PaRCha - JNU - General Procedures - 2005 ID-59868
.
ne .
PEOPLE'S DEMOCRACY APRIL 1 0. 2005DYFI CAMPAIGN IN KERALA ..l .
A.
(l Youth March To District Successful Two-Day StrikeCollectorates In General Insurance S part of the all-India agitation M ORE than 70,000employeesand.
The education scenario, which The succe~s of tht. two d<lVs.
against growing unemployment, officers of the four public SC'ctorlakhs ofyouth under the bannerofOYFI was once famous for its universal base general insur.1nce compantes viz. strike on March 2'3 and 24 could be m<Hched to and merit criteria has been restruc-United India Insurance Co., Na-measured in the context nf threat:, bvd ifferent district the mnnagcmenl o f punitive action.
collcctorall's in KernIa on March 28 de-tured today as a market-driven educa-tional Insurance Co., Oricntilllnsur--tion system. As for the growth of the and attcmpt!:t to break the strike by.
manding the revcrs.1l ofanti-youth poli-ance Co. and New Ind ia Assurilncc.
criminal ma(ia, the DYFI said stories Co., the A)~riculture Insurance Co. calling the police in ~orne centers.cies being pursued by the Congress-led of mGrin-police-administralion nexus The management also made som<: of.
UDF g<n"emmcnt. As a result of the agi-of Indio Ltd., Tariff Advisory Com-.
tiltion, \\'Clrk c;"~mc to a standstill in mo~t were regularly coming to light .1nd. mittee ond Loss Prevention Associa-the groups to issue calls to their sup-oithe distTict headquarters. tbert? have been alkgalions even tion of lnJi<~ observed t\vo days porter!' to brenk the strike by sprecld· .
The <lgitators rnised slogans against some ministers.. strike ~m Marcl1 23-2-t, in response ing rumours and charactensing theAmong those who addressl.'d the strike ,,s 'politically mot1vated'..
against unemployment, commerciGli-to the call given by the recognised.
demonstrators at different places unions in the indust:y Whut political motivation Lould be.
;;ation of educGtion and the dangerous .
included CPl(M) Polit Bureau member there in asking for early settlement.
growth of crimin<ll mafia forcC!' in the The demnnds for which the.
nnd leader of opposition in Kcrala as· employees and officers went on of the long-pending wage revisionstJte. Itwas pointed out that the policies.
of the Congr~govemmcnthad further sembly, V S Achuthanandan, DYFl strih.e included settlement of the ''"d release of the due promotions,genernl secretnry, Tapas Sinha, DYF! won.dered the employees. But theworsened the employment situation in president, K N Balagnpal, former DYfl long-pending wage revision whirh disrupters had no qualms to usc any.
tell due nn August 2002 ond rL'-the state as there was a permanent ban leaders M A Bi'lby, E P Jayarnjan and S method to disrupt the democraticl'n recruitment Manyjobs hadbeen abol-sumption of promotion eXL·rcise ..:xprcs~ion of anger and anguish. "It.
Sharma, DYFI s ta te president P R withht..ld lor two yewrs. More thnn.
ished and job security concept had b('('n is heCHkning to note that in spite ofaltogether d ispenscd with Vasnnthan and 01 Fl Stil le s~crete1ry A -1,000 operating offices of these pub-.
Pradeepkumar. threats and attempted disruption of.
lic sector companies across the.
countn. induding the head office ol the strike, most of lhc offices, includ-.
'\...t~ll'tl -.1 \,l._ur"ncc Co. at Kolk<lta ing head nffke of National Jnsur-,,ncc Cn. Ltd . Kolkata remained.
Agricultural Labour ---' 111 these two d.v. :-. Lic'"l'd ~"' l )th these days; it speaks.
,)S tl\ t..r: o 1 .
(From page 7) I' ''1d empl.
oppression of forest officials and made ees joined the strike. 1 hi.? ~u(CL'SStt' Plume~ about the employees' in-labour to themselves as bonded digniition to the indiiferent attitudelabourers. This the tribal people insecure. Worse, it has observonce of the strike has s~nt of the authorities on their core de-.
lacun a in the increased the numberof migrant labour.
