AIKC Meeting: New Peasant Upsurge

INTRODUCTION

The first meeting of the All India Kisan Council (AIKC) after the 23rd Conference held at Varanasi met at Trichur in the Azhikodan Raghavan Memorial Hall from 29th November to 1st December, 1980 under the presidentship of Com. Benoy Krishna Choudhury, the President of All India Kisan Sabha. Besides Comrades Har Kishan Singh Surjeet, M.A. Rasul (Vice Presidents) K. Chathunni Master (General Secretary), Santimoy Ghosh, N. Sankariah (Joint Secretaries) and Comrade M. Basavapunnaiah the members present were comrades:

  1. Gour Saha, 2. Bagala Guha, 3. Paritosh Chatterji, 4. Khudiram

Bhattacharya, 5. Bejoy Modak, 6. Joykesh Mukherji, 7. Sunil Majumdar, 8. Benoy Konar, 9. Mahindra Gope, 10. Anil Saha, 11. Benode Das 12. Ananda Mukherji, 13. Gunadhar Choudhury, (14) Madhu Bag, 15. Chandra, 16. Provash Roy, 17. Santosh Banerji,

  1. Siban Chowdhury (West Bengal) 19. N. Krishnan Nair, 20. M.P. Narayanan Nambiar, 21. P.V. Kunhikannan, 22. T.K. Ramakrishnan, 23. P.P. Esthose, 24. U. Kunhiraman, 25. T. Chathu, 26. A. Kanaran, 27. R. Krishnan, 28. P.K. Kunhachan, 29. V.S. Achuthanandan, 30. K.P. Aravindakshan, (Kerala) 31. U. Ramam, 32. T.V.R. Chandram, 33. V.

Narasimha Reddy, 34. J. Venkatesh, 35. P.V. Subba Rao, (Andhra Pradesh) 36. R. Rama Raj, 37. G. Veeraiyan 38. T. P. Muthuswamy, 39. N. Varada Rajan, 40. N. R. Ramaswamy, 41. P. Kumara Velu, 42. P.S. Danushkoti, (Tamil Nadu) 43. Rachpal Singh, 44. Dalip Singh Johal, 45. Chand Singh, (Punjab) 46. Narayan Kar, 47. Samar Choudhury (Tripura), 48. Noorul Huda, 49. Tarun Khakhlari, (ASSAM) 50. Krishna Kant Singh, 51. Subhodh Roy, 52. Ramashray Singh, 55. Rajendra Singh Munda, 54. Tarini Yadav, (BIHAR) 55. Khitish Viswal, (ORISSA), 55. Jiwan Lal Jariram Das, (Gujarat), 57. Tarachand, 58. Kuldip Singh, (Himachal Pradesh), 59. Rishi Dev, 60. Nabi Mallik, (Jammu & Kashmir), 61. Jagannath Bharati, (Madhya Pradesh) 62. V N. Halakatti, 63. P. Ramachandra Rao, (Karnataka).

The Council has discussed elaborately the problems facing the peasantry and their struggles which are being conducted in an unprecedented dimension in almost all the states in our country and adopted unanimously General Secretary’s Report and Resolutions which gathered much importance to strengthen All India Kisan Sabha and united actions of the peasantry in this period of new peasant upsurge all over the country.

Comrade E.K. Nayanar, Cheif Minister of Kerala greeted the Council meeting with a speech which indicate the changes of the agrarian relation in Kerala. A massive rally in connection with the Council meeting was held at Trichur on 30th December which was addressed by Comrades E.M.S. Namboodiripad, Harkishan Singh Surjit, M. Basavapunnaiah, E. K. Nayanar and K. Chathunni Master. Com. P.V. Kunhikannan, General Sacretary of the Kerala Karshaka Sangham presided over the meeting and A.S.N. Nambissan, the Chairman of the Reception Committee welcomed the rally. Com. K.P. Aravindakshan, Secretary of the Reception Committee has extended vote of thanks to the rally.

We hope the publication of these decuments will be helpful to understand the meaning and contents of the new upsurge of peasantry of our country which has already raised the conflicting reactions even among the Indian ruling hierarchy.

After the AIKC meeting, a meeting of the representatives of the peasant masses in the country was held at New Delhi on 16th December 1980 and adopted a resolution and formed a “Central Kisan Co-ordination Committee“. We included this resolution also in this publication.

Our earnest hope is that these documents will induce further fillip to the unity of struggling peasantry of India and it will help to strengthen the All India Kisan Sabha.

K. CHATHUNNI MASTER General Secretary

NEW DELHI 3.1.1981

Dear Comrade,

The All India Kisan Council is meeting after a period of more than one year and eight months. Although this is the second meeting of the A.I.K.C. after this body was constituted through an amendment to the Constitution feeling the necessity of the wider body in between the two conferences in reality this is the first meeting. One meeting was, no doubt, held before the conclusion of the A.I.K.S. session at Varanasi to elect its office-bearers and the members of the C.K.C. on April 1, 1979. As per the Constitution of the A.I.K.S. this body was to meet before April 1980 but due to various political developments in the country this schedule could not be adhered to.

Since the Varanasi Session of the A.I.K.S. many important changes have taken place in the international situation, and also in our country. Before I deal with them I pay my homage to those comrades who are no longer with us.

Comrades, I express my deep sorrow over the passing away of Com. Surhid Mullick Choudhury, member of the Central Kisan Council, who suddenly passed away due to heart attack. He served the All India Kisan Sabha as CKC member for many years, with the devotion and purpose.

I express my deepest grief on the death of Com. Ramanand Singh who was a member of the C.K.C. and the General Secretary of the Bihar State Kisan Sabha for the last many years. He was brutaly murdered by a gang of criminals when he was travelling in a bus, near Bihar Sherif on 19th October, 1979. His death is a heavy loss not only to the All India kisan Sabha but also to the Left and Democratic forces of Bihar.

I express my deep sorrow at the death of Com. A.V. kunhambu. He was a veteran peasant leader who was convicted in the famous Karivelloor case and contributed a lot in building the peasant movement in Kerala. He was a member of CKC for many years. Throughout his life he fought for the cause of peasants and other downtrodden people. His services will remain long in our memory. I mourn the death of Com. Hardet Singh Bhattel, Vice-President of the Punjab Kisan Sabha who for sixty long years worked for the cause of peasants, first in the struggle for national independence facing the tyranny of fuedal princes and then against the Congress regime. He was a household figure in the earstwhile Pepsu area of Punjab. I also express my deep sorrow the sudden death of Comrade Satyanarayan Chande, AIKC member from West Bengal.

Let me remember on this occasion scores of martyrs who have laid their life in defending the interests of the peasants and who died at the hands of the landlords goondas and by bullets of the police.

This period has witnessed many developments on the international scene. Because of the deepening crisis of world capitalist system the conflict between the developing and the developed countries are growing everyday and the non-aligned movement is playing a positive role today in the struggle against imperialism. This phenomena is expressed in all the world forums whether it is a meeting of 77, Conference of UNESCO or the special session of UNO on the Third development decade. The forces of liberation are no doubt growing.

This period has also seen the victorious struggle of the people of Zimbabwe resulting in independence of Zimbabwe throwing a challenge to the racialists and imperialists in Namibia and South Africa, that their rule cannot last for long and the last bastion of imperialism and racialism are to be eliminated. This period has seen the victory of the people of Nicaragua and the strengthening of the struggle of the people of EI Salvador, Columbia and many other countries of Latin American.

In this period the policy of detente has suffered a setback and the danger to world peace and the danger of war has increased. Raising a false scare about the Soviet danger to the security of USA, the American imperialists are piling up new armaments and creating a war atmosphere. The real aim is to put the USA in its strategic position to dominate the world and be ready with the new geneocidal armaments to threaten the socialist and other independent countries. The victory of Reagan in U.S. Presidential election who has been openly advocating the policy of condrontation has further added to this danger.

The war between Iran and Iraq, the two non-aligned countries which have been playing an important role in the struggle against imperialism and Israeli Zionism has only encouraged US imperialism to further disrupt the Arab unity and the unity of non-aligned countries. At the Varanasi Conference we had hailed the victory of the Iranian people who carried out successful revolution against the tyrannial rule of US puppet, of the late Shah of Iran and overthrew it, thereby striking a heavy blow to US imperialism in this region. It is regrettable that these two non-aligned countries are engaged in a full-scale war against each other which not only would seriously damage their economy and life but would disrupt the unity of the Arab people against US machinations. This war is having disastrous effects on the glorious freedom struggle of the Palestinian people under the leadership of the PLO and offer opportunities to US and other imperialist powers to interfere in this region. This is a great portent for the Indian sub continent. The Iran-Iraq war has further seriously affected the economy of the developing countries. This war only benefits the US imperialists and the reactionaries and every step should be taken to stop this war and prevail on the leadership of these two countries to settle the disputes through negotiations.

The situation in the South-East Asia continues to remain tense. In the name of socalled Kampuchean issue, the US imperialists and Asian countries are out to create the situation of instablility in this region the region which for decades have fought against the foreign imperialist rule, including the direct intervention of US imperialism.

We had adopted a resolution in Varanasi about the unification of Korca. But US imperialists have encouraged on another coup in South Korea which has unleashed severe repression on the democratic movements inside South Korea and the authorities there are trying to bar the way to its unification. US imperialists continue to keep their armed forces in South Korea to perpetuate the puppet regime.

Our country also is facing a serious danger in the strengthening of the American base in Diego Garcia and by arming the military rulers of Pakistan by America under cover of Afghan developments. Perhaps it is because of Pakistan’s threat, Indian Government has been able to take a sobre view of the Afghan developments and have refused to join the chorus of attacking Soviet Union.

Apart from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal and even Bhutan are being used to pressurise India. Bhutan asserted its “independence” to India at the non-aligned conference by refusing to vote for the recognition of the new Kampuchean Government. Therefore it is very necessary to fight against the manoeuvres of imperialism. It is the bounden duty of the peasant movement in the country to solidly stand behind the national liberation forces and against war and for peace.

Coming to the national situation big changes have taken place in the political situation since Varanasi. In the General Secretary’s report at Varanasi it was pointed out that “the class bias of the new Government was revealed in its proposed Industrial Relations Bill, which has been described by the entire working class movement as the most reactionary, antiworker, and anti-trade union Bill ever presented to Parliament, in its eagerness to join hands with the Congress party in order to keep the emergency provisions and the provisions for preventive detention in the Constitution and in the budge proposals presented to Parliament only a month ago.

“The organised attacks on harijans colonies by the goondas of the vested interest in many states of the country of which the Belchi and Villupuram incidents are not two isolated examples, the raping and killing of women, the burning of their huts and the general atmosphere of terror which is prevailing in many parts of the country, are being encouraged, if not always by the active participation of a section of the ruling party in those atrocities, but at least by the indifference and tolerance shown towards these by the Gomernment. While the fear of the return of authoritarianism is still real, and there can be no denying of the valuable contribution made by sections of the Janata Party in the fight against authoritarian trends, the workers of the Kisan Sabha can ill-afford to forget the class character of the present regime and neglect the task of sustaining and stepping up of the struggle in defence of the rural poor, against the present Janata regime”.

