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Friday, June 29, 2012

ஈழத்தமிழ் இனப்படுகொலை - அதன் ஆழம், மற்றும் அதன் சோகம் எனக்கு ஊட்டிய சில வரிகள் . . .


கற்களுக்கு உயிர் கொடுத்து கடவுள் போற்றும் மனிதா!

நீ உணர்விழந்து கல்லாய்ப்போனதை உன் கடவுள் போற்றுமோ?

இங்கே அமைதியென்பது கடவுள் போலில்லா மாயமோ?

அல்லது, சுரண்டப்படும் மனிதம் ஒருங்கிணைந்தால் உருவாகும் மாற்றமோ?

இனி ஒடுக்கப்பட்ட, உரிமையிழந்த வர்க்கம் புதுச் சரிதம் எழுதத்தொடங்குமோ?

இல்லை சதை எரிந்து, உருவழிந்த பிண்டங்கள், முகம் இழந்து போவது ஒரு தொடர்கதையாய் விடுமோ?



சஜித் அட்டேபுரம்

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

A sheer power struggle to a non-ideological factional feud & the crisis in the Kerala state unit of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)!





Factionalism: 
                                                             Not so long after the SNC Lavalin controversy[1] the Kerala unit of the Communist party of India- Marxist (CPI-M) have recently seen new depths in their long running factional struggle after the cold blooded, allegedly political murder of the former CPI (M)party dissenter and the founder leader of Revolutionary Marxist Party (RMP) T.P. Chandrasekharan.  

For nearly a decade, the high profile ‘political factionalism’  in the Kerala state CPI (M) between V. S. Achuthanandan and Pinarayi Vijayan, which is in essence a power struggle, have taken its course predominantly to assert their own zone of influence in that supposedly workers’ party. Nonetheless, the thousands of CPI (M) members, cadres and sympathisers were been told otherwise by the popular media and the CPI (M) state and central committee leadership along with their polit-bureau, in their own, unique and consciously misleading ways. The ‘official’ or Pinarayi Vijayan’s faction, the dominant faction in the party versus the V.S. Achuthanandan and his followers is now a wholesome entertainment for most of the politically mindful, Malayali households. The contrasting role and characterisation were been put on to the warring factions by the media, particularly the news channels who are principally sensational rather informational.
Pinarayi Vijayan, currently a politburo member and the state secretary of Kerala State Committee of CPI (M) for a record fourth consecutive time, often dubbed as autocratic by the media and also by the dissenters of the likes of, the late T. P. Chandrasekharan,  a party organiser with strong links among the rank and file of Onchium,  a traditional CPI (M) stronghold  known for its  bloodshed history of class struggles and uprisings. On the other hand V.S. Achuthanandan, a veteran politician, founder member of the CPI (M),  was the Secretary of the Kerala State Committee between 1980 and 1992 and since 1985 he is the member of the CPI (M) Polit Bureau, re-elected again recently in 2008, at the 19th Congress Coimbatore, until  June 2009, when he was removed from Polit Bureau, during the SNC Lavalin controversy row, as the comments passed by V.S. Achuthanandan were not towing up with the official party line of CPI (M) leadership, to completely defend Pinarayi Vijayan  against the SNC Lavlin corruption allegations.

This article will from now purposefully avoid duplicating the efforts of the mainstream media in just simply reporting the ongoing events of the split and will also reflect on the objective causes behind these crises in a workers’ party which are based on distorted as well as a crude understanding of Marxism along with a dogmatic approach regarding the course of the class struggle obviously inheriting the Stalinist legacy from the Communist Party of India (CPI) from which the CPI (M) split during 1964.  If we analyse the nature and the elements of the split, the feud between the two factions and the ongoing  crises in the CPI(M), it is apparent that they are not rooted on any ideological or theoretical basis and also not even in the programmes or the policy line of the party to start with.

The ideological dimensions like democratic centralism including the popped up factors of morality like anti corruption which were championed  in a well orchestrated way by V.S. Achuthanandan, and the importance of party discipline put forth by the ‘dominant’ Pinarayi faction, are all cropping up as the consequence of the power struggle and for  political returns.  In actual fact, following the death of the then party secretary Chadayan Govindan in 1998, Pinarayi Vijayan was appointed to that post as a nominee of V.S.Achuthanandan, who himself was a secretary of the Kerala State Committee between 1980 and 1992.

