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Millions to join one-day, all-India general strike
By Keith Jones
14 December 2006
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Millions of workers across India will participate today in
a one-day, nationwide general strike called by the Left Front-aligned
Trade Union Sponsoring Committee to oppose the neo-liberal policies
of Indias United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government.
The strike is testimony to mounting popular opposition in both
the city and countryside to privatization, deregulation, corporate
tax cuts, the dismantling of public and social services and agricultural
price supports, and the diversion of public funds from agriculture
to business-backed infrastructure projectsi.e., to the program
all Indian governments, Union and state, have pursued since 1991.
But if the progressive potential of this mounting opposition
is to be realized, it is necessary for socialists to bluntly state
what is: Todays protest is not aimed at developing an independent
political movement of the working class to challenge the bourgeoisie
and its plans to make India a center of cheap-labor manufacturing,
business-processing, and research for the world capitalist market.
Rather it is a maneuver on the part of the Left Front, a parliamentary
alliance dominated by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPM]
and its sister Stalinist party, the Communist Party of India [CPI].
This maneuver has a double-purpose: to shackle the working
class to the UPA, which depends for its survival on the Left Fronts
parliamentary support and to provide a political cover for the
Lefts Fronts own role in imposing the economic reform
program of big business in the three states where, under various
labels, it forms the governmentWest Bengal, Kerala, and
Tripura.
On September 29, 2005, more than 60 million workers and toilers
participated in a similar national strike.
Since then, the Congress Party-led UPA government has accelerated
the pace of neo-liberal reform. It has thrown open
the retail sectorthe countrys second largest employerto
foreign investment, initiated Special Economic Zones where companies
are to enjoy massive tax concessions and where normal work standards
and worker-rights are to be waived, and pressed forward with plans
to rewrite the countrys labor laws so as to make it easier
for companies to contract-out work, layoff workers, and close
plants.
In pursuit of a strategic partnership with US imperialism,
the UPA has toed the Bush administrations line on Irans
nuclear program and made only the lamest criticism of Israel for
last summers invasion and carpet-bombing of Lebanon. Under
the UPA, the Indian state spends less than 1 percent of GNP on
health care and barely 3 percent on education, while pouring billions
into the military build-up that the corporate and political elite
views as vital to securing India world-power status.
Yet now, no less than 15 months ago, the Stalinists insist
that there is no question of withdrawing their support for the
UPA government. Declares CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta, We
want to bring the government to its senses.
The real character of the Left Front and it relations with
big business have been demonstrated by recent events in West Bengal.
West Bengal Chief Minister and CPI (M) Politburo member Buddhadeb
Bhattacharjee has vowed to use the police and courts to ensure
that the strike in no way impacts on the states burgeoning
information technology (IT) and information technology-enabled
service (ITES) sector and successfully pressed the CPM-affiliated
Center of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) to abandon a plan to stage
a token walkout of a small number of IT-ITES workers.
On Tuesday, Bhattacharjee told the press, As far as I
know, no one in the IT sector will join or observe the strike.
No one from outside, or any outsider, will be allowed to do any
picketing in front of IT offices. No one will be allowed to prevent
anyone from joining work. Such things will not be tolerated by
the government.
The Left Front government, added Bhattacharjee, will assist
in arranging transport for IT-ITES workers, since public transport
will be paralyzed by the strike.
The IT-ITES bosses complained vehemently after the one-day
strike in 2005 disrupted their operations. Bhattacharjee, who
has openly proclaimed his governments commitment to placating
investors, responded by publicly pledging that no similar disruption
will ever be allowed in West Bengal.
The corporate media has lavished great attention on whether
Bhattacharjee will fulfill his pledge, seeing it as a crucial
test of the Left Fronts readiness to enforce the dictates
of capital.
In 2002, the West Bengal government became the first state
government in India to declare the IT-ITES sector a public utility,
a designation which greatly restricts workers rights, including
the right to strike. In the run-up todays protest, Jyoti
Basu, the CPM senior statesman and former West Bengal Chief Minister,
has been urging that the restrictions on worker rights in the
IT-ITES sector be further tightened by declaring it an emergency
service. Such a designation would effectively make all work
stoppages illegal.
Recent weeks have also seen West Bengals Left Front government
using the repressive powers of the state to stamp out protests
against the expropriation of prime agricultural land so that it
can be sold off at a bargain price to the multinational automaker
Tata Motors. The government invoked Section 144 of the Criminal
Code, a draconian law crafted by the British colonial state, to
outlaw all meetings and protests in the environs of Singur and
to ban outsiders from visiting the town. Then it unleashed
the police against those, including poor peasants and sharecroppers,
who were protesting the expropriation.
These actions of the ostensibly Marxist West Bengal
government lend critical political legitimacy to the offensive
the Indian bourgeoisie has mounted on worker rights through the
judiciary. Time and again, over the past decade the courts have
issued rulings expanding managerial powers and illegalizing strikes
and other forms of popular protest.
Among the demands being raised by the unions in todays
strike is that the Indian government take legislative action to
reverse a 2003 Supreme Court ruling that public sector workers,
and possibly all workers, have no constitutionally-protected right
to strike.