Subsequnetly only four months after Varanasi, a serious crisis crupted in the Janata party leading to the fall of Janata Government and the formation of Lok Dal-Congress(U) Government. This Government also could not rally the majority in Parliament and the country was to go in for new elections. In the elections to the Lok Sabha which were held in January 1980, the Indira Congress got a sweeping victory except the states were the Left and Democratic movement was strong. This was not an ordinary change of the government but a return to the key position of large number of those who were instrumental for the Emergency crimes. Immediately following the formation of the Cabinet many bureaucrats whose actions were exposed in the various reports dealing with the Emergency excesses were placed in the key posts.

Not content with this the Indira Government utilising its brute, majority in the Parliament arbitrarily dissolved the nine state Assemblies to enforce the monopoly of its rule in those nine States too. Subsequently the Government began threatening, the Left Front Governments in the name of the so-called law and order and began discriminating against them in order to create difficulties for them. The issuing of National Security Ordinance initiated of the debate on the Presidential form of Government. The proposal to curtail the power of the Chief Justice on the question of appointment and transfer of judges, arbitrary dismissal of the Governer of Tamil Nadu shows that the Government instead of tackling the problems of the people is bent upon in perpetuating its rule through authoritarian methods. Not a single pledge given to the Masses during the elections about bringing down prices, providing employment, eradicating poverty has been fulfilled. In fact, it is trying to divert the attention of the people from the burning problems of the masses.

Instead of securing the co-operation on important issues of communal and national unity, the Prime Minister started attacking all opposition at a time when the country is faced with very serious situation in the North-East region. The genuine discontentment of the people of the North-East region has been diverted into secessionist channel. No solution is seen to be in sight on the problems of Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Nagaland and other States. In Assam, the reactionary forces helped from outside are exploiting the situation to disrupt the national unity. The peasant movement in Assam had to face a very critical situation, but heroically stood against the disruption of the democratic movement and in defence of national unity opposing the secessionist slogans of the movement.

This period also saw the reactionary efforts to disrupt the democratic movement in Tripura, one of the strongest base of peasant movement, the unity forged between the tribals and the non-tribals through struggles was sought to be disrupted by organising riots between them. Here also the hand of foreigners could be clearly seen. In fact, the developments in the North-East region posed a serious challenge to the Indian unity, and the very Indian citizenship. This has to be resisted by the peasant movement of the country. The separation of North-Eastern areas has been a part of the imperialist plan for weakening and dismembering India and some reactionary leaders of the movements in these areas are playing in their hands.

This period has witnessed eruption of communal riots in many parts of the North starting on the attack by the PAC personnel on the praying Muslims on Id day in a mosque at Moradabad. This has again created a sense of insecurity among the Muslim minority in the country. This is meant to disrupt the common movement of the working class, peasants and other sections of the toiling people. Therefore, the Kisan Sabha has to fight consistently against the communal forces of all varieties.

It is in this period the attacks against harijans are continued and the offensive of the landlords is on.

Moreover this period has witnessed the molestation of women by innumerable instance of rape, specially in police custody. The Bhaghpat incident followed by Dabunaly and many other incidents have enraged the peasantry and they have launched protests to encircle the police stations and by holding big demonstration and even offering satyagrahas.

The promising element in the situation is the growing unity of the masses and united actions of the peasants on various issues. There have been in the period spontaneous struggles of the peasants for remunerative prices, against indebtedness and taxes. The agricultural workers went on struggle for minimum wages and homestead lands. The mass struggle of the peasants of Karnataka, the bandh in Andhra Pradesh, the struggles of Maharashtra farmers and the peasants of Punjab, the Bihar Bandh and the Bengal Bandh are indicators of growing unity of the peasants in defence of the interests and to fight against the drive towards authoritarianism.

In this respect, the coming together of the six opposition parties is a welcome feature on the issue of prices, communalism and democracy. This has given a big fillip to the peasants struggles that are going on in the country. We from this platform should lend our full support to these efforts for united action. But we should not feel content with this. More active participation of the peasantry is required in order to fight in defence of the interests of the peasantry. We should join hands with others against authoritarianism and in defence of democracy. Now, I would proceed to deal with the concrete problems facing the peasantry today.

AGGRAVATING PEASANT PROBLEMS AND ITS IMPACT

In the Secretary’ report to the 23rd AIKS Conference which was held from 30th March to 1st April 1979 at Varanasi, it was correctly stated that “the biggest single problem in the rural areas at present is the crash in the prices of agricultural produces especially of commercial crops but also of food grains. Be it cotton or jute, sugarcane or potatoes, tobacco or rubber the prices which the actual producers are getting do not even meet the cost of production. If we are not able to win remunerative prices for the agriculture produces, the entire rural economy will be seized by a crisis the magnitude of which affects all sections of the peasantry and the widest mobilisation is possible in the struggle for remunerative prices” and the report emphasised further “during this period fair price for the crops became a major demand of the peasant movement in practically every states”.

The anti-peasant, anti-people and pro-monopoly policies of the government which has continued ruthlessly in the intervening period between the Varanasi Conference and this AIKC meeting, have further aggravated this burning problem unprecedentaly and the different section of peasant producers and their various organisations, cutting across all political barriers, are compelled to fight against this policy unitedly to win a remunerative price for agricultural produces. This problem has come to the forefront opening the prospect of broadest united action of all the section of the peasantry on a national scale.

The serious impact of this vexed problem on the age old other problems of the peasantry ie. tenancy, share cropping, rent to land lords, failure of implementation of land legislation and distribution of surplus land, rural indebtedness, problems of agricultural workers, tax burden etc, has extremely worsened the misery of the peasanty in manyfold, especially of the poor and middle peasanty and agricultural workers. This extraordinary situation has fermented the entire peasantry unprecedentedly and compelled them to unite and fight for existence.

The gravity of this objective factors naturally urges upon the peasantry and their organisation to consolidate their strength and struggles to mitigate the pauperisation of the peasantry by winning over their demands which include the demands on implementation of land legislation, debt relief measures, agricultural workers minimum wage etc., etc.

STRUGGLES FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF LAND REFORMS

The level of implementation of land reform legislations varies from state to state in our country. The progress of land legislation implementation and the enactment of the new amendment act to plug the lacunas and the radical amendments to ractify the drawback in the existing land reform act are in a snail’s creeping speed, except in Kerala, West Bengal and Tripura. Because of the delinquency of the land reform implementation and the absence of the powerful struggles to implement it a large majority of Indian peasants still continue as share croppers, tenants at will, without fixity of tenure under the ruthless eviction and exploitation by way of exorbitant share from share-croppers and rent to the land owners. Implementation of the ceiling act and taking over of the surplus land were being nullified with the connivance of the Janata and Congress(I) rulers wherever they were in power for the last so many years and denied the distribution of surplus land to the landless rural poor.

The basic cause of atrocities against Harijans and other weaker sections mainly arise from the unfulfilled tasks of radical land reform measures. The vicious circle of persistant hike of inflation and living costs and ever-increasing price of agricultural inputs and the unremunerative price level of agricultural produce of Indian economy have inflicted multifarious misery to the Indian peasants. The remnants of fuedal and landlord exploitation wherever being continued, because of the failure of implementation of land reforms have multiplied the miseries of the peasants and agricultural labourers in those States.

The struggle for land reform measures is a long and continous one of step by step advancement to win over radical changes in the agrarian set up of our country. In the path of this struggle of course, many obstacles are there, like constitution, courts, the grip of land lord interest in the State and Central Government etc;. But our experience has proved that the massive and powerful and continous struggle can remove these obstacles to a great extent by the ardent endeavour of the organised peasant movement. Therefore AIKS should take the initiative to renew the struggle and unite other peasant organisations for the implementation of the unfulfilled tasks of radical land reforms.

Eviction of tenants at will and share-croppers is rampant especially in whole Hindi area. While campaigning for the implementation of land legislation acts including ceiling acts, we should take up the problem of recording of rights of the tenants at will and share croppers as a burning issue. Organising resistance against the evictions also an urgent task to be carried out by way of all forms of direct actions.

To begin this agitation and struggle at the outset, AIKS should special state conventions to review the progress of the land legislation in the concerned states and formulate our amendments and suggestions to the existing legislation and decide to programme of future action in this regard. Simultaneouly we should approach the other peasant organisations especially the other Kisan Sabha (CPI) to launch a united struggle for its implementation. For this purpose state level Co-ordination committees of the various peasant organisations can be forme and state level joint conventions also be needed to chalk out the demands and form of action. We should always keep in mind that our independent activities and endeavour are necessary to launch a united action and its advancement to achieve further victory in this field to transform the existing land owenership system for the benifit of the tillers of the land.

AGRICULTURAL LABOURERS’ PROBLEMS AND STRUGGLES

The Joint All India Convention of Agricultural Labour Organisations held on 23rd October, 1979 in Delhi demanded that the Central Government should enact an All India Act for the protection and welfare of the agricultural labourers. In this regard, the Rural Labour Bureau of the Government of India constituted a committee including Comrade H.S. Surjeet, Vice President of AIKS which submitted its recommendations quite recently. The Central labour Minister has given the assurance in the Parliament that a new bill would be introduced as soon as possible on the basis of this recommendation. Therefore this is the opportune time to initiate an All India Movement to force the Central Government to speed up the procedures of this legislation.

The All India united Convention of Agricultural Labour Organisations decided to conduct united agitation and struggle on this issue. But this decision could not be implemented because of the successive election to the Parliament and State Assemblies. The demands for joint campaign adopted by the convention include the following:—

  1. Conferring of Trade Union rights to agricultural workers including the right to collective bargaining and collective agreements with definite guarantees against infringement of those rights.

Simplification of the procedure for registration of Trade Unions of agricultural workers in order to make it easier and quicker. Relaxation in the provision of Union Membership subscription considering the low income and backwardness of the agricultural workers.

  1. Security of Employment.
  2. Working conditions to be regulated with fixation of working time according to the nature of work with condition that in no way the total working period should exceed eight hours a day, Provision for overtime payment for additional work. First aid, place for rest during interval, etc,. Special provision for regulating child labour with suitable protection to their health.
  3. Compensation in injury and loss of life Ind safety measures.
  4. Wage boards to be constituted for fixing wages on scientific basis. Proper representation to agricultural workers organisations on such wage for equal work between men and women.
  5. Proper and effective machinery to deal with labour disputes in the agricultural sector. Separate labour wing or Labour Department in the States and at the Centre with an Agricultural Directorate at the State headquarters with enough number of officers at district and tehsil level and adequate number of inspectors.
  6. Medical leave, casual leave, earned leave, etc; maternity benefits to women workers.
  7. Social Security Scheme such as Provident Fund, workers and employers to make equal contribution.

A separate board with representatives of workers, employers and government to administer the provident fund scheme.

A social security fund to be set up to provide assistance to rural workers at the time of death, marriage and birth and in old age, etc, with the contribution of workers, employers and government. Major contribution but to in this fund has to come from the government.

A seperate board with representatives of workers, employers and government to administer the fund.