This less tortuous and straighter forward course of the split though traces itself markedly during 2005, the CPI (M) members who were considered sided along with Achuthanandan, including S.Sarma and M. Chandran, have been dropped from the CPI (M) secretariat in Kerala, constituted after the State party conference in Malappuram.  Around a dozen of Achuthanandan’s clique lost the election to the state committee after provoking the leadership by contesting. Pinarayi Vijayan has also removed Achuthanandan of his post as editor of the party newspaper, Desabhimani, the third-largest daily in Kerala, a very influential party responsibility. The split and the allegations of factional activities was not only reviewed by the State committee lead by Pinarayi Vijayan, but was also acknowledged by the organisational report at the 18th CPI (M) party congress expressing “serious concern at the persisting disunity and factional tendencies in Kerala,”.

Polarisation between the factions were becoming more apparent, as Pinarayi Vijayan, the shrewd political organiser, successfully exerted his power of influence with the help of his strong hold in Kannur district, considered as CPI(M) bastion in the Malabar region in Northern Kerala. Pinarayi faction dominated Kerala state party apparatus, and subsequently the CPI (M) politbureau leadership decided not to field V.S. Achuthanandan for the 2006 Kerala Assembly elections.  Strangely enough, those who are aware of Kerala politics knew without any qualms that V.S. Achuthanandan was widely considered by that time as a chief minister in ‘waiting’, even from 1996, although the media was consistently parodying his unsuccessful attempts for the chief minster post, mainly because of him loosing the 1996 assembly election in Mararikkulam[2], a CPI (M) stronghold. Suspicions of Pinarayi faction architected that extraordinary electoral upset did arise.

Velikkakathu Sankaran Achuthanandan, popularly called V .S., not only commands cadre loyalty at the grassroots but also have a great support from the people, which he accumulated during his tenure as the leader of opposition particularly during 2001-2006, during which he was clearly seen donning the cap of an anti corruption crusader, consciously flaunted his clean personal image while he was sternly exposing the scandalous United Democratic Front (UDF) government of Kerala.

Even during his Chief ministerial tenure, V.S.Achuthanandan was perceived fighting corruption, scams and scandals both in the society and within the party itself, which apparently have not left the kind of void for that Anna Hazare and his popular right wing backed anti corruption campaign enjoyed elsewhere in India. His confrontation of the global monopolies like Coke and Microsoft, forcing the corruption ridden and corporate friendly government in the centre for a nationwide ban on endosulfan pesticide, have all garnered V.S.Achuthanandan popular support among the rank and file of the party and the people alike.

The factionalism was given an ideological element, by the media and the public, as it was more than obvious to them from various allegations on the ‘official’ or the ‘Pinarayi faction’ of the CPI (M) Kerala state unit, including flaunting a reformist agenda, supporting corporate interests , globalisation and neo-liberal policies. In effect the businesses ventures owned by the CPI (M) is functioning no different other the capitalists owned initiatives. The business empire owned by CPI(M) worth RS. 4000 crores, which incorporate amusement Parks, TV Channels, rubber cooperatives – allegedly funded from foreign capital, super-specialty hospitals, supermarkets and IT parks. These explicit moves towards neo- liberalism are a thorn in the flesh of many party loyalists especially among the rank and file and also among the old guards, high up in the party ranks. V.S. Achuthanandhan and his in-group deemed widely as old guards never ignored any opportunities especially from the news channel media to tactfully, discredit the ‘Pinarayi’ faction of corruption or of ‘revisionism’. Prof MN Vijayan, the former President of the pro CPI (M) organisations like Purogamana Kala Sahitya Sangham (Progressive Association for Art and Letters) and Adhinivesha Prathirodha Samithi (Council for Resisting Imperialist Globalisation), criticised the prominent members of the ‘Pinarayi’ faction in the CPI(M) openly of social democratic deviation and also of diluting the party’s class character.

On the other hand, V.S. Achuthanadan was the party State secretary in the 1980 -92, the longest tenure in that office, till recently when Pinarayi Vijayan surpassed it. Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee president Ramesh Chennithala, have in fact pointed out the various allegations of political murders stemmed up in the CPI (M)are during the 1980’s. Recently in a political meeting, the Idukki CPI (M) district secretary M.M. Mani declared publicly (In front of the media) the list of 13 persons to be killed was arranged by the party during the early 1980s and also acknowledged that out of them three were killed. Nevertheless, a fragment of the prevailing rumours still uphold that this could be a desperate attempt of the opposing Pinarayi faction to discredit the image of V.S.

