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  • चुटका के आदिवासी आएँगे दिल्ली, उठाएंगे परमाणु प्लांट के खिलाफ आवाज़

    पिछले महीने मध्य प्रदेश सरकार ने चुटका परमाणु प्लांट के व्यापक विरोध को दर किनार करते हुए पर्यावरणीय जन सुनवाई को बंदूक की नोक पर सफल करार दिया है । ज्ञात रहे कि व्यापक विरोध के कारण 24 मई, एवं 31 जुलाई, 2013 को राज्य प्रदूषण नियंत्रण बोर्ड, जबलपुर द्वारा आयोजित पर्यावरणीय सुनवाई स्थगित करनी पड़ी थी। इस बार शासन द्वारा भारी पुलिस बल के साये में जन-सुनवाई आयोजित करवाई गई।  इस फर्जी जनसुनवाई के विरोध में स्थानीय समुदाय भोपाल व दिल्ली में अपना विरोध दर्ज करायेंगा। हम आपसे 03 मार्च, 2014 को भोपाल एवं 04 मार्च, 2014 को दिल्ली में जंतर मंतर पर परमाणु ऊर्जा के खिलाफ जन संसद में शरीक होने की अपील करते है।

    03 मार्च, 2014 को भोपाल में चुटका परमाणु परियोजना की स्थापना के खिलाफ रैली तथा मुख्यमंत्री एवं राज्यपाल को ज्ञापन। 
    कार्यक्रम स्थल: यादगारे शाहजहानी पार्क, भोपाल, मध्य प्रदेश 
    04 मार्च, 2014 को दिल्ली में जंतर-मंतर पर राष्ट्रीय परमाणु ऊर्जा के खिलाफ जन-संसद के बाद 
    राष्ट्रपति, अनुसूचित जाति/जनजाति आयोग तथा वन एवं पर्यावरण मंत्रालय को ज्ञापन।
    कार्यक्रम स्थल: जंतर-मंतर, नई दिल्ली 

    मध्य प्रदेश का मण्डला जिला संविधान की पांचवी अनुसूची के तहत वर्गीकृत है, जहां पंचायत (अनु. क्षेत्रों के लिए विस्तार) कानून, पेसा प्रभावशील है। मण्डला जिले में नारायणगंज विकास खण्ड के तहत चुटका ग्राम में चुटका मध्य प्रदेश परमाणु परियोजना प्रस्तावित की गई है। पांचवीं अनुसूची वाले ग्राम टाटीघाट, चुटका, कुण्डा, पाठा, पिण्डरई, सिंगोधा, झांझनगर एवं मानेगांव विकासखण्ड नारायणगंज, जिला मण्डला, म.प्र. की ग्रामसभा द्वारा परियोजना के विरोध में प्रस्ताव पारित किया गया है। इसी प्रकार पिपरिया, पीपाटोला एवं धूमा विकासखण्ड घंसौर, जिला सिवनी, म.प्र. की ग्रामसभा द्वारा परियोजना के विरोध में प्रस्ताव पारित किया गया है। मानिकसराय, लालपुर एवं सांगवा वि.ख. बीजाडांडी, जिला मण्डला, म.प्र. के पंचायत द्वारा परियोजना के विरोध में प्रस्ताव पारित किया गया है।

    इसी विरोध के कारण 24 मई, एवं 31 जुलाई, 2013 को राज्य प्रदूषण नियंत्रण बोर्ड, जबलपुर द्वारा आयोजित पर्यावरणीय सुनवाई स्थगित करनी पड़ी थी। तीसरी बार शासन द्वारा भारी पुलिस बल के साये में जन-सुनवाई 17 फरवरी, 2014 को आयोजित करवाई गई।