  1. Tripartite Labour bodies to be set up at the Centre and State headquarters to discuss and decide general policy matters and specific issues of importance relation to problem of industrial relation in Agriculture.
  2. Watch dog committees at District levels should consist at representatives of workers, employers and district administration to review the progress of implementation of the provision of law and suggest improvements in implementation and to discuss specific issues relating to the districts.

Apart from these demands of the Joint Convention and there commendation of the Rural Labour Sub-Committee, the measures taken by the Left and Left-Democratic Governments of West Bengal and Kerala to ameliorate the depressed conditions of the Agricultural workers such as old age pension, have given new inspiration and confidence to the Agricultural Workers all over the country. If we try to use this opportunity properly this is the best opportune time to organise them in a big way on a national level.

In Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and Punjab our Agricultural Labour Union organisation is working separately in State level for the last many years. Recently Tripura PKC decided to organise a separate State organisation for the Agricultural labourers. In Tamil Nadu our Kisan Sabha movement mainly confined among the Agricultural Labourers especially Tanjore District which is one of the Kisan strongholds in Tamil Nadu. In all other states agricultural workers are being organised on district level or area levels and are functioning separately under the Kisan Sabha.

The problems of the Agricultural Labourers are not only the wages and the Acts regarding that, but other vital issue like allotment of house sites, housing schemes, distribution of government lands and surplus lands, social oppression police and landlord gunda repression, untouchability, atrocities on them etc, etc,. Kisan Sabha and Agricultural Labour Unions independently and united with others fought many a battles on these demands in this period in almost all the States especially in Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Bihar and Himachal Pradesh. These struggles are mainly for increasing the wage or for the implementation of the minimum wage Act, distribution of the government land and surplus land for house sites, for the grand to thatch the hutments and dwelling-huts, farms servants and Beedi leave plucking workers demands, against the attacks of police and landlords goondas etc, etc,. In the fighting fields of these struggles many fighters of the Kisan Sabha Workers have been killed by Police and goondas of landlords and many were maimed with injuries almost all over the States especially in Andhra Pradesh.

In Andhra Pradesh many struggles were launched independently and unitedly with the CPI Agricultural Labour Union (BKMU) facing brutal repression and won over many demands wherever the struggles were carried out. In 1979 a joint struggle was conducted demanding the distribution of 40,000 acres of benami and surplus land on 13 districts 70,000 agricultural labourers including 5000 women participated in this movement. 4000 of them were arrested and 3000 of them are even undre prosecution. One comrade died and two others lost their arms in police firing.

Over a lakh of people picketed government offices for two days in about a hundred Taluk centres for house sites and grant of Rs. 2,000/- to build their huts as the State legislative council passed unanimously a resolution for. The Agricultural Labour Union through its branches has been agitating and working to secure house sites in 426 villages of eleven districts. In about 60 villages sites have already been obtained by about 4,500 families.

Beedi leaf picking is an important source of work in the plains and forest areas of Khammam and Warangal districts, 1,22,000 Beedi leaf workers belonging 912 villages and hamlets went on strike for about two weeks and succeeded in raising their total income by Rs. 5 lakhs over the prevalent rates and Rs. 17 lakhs over the government fixed rates. So, too many strikes had been waged on the demands of the farm servants and agricultural labourers to raise their wages and succeeded increased wage.

Heinous killing and repression by police and goondas including Naxalites and Congress (I) were a regular phenomenon here especially in Khammam and Warangal Districts. In the last 2 years 46 comrades were killed and many thousands were injured. On Comrade Omkar, M.L.A attempts have been made to murder by these goondas more than one time Naxalities have become the arms in the hands of landlords and Con(I) gangs here to supress the struggles and kill our comrades. All India Kisan Sabha and its state units should take these repression as a special issue all over India to campaign and compel the authorities to stop it. Andhra Pradesh Kisan Sabha and Agricultural Labour Union deserves more help from other States to defeat this brutal attacks against our movement there.

Kerala Agriculturul Labour Union and PKC jointly taken up the fight to defeat the enactment of the socalled land legislation amendment bill initiated by Mohamed Koya Ministry which was intended to conceal the surplus lands and legalise the benami transaction of surplus lands by big land holders. This struggle was continued until the fall of Koya Ministry and win over some participant parties of the Koya coalition and with there support also, the undesirable intention of that amendment has been checked by another amendmet bill passed by the Kerala legislature under Com. Nayanar Ministry, but this bill is even pending before the Central Government for its assent. Kerala Kisan Sabha and Agricultural Labour Union are periestantly campaigning to obtain the assent for this Kerala land reform amendment act.

Kerala Agricultural Labour Union has been conducting a struggle to increase the prevailing wage of the agricultural workers. In some areas they have won more than the fixed wage and the struggle continues in other areas where the increase is not achieved.

West Bengal Kisan Sabha conducted a struggles in thousands of villages to implement the fixed minimum wage act and own this demand successfully. Several court injunctions issued for the benefits of the land lords against minimum wage and operation burga have been defeated by the struggles of the peasants and agricultural workers in the fields. In Tamil Nadu also this kind of court injunctions against the minimum wage has been defeated by organised struggles of the agricultural workers.

Although we are working separately in some States and areas we must keep in mind always firmly that the relation between both these organisations are to be close and familiar to the utmost. In other words what should be in the strong frame work of the same lines and principles which have up held by the All India Kisan Sabha in its whole glorious tradition that the peasants and agricultural labourers are the both sides of revolutionary Kisan movement.

BURDEN OF RURAL INDEBTEDNESS AND TAXES

One of the serious effects of the all embracring crisis of the unremunerative price problem of agricultural produce is that it worsened the other pressing problems of the peasants like agricultural debts, taxes, Spiralling prices, rent to the landlords, by peasants and share croppers etc, etc as adding more fuel to the fire. Therefore abrogation of rural indebtedness and unbeatable taxes, betterment levies and many types of cesses on the peasantry became the most distressing problems to be solved urgently.

The agricultural and rural indebtedness, has turned up to be one of the most disturbing problems of the peasants and agricultural labourers and rural artisans. It was estimated years ago that Rs. 6000/- crores were the rural indebtedness of the peasants. Now it has further increased because of the enhancement of disbursement of loans after the period of the above estimation of agricultural credit societies, commercial bank and Government Agencies. The following data may throw some more light on the existing rural indebtedness.

PRIMARY AGRICULTURAL CREDIT SOCIETIES

State Loans outstanding as on 30.6.1978 Overdues as on 30.6.1978 Overdues as Percentage of Loans outstanding
Maharashtra 294.47 157.52 53.5
Uttar Pradesh 191.92 91.35 47.6
Gujarat 218.01 90.33 41.4
Madhya Pradesh 121.38 75.31 62.0
Tamil Nadu 207.26 68.55 33.0
Karnataka 129.00 63.42 49.2
Andhra Pradesh 128.33 42.71 33.3
West Bengal 74.71 31.81 42.6
Haryana 71.58 29.83 41.7
Punjab 68.01 28.99 42.6
Bihar 36.48 28.61 78.4
Kerala 85.90 25.19 29.3
Orissa 52.58 22.89 43.5
1798.07 809.62 45

According to press reports, commercial banks have lent a total amount of Rs. 2200/- crores to agriculturists till the end of May 1979. In the year 1978-79 the aggregate credit to State Co-operative Banks sanctioned by the Reserve Bank of India was Rs. 942/- crores. Apart from this credit sanctioned by commercial banks and credit societies, peasants were compelled to take loans from Land Mortgage Banks and many government agoncies like Blocks, Takabi Loans etc, in this period. Including private loans it will far exceed than that of the past estimate: The Following Table reveals further.

REPORT ON CURRENCY AND FINANCE. 1978-79

Source Loans issued (Rupees Crores) Loans
during Outstanding as on June 30
1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78P 1978-79E 1978P 1979E
I. Co-operatives (July-June) of Which 1039.2 1186.7 1431.2 1475.2 1740.0 2762.0 3405.0
(a) Short-term loans by PACS 750.0 881.4 1016.3R 1108.0 1240.0 1309.7 1610.0
(b) Term loans by PACS/LDBs 289.2 305.3 414.9 367.2 500.0 1452.3 1795.0
II. State Govts.(April-March) 77.5 81.5 82.3R 97.8 146.4 N.A. N.A.
III. Scheduled Commercial banks 274.3 404.9 507.7 569.4 670.0 1339.7 1747.9
(April-March) of which
(a) Short-term loans 146.1 212.5 253.8R 288.1 325.0 546.6 661.4
(b) Term Loans 128.2 192.4 253.9 281.3 345.0 793.1 1086.5
IV. Regional Rural Banks(July-June) N.A. 1.5 16.2 43.7 101.1 N.A. N.A.
Total Direct Finance(I to V) of which 1391.0 1674.6 2037.4 2186.1 2657.5 4101.7 5152.9
(a) Short-term loans 973.6 1176.9 1368.6 1537.6 1812.5 1856.3 2271.4
(b) Term loans 417.4 497.7 668.5 648.5 845.0 2245.4 2881.5

Revised. P= Provisional. E= Estimates. N.A. Not Available.

The spiralling inflation and the unremunerative price for agricultural produce and the persistant increase of living cost heavily added to the miseries of the indebted peasant. Not only that, many agricultural labourers and poor peasant who are indebted to private money lenders are being kept in bondage and cruelly exploited. Penal interest and its accumulation is the another thorn in the flesh. Lakhs of peasants and under litigation and victims of action and attachment procedures on account of their over dues. This pitiable situation amplifies the urgent need of getting relief from agricultural and rural indebtedness as has been demanded for the last many years by AIKS and other peasant organisations of India.

The State-wise details of the over-due agricultural loans of the period ending June 1978 is giving below. Accumulating interest and penal interests of this outstanding and with the further over-due for the year 1979 and 1980 we can estimating neck breaking burden of the aggregate over-due on peasants.

Name of the State Total loan outstanding(Rs. Lakhs) Percentage overdue loans
Haryana 6353.37 32.1
Himachal Pradesh 580.48 53.2
J. & K. 205.90 37.4
Punjab 8446.52 23.6
Rajasthan 5826.46 50.0
Chandigarh 143.27 65.1
Delhi 862.42 51.0
Assam 392.80 70.2
Manipur 50.00 69.9
Meghalaya 60.32 73.8
Nagaland 8.72 30.8
Tripura 124.31 55.4
Arunachal Pradesh 0.70 57.1
Mizoram 0.58 56.1
Sikkim
Name of the State Total loan outstanding(Rs. Lakhs) Percentage of overdue loans
Bihar 5864.58 64.2
Orissa 2250.62 58.2
West Bengal 5821.97 59.1
A & N Island 18.94 99.3
Madhya Pradesh 7041.46 61.1
Uttar Pradesh 13263.63 43.5
Gujarat 7563.79 59.8
Maharashtra 15142.05 62.1
D & N Haveli 2.73 63.9
Goa, Daman & Diu 444.34 23.7
Andhra Pradesh 18470.65 42.1
Karnataka 13556.29 52.6
Kerala 5764.13 3.6
Tamil Nadu 15150.60 47.0
Lakshadweep 0.89 16.7
Pondicherry 526.31 23.1
All India 133938.83 49.8

As a result of the widespread agitation and struggle all over the country in general and in some states in particular, the new state Government which have taken the reins of administration on States after the last election, were compelled to declare debt relief measures. Another important catalyst for this move as the impact of the many measures taken by the Left Front Governments in West Bengal, Tripura and the Left Democratic Government of Kerala to ameliorate the sufferings of the rural poor and the peasants.

Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu Governments have promised to write off the agriculture debts to a certain extent. In Maharashtra, farmers holding 7.5 acres of land in drought-hit areas and five acres in other parts would be provided with the benefit of this new legislation. In Tamil Nadu peasants who own two hectres of land will be benefited as announced by the Tamil Nadu Government. An amount of Rs. 29 crore Taravi loans outstanding at July 1980 has been cancelled in Tamil Nadu. According to the offical spokeman of Maharashtra Government Rs. 49/- crores would be spent for the purpose from their own ex-chequer. Tamil Nadu Government has stated that for the abrogation of debt Rs. 62/- crores would be spent to write off the debts due to commercial banks, credit societies and Government agencies. Tamil Nadu Government has rightly demanded from Central Government to bear portion of this financial commitment. Both these Government proclaimed that the legislation will abrogate the debts of the above mentioned peasants due to the credit societies, commercial banks and Government agencies.

Karnataka Government has announced some concession of rural indebtedness under the heavy pressure of the might Karnataka peasant struggles. It includes abrogation of Taking Loans and penal interest on other loans and cancellation debt overdue of certain categories of peasants.

Kerala and West Bengal Governments have given real measures to the agricultural debters by taking the responsibilities to pay arrears of interests against their debts overdue from 1976. Instead of giving adequate financial help to the State Governments which are intent upon implementing this legislation, the Union Agriculture Minister has only offered a from survey on rural indebtedness.

Therefore it is necessary to take a new guide line by the All India Kisan Sabha to strengthen the process of agitation and struggle for the abrogation of the rural indebtedness reviewing the past resolution in this context.

  1. AIKS should demand to abrogate the agriculture debt of the peasants and agricultural labourers and village artisans who hold land upto 5 acres.
  2. This abrogation law should cover all the debts of peasants including dues to credit societies, commercial banks and Government agencies.
  3. Regarding the peasants who are holding more than five acres of land should be provided with cancellation of penal interest, long-term installments to repay the overdue etc,..
  4. We should demand for an All India Act by the Central Government and compel it to take its responsibility on this burning demand of the peasants and also demand that the Central Government should not evade its responsibility in this matter under the pretext of the new survey.

AIKS and its affiliate organisations should take the initiatial to unite other peasant organisations for the joint agitation struggle on this demand to compel the Central and State Goverments to implement the debt relief Act as early as possible.

The unbearable burden of multifarious taxes were imposed peasants one by one by the rulers, of our country under the next of socalled theory of “untaped agricultural income”. The back-breaking affect of this accumulated tax burden as bilessly aggravated by the unremunerative farm prices and depanding spiralling inflation.

Some of the export duties charged upon the agriculture commodities as Coffee, Turmeric, Spices far exceed that whatever the cost of such produces really getting to the producers. Unbearable and uneconomical higher rates of betterment levy and water charges compulsorly are being collected from the peasants in all the irrigated lands. Higher rates of sale-tax are imposed on the producers on several agricultural commdities. Agricultural income tax and land revenue are also there in a variaties of forms. Apart from this several other local administration and panchayat’s taxes are also in operation. Until and unless the income of the peasants are to be assured by way of a fair remunerative prices for their produces and the availability of agricultural inputs and daily necessities are ensured by fixing fair prices, peasants are unable to pay the taxes because of their existing miserable conditions.

PEASANT STRUGGLES AND UNITED ACTION IN STATES

Since the independence of our country the Indian Agricultural sector has never plunged in so deep a crisis which is being experienced in this period. This unprecedent crisis enormously demaged the agricultural economy and the life of the peasantry. The Indian peasants and their movements have taken up this challenge and started to fight back by united actions in almost all the State of our country. The burning problem of the peasants now has developed into foremost national problem which might explode at anytime remedial measures are delayed.

From joint mammoth demonstrations and satyagrahas had developed in to total bandh in some states. Some of the Governments as in Karnataka, Maharashtra, are trying to supress this movement by police repression including firing and killing but the tide of the struggle is gaining momentum everywhere.

KARNATAKA

The spontaneous united struggles of the Karnataka peasants which has started months ago spread like a wildfire and shook the Con(I) rulers of Karnataka. In the first stage of the struggle police lost control and began repression including firing, as a result of which twenty four persons were killed including two police officers and a constable. Challenging the police repression and killing, the struggle spread more vigourously to new areas and districts and compelled the government to concede the burning demands of the peasants by negotiation and settlement. In the history of the peasant struggles of Karnataka this mighty struggles should be recorded in golden letters.

According to paper reports the Karnataka government has declared some concession which will cost 85 crores of rupees to the exchequer. But the struggling peasants of Karnataka are not satisfied with the government’s declaration and are continuing the struggle for further success of their demands. The impact of the Karnataka struggle enthused more confidence to the whole Indian peasantry to continue their struggle for attaining their demands with added vigour.

Although our Com. Halli Katty is one of the convenors of the united action committee of the struggling peasantry of Karnataka the State Kisan Sabha’s organisational work is too weak that unable to cop up with the advancement of the struggle and lead it. The main weaknesses of the State Kisan Sabha is lack of functioning of the State Centre properly with a team of cardes in the leadership. Even the General Secretary of the PKC is not a whole-timer of the Kisan Sabha Centre till now. Unless and until this weakness is corrected we cannot use this huge upsurge of the Karnataka peasantry and strengthen the Kisan Sabha work or united action in State level.

ANDHRA PRADESH

Andhra Pradesh resurged and resurrected with mighty mobilisation and a successful state bandh to fight against the anti-peasant and anti-people policy of the government. The main demand of this biggest state-wide struggle is the burning problem of the peasants. All opposition parties in Andhra Pradesh are unitedly leading this struggle. Although Andhra Pradesh Government has taken a course of negotiation with the opposition leaders and announced some paltry concessions, it is persisting its recalcitrant attitude towards the vital demands of the peasants like remunerative prices, cancellation of unbearable taxes and agricultural debt etc,. Therefore the leadership of the united struggle decided to continue the struggle including no-tax campaign until the government some down and concede the demands.

Although the State Kisan Sabha leaders and cadres are active in this battlefields the State Kisan Sabha Centre functioning is weak because of the lack of leaders who are working a whole-timers of the PKC Centre. If we fail to participate in the united campaign and struggles in an organised way neither we can strengthen Kisan Sabha work and organisation with the mighty state-wise movement which is being developed nor can keep the unity of the peasants and their organisations in the future course of development of this movement.

PUNJAB

The Punjab Kisan Sabha has taken the lead to unite other Kisan Sabha for a united struggle on the pressing demands of the peasantry. After many independent campaigns, rallies, direct actions of the Kisan Sabha they achieved the unity with the other Kisan Organisations under the leadership of C.P.I. and Akali Dal. Both the factions of the Akali Dal had been drawn to the united action. This is a remarkable achievement because, their tradition is not to indulge in any struggles of the peasantry or such kind of class actions.

The Joint Struggle-Road blocking, market (Mandy) boycotting, Bus picketting-has created a powerful impact in the whole State. In the first stage of the united struggle the Congress(I) State Government has taken an adament attitude against the struggle. After knowing the mighty upsurge of the people the Punjab Government declared the higher prices for paddy especially for sugarane which is the highest-Rs. 25/- for a quintal of sugarcane-than any State Governments which have already declared the price for sugarcane.

This Struggle has taken the demand to withdraw the enhanced bus fair which goes up to 43% increase and attracted more wide section of the people including students. The struggle spread all over the State and turned to militant action, police resorted firing and killed one youth.

MAHARASHTRA

Spontaneous struggle of some categories of Maharashtra peasants have taken place on occassions. The onion & sugarcane cultivators are in the fore-front. Police has resorted firings and killed four agitators including two killed in the last year. Road traffic blocking and “Hartals” in some areas observed with mass support. The opposition co-ordination committee of Maharashtra State has taken the pressing demands of the Maharashtra peasants and observed one day state bandh on price rise and other burning issues of people including peasants. The joint agitation is being continued.

But the activity and the role of the Maharashtra State Kisan Sabha in this agitation and struggles are in a low key. Day to day functioning of the PKC has come down now in a stand still. When the wide-spread discontent of the peasants exploding and the spontaneous struggles in many forms are being carried out and police let loose repression against them absence of our activity is conspicous and dangerous.

WEST BENGAL

West Bengal State Kisan Sabha has taken initiative to unite the other Kisan Sabhas under the leadership of other Left Parties in the ruling front of the State and the CPI Kisan Sabha for the campaign and mobilisation on the burning isues of West Bengal peasants and agricultural labourers. Many meetings and rallies were held under the joint auspices of four Kisan Sabha and culminated in a big mammoth rally at Calcutta.

This united mobilisation was on the question of price rise, unremunerative price for the agricultural produces, non-alotment of foodgrains for ration and food for work scheme etc,.

west Bengal State Kisan Sabha with its dynamic and powerful independent activity and struggles developed as the biggest organisation of the peasantry which embrace the whole rural West Bengal. Many measures have been taken by the Left and Left Democratic Government of West Bengal to emiliorate the peasant problems including the land legislation Act and implementation of the minimum wages to the agricultural workers. Taking this opportunity to activise the Kisan Sabha and provided the full benefits of the newly enacted land legislation and other measures of the State Government to the peasants and the agricultural workers West Bengal Kisan Sabha unleashed campaign and struggles to register share droppers (operation Burga), implementing agricultural minimum wage, F.F.W. etc,. In operation Burga almost 50% of the share croppers (10 lakhs) already registered.

The all embracing influence and powerful force of the Kisan Sabha clearly proved in the sweeping victory of the last Panchayat Samithi election. West Bengal Kisan Sabha and Panchayat Samithies closely co-ordinated their work to strengthen the activities of each other. With all these endeavour West Bengal Kisan Sabha established its basis on a solld rock bottom of agricultural workers, poor peaants and other rural poor.

But the PKC apprehended and felt from their experience that the middle and upper middle peasants are alienated more and more from the hold of the Kisan Sabha. To retrace this trend among the middle peasants West Bengal Government has implemented some measures which are giving relief to this section, but this phenomenon has yet to be checked. In the last April meeting of the West Bengal PKC and the District Panchayat Pradhans discussed these matters seriously and arrived in some directives to streamline the Kisan Sabha and Panchayat Samithy activities to win over these sections again to our movement.

KERALA

Kerala State Kisan Sabha has taken the 21 point charter of demands which has passed by the State Convention of the Kisan Sabha which held in last August at Trivandrum to organise a vigorous independent campaign and direct actions. In connection with this agitation thousands of volunteers marched from nook and corners of the State and staged dharnas before the collectorate & Secretariat of Kerala. United action with other Kisan Sabha Organisations is not developed remarkably in Kerala.