However all of those attempted and executed political murders do reveal a rogue trend which would potentially alienate them from the people.  Encouraging the use of violence for plain political gains and repression of dissidents were all the indications of an active process of further degeneration in this so called workers’ party.

Not many have to dump themselves in to the archives to prove the existence of the trend where the individual power struggle developing into factional infighting regrettably in a workers’ party. Working class activism is not about the concentration of political power and influence but taking up the roles and responsibilities to represent the needs of the ordinary working people and toilers, with a true sense of solidarity and Comradeship.  We can only speculate that the power struggle, if there was anything else behind the expulsion of K.R.Gowri Amma, a prominent women leader of CPI (M), the Revenue Minister in the government 1957, headed by E. M. S. Namboodiripad (EMS) of the undivided Communist party (CPI).  The pinnacle behind political legend of K.R.Gowri Amma, a well known conspiracy of that time, is the lost opportunity of the chief ministerial post to E.K.Nayanar. The longest serving Chief Minister of Kerala, E.K.Nayanar was in fact supported by the strong Malabar lobby and was capable of manoeuvring the power clutches of the party. This was also contemplated as one the reasons behind Gowri Amma’s disenchantment with the CPI(M) leadership and her eventual ousting from the party in 1994, who then floated her own party Janathipathiya Samrakshana Samithy (Association for Defence of Democracy), only to join the right wing United Democratic Front (UDF) alliance.

The crisis in Kerala State unit of CPI(M): 

The uninterrupted expulsions of members on charges of anti party activities does not reveal clearly the underlying causes or reasons behind the expulsions of very experienced members of the CPI (M). This leaves us wondering how the CPI (M) members like M.V.Raghavan, was a prominent CPI(M) leader; Sindhu Joy,  was the party district committee member and former Students' Federation of India State president;  Abdulla Kutty, was a CPI(M) Member of Parliament  for Kannur Lok Sabha constituency of Kerala, all of those who are climbed up in party organisational structures, many of them who spent a substantial portion of their lives representing CPI(M), could then join the right wing United Democratic Front (UDF), evidently collaborating against the class interests for which they seemingly have struggled for all their lives. In fact A. P. Abdullakutty, expressed an opinion against the industrial action of the workers, therefore attacking the important rights of workers including the right to withdraw their labour, an awful criticism from the leader of the so called workers’ party. It also questions the basic functioning of the largest and influential workers’ party in India, which is to empower and educate their members to be the revolutionary organisers and the teachers of the working people –the proletariat. The recent expulsion of the high ranking CPI(M) members and the following shameful defection to the United Democratic Front (UDF) either by forming their own party, or directly joining in one of the parties of the UDF itself was appalling not only to the rank and file of the CPI(M) but also to the workers and farmers in general, leaving them disillusioned and thereby creating a space, where the reactionary and communal political forces could foster.

In the 2011 assembly elections, one of the closely contested elections in Kerala, the Indian Union Muslim League (IUML), a political outfit with reactionary leadership based on pro Muslim communal politics, bagged 20 seats causing an electoral upset in many of the crucial seats of the Left Democratic Front (LDF) of which the CPI(M) is the leading entity. The Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) won the majority of its seats from the Malappuram district, a Muslim majority district in Kerala.

In Neyyattinkara, the 2012 assembly by election, held recently due to the resignation of the CPI (M) R. Selvaraj from his Member of Legislative Assembly (MLA) post, after surprisingly winning that seat from the Congress. R. Selvaraj also resigned his membership on the CPI(M) district committee, only to be expelled from the primary membership of the party. He then joined the Indian National Congress and contested on the Hand symbol, subsequently winning the by elections to become the United Democratic Front (UDF) MLA of Neyyattinkara. However, the by-election results also showed the growing support for Bharatiya Janata Party’s candidate O. Rajagopal.  Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), again a reactionary political force with its roots organisations embedded in Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) which are organisations advocating Hindu fundamentalism.  