    प्रस्तावित परियोजना से प्रभावित गांवों के आदिवासियों को पहले भी बरगी बांध परियोजना के लिए विस्थापित किया गया था। अब उन्हे दोबारा विस्थापित करने की योजना बन रही है। हमे ज्ञात हुआ है कि इन गावों की ग्राम-सभाओं ने इस परियोजना के खिलाफ प्रस्ताव पारित कर आपत्ती भी दर्ज कराई है, लेकिन इसे सरकार ने बिल्कुल अनसुना कर दिया है। यह पंचायत (अनुसूचित क्षेत्रों पर विस्तार) अधिनियम, 1996 और  अनुसूचित जनजाति एवं अन्य परंपरागत वनवासी (वनाधिकारों की मान्यता) अधिनियम, 2006 के प्रावधानों का उल्लंघन है।
    इस एक पक्षीय हुई जन सुनवाई में पुलिस के आतंक व बल प्रयोग के चलते स्थानीय आदिवासी समुदाय को अपनी बात कहने का मौका नहीं दिया गया और पुलिस द्वारा उन्हें बल प्रयोग करके जन सुनवाई स्थल से बाहर निकाल दिया गया जबकि वहां एकत्र हजारों की संख्या में स्थानीय आदिवासी अपना विरोध दर्ज करा रहे थे। इस भारी संख्या को दर किनार करते हुए जन सुनवाई एक पक्षीय रूप से पूरी की गई। इस कार्यवाही के विरोध में स्थानीय समुदाय भोपाल व दिल्ली में अपना विरोध दर्ज करायेंगा। 03 मार्च, 2014 को भोपाल एवं 04 मार्च, 2014 को दिल्ली में जंतर मंतर पर परमाणु ऊर्जा के खिलाफ जन संसद में शरीक हों।

    सम्पर्क – विजय: 09981773205; सत्यम: 09406538817 
    चुटका परमाणु विराधी संघर्ष समिति
    ग्राम चुटका, वि.ख. नारायणगंज, जिला मण्डला,
     म.प्र.

  • Post-ideological Politics and Left Politics

    By Debarshi Das Left, Right and Rights A stream of liberal thought, popular among NGO’s, argues that political parties in India, including the Left, have not done enough for the poor. Leaders and ideologues have kept on harping abstract principles, without caring for stark manifestations of poverty, such as lack of food, education, health. A […]

  • University of Arizona presentation on the self-defense movements of Mexico

    Tucson, AZ – The usual evening at the University of Arizona might involve young males playing war simulations on video game players. That is unless there is a public presentation and discussion of armed indigenous groups battling Mexican drug cartels.

    On Wednesday, February 19, 2014, Simon Sedillo, an activist filmmaker, shared his experience filming “El Movimiento de Autodefensas” (“The Self-Defense Movements”) with fifty University of Arizona students and local activists. Autodefensas are armed indigenous groups that are kicking out the drug cartels in the states of Guerrero and Michoacán. The people are saying “Ya Basta!” to the violence, corruption, and hopeless desperation of living in cartel-controlled areas. Filmmaker Sedillo described the cartel-controlled towns as “The Hood.” In these places, cartels bribe elected officials, police, and military and the community suffers. Taking up arms, communities are now determining their own lives in their ancestors’ territory.

    In the agricultural fields of Michoacán, corn, timber, and fruits are harvested but two commodities dominate production: avocados and marijuana. Michoacán is the worlds leading producer in avocados, and marijuana is a hugely profitable cash crop. In 2010, in the town of Periban, the Knights Templar cartel (KT) seized total control after eliminating its competitors. Competing with rivals, the KT initially appeared community-oriented by building schools and funding projects. However, once control was complete, the KT turned on the community and extorted 50% from any profits that people made. From lemon pickers, avocado farm owners, to tortilla vendors, everybody had to pay. Refusal to comply resulted in threats, and then in torture. Continued refusal meant the KT killed your family, and eventually killed you with a plastic bag over your head.

    In three short years, the terror campaign launched by the KT took many forms. A form of rape called “prima nocta” used by kings and nobles in medieval Europe, involves KT bosses forcing themselves on brides, while their husbands are held hostage. Killing, torture, extortion and kidnapping grip the communities in fear.