21 Point charter of demands includes:- No import of Cocoa, Coconut, Rubber; withdraw increased price of fertilizers, pesticides, diesel oil; give assent to the land reform amendment act, cancel all agricultural debts; abrogate compensation and rent balance to landlords; grant Rs. 100/- per acre farming subsidy for paddy; pass peasant social security act including crop insurance etc,.

ASSAM & TRIPURA

Both of these States are in a turmoil during the last several months and it retarded the activities of the Kisan Sabha by the peculiar situation developed there. In Tripura the communal carnage committed by reactionary forces of TUJS, Amra Bengali and Congress(I) with the help of foreign christian missionaries created a serious situation and the whole attention of our Kisan Sabha Workers was given to take this challenge and defeat the conspiracy by uniting with other democratic and political forces. Therefore Kisan Sabha work come to a stand still for months and now it has started its work again.

The conspirators are mainly enraged to over-throw the Left Government of Tripura because of the new land legislation which has passed and being implemented by Tripura Government on elienated land from the tribals and to restore them back. Tripura carnage is an unforgetable experience for the whole peasant movement of our country that the vested interests on land how far they become mad and what would they do when their vested interests in land would eliminated.

Because of the Assam agitators are continuing their undemocratic and semi fascist methods like attacking and killing our workers it has retarded the Kisan Sabhas work and seriously damaged the peasants and agricultural labourers’ interest. The fractricidal war which started by Assamese agitators and being continued even now is imposing much harm to the Assam people.

In the middle of this difficult situation also the Kisan Sabha is trying to take up the burning problems of the peasants unitedely with the CPI Kisan Sabha.

As a result of blockade of the movement of crude oil, plywood, jute and bamboo, the peasants, the agricultural workers and plywood workers have become a worst curse to the Jute growers. Price of of sugar, kerosine, dal, mustard oil and other essential commodities are shooting high. On the other hand wages of the agricultural workers and poor peasants are falling miserably.

TAMIL NADU

Tamil Nadu State Kisan Sabha has mainly concentrated their work on independent campaigns and struggles of the agricultural workers to implement the minimum wages and ceiling act, debt relief act, etc,. Some big rallies were held under the joint auspice of Kisan Sabha organisation of CPI, DMK, ADMK and Gandhi Kamraj National Congress. Although vital differences between our Kisan Sabha and CPI Kisan Sabha continue to exist we are trying to build the unity with CPI Kisan Sabha in the State.

UTTAR PRADESH & BIHAR

While independently campaigning and launching some direct action as satyagraha on the burning issues of the peasants and agricultural workers the Kisan Sabha of both these States are trying to unite other peasants organisations under the leadership of all opposition parties espcially with the CPI Kisan Sabha. But much has not been achieved in this direction in both these states because of our own organisational weaknesses.

GUJARAT

Gujarat State Kisan Sabha is independently and unitedly compaigning and struggling on burning issues of peasants and and agricultural labourers especially on rural indebtedness. Joint convention and dharans before the government offices have been launched in many districts. Women were also participated in their demonstrations and dharnas with militancy with large numbers.

HARYANA

Although Kisan Sabha organisation is very weak in Haryana it has conducted padayatras and public meetings as our independent campaign on burning issues of peasants and agricultural labourers. At the same time we tried to unite the other peasant organisation including the Kisan Sammelan and has conducted few public meetings under the joint auspices of the Kisan Organisations in the State.

RAJASTAN & MADHYA PRADESH

Both these States Kisan Sabhas are working in very paltry manner in our independent work as well as in the joint agitation. However they have taken in some pockets the burning issues of the peasants and agricultural labourers.

ORISSA & HIMACHAL PRADESH

In both these States the independent work of the Kisan Sabha as well as joint movement are in a low level. In Orissa we tried to unify the other peasant organisations including Nandini. Satpathy faction and CPI Kisan Sabha and had a convention with them but it has not yet developed so far remark ably. The State rulers and the vested interests in rural areas are attacking. Our Kisan Sabha Workers is a usual practice there. They implieded a murder case against our important workers of the Kisan Sabha including the General Secretary of the PKC. Although Comrade Khitish Viswal our General Secretary of the PKC has been aquitted, the six comrades have been convicted for life term. In the middle of this repression Kisan Sabha is trying to take up issues slowly.

In Himachal Pradesh State Kisan Sabha has independently campaigning on the burning issues of agricultural workers and peasants. There was no any move of united action until now because of the weaknesses of our organisation and the general weaknesses of the peasant movements in Himachal Pradesh including other Kisan Sabha Organisation.

The possibilities of unity of peasants and united action of the various Kisan Organisations have arisen by decision of the joint convention of the six opposition parties which was held at New Delhi on Sept. 27, 28th, 1980. In the declaration adopted by this convention includes the burning issues of the peasantry like remunerative prices for agricultural produces, price-rise of agricultural inputs daily necessities etc,. If we use this political unity in State level to organise and conduct united struggle that will be a powerful impetus to widen the unity and united actions.

A common factor of these united campaigns and struggles wherever it started is a unity of the mass peasantry without the difference of the followers of ruling party or the opposition. This healthy development of this united action will further strengthen the movement of all the peasants on their burning issues. Another inspiring experience of this united struggles is the agricultural labourers and their unions are in the fore front of this united campaign and struggle in many States as Andhra Pradesh and Punjab.

DEFEND-LEFT DEMOCRATIC FRONT GOVERNMENTS

In the existing context of the Indian political situation and the endeavour of AIKS to fight for the just-demands of peasant and agricultural labourers, existence of Left Democratic Front Governments is West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura is gathered much importance. Policies and measures being taken by these governments and its successful implementation that will be a powerful impetus to the struggles which are waging for basic changes against reactionary State governments and Central Governments; so that the former governments are the powerful instruments in the hands of the people, especially for the peasant and agricultural workers movement. Take for instance murderouse and in human attack on agricultural workers especially on Harijans even being continued in all states except the state where left democratic government are in power. The people who were fighting against this callous attacks and murder on the weaker sections of the people definitely could have drawn confidence and courage from the policy of these left and left Democratic front governments to safeguard their life and interest under this government.

Defending and strengthening of left democratic governments of West Bengal, Tripura and Kerala and implementing successfully the radical policies and measures of this governments have been gathered prime importance for the advancement of the peasant and agricultural labour organisations struggles all over the country. Therefore it is necessary to propagate the policies and measures of this left and left democratic governments to ameliorate the burning problems of the toiling peasants and agricultural workers including land reform implementation, pension for agricultural workers and poor peasants, rural development programmes, agricultural labourers wages and its legitimate implementation etc,. This wide propaganda will be a big pressure on other state governments to concede these demande which has been implemented by the left and left front government. This movement itself will be a powerful guarantee against the reactionary forces including Congress(I) Government in the Centre who are being trying invediously to topple these left and left democratic governments and their radical policies.

Our past experience amply given evidence to the important role of left and left democratic government in states, that these governments can be enacted and implemented with the support of the mass struggles of the peasantry the radical land reform and such other measures for the progress of the toiling people. Therefore it is our duty to defend and popularising the left and left democratic governments and its policies and an integral part of our struggles by which give impetus to the left and democratic force in the country who are fighting unitedly to replace those reactionary state governments who have not the will to implement the radical changes for the toiling masses.

This task has come to the forefront when taking into account the carnage committed in Tripura to destabilise the left front government of Tripura and in West Bengal the Congress(I) party with the connivance of the Central Government and collusion with all vested interests and divisive forces in the State and trying to create law and order problem by attacking peasant’s interests openly allying with jotedars in the intention to invite centre to intervence and topple the West Bengal Government. Using the position of the Central Government the Central Ministers including Prime Minister abating discord between the coalition parties and made avenues to topple the Kerala Ministry is also has started its intrigue in this direction. Without effectively exposing these intrigues of the vested interests against the left and left democratic governemnts and unifying all the democratic forces of our country we can not defeat this dangerous forces and defend the democratic rights of the people.

COMPENSATION FOR LOSSES AND SOCIAL SECURITY FOR PEASANTS

More and more sections of the people of our country are included year after year who are eligible to get the benefit of many categories of social security measures as provident fund, compensations, health scheme, group insurance and life insurance etc,. But the peasants who comprise the largest section of the Indian people have been far removed from this kind of social security schemes and measures. But the nature of the agriculture and the condition of our country always put them into destitution by huge losses of their crops by which inflict insecurity of the life of the peasantry more than any section of the people in our country. This age old negligence of the peasants should be plugged with remedial measures is a necessity.

Our country is a land of disastrous floods, droughts, cyclones and other kind of national calamities. It comes intermetently on occassions and damaged heavily crops, properties, cattle, human life, etc,. Nobody can forget enormous volume of losses and casualities in the Andhra Cyclones. Ruinous drought which effected a big part of our country and huge floods occuring in every years. The first victim of this calamities always will be the agricultural crops and other wealths of the peasantry. But it is a sorrowful negligence on the part of the rulers of our country not to compensate with adequate measures to the peasants.

Kisan Sabha should take up this issue as an important demand of the peasant to get adequate compensation for losses including life wherever this calamities occur by crop-insurance grants and aids. Besides this peasant welfare fund and crop-insurance schemes should be implemented on easy term. And a health protection scheme like ESI to be devised and implemented for the benefit of the peasants.

The Kerala State Kisan Sabha has taken this issue as a important demand in their continuous campaign. The last special convention of the Kerala State Kisan Sabha adopted a 21 point demand including these social security measures and compensation for losses of the peasants which has been given due priority. In the last budget speech of the finance minister of Kerala assured to implement a new legislation with regard to this demand. This is a prospective indication for the success of the campaign on this problem.

JOINT ACTION FOR MINIMUM NECESSITY FOR VILLAGE LIFE

Generally peasants and agricultural workers have been living in the remote villages. Indian villages are traditionally devoid of primary human conditions for habitancy. Eminities for drinking water, dispensary with a doctor and a midwife, motrable roads, schools and post offices are lacking in many of our villages. As a symptom of most acute backwardness in many villages Harijans are being separated or segregated.

The AIKS Agricultural Labour Unions have been fighting for the upliftment of peasants and agricultural workers since long years. Without removing the deplorable conditions of village life real progress of peasants and agricultural workers could not be achieved. It is a matter of regret that the AIKS and Agricultural Labour Union did not see the importance of village upliftment which would have stepped up the common mass movement and that objective conditions would have used for strengthening our movement and made the villages politically educated. Therefore, the AIKS and Agricultural Labour Unions should jointly take up the village development programme and unite all other organisations in the villages to fight for the achievement of the above demands. These should be a country wide movement with all sided support.

Panchayats and other local bodies can be utilised with mass participation by the active initiative of the Kisan Sabha and Agricultural Workers Organisation. Food-for-work scheme also be directed to contribute the work of rural development. Kisan Sabha should take special attention to campaign to implement the irrigation schemes and other agricultural development scheme, effective participation in agricultural co-operatives and such other co-operatives institutions in villages.