\!,Ovcmmcnt'~pcTStx-"Clivc musl p,o. ~d. strong signnls to the attthorities con-mands" said ) Gurumurth_v, secn:-.
ond m.:~dc the job silualion worse for the ccrn<?d th:ll the employees nnd oi-it c.-m goonly \"'hen the massof a~ncul-nual mas~s. The forest policy thai wrance Employe~·.
.u nis\ ...r.~l bbnu.-, together ,,·ith f.H-nkr-; anJ As~~o.i.1ti~,n (A liLA) \" hich :.pt:.lr-lte \\'ork1ng cl-S, unJensh<?!" ,rruHgks dr.1wn up in th<- inl\.'rt_"-1 nf rnulttn.1tion-m,lnd-. '' t.:ro.: md..
a sharp )r their ric;ht~ ,.,Js .1nd corpor:ll<.'" '"a~ succt.sslully E~rlins " lh:a~k.J the joint 11'1\.)\ ement. The I.
l.'I'L'.
20vears oppllSCd by the 1113!>S of trib<JI rcople in held L'VL'ry week \Vhich wo.::rc l.'nt' hu-ut'\ion-. ·wnuh.l b~ n'H! tt' th~: que-;-Kt..'r<lla , forest oft iuab ,1nd \.
dispossessiOn of the rural small 'l'"kd t \1 0 ... of lht Llllll! ,1n i ~c·-; " ,irt\ t..'.
·had not mtercstscontinue tn haras~ Inrest dw,IJ-ThL' ... tn ke had i b t..cho m pJr·producer and the n1ral poor. Not only he loll th· p):'1! that th··y u1;·',1 ·wt 1t.1ment on :-..1arch 13 \\hen CPI{tvl).
!ding the sh1rh. tht..tr r.....r· nsib!ltt~ If! ttnding.
ers. Much morevigibnce wtll be nL>ed(:'d.
was the are their small garden plots up for grabs, to protect them. IL'ader in Luk. Sabha, Basudeb .
;piration soare their house-sites. The\vomen are nn l'arly and arnicablt.: st.Htlement of Acharia and other Left ~1Psbrought.
e\·en moreinsecure than animals. Ifthey In these conditions, it is not an the issues. The representatives oftherth of the exnggeration to Sil)' that under the unions mel the four CMDs a t to the attention of the government ns in the as much as demand the minimum nee-liberal market life has become un-the on-going strike in general insur· nd hun-human treatment theyCiln beforbidden Hyderabad on March 16 when they ance and demanded early settlement.
bearable for the rural poorand espccialJy attended a meeting in lRDA..
\prehen-to usc the village fields to dcfecate.and agricultural labour \'vho are the most of the wage demands..
urinate in. They are subject to rape and.
earned a murderous attacks. And today, the oppressed and exploited among them..
nmedia, They cannot survive without struggle.
extra-judicial powers of the rural rich a_gainst theireconomic exploitation nnd.
'respon-have reached such proportions that in-against social oppression . And their 7TH J&K State Conference---.
(From page 13).
always ter-caste marriages are often punished members, out of which four were1ives of by lynching young couples. Without struggles will not succeed without a ity to women who had been dis-.
perspective and an org<misation to reserved for co-option at a laterialism, gl\ ingthese people land, house-sitesand criminated against..
ensure it is implemented. As such, they dnte. The 12 elected members.
)mmOn lavatoriesat least, wecannot expect them The report stated that the Lndusare thatsection ofour society that most are:.
' to liv12 ascitizens and as human beings. Water Treaty adversely affected the 1.arugglesaid. needs an agrarian revolution. So it power generation, irrigation and l\1 Y Jangam1The new forest ordinance passed by becomes the prirnarydutyofour Party to industrialisation of the state. lt pleaded 2. 1\! Trisal.
rtback the BjP-led 1\.'DA governmentin2002 has organise them as the crucial link in the 3. F J..: Bokhshidispossessed nearly 161akh tribal people for grantingofpowers to the state to fully.
nalism worker-peasant alliance and to unlensh -l..
as encroachers on land they have lived <. 'm l.nn Nabi Malik..
en the its momentum with their full participa-utilise the \·Vaters flowmg through its riv-5. :-,h ' ' Pras:~d Kcsar.
in forgenerations.Thishas increased the ersor providean equitnble<lltemattve to.
a big tion. (). oV' mmwd Khalil Naik (l\H A.
the state. .
