabinet also approved empowered the Core Group of Secretaries to take policy decisions on the procedural issues of these strategic sales of PSUs.

It seems that the government wants to gift all the PSUs to the corporates before the 5 year term of the Modi Government is over.

Private participation mandatory for Metro Rail projects -Central Government.

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It seems that the Modi Government will go to any extent for helping the corporates and the big private business. The latest is the government order making it mandatory for any metro rail project to have private participation.

The Central Cabinet has adopted a new policy for expanding and regulating metro rail projects, in which it is mandatory for private participation. The success of the metro projects in Delhi, Kolkata  and other metro cities and the collections being received has been in the eyes of the corporates and private business for some time. The central government, which is always for enriching the corporates has now made this new policy of mandatory private participation in metro projects. It is to be read in connection with the privatisation of the hundreds of railway stations and handing over the huge land assets to them for minting money.

The policy also stipulates for profitable projects. Of course, when private participation is there, it should be profitable, since the corporates should not be made to lose their funds for social responsibility.