Stalinism:
The factions and the crises in the CPI-M are gushing out like always from the logic of the objective situation, which is the adherence of CPI(M) to the Stalinist legacy it carried on from the Communist party of India (CPI) – at an early stage aspired to be a workers’ party. After the Stalinist influence and the control of the Comintern in the mid and the late 1920’s onwards, CPI was devoted itself to the two stage theory/ stagism unyieldingly since their course of action was dictated by the despotic Stalinist leadership in Moscow. Stalinism, a gross deviation from Marxism, espoused the stage theory importantly to safeguard the interests of the bureaucracy to anchor itself in the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was evolved from the 1917 October revolution when workers’ took power, a magnificent event in the history of human kind. Socialism, in which an important element is the workers’ taking control of production and distribution, was distorted by the rise of Stalinist bureaucracy. Stalinism, which had risen into prominence due to the objective circumstances eventually lead to widespread persecution of dissidents, including the assassination of many Bolshevik leaders including Leon Trotsky, who along with Vladimir Lenin provided theoretical and organisational leadership to the October Revolution of 1917.

The theory of socialism in one country, betraying the internationalist spirit of the Marxism, persecution of the dissidents, lack of democratic centralism, parliamentarianism, non ideological factionalism and even the power struggle are all the symptoms or outcome of stagism, the essence of Stalinism. The mainstream workers’ parties in India, the CPI and CPI (M) are all based on the frame work of the two stage theory advocating the necessity of a bourgeois (capitalist) democracy before moving to a socialist stage set into somewhere in the distant future. Consequently their programs and understanding of class struggle and their collaboration with bourgeois parties like Indian National Congress and other regional parties in India. Thus the CPI & CPI (M) both have not only failed to provide a genuine socialist alternative but they are completely succumbing to the short fall of the parliamentary system, which is all about  the influential  posts, seat sharing and gradually integrating themselves with the ruling class, and slowly getting alienated from the ordinary working people. Stalinist legacy have also taken the toll of independent trade unionism and student activism in India as the most prominent trade unions and student unions today are the fronts of the CPI (M) and CPI.

The dynamics of this present crisis and factionalism in CPI (M) are on the foundational basis of stagism. Therefore to adopt bourgeoisie democracy and the consequential emphasis on parliamentary mudslinging politics, instead of organising workers, agricultural workers and peasants and van guarding them for a socialist society. The mainstream media and the public portray CPI (M) cadres being involved by the leadership in what is being mentioned as ‘organised crime’ to purely safeguard its power relations and electoral influence, again a consequence of its perverse theoretical orientation which is conveniently called by the party members and the media for their own interests and purposes as ‘Marxist’. Events like ruthless killing of former CPI(M) party member and Revolutionary Marxist Party (RMP) leader T.P. Chandrasekharan conform the line of action often.

On April 11, 1964, 32 Council members at a CPI National Council meeting, walked out in protest, accusing then CPI Chairman Shripad Amrit Dange, a Stalinist hardliner and his supporters of "anti-unity and anti-Communist policies. V S Achuthanandan, one of those 32 council members recently said ‘ Pinarayi Vijayan will meet Dange's fate’. What V.S. failed to mention was how these S.A. Danges’ are evolved and how these Stalinist parties including the CPI (M) are increasingly becoming irrelevant in the lives of ordinary working people, farmers and students.
  
                                                                                                                         
We need
  • - A new workers party accountable to its rank and file, with its programs and policies based on transitional demands for a socialist society under the control of agricultural and industrial working people.

  • - Independent trade unions and student unions.









foot note


[1] A scam related to the contracting of the government and the Canadian firm SNC Lavalin for the renovation of
hydro electric power stations of Kerala, in Pallivasal (37.5 mw), Sengulam (48 mw) and Panniar (30 mw).The Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India reported that Kerala state had lost Rs 374.5 crore in the deal with Lavalin.

[2] Mararikulam is a beach village in the district of Alappuzha, in Kerala.

Friday, March 30, 2012

The Corporate media in India


"Just a few years ago, the corporate media houses, including the multinational news corporations in India were euphoric of the so called ‘growth’ of our economy and were celebrating Ambani’s, Tata’s and the other modern lords of Indian capitalism. An average Indian or “aam adami” was influenced by this gold rush which was very obviously accessible for the privileged corporate at the expenses of the vast majority of our hard working people. 