    In the most desperate of situations however, the people of Periban and other communities began to rise up in arms. Former gang members turned community defenders grabbed their automatic weapons, while other community members grabbed hunting rifles. With police and politicians long gone, the abandoned vehicles and artillery of the police became the communities’ resources. Boldly, the community defenders began to hunt down and kill members of the KT. After initial success, even lower level members of the KT began begging to switch sides and join the autodefensas. The upper level KT sought to consolidate power by killing off rank and file members of the autodefensas. However, entry into the autodefensas by outsiders is almost impossible.

    Who are the autodefensas?

    The corporate media casts the autodefensas as vigilantes. Others are less certain; Laura Carlsen of the Center for International Policy, joining the conversation from Mexico City by phone, described the autodefensas as “a bunch of men running around with guns.”

    In the room at University of Arizona, Sedillo clarified: “the mainstream media and the official line claim the self-defense patrols are composed of marauding militias. Not true. Comunitarios is what the people in this part of the state call the self-defense groups in order to clarify their relationship to the community. They are from the community and are therefore comunitarios (communitarians).”

    Many communities are returning to traditional ways of governing themselves while also adopting new methods. Both include consensus decision-making and participatory democracy in the form of assemblies. These assemblies decide what is to be done. So the armed groups do not act without the consent of the community, but are accountable to the assemblies.

    Ms. Carlsen cautioned the “militarized nature” of this movement and advocated a peaceful, nonviolent approach. She feels it could lead to further destabilization and an escalation of Federal and paramilitary involvement.

    Carlsen was immediately confronted by an audience member who said: “Malcolm X’s analogy of people sitting on a hot stove and not letting them up best describes your liberal attitude toward these communities right to self-determination and to use force to end the KT’s rape, murder, and torture of their families!”

    The assemblies also decided to root out the remaining elements of the “narcocultura.” For example, a famous “narcocorrido” singer was barricaded from entering Periban to play a scheduled concert. Communities are operating their own TV, radio, and newspapers. They are connected to the indigenous struggles in Chiapas, inspired by the Zapatistas. Solidarity and support is also coming from groups of people in Mexico City.

    Two things stuck out in the presentation: On the one hand, the KT’s capitalist tendency to expand and dominate by investing in productive enterprises such as agriculture and manufacturing, in addition to their drug, gun, and human trafficking operations.

    On the other hand, and much to Sedillo’s pleasant surprise, three mestizo communities are following the indigenous autodefensas inspiration and forcibly removed the cartels from their communities. “If you told me two years ago that I’d be talking about mestizo autodefensas, I would have said you’re crazy,” smiled Sedillo.

    Interestingly, the Federal Government approached the comunitarios for dialogue and the opportunity to become legalized and registered. But this is because “they must admit that it is the comunitarios who know exactly who is involved, where they are hiding, and what the cartel has done to their families over the last several years. The government officials admit that without the help of the comunitarios, it would be impossible to get rid of the Knights Templar cartel. It is clear that the comunitarios have the upper hand in this situation.”

    Unlike Carlsen, Sedillo actually spent time in these “warzones,” giving him access to community members’ voices. Sedillo added that the community members he spoke with named two big fears: “this list of comunitarios names will later be used to criminalize and incarcerate the comunitarios after they have accomplished the task at hand, ridding their state of the Knights Templar” and that “the whole agreement is pure theater, an act by the federal government to buy time and gain control of the situation.”

    Two elderly women from Apatzingan told Sedillo under condition of anonymity: “Why are they signing now? Why work with the government when we have proven that we don’t need them to organize and defend ourselves? Why sign with the white-collar criminals?”

    While drugs, bribery, corruption, and violence cross the US-Mexico border, so too does the fight back. Reports say community members who were living in the US returned home to play a role in this struggle for self-determination. One such person, Nestora Salgado, a strong, dynamic indigenous woman and naturalized US citizen is imprisoned in Mexico since August 21, 2013. Her “crime” is participating in her community’s legal right to form a community police force to protect themselves against the cartels.