It is necessary to give our attention to organise rural industries under many schemes of the goverment and the five year plan including scheduled caste and scheduled tribes development schemes. If the Kisan Sabha and Agricultural Labour Union ignore this development work other vested interests who are interested to weaken the peasant and agricultural movement will go with these schemes and create illusion among the agricultural workers and peasants who are facing unemployment and misery. The importance of taking this kind of responsbility by the Kisan Sabha and agricultural Labour union must be inculcated to our workers. By these categories of activities Kisan Sabha should strive to develop as a major initiator of the rural life and transformer of the rural society. Without using this opportunity also Kisan Sabha cannot help rural people to achieve some remarkable advance in the rural development. Therefore this categories of work also as a part of our common struggle to win over a better life to the peasants and agricultural labourers.

THE PROBLEM OF REMUNERATIVE PRICES FOR AGRICULTURAL PRODUCES

The syndrome of the throw away price level for the agricultural producers and the huge profit to the industrial monopolies and the rocketting black-market price to the consumers could be seen nakedly in the case of acute sugar crisis which has developed now. The vicious circle of sugar crisis which has developed now. The vicious circle of sugar crisis has started from them manipulation of the plummeted sugarcane price to a most unremunerative level which has compelled some of the sugarcane cultivators to use sugarcane as fire wood especially in the years of 1977-78 and 1978-79. Maximum sugarcane production in our country was witnessed in these years. The following facts of sugar and sugarcane production will explain these facts:

Years Sugarcane in million tonnes Sugar in lakh tonnes Sugar price for quintal
1977-78 177 64.6 Rs. 200-250
1978-79 156 58.6 Rs. 200-300
1979-80 145 42.00 Rs. 450-700
(Black Market)
Rs. 800-2000

The above figures have clearly shown in which years the sugarcane production was the highest. These years were the peak years of sugar production and in this period the price of sugar for the consumers also was cheapest.

The years of maximum sugarcane production were the perilous years for the cultivators because of the distress sale of the sugarcane and connected miseries like huge amount accumulated in sugar factories as dues to the meagre price of sugarcane which they sold to the factories. The crisis created by the low-level prices of sugarcane in 1977-78 reduced the production of sugar in the next year, but the low price level continued for sugarcane and sugar although the production of sugar was 68.6 lakh tonnes, which means 6 lakh tonnes less than the previous year.

The internal consumption of sugar in our country is estimated from 50 to 55 lakh tonnes per year. When sugar production was more than the internal consumption level that was achieved at the cost of sugarcane cultivators. But the sugar barons of India mercilessly fleeced both the sugarcane cultivators and the consumers and fattened their profit in all these years. It was estimated that more than one thousand crores of rupees were squeezed as profits by sugar barons in these years of the socalled sugar crisis of our country. The “Sugar Crisis” therefore is a manipulation or a cruel manouvering of the greedy sugar barons who are hand in glove with the Central Government to a mass huge profits at the cost of sugarcane cultivators and consumers.

The dangerous situation has arisen from the anti-peasant price-policy of sugarcane on the one hand and on the other anti-people and pro-sugar baron price policy of the Government. One of the fertile soils to make more profit for the sugar magnets is the cheapest raw material i.e. sugarcane, government has been fixing sugarcane prices continuously, year per year on a most unremunerative level for the benefit of sugar magnets and compel the sugarcane cultivators to supply their produce to sugar factories even by banning power crushers, khandasari units, gur makes whenever they were giving higher prices to sugarcane than fixed by the government. The dual pricing policy also is a boon to the greedy sugar barons to manipulate and loot the consumers.

These anti-people and pro-monopoly policies could not be changed without radical transformation of sugar policy and the connected matters with regard to price policies on sugar and sugarcane. Therefore All India Kisan Sabha strongly demands the following measures to be taken to solve the “sugar crisis”.:

  1. Nationalise Sugar industry.
  2. Takeover all sugar stocks. End dual price policy. Distribute through public distribution system. From vigilance committees to ensure proper distribution.
  3. Fix minimum price Rs. 25/- per quintal for sugarcane.
  4. Repeal all restrictions against sugarcane selling other than sugar mills.

These demands must be justified because of the continuous unremunerative price fixed for sugarcane for long and the ever growing flunctuations in sugar price against the intrest of the consumers and the record-breaking profits of the sugar magnets. It is amply clarified by facts that the quantity of sugarcane cultivation and production capacity of the sugar factories of our country are sufficient to produce sugar more than needed for the internal consumption of our country. Therefore the struggles to get remunerative prices for the sugarcane should be strengthened by united actions and to win over the above mentioned demands for basic changes in sugar policy.

All the cultivators of commercial crops like Jute, Cotton, Cocoa, Tamarind, Rubber, Coconut, Tobacco, Groundnut etc, are under the same plight which has been meted out to sugarcane growers as mentioned above in the socalled sugar crisis.

“ It is a sorrowful reality that the Central Government since independence during the last thirty years, have been sacrificing the interest of the Jute growing peasants of India and allowing the Jute sharks to loot the peasants. Today in West Bengal alone 20 lakhs peasant families are involved in Jute growing agriculture and they are already bled-white by the Jute barons, who are all Indians”.

“ At the cost of millions of Jute growing peasants and Jute Mill Workers, the Jute magnets are earning profit to the minimum extent of 400 crores every year and the Government of India is earning foreign exchange to the extent for- 3 hundered crores of rupees every year. What the Jute growing peasants got? They are being denied even the very subsistance and they are increasing by becoming landless”.

It should be noted here that West Bengal is the biggest Jute producing State in our country. 52% of the Jute produced in India comes from West Bengal. The age-old miseries of Jute cultivators are continuing unabeted because of the anti-peasant pro-monopoly policy of the Government.

The Central Government led by the Janata Party after much hesitation gave an assurance to the Left Front Government of West Bengal and the united movement of the Jute cultivating peasantry and Jute Mill workers union that the JCI would implement the policy of monopoly purchase of Raw-jute in 1980. But after having assumed office, the Indira Gandhi government blatantly rejected the policy of monopoly purchase and came out with a declaration that the JCI will confine its operation during the current season only to price support by purchasing Raw-Jute at the level of minimum support price which would be recommended by APC. However, nothing has been done effectively to purchase Raw-jute from peasants by the JCI in this Jute harvesting season and they compelled the Jute growers for distress sale at the rate of Rs. 60/- below than the minimum price fixed by APC per quintal. But the paradoxical side of the problem reveals the following facts. The cost price was worked out by the West Bengal Government is Rs. 190/- per a quintal of Jute. The support price had been fixed at Rs. 160/- a quintal, against the West Bengal Finance Minister’s demand for Rs. 250/- and the joint demand of the peasant organisations for a higher rate Rs. 300/-. The real peasants are getting is far below the support price.

The perilous havoc of the Jute growers of Assam due to agitation are now forced to sell their product at prices ranging from Rs. 12 to 45 per quintal. Apart from government’s failure to fix remunerative prices and decietful purchasing of JCI has created this ruinous position. Thanks to the blockade imported by the Assam agitators on foreign nationals by which the peasants are thrown to such a calamity.

The Left Front Government of WEst Bengal with the action co-operation of the Panchayat Samities made arrangements purchase Raw-jute from the peasants to save them from the distress sale and to give them relief in this regard. But the miseries of the Jute cultivators remain for want of a durable solution by radical measures which are being jointly demanded for the last so many years by the peasant organisations and Jute Mill Workers Unions. Since independence the following demands were raised and which have gathered much importance now for a durable solution for this vexed problem.

  1. The entire Jute trade including foreign trade and also the wholesale of Jute be nationalised.
  2. Definite arrangements should be made for monopoly purchase of Raw-Jute by J.C.I at the fixed rate.
  3. Ensure fair and remunerative price to the Jute Cultivators and make available the agricultural inputs to the peasants on fair price.
  4. Nationalise Jute industry and safeguard the legitimate demands of the Jute Mill Workers.

As the Jute growers the similiar distresses and miseries are meted out to the cotton growers also over the country. The Agricultural Prices Commission and the Government of India by their antipeasant, anti-consumer and pro-monopoly policies compelled the cotton cultivators for distress sale on a throw away price of their produce and allowed textile barons to mint huge profits at the expense of the cultivators and consumers.

Varanasi Conference of the AIKS as demanded minimum price of cotton be fixed at Rs. 500/- per quintal. For the 1979-80 season, the APC has recommended a price of Rs. 265/- for the Punjab-320/F variety an increase of Rs. 10/- per quintal as compared to the former year. Now the APC’S latest recommendations for the 1980-81 is Rs. 300/- per quintal kapas of fair average quality of- 320 F/414-F/J-34-variety.

Their original recommendation was Rs. 290/-, but by a supplimentary report added Rs. 10/- more. APC’s funny claims for this enhancement is by the way of 37.9% increase in fertilizers and 50% increase in diesel oil and their impact on cost of cultivation of cotton would be to raise it about 4.2% and it would be sufficient to offset that hike of cultivation expense by this paltry amount of Rs. 10/-.

The Cotton Corporation of India also like to JCI and FCI will not enter the market in the season to purchase the agricultural produces which compel the peasantry especially the poor and middle peasants to sell their produces by distress sale. Usually these public sector corporations have been working consciously hand in glove with the industrial barons to exploit maximum of raw material producers and to amass their own profits. Whichever be the commercial crop this is the developing stance of mainpulation in the field of activity of te public sector purchasing agencies including CCI under the existing context of this vicious circle.

The following schedules of cotton production and the purchase by CCI in India obviously shows the wide gulf between the production of cotton and purchasing by the CCI. The meager quantity of the purchase in each and every year which is the main reason of the distress sale of cotton cultivators it occurs usually.

State 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Maharashtra 971 1115 1016 1717 772 833 1263 1317
Gujarat 2415 1465 1708 1455 1677 1630 1942 2101
Punjab 1029 1075 1157 1199 1235 1138 1224 1325
Karnataka 602 443 720 793 587 460 802 823
A.P. 175 119 347 483 239 261 217 347
Haryana 465 448 467 426 465 499 464 603
Tamil Nadu 411 346 358 274 253 348 338 496
M.P. 391 350 179 425 272 278 299 297
Rajastan 416 304 300 337 404 348 452 570
All India 6950 5735 6309 7156 5950 5839 7243 7927

Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics Ministry of Agriculture.

State 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 up to 27.2.80
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Maharashtra 68 135 52 10
Gujarat 358 3 17 26 120 106 247 33
Punjab 50 248 189 1 24 132 113 204 302
Karnataka 21 1 55 2 24 62 35 134 96
A.P. 18 18 9 9 38 32 48 37
Haryana 23 84 32 1 7 39 46 133 22
Tamil Nadu 1 1 2 19 24 37 85 9
M.P. 5 7 3 2 8 53 66 89 109
Rajastan 3 71 42 1 15 67 92 109 138
All India 547 411 343 35 132 535 662 191 755

Source: Cotton Corporation of India.

The capitalist development in our country takes place by exploting the maximum from the peasantry and this policy is being persistently followed by the rulers of our country. Without defeating this bankrupt policy and wining the following demands which are essential to ensure remunerative price for cotton, we will not be able to put an end to the lost of peasants, consumers textile workers by the textile barons,

  1. Nationalise the Textile Industry.
  2. Monopoly purchase should be ensured by CCI all the marketable cotton in the country.
  3. Fix a minimum remunerative price of Rs. 550/- for a quintal of cotton.