The CPM and CPI justify their propping up of a coalition led
by the Congressthe historic party of the Indian bourgeoisiewith
the claim that it is susceptible to mass pressure. As evidence
of this, they point to the governments ostensible program,
the National Common Minimum Program (CMP), which was drawn up
with the Stalinists assistance in the days immediately following
the UPAs May 2004 election victory.
The CMP is an elaboration on the Congresss 2004 election
slogan of neo-liberal reforms but with a human face.
It is based on the lie that is possible to reconcile the program
of capitalIndias transformation into a magnet for
international capital and the rapid conversion of its agricultural
sector into agribusinesswith the needs of the working class
and toilers.
Historically, the crucial service that the Congress has performed
for the bourgeoisie is to harness the masses behind its class
strategy, through limited reforms and populist rhetoric. But the
regime of Indira Gandhi came into a headlong collision with the
working class in the mid-1970s. In the race for profits and investment,
the bourgeoisie, in India as around the world, has in the ensuing
three decades systematically repudiated social-welfare policies,
leaving an electorally weakened Congress to spout empty phrases
about its concern for the poor. Only the Stalinist-led Left Front
echoes and embellishes them.
Although big business is constantly urging the government to
accelerate the pace of neo-liberal reform, the Stalinist-backed
UPA, as evidenced in the editorial pages of both the Indian and
international press, continues to enjoy the confidence of Indian
and international capital.
For their part, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Finance Minister
P. Chidambaram, are acutely aware of the distress that reigns
in much of rural India and the role that the Left Front is playing
in deflecting and derailing popular opposition to the governments
agenda. That is why they continuously insist on the need to consult
the Stalinists, publicly extol the value of their advice, and
give them an occasional sop or, at least, make policy reversals
that have the appearance of sops. A case in point is the privatization
of Indias most profitable and strategically significant
public sector corporations, the so-called navaratna (nine
gem) companies, which include Indias largest energy utilities.
Given the growing geo-political importance of the energy sector,
many sections of Indian capital came to question the wisdom of
selling-off the navaratna companies.
Forced to concede that the UPA has move steadily right during
its two and a half years in office, the Stalinists advance a second
argument as to why it must be sustained in office: propping up
the Congress-led UPA is the only way to block the return to power
of the Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
In fact, it is no more possible to defend democratic rights
and fight communal reaction through the Congress, than it is to
oppose the neo-liberal program of the bourgeoisieboth require
the independent political mobilization of the working class.
It was the Congress that joined hands with the British and
the Muslim League in 1947 to suppress the anti-imperialist struggle
and partition India along communal lines.
Whilst claiming to uphold secularism, the Congress has stoked
a Hindu-chauvinist laden, anti-Pakistani Indian nationalism ever
since and it has repeatedly connived with the Hindu supremacist
right. The results of this are graphically illustrated by the
recent report of the government-appointed Sachar Committee into
the socio-economic condition of Indias 140 million Muslims.
The report found that the Muslims constitute a grossly socially
disadvantaged groupsecond only to the most historically
oppressed groups (the Dalits and tribals)and an increasingly
persecuted minority.
The growth of the BJP and various casteist parties in the 1980s,
as the Congresss national bourgeois economic strategy began
to unravel, was not inevitable. If such forces were able to come
to the fore it was because for decades the Stalinists supported
the bourgeoisies nationalist economic strategy, claiming
that it constituted a necessary part of the democratic revolution,
and politically confined the working class to trade union struggles
and electoral politics that revolved around aligning with the
Congress or a rival bourgeois formation like the Janata Party.
Now the Stalinists argue that to fight communal reaction the
working class must prop up a Congress-led government that is implementing
a socially incendiary neo-liberal reform program and increasingly
allying India with US imperialism.
Workers and socialist-minded youth and intellectuals must reject
this course and undertake the struggle to build a new mass revolutionary
socialist party.
The allies of Indias workers and oppressed are the workers
of the world, who everywhere confront globally-organized capital.
Capitalist globalization and the associated recrudescence of militarism
and imperialist war are producing the objective conditions for,
and the necessity of, the working class mobilizing as a self-conscious
international force in struggle against capitalism and the outmoded
nation-state system.
Indian workers must place themselves at the head of all the
oppressed. The liquidation of casteism, landlordism, and all the
legacies of imperialist oppression and feudal backwardness will
be accomplished through a socialist transformation carried out
by the Indian working class in alliance with the world working
class, not by chasing the Stalinist mirage of a progressive
national bourgeoisie.
It is for this international socialist program that the World
Socialist Web Site and the International Committee of the
Fourth International, the World Party of Socialist Party founded
by Leon Trotsky in opposition to the Stalinist betrayal of the
1917 Russian Revolution, fight.
See Also:
West Bengals Left Front regime
suppresses protests against land seizures
[10 December 2006]
US Senate endorses Bushs
nuclear accord with India
[29 November 2006]
In response to intensifying
class antagonisms
Indias Congress Party revives discredited Garibi Hatao
slogan
[10 October 2006]
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