7..
t like ...... Th12 report laid dmvn 21 t<1sks for Abo 1d Hameed Wani.
inch-also lauded Prajas<1klifor working with 8. .\' .Itt! G<1ni Hafi:~.
.
;;id it was a people's newspaper a commitment to seculur values and the party in the coming d.1ys. 9. On I'raknshand the peoplee themselves helped it After discussion, the report wi'lslions, whenevera programme for its develop-interests ofthe farmers, workers and the unanimouslyadopted by the conference. 10. i\lt,1· .1 nm:-~d 1.1qoob'leonJv poor. ) 1. Bish.m Oas.
ment was taken up. Prai1sakti was an It also adopted 13 resolutions-on hu-.
blic-Veteran journalist V 12. Kishore Kumnr.
alternative forum, not a competition to Bommareddy, C R.aghav<1chary, former R man rights, unemployment, agriculture,.
.
anyone, he ~id.Theeditoralso t'ead out MY Tnrigami was rL'-elc.:-ted as the.
editorofV!salnndhra, I Venkalrao, former hydro electric project, democr<1tic trade state ~cretary ottheCPI(l\1). 1l1cconfer-messagesofgoodwill received from sev-union rights, migr<~nts from vJlky, bor-.
eral prominent people, including the chairmnn ofA P Press Academy, t~nd its der migrants, errJ tic povvN supply, ence:1lso ehxtl't..i 5 delcg.1lL~and one ob-.
former Chief Minister and TOP prc~i-present chairmnn 0 Amnr, K serVL'r for the It:lth Party congr~s to be.
Rao Rrunnch;mdra Murthy, editorofAndhrn ~vvomen, civic bodics/pa.nchGyat, rcha-held in New Delhi.dcnt, l\Chandrababu Naidu, <~nd t~lso bilitation ofsnow victims and th1 stntc/greatfully acknowledged donations by Jyoti, and T Ashok, editor ofVnrth.l were ct-ntrnl PSL-s. The conference o.1ncludt..'t..i with a .
several people. on the d<1is. V Krishnaiwh t..'k>ett..' d uct L)f the conference in a wholesome.
rnannL'r. .
.
r .
.
PaRCha - JNU - General Procedures - 2005 ID-59868
.
ne .
PEOPLE'S DEMOCRACY APRIL 1 0. 2005DYFI CAMPAIGN IN KERALA ..l .
A.
(l Youth March To District Successful Two-Day StrikeCollectorates In General Insurance S part of the all-India agitation M ORE than 70,000employeesand.
The education scenario, which The succe~s of tht. two d<lVs.
against growing unemployment, officers of the four public SC'ctorlakhs ofyouth under the bannerofOYFI was once famous for its universal base general insur.1nce compantes viz. strike on March 2'3 and 24 could be m<Hched to and merit criteria has been restruc-United India Insurance Co., Na-measured in the context nf threat:, bvd ifferent district the mnnagcmenl o f punitive action.
collcctorall's in KernIa on March 28 de-tured today as a market-driven educa-tional Insurance Co., Oricntilllnsur--tion system. As for the growth of the and attcmpt!:t to break the strike by.
manding the revcrs.1l ofanti-youth poli-ance Co. and New Ind ia Assurilncc.
criminal ma(ia, the DYFI said stories Co., the A)~riculture Insurance Co. calling the police in ~orne centers.cies being pursued by the Congress-led of mGrin-police-administralion nexus The management also made som<: of.
UDF g<n"emmcnt. As a result of the agi-of Indio Ltd., Tariff Advisory Com-.
tiltion, \\'Clrk c;"~mc to a standstill in mo~t were regularly coming to light .1nd. mittee ond Loss Prevention Associa-the groups to issue calls to their sup-oithe distTict headquarters. tbert? have been alkgalions even tion of lnJi<~ observed t\vo days porter!' to brenk the strike by sprecld· .
The <lgitators rnised slogans against some ministers.. strike ~m Marcl1 23-2-t, in response ing rumours and charactensing theAmong those who addressl.'d the strike ,,s 'politically mot1vated'..
against unemployment, commerciGli-to the call given by the recognised.
demonstrators at different places unions in the indust:y Whut political motivation Lould be.