The share market was forced into the drawing rooms of those average Indian families who after paying a substantial amount of their income to their family health care, their children’s education and for the perpetually inflated food and fuel prices, were looking forward to make savings (with the obvious lack of adequate social security measures). The ordinary public were constantly exposed to the surging Sensex and have been shown the lucrative rising profits by buying and selling shares rather than their conventional ways of saving money by investing in  gold or other properties or even depositing them safely in a bank for low interest rates off course. The stories of those who lost money in the stock markets perhaps not sensational and rewarding enough for the corporate media to follow through."



"Corporate media" is termed to refer the system of mass media production, distribution, ownership, and funding which is dominated by corporations and big businesses with a motive to make profit. In simpler words, the accumulating money of huge proportions, in a corporate scale by making and selling News or information.


Traditionally the popular media like news paper, magazines, Radio and Television broadcast was controlled both by private and public or state entities, a lot according to the type of economy; in a closed economy where usually the state or the public sector play an important role and subsequently their strong influence obviously due to their ownership of the Media. Quite similarly in an open economy, the crystal clear influence of private ownership in the media and in a mixed economy both the public and private media exist together often serving their own interests which frequently reflect through their selection of news and equally important the distortion of news.


The printing press dating back to the Holy Roman Empire around the midst of the 15th century enabled the spread of Renaissance and triggered the democratization of knowledge and the Enlightenment or Age of Reason. The printing press also set off and revolutionised the production and the concept of daily news papers and in its very beginning the news papers were mostly owned privately and was circulated within the establishment network consisting rulers, their associates and the other privileged like the traders, merchants, industrialists and the intellectuals often from a wealthy background. Nevertheless, as the widespread availability of the printing press and the following mass production of newspapers in reduced costs resulted into a wider circulation among the public.


The printing press were often privately owned in the beginning and hence the news papers. The published news was duly selected to representing the interests of the socio economically powerful groups and frequently took a conciliatory approach towards the establishment henceforth reinforcing them. Lucrative markets were created for sensational news and celebrities were created by the sensational news for it to thrive. Science, technology and industrialisation poured in the other sources of mass media including radio, Television, internet and its online literatures.


The political bias that was inherent within the mass media has hardly changed in its fundamentals, even in this modern information age. The much researched account of Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky’s “Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media (1988)”, employs the propaganda model, analyses the mass media- the news media in particular- and reveals that the multimillion corporate possessed news communication media, the press, radio and television are profit oriented businesses subject to commercial competition for advertising revenue and profit.  Manufacturing consent uses the terms “distortion” or “editorial bias” as an inherent part of the news reportage. The news that are being reported and also how they are being reported are all direct outcomes of the profit motives, commercial interests of those big media moguls’ and the level of its dependency over the involved parties in the news reportage.  There are also state-owned or more likely state oppressed media institutions that serve the role of the propagandist for the government/ state policies and also fulfil their need for public relations. 


It is often a Good News Procuring Practice to analyse the various stakeholders or the interest groups involved in any particular bit of news of your concern. Corporate and big businesses are funding the corporate media in India like anywhere in the present world. Therefore the news would be obviously biased towards their interests. In other words, this would encourage the corporate media, to spread the news to favourable to the privately owned big business corporations and multinationals which would be justifying privatisation of the Indian state owned companies, deregulation of petrol prices, showcasing luxury goods in the news channels, selecting and deselecting the news according to the interests of those big businesses; and above all, lobbying among the millions of households for the interests of the very tiny minority of those rich and powerful people.


Free, politically neutral and non biased Mass media is essential for a healthy and transparent democracy, from which the society could achieve the change and development in both political and socio-economic relations. The mass media could only be independent when it is publically owned under democratic workers’ control and also in the control of a wider community with the procurement of news to be more decentralised where the concept of the freedom of the press holds any meaning. Only then it could be the media of the masses.  



-Sajith Attepuram

Friday, January 13, 2012

The Public health crisis in India . . .


During the 2011 budget, when the IndianGDP is estimated to increase by 37% from 2009-10 to 2011-12 the allocation for the health ministry for the various public health oriented national disease control and prevention programmes has gone down by 14%.The Indian ruling class regardless of the political parties they represent are only concerned in their vested interests which could retain them in power. The vast majority national and regional political parties have always achieved unity in their diversities in ignoring the interests of the people who elected them and further exploiting them to be in power and enjoy the privileges of power.