ON FOODGRAINS PRICES

Paddy, Wheat and other food grains and cereals cultivation also became a losing vocation of the peasants. This plight of the peasant producers became more aggravated by the anti-peasant policies of the government also. The huge price rise of all vital agricultural inputs like fertilizers, diesel oil, electricity charges, agricultural implements etc, on the one hand and the ever-widening disparity of agricultural produces and industrial products and the spiralling price-rise living index on the other worsened this problem further.

The additional burden imposed through the price hike of petroleum products amount to Rs. 2100/- crores, fertilizers to 665 crores and through defecit financing Rs. 1600/- crores. All these put together by the lase budget is a heavy burden of Rs. 5100/- crores in a full year. The ever-growing inflationary spurts and widening gap of price disparity are ruining the peasantry. During the first three months of the new Indira regime it goes up alarmingly from 16% to 19.8% in March 1980 and after that it has gone up beyond 22%. The first victims of the extra-ordinary inflation will be the peasants and agricultural workers and other toilers. The cultivation expenses and cost of living have gone beyond the reach of the peasants because of this inflationary spiral.

The blatant negligence of the APC and the Central Government regarding the rising cost of the agricultural negligence of the APC and the Central Government regarding the rising cost of the agricultural production led them to fix the prices of paddy and other agricultural produces on a paltry price level as usual. It is admitted that there has been an increase in the cost of production the increase in the price of fertilizers alone will come to the extent of 38%. The increase in the cost of production of paddy due to this one factor alone-fertilizer price increase-is calculated as not less than Rs. 11.50 per quintal. In addition is the increase in prices of diesel oil, pesticides, weedicides etc,. As against this huge increase in the cost of production , the increase in price recommended by the APC was only Rs. 5/- and the goverenment has added only another Rs 5/- per quintal paddy over the APC recommendation and the price ultimately announced by the government is Rs. 105/- per quintal of paddy and 105 per quintal of coarse grains which is Rs. 7.5 more than the previous year’s fixed price.

Nobody knows how the APC and the Central Government work out the price it recommends and fix upon. But one thing is certain. They never give even scant respect to the real cost of production of paddy in that State came to Rs. 124/- per quintal, while the figure worked out by Andhra Pradesh governments was Rs. 125.46 per quintal. Other State Government like Kerala, Karnataka etc, also estimated more than the estimations of the above states. But it is astonishing that the Central Government calculated and declared the price at Rs. 105/- per quintal of paddy.

The Agricultural Prices Commission continuously failed to take into account the ever-rising production cost and recommended the most unremunerative price, leading to the growing pauperisation of the peasants. Hence agricultural vocation has become a losing business. By continues failure to take into account the realities the APC has lost its credibility and ceased its viability to exist. No peasant organisation of our country is represented in the APC or the were never consulted by the APC before making the recommendations. Therefore it is necessary to compel the Central Government and the APC to take a course of consultation and discussion with all the Kisan Organisation of India before deciding and declaring the agricultural prices.

Food Corporation of India (FCI) should spread and ramify its organisational setup all over the country to purchase the food grains and cereals from the cultivators on a remunerative prices from all States. Take over the whole sale trade in food grains. It is a necessity to get remunerative prices for food grains and effective supply to the people and to eradicate the evils of black-marketting and hoarding of food grains.

The most pitiable practice continuously followed was that nobody is ready to purchase the agricultural produces even on fixed prices-although its prices fixed on a paltry rate-including the public sector purchasing agencies. Andhra Pradesh which is the biggest granary of our country has became the gravest victim of this impotent activity of the FCI. Without strengthening and streamlining the public sector purchasing agencies in a new direction to cater the needs of the marketing of the agricultural produce it is impossible to avert this havoc.

The all embracing aspect of this agrarian crisis will have its serious impact on our total economic setup and impair the whole progress of our country. Therefore this burning problem has developed as the biggest national problem of peasantry which demands urgent attention and solution.

ON ORGANISATION

In the General Secretary’s report to the 23rd Varanasi Conference of the AIKS high lighted many aspects of the drawbacks of our organisation and dealt with some guidelines to correct the weakness. But after the Varanasi Conference also there were no remarkable improvement in the organisational position in the traditionally weakest states especially of whole Hindi belt. We are aware of the weakness of Kisan Sabha for long and thinking continously for the 2 to 3 decades to desist this weaknesses. If a glimpse of All India Membership and its statewise distribution from year 1979-80 which has given below it would be seen rise and fall of membership year by year in States and the persistant weaknesses majority of the State Kisan Sabha especially of Hindi belt.

In a long period of a two and half decades, this schedule clearly indicates the traditional weak states of Kisan Sabha which have been pecked persistently where it was even after the Varanasi Conference also. At the same time few states West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura continuously improved their strength especially West Bengal. This experience obviously shows the strength and the weakness of our state movements.

The membership of the AIKS has gone up to hundred percent in two years after the Varanasi Conference from 22, 91, 980 in 1977-78 to 45, 26, 243 in the main chunk of this enhancement comes from West Bengal alone. The total increase of the All India Membership in this period is about 23 lakhs. In this 23 lakhs about 19 lakh is the share of West Bengal only. West Bengal Provinicial Kisan Sabha gloriously represents 70.3% of total membership of AIKS in 1979-80. Next strong hold state of AIKS in Kerala but camparatively to West Bengal’s inspiring advancement Kerala stands far below. In 1977-78 combined membership of the Kerala Kisan Sabha and Agricultural Labour Union was 4,19,030. It has increased to 5,51,29 in 1979-80. Thats means an increase of 1,33,000 membership and its represents only 12.4% membership of the AIKS. But in West Bengal some of the districts have more than the total membership of Kerala. For Instance Midnapore district membership is 5,97,871. 24 Parganas, Burdwan has 4,60,374 and 4,57,577 membership respectively. It is noteworthy the difference between West Bengal and Kerala in their respective enhancement of the membership in comparison with the population in West Bengal is 4,43,12,011 and Kerala is 2,13,47,375. That means the population of Kerala is nearly 50% of the population of West Bengal. But Kisan Sabha membership of Kerala is only 16% of the West Bengal Kisan Sabha membership. If the ration of population and membership is to be taken into account Tripura also is far better than Kerala. Population in Tripura is 15,56,342 and the Kisan Sabha membership is 70,092. On basing state-wise population the percentage of Kisan Sabha membership of West Bengal is 7%. Tripura 4.5% and Kerala 2.6%. But in the total membership of AIKS 84.2% belong to these three states.

In the rest part of our country which represents the majority of the States and the States and the biggest part os it has a share of merely 15.8% of total membership of AIKS. If we further distribute this percentage 4.5% is in Andhra, 2.5 is from Tamil Nadu and the remaining 11% is from the rest of the states. In the Hindi region including Punjab membership is hardly 5%. In fact the membership in Bihar has come down from 1,27,400 in 1978-79 to 85,400 in 1979-80, in Punjab from 1,04,050 to 82,267 and in Rajastan from 30,000 to 10,000. Maharashtra has gone back from 32,000 to 18,000. Karnataka where a tide of widespread and courageous struggle of the peasantry are going on, the performance of our organisation is in a reserve gear. In 1968-69 Karnataka membership was 25,482 and 1978-79 decreased to 18,200 and further decreased to 16,000 in 1979-80. But Jammu & Kashmir and Gujarat raised their membership from 2000 to 7000 and 8000 to 11,600 respectively.

The main reason of the great success of the West Bengal State Kisan Sabha is the strong state centre and better district centres also. Without strong state and district centres it is ipossible to build up a powerful peasant organisation in states.

Therefore we must concentrate our attention to strengthen the State and District Centres with capable full-timers of the Kisan Sabha in the helm. When we think to strenghen our state organisation we should start from this primary task. As far as the weaker states are concerned we should findout more cadres to work in states and districts centres from the activities in our movement. The following schedule of the district level membership of some states clearly shows the strength and weaknesses of our organisation from top to bottom.

In the strong states of our movement namely West Bengal and Kerala the district membership of these states are sufficient to have necessary cadres to the district committees, intermediary and primary committees also. District-wise membership in weak states shows the main deficiency of our organisation there. In some of the district membership of U.P. and Haryana far below the membership of a primary committee in West Bengal or Kerala. The membership enrollment principle of a mass organisation is itself also lacking in these weak states. For instance the membership distribution of districts itself clearly shows in many of the districts there cannot be functioned any primary committee of the Kisan Sabha because of the number of membership for a primary unit area is paltry or nil. This system should be corrected at least in the coming years membership enrollment. All the PKCs should decide the minimum membership necessary for a primary Kisan Sabha and insist that minimum membership as a firm condition to form a primary Kisan Sabha member should be a member of a primary unit. In other words enrolling Kisan Sabha membership not in a primary unit of the Kisan Sabha should be avoided strictly. Otherwise in the weak states weakness of the organisation never can be plugged from top to bottom.

Politicising and radicalising of the whole peasantry is a major task to build up a revolutionary Kisan movement and unify the other Kisan Sabha organisations for a united struggle to change the exiciting socio-economic set up of our country. In this regard we should intensify our work in the grassrooot level of the Kisan Sabha to closely contact the mass peasantry by day to day activities to activise and unite them for a new upheavel. For the success of this resurgancc of the peasantry we should streamline the day to day functioning and activities of the primary unit of our organisation with added vigour and concentrated efforts.

One of our main weakness in the primary units of the Kisan Sabha is the utter lack of day to day contact with the mass membership and activise them to participate in the activities of the Kisan Sabha. Best Bengal Kisan Sabha has taken into account this necessity and decided to reorganize its primary units in all polling booth areas to revitalise its activity to achieve success in the above direction. The experience of the West Bengal Kisan Sabha to reorientate the functioning and activities of the primary unit of the Kisan Sabha be assimilated and inseminate that experience to other states also as a guideline for the success of this endeavour.

ON WORKING FUND

For the activisation of the primary units and the mass membership of the Kisan Sabha and Agricultural Labour Union there must be general body meeting of the members regularly. For the convenience of the general body functioning it is better to divide the membersip in a primary unit as groups which is not exceed more than 50. This group units and these 50 members further be divided into two or more squared which have to go to the total peasant masses of the respective areas of the squads with the day to day working programme of the movement.

One of the major reasons of the poor performance of the Kisan Sabha organisation in states is the acute dearth of fund for the minimum necessities of effective work of the Kisan Sabha. The paltry sum getting from the membership fee yearly is not sufficient to meet the minimum necessity of the organisational work of the Kisan Sabha.

For the effective functioning of the State Kisan Sabha as well as the lower level committees adequate finance is a must. For this purpose all the State committee of Kisan Sabha and the Agricultural Labour Union, where it functions sparately, should observe a month in an year as “Working fund collection month”. The State Kisan Sabbha should select a convenient month and the agricultural labour union another month on a mutual understanding.