;;ation of educGtion and the dangerous .
included CPl(M) Polit Bureau member there in asking for early settlement.
growth of crimin<ll mafia forcC!' in the The demnnds for which the.
nnd leader of opposition in Kcrala as· employees and officers went on of the long-pending wage revisionstJte. Itwas pointed out that the policies.
of the Congr~govemmcnthad further sembly, V S Achuthanandan, DYFl strih.e included settlement of the ''"d release of the due promotions,genernl secretnry, Tapas Sinha, DYF! won.dered the employees. But theworsened the employment situation in president, K N Balagnpal, former DYfl long-pending wage revision whirh disrupters had no qualms to usc any.
tell due nn August 2002 ond rL'-the state as there was a permanent ban leaders M A Bi'lby, E P Jayarnjan and S method to disrupt the democraticl'n recruitment Manyjobs hadbeen abol-sumption of promotion eXL·rcise ..:xprcs~ion of anger and anguish. "It.
Sharma, DYFI s ta te president P R withht..ld lor two yewrs. More thnn.
ished and job security concept had b('('n is heCHkning to note that in spite ofaltogether d ispenscd with Vasnnthan and 01 Fl Stil le s~crete1ry A -1,000 operating offices of these pub-.
Pradeepkumar. threats and attempted disruption of.
lic sector companies across the.
countn. induding the head office ol the strike, most of lhc offices, includ-.
'\...t~ll'tl -.1 \,l._ur"ncc Co. at Kolk<lta ing head nffke of National Jnsur-,,ncc Cn. Ltd . Kolkata remained.
Agricultural Labour ---' 111 these two d.v. :-. Lic'"l'd ~"' l )th these days; it speaks.
,)S tl\ t..r: o 1 .
(From page 7) I' ''1d empl.
oppression of forest officials and made ees joined the strike. 1 hi.? ~u(CL'SStt' Plume~ about the employees' in-labour to themselves as bonded digniition to the indiiferent attitudelabourers. This the tribal people insecure. Worse, it has observonce of the strike has s~nt of the authorities on their core de-.
lacun a in the increased the numberof migrant labour.
\!,Ovcmmcnt'~pcTStx-"Clivc musl p,o. ~d. strong signnls to the attthorities con-mands" said ) Gurumurth_v, secn:-.
ond m.:~dc the job silualion worse for the ccrn<?d th:ll the employees nnd oi-it c.-m goonly \"'hen the massof a~ncul-nual mas~s. The forest policy thai wrance Employe~·.
.u nis\ ...r.~l bbnu.-, together ,,·ith f.H-nkr-; anJ As~~o.i.1ti~,n (A liLA) \" hich :.pt:.lr-lte \\'ork1ng cl-S, unJensh<?!" ,rruHgks dr.1wn up in th<- inl\.'rt_"-1 nf rnulttn.1tion-m,lnd-. '' t.:ro.: md..
a sharp )r their ric;ht~ ,.,Js .1nd corpor:ll<.'" '"a~ succt.sslully E~rlins " lh:a~k.J the joint 11'1\.)\ ement. The I.
l.'I'L'.
20vears oppllSCd by the 1113!>S of trib<JI rcople in held L'VL'ry week \Vhich wo.::rc l.'nt' hu-ut'\ion-. ·wnuh.l b~ n'H! tt' th~: que-;-Kt..'r<lla , forest oft iuab ,1nd \.
dispossessiOn of the rural small 'l'"kd t \1 0 ... of lht Llllll! ,1n i ~c·-; " ,irt\ t..'.
·had not mtercstscontinue tn haras~ Inrest dw,IJ-ThL' ... tn ke had i b t..cho m pJr·producer and the n1ral poor. Not only he loll th· p):'1! that th··y u1;·',1 ·wt 1t.1ment on :-..1arch 13 \\hen CPI{tvl).
!ding the sh1rh. tht..tr r.....r· nsib!ltt~ If! ttnding.
ers. Much morevigibnce wtll be nL>ed(:'d.
was the are their small garden plots up for grabs, to protect them. IL'ader in Luk. Sabha, Basudeb .