The very notion of Universal healthcare in India is a cruel laugh at the vast majority of its people, where the so called free and universal health infrastructure provided by the government is underfunded, understaffed, undersupplied with medicines and surgical equipments. The hospital beds to patient ratio, doctors to patient ratio, hospitals to patient ratio and the government funding to the extent of our population are all far less from the minimum standards set up by the international regulating bodies.The inadequacy of our government health care system is appalling and forcing even those who cannot afford to pay for their healthcare at the doors of the private health care providers. The average spending by ordinary people for procuring medical care in hospitals is already a large percentage of their earnings when compared toseveral other parts of the world and continuously increasing and is worse in rural areas. The irony of the more poverty stricken and impoverished people in the remote villages and rural areas to pay more for their healthcare as there is a general lack of government healthcare provisioning system and the private healthcare provides are obviously located in well affluent urban areas is a classic example of inverse care law, characterised by health inequalities which is a direct outcome of socio economic inequalities.



Public health care plays a very important role especially in the circumstances of prevailing health inequalities and this drastically inadequate health care provisioning system. Although public health care which is about prevention and control of disease, increasing quantity and quality of life and promoting health is definitely not a replacement for provisioning health care in the following levels:
-           Primary level by the general medical doctor and general dentist and other health care professionals, who not only act as a first point of consultation for all patients within the existing health care systems, like the primary health care centres and private medical clinics etc., but also provide routine check-up, diagnosis and also provide early consultation thus contributing to the prevention of disease or disease progression.

-          Secondary level of healthcare provided by the medical specialists like cardiologists, dermatologists etc., who do not have first contact with the patients. The secondary care also involves acute care and emergency care.

-          Tertiary care is again specialised health care dealing with long time inpatient treatment of chronic diseases like cancer. It also involves rehabilitation and restoration of the functions hampered by the disease progression.

Nevertheless Public health plays an important part in enhancing the quantity and quality of life by emphasising prevention and promoting health. During the First International Conference on Health Promotion, organized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and held in Ottawa, Canada, in November 1986,Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion was signed as an international agreement which apart from setting up sweeping goals to achieve “Health For All”. Itis about the World Health Organization's foremost health care approach to promote health and enhance the quality of human life. Ottawa Charter clearly identifies important areas for health promotion which are:

  • -          Building healthy public policy
  • -          Create supportive environments
  • -          Strengthening community action
  • -          Developing personal skills
  • -          Re-orientating health care services toward prevention of illness and promotion of health.

To frame a healthy public policy, to create supportive environments like public parks, fitness and sports centres etc., to engage in communities to identify their health priorities subsequently enable and empower them to fulfil their health needs, to educate individuals to fulfil their health requirements and finally diverting more resources into prevention and disease control, all of these needs heavy investments. A radical budget allocation into public health care is vital. The recent budget allocations for healthcare particularly public healthcare, which is a meagre 1.4% of India’s GDP, itself, prove that the government have no serious intentions to reverse the present health care system of India. The low budgetary spending in public health care would also ensure the continuation of substandard delivery along with increasing inadequacy to meet the healthcare demands of a growing population. At the same time it also enables the exploitative private health sector to establish itself.  The health care services in the second largest populated country are already in the radar of global business corporations as an industry worth 40 billion US dollars and projected to grow exponentially.

Apart from Kerala, majority of the regional governments have so far consistently smeared the already abused pages of the Indian constitution which declares that "raising of the level of nutrition and the standard of living of its people and the improvement of public health as among its primary duties". The insensitivity of the government policies regarding public health care is not only due to the lack of political will but it is how a vast majority of ruling governments operate throughout the world until they face a mass resistance from ordinary working people and youth. This could possibly be demonstrated in the states of India itself. Organised working people and educated, socially aware young people and also their political consciousness are all reasons for the high human development index and life expectancy seen in Kerala.

It is important to identify and consider the fact that the past and present governments have been consistently considering social spending as an unnecessary burden but vital tool for electoral politics. We expect a radical approach from the government towards public health care.  We need an independent and democratic fact finding commission to precisely estimate the amount of funding required fulfilling the health care demand of our people and the government should at once initiate the allocation of funding according to the health care needs of the people. Sadly the mainstream political parties and the big businesses have different plans. Hence the need is a political, socio economic alternative and a true working class alternative.