    Despite the violence and intensity, Sedillo said he felt safe in what is “liberated territory.”

    The domination of the US over Mexico sees the marriage of drugs and high finance. Profits, prisons, and violence hit both sides, but unequally. In the US, banks launder $350 billion, while mass incarceration is over two million. In Mexico, cartel violence has killed 100,000 and disappeared 10,000 in the last seven years. Banks get the money, the poor get prison, and many Mexicans are displaced, disappeared, or murdered.

    For more information about the autodefensas visit: http://elenemigocomun.net/

     

     

  • UW-Milwaukee protests racial injustice, remembers Trayvon Martin

    Milwaukee, WI – Dozens of students at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee rallied on campus to protest racial injustice and racial profiling, February 26, the second anniversary of the murder of Trayvon Martin.

    “What happened sixty years ago is still happening today,” said Rick Banks, president of BSU as he held a picture of Emmett Till, a 14-year old Black child brutally murdered in 1954 for allegedly speaking to a white woman.

    Protesters held pictures of Trayvon Martin, Derek Williams, Corey Stingley, Marissa Alexander and Emmett Till. Protesters sang the Black national anthem and raised their fists in the air.

    The rally was organized by the Black Student Union, and featured speakers from the United States Student Association, the Sankofa Squad, and AFSCME Local 82.

     

  • From the Pen of the Resistance : The Lalgarh Uprising

    [This is a book review, written by Bernard D’Mello, that was published in EPW. For obtaining a copy of the book, please contact us : communications [at] sanhati [dot] com -Ed] Letters from Lalgarh by the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities, edited and translated by Sanhati (Kolkata: Setu Prakashani in collaboration with www.sanhati.com), 2013; pp […]

  • Feb 28: Flipping the corruption myth

    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2014/01/flipping-corruption-myth-201412094213280135.html Flipping the corruption myth Jason Hickel Transparency International recently published their latest annual Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), laid out in an eye-catching map of the world with the least corrupt nations coded in happy yellow and the most corrupt nations smeared in stigmatising red. The CPI defines corruption as “the misuse of public power […]

  • Feb 28: PMO pulled out all stops to weaken eco, forest norms

    http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/pmo-pulled-out-all-stops-to-weaken-eco-forest-norms/article5730943.ece PMO pulled out all stops to weaken eco, forest norms Nitin Sethi The Prime Minister’s office has repeatedly ordered and orchestrated dilution of environment and forest clearances in order to fast-pace industrial projects, documents with The Hindu show. In a series of orders and missives sent to the Union Environment and Forests Ministry over […]

  • Hyderabad – Seminar on New Forms of Bondage and Rights of Brick Kiln Workers, Mar 1

    The seminar is being organised in the context of grave atrocities being committed on distress driven migrant labour from some of the most backward districts of the country in Odisha, working in brick kilns located in Medak and Rangareddy districts of Telangana state. The labour is predominantly drawn from scheduled castes and scheduled tribe communities. […]

  • Press Release condemning the brutal police violence on the activists of VIBGYOR

    On February 22, 2014, five activists of VIBGYOR International Film Festival were picked up by the police in Trichur and they were brutally beaten up inside the vehicle as well as inside the police station. Young woman cinematographer Neethu was attacked physically by male police and was subjected to sexual verbal abuse as well as […]

  • Kolkata – Kapil Bhattacharyya Memorial Lecture, Mar 6

    Association for Protection of Democratic Rights 1. Topic: “Bharatiya rajnitir bibartan o ganatantrik adhikar raksha” 2. Speaker: Dr. Partha Chatterji 3. Date: The 6th March, 2014 4. Venue: Student’ Hall 5. Time: 5 PM 6. Entry: No bar. Dr.Partha Chatterji is honorary professor of Political Science and the Director of the Centre for Studies in […]