;piration soare their house-sites. The\vomen are nn l'arly and arnicablt.: st.Htlement of Acharia and other Left ~1Psbrought.
e\·en moreinsecure than animals. Ifthey In these conditions, it is not an the issues. The representatives oftherth of the exnggeration to Sil)' that under the unions mel the four CMDs a t to the attention of the government ns in the as much as demand the minimum nee-liberal market life has become un-the on-going strike in general insur· nd hun-human treatment theyCiln beforbidden Hyderabad on March 16 when they ance and demanded early settlement.
bearable for the rural poorand espccialJy attended a meeting in lRDA..
\prehen-to usc the village fields to dcfecate.and agricultural labour \'vho are the most of the wage demands..
urinate in. They are subject to rape and.
earned a murderous attacks. And today, the oppressed and exploited among them..
nmedia, They cannot survive without struggle.
extra-judicial powers of the rural rich a_gainst theireconomic exploitation nnd.
'respon-have reached such proportions that in-against social oppression . And their 7TH J&K State Conference---.
(From page 13).
always ter-caste marriages are often punished members, out of which four were1ives of by lynching young couples. Without struggles will not succeed without a ity to women who had been dis-.
perspective and an org<misation to reserved for co-option at a laterialism, gl\ ingthese people land, house-sitesand criminated against..
ensure it is implemented. As such, they dnte. The 12 elected members.
)mmOn lavatoriesat least, wecannot expect them The report stated that the Lndusare thatsection ofour society that most are:.
' to liv12 ascitizens and as human beings. Water Treaty adversely affected the 1.arugglesaid. needs an agrarian revolution. So it power generation, irrigation and l\1 Y Jangam1The new forest ordinance passed by becomes the prirnarydutyofour Party to industrialisation of the state. lt pleaded 2. 1\! Trisal.
rtback the BjP-led 1\.'DA governmentin2002 has organise them as the crucial link in the 3. F J..: Bokhshidispossessed nearly 161akh tribal people for grantingofpowers to the state to fully.
nalism worker-peasant alliance and to unlensh -l..
as encroachers on land they have lived <. 'm l.nn Nabi Malik..
en the its momentum with their full participa-utilise the \·Vaters flowmg through its riv-5. :-,h ' ' Pras:~d Kcsar.
in forgenerations.Thishas increased the ersor providean equitnble<lltemattve to.
a big tion. (). oV' mmwd Khalil Naik (l\H A.
the state. .
7..
t like ...... Th12 report laid dmvn 21 t<1sks for Abo 1d Hameed Wani.
inch-also lauded Prajas<1klifor working with 8. .\' .Itt! G<1ni Hafi:~.
.
;;id it was a people's newspaper a commitment to seculur values and the party in the coming d.1ys. 9. On I'raknshand the peoplee themselves helped it After discussion, the report wi'lslions, whenevera programme for its develop-interests ofthe farmers, workers and the unanimouslyadopted by the conference. 10. i\lt,1· .1 nm:-~d 1.1qoob'leonJv poor. ) 1. Bish.m Oas.
ment was taken up. Prai1sakti was an It also adopted 13 resolutions-on hu-.
blic-Veteran journalist V 12. Kishore Kumnr.
alternative forum, not a competition to Bommareddy, C R.aghav<1chary, former R man rights, unemployment, agriculture,.
.
anyone, he ~id.Theeditoralso t'ead out MY Tnrigami was rL'-elc.:-ted as the.
editorofV!salnndhra, I Venkalrao, former hydro electric project, democr<1tic trade state ~cretary ottheCPI(l\1). 1l1cconfer-messagesofgoodwill received from sev-union rights, migr<~nts from vJlky, bor-.
eral prominent people, including the chairmnn ofA P Press Academy, t~nd its der migrants, errJ tic povvN supply, ence:1lso ehxtl't..i 5 delcg.1lL~and one ob-.
former Chief Minister and TOP prc~i-present chairmnn 0 Amnr, K serVL'r for the It:lth Party congr~s to be.
Rao Rrunnch;mdra Murthy, editorofAndhrn ~vvomen, civic bodics/pa.nchGyat, rcha-held in New Delhi.dcnt, l\Chandrababu Naidu, <~nd t~lso bilitation ofsnow victims and th1 stntc/greatfully acknowledged donations by Jyoti, and T Ashok, editor ofVnrth.l were ct-ntrnl PSL-s. The conference o.1ncludt..'t..i with a .
several people. on the d<1is. V Krishnaiwh t..'k>ett..' d uct L)f the conference in a wholesome.
rnannL'r. .
.
r .
.