This fund should be divided among the committees as follows:-

a. Primary Kisan Sabha & Agricultural Labour Union 30%

b. Taluk 25%

c. District 25%

d. State 171/2%

e. AIKS 21/2%

If we take up this working fund collection in an Organised and serious manner it will be a successful move to desist the organisational weakness of the Kisan Sabha.

All the PKCs and Agricultural Labour Union State Committees should take stock of the organisational weaknesses of respective states and prepare their suggestion and proposal to overcome the weaknesses and work out their decisions as soon as possible. When the complicated situation develops fastly in the Indian Agricultural Front and many from of struggle getting momentum as a national scale and the united struggles are also developing, we can’t successfully carry over our task until and unless improve our organisational ability to cope up this situation. More gliding with the existing weakness of organisation never help us either to lead the peasant and agricultural labour movement of our country or get over from our organisational weaknesses successfully.

CKC Centre also be revitalised to effectively help the stage in their day to day activiies. But to strengthen the CKC Centre further all the necessities for that should come from states including cadres and leaders.

The mounting challenges of the anti-peasant and anti-people policies of the ruling class of our country are increasing day by day. The deepening crisis of the economic and political set up of India which is threating the very vital democratic set up of our country and the rights of the people must be effectively challenged and defeated. The importance of a powerful peasant movement is necessitated more than ever. Without a powerful national peasant movement it is impossible to overcome cronic uneven development of the Left and Left Democratic forces of our country which is capable to challenge and defeat the dangerous postures of the rulers of our country. I hope this extreme importance of the peasant movement inspire all the Kisan Sabha workers to fulfil their historic task in the coming days.

K. CHATHUNNI MASTER, GENERAL SECRETARY ALL INDIA KISAN SABHA

Resolutions

IN SUPPORT OF PEASANTS STRUGGLE FOR REMUNERATIVE PRICES

This meeting of the All India Kisan Council pays its homage to those martyrs in different parts of the country who laid their lives in the struggles for remunerative prices.

This meeting expresses its full support and solidarity with the movements of the peasantry for remunerative prices for the agricultural produces going on Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Punjab and Bihar States. It condemns the efforts of Government spokemen to dub the peasant agitation as politically motivated and using lathies and bullets to supress them. These movement are the result of the growing discontent among the peasantry in which the peasantry owing allegiance to all parties is participating.

They are organised against the price policy of the government which is detrimental to the interests of peasantry. It is accepted by the government that during the last ten months since it came to power, prices have gone up by 20%. But in spite of the fact that there is a big hike in the price of fertilizers, diesel, electricity charges, agricultural implements and other inputs, the peasants are being denied remunerative prices in an effort to throw the burden of the economic crisis on to their shoulders. This policy is denuding the peasants of their purchasing power and driving them to destitution.

When sugar is selling at Rs. 15 a kg., the sugarcane grower is offered in most places Rs. 16 per quintal of sugarcane; when the prices of medium cloth has gone up to Rs. 7 a metre, the cotton growers are offered Rs. 300 to 400 per quintal; and when the jute magnets are getting huge profits, the jute grower is asked to sell his jute at price much below the cost of production. The same is the case with other crops,

Moreover whatever the support price announced by the government there is no guarantee to ensure it while purchasing the peasant produces. The big whole-sale traders are allowed to cheat the peasantry. In spite of the assurances by the Government, the peasant in Andhra Pradesh were forced and sell their paddy at Rs. 70 per quintal and the jute growers of West Bengal were forced to sell jute below Rs. 100 per quintal. Thus the Government policies are becoming ruinous for the peasantry.

The A.I.K.C. considers its duty to defeat the present anti-peasant agricultural price policy. It demands that the peasants be ensured the following remunerative prices.

Paddy = Rs. 125 per quintal Sugarcane = Rs. 25 to Rs. 30 per quintal Cotton = Rs. 550 per quintal Jute = Rs. 300 per quintal.

It calls upon its units to participate in the movement that is on in several states, for remunerative prices, and organise united actions with different organisations of the peasantry to win these demends.

The A.I.K.S. is of the opinion that the continuous rise in the prices of inustrial produces, particularly consumer goods only benefits the monopolist hoarder and black-marketters at the cost of common man. It demands that the supply of essential commodities be ensured through a net work of fair price shops supervised by watch dog committees. There should br no increase in the price of foodgrain and increased subsidy be met by taxing the huge profits of monopolists and big traders and the rich.

STRUGGLES FOR PEACE AND AGAINST WAR DANGER

This meeting of the All India Kisan Council is alarmed at the growing threat of war resulting from the agressive policies of US imperialism. After suffering defeat after at the hands of the national liberation forces US imperialism is making determind efforts to work up an atmosphere of cold war by refusing to ractify the SALT II treaty, by sabotaging the Helsinki accord and installing miissiles in Europe, to stir up tension, fan war hysteria and step tp the arms race, above all, of nuclear arms in the name of changing the existing military balance in their favour.

US imperialism having suffered a series of reverses defeat after defeat, is fostering puppet regimes and is toppling popular governments. The imperialists are supplying arms to the local reactionaries to fight the popular governments as seen in Afghanistan and Kampuchea. This Council expresses its serious concern over the attempts of the imperialists and reactionary forces to aggravate the situation in Southern Africa and undermine the organisation of African unity. It condemns the continued aggression racist-terrorist pretoria regime against the People’s Republic of Angola and other independent states and supports the freedom movement of the people of South Africa struggling for the liquidation of the ignominous fascit system of aparthied. It condemns the continuation of illegal occupation of Namibia and demands withdrawal from its territory of the troops of racist South African regime. It demands full implementation of the UN dcision of Namibia for attainment of genuine independence by the country and recognition of the leadership of SWAPO as the sole legitimate representative of the Namibian people.

The Council notes with great concern the feverish global military activities of US imperialist circles and the establishment and expansion of US military bases in the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean and the Gulf area including the deployment of the so-called US “ quick reaction forces”. This poses direct threat to the security of the countries of the region and constitutes a great danger to world peace. The US imperialists have concentrated military forces in the Indian Oceans, particularly in the Gulf area, and are expanding the exisiting imperialist bases as in Diego Garcia. The Victory of Reagon in US Presidential election who has been openly advocating policy of confrontation has further aded to this danger.

The Council condemns the US imperialist policy in West Bengal of organising separate deals directed against the legitimate interests of their people, which are desruptive of the just struggle of the Palestinian people. The Council rejects the Camp David collusion and fully stands for a just and lasting peace in West Asia on the basis of complete withdrawal of the Israeli troops from illegally occupied Arab terriories and excercise of the national legitimate right of the Arab people of Palestine including their right of self-determination and the establishment of their own independent State.

The Council expresses its full solidarity with the Government and the people of Afghanistan in the struggle for national independence and in defence of gains of April Revolution. It condemns the imperialists and other reactionary forces who are brazenly intervning in the international affairs of Afghanistan by arming and training rebels.

The Council also expresses its concern over the intervention of imperialist and reactionary forces in the Indo-Chinese Peninsula to create a situation of instability and the blocking of the seating in the UN of the Government of the People’s Republic of Kampuchea.

It expresses its deep concern over the continuing war between Iran and Iraq which is undermining not only the economy of these countries but adverely affecting the economy of the whole region. The continuation of this war serves only the interests of imperialism and nobody else. It extends its full support to the efforts of the non-aligned countries to bring the two parties togther for the peaceful settlement of their problems.

The Council calls upon the peasantry to join hands with the rest of the democratic people in the fight against the manoeuvers of the US imperialism which is fanning cold war and aggravating the war danger, and take its rightful place among all the people fighting for the peace and against the menance of war.

It appeals to all the world forces of peace, democracy and socialism to close their ranks and to fight unitedly to inflict defeat on the portant forces of war who are aggravating the world situation.

ON COMMUNAL RIOTS

This meeting of the All Inia Kisan Council expresses its deep concern over the new spate of communal riots which have recently erupted in Uttar Pradesh, Delhi and some other parts of the country endangering the unity of the working class, peasantry and other toiling people and the democratic movement in general.

The gruesome killings and destruction of properties of the Muslim minorities in Moradabad have exposed the hollowness of the claims being made by the Congress(I) government as a defender of minorties. For, its anti-muslim bias there the PAC under its government attacked Muslims who were praying on Id day in the Edgah. There are reports from other parts also where sections of the police and administration either aided or abetted the communal incendiaries. Only in the States where the peasant movement and other democratic forces are strong such as West Bengal, Tripura and Kerala, the communal forces are kept in check.

The Governement always attempts to deal with the communal riots situation through administrative measures. It forgets the fact that it is the deepseated ideas of communal intolerance which are at the root of the communal riots. It is in this context that the policies and practices of the Government and the ruling party are fostering of such communal forces. Although the word “secularism” has been written into the constitution, a large number of political leaders belonging to the ruling as well as opposition parties who swear by secularism words, are freely mixing religion with politics which is the very negation of secularism. The State owned media and State functions are so organised as to mix religion with the State. This has provided fertile soil for the sprouting of the poisonous plant of communalism. It is in fact the scrupulous defence of secular principles and practice and the strict separation of religion from the State which alone can help the eradication of the deep-seated poison of communalism.

This does mean that the organised forces of majority communalism represented by RSS, is not playing its role. The role of the RSS has been condemned by our AIKS many times, because its slogan of “Hindu Rashtra” has proved disastrous, increasing communal tensions and vitiating the atmosphere of amity between the various communities of our country. But recently the Jamat-e-Islami also has started playing its role in rousing the passions of communalism among the Muslims.

A.I.K.S shares the grief of all those families who have suffered in the recent communal carnages and demands payment of adequate compensation to those naimed and killed and whose properties are destroyed during these disturbances.

The A.I.K.C. which has always fought against communal and divisive forces, has its duty to rally the peasantry against the dangerous moves of the communal forces which are aimed at diverting the growing discontentment of the people, and is disruptive of the developing united movement. The A.I.K.C. appeals to all its units to unite with other secular and democratic forces in fighting against this communal menance and to stoutly defend the communal amity and national integration.

ON AGRICULTURAL WORKERS DEMANDS

The A.I.K.C. congratulaes the agricultural workers who are carrying on struggles in various parts of the country for wages, house sites, distribution of surplus and waste lands, against unemployment and social repression. In this they are fighting back the combined offensive of landlords and police and other administrative machinery of bourgeois landlords governments and the sense of the unity and consciousness is growing amongst them.

The Council appreciates the steps taken by the Left oriented governments of West Bengal, Tripura and Kerala is ameliorating the condition of agricultural workers, by raising the wages, distributing house sites, providing employment opportunities, debt relief, providing old age pensions and protecting them from the attacks of the landlords and harrassement of the police.

The Congress Government which have been talking too much about the interests of agricultural workers and Harijans have failed to provide them either land or wages. Their conditions have worsened. Atrocities on agricultural workers under Congress Governments have became order of the day and it is admitted that the root cause behind it is the question of land and wages. Because of high prices, unemployment and under employment indebtedness among them is increasing and they remain at the mercy of landlords and money lenders reducing them to the status of bonded labourers.

The A.I.K.C. demands that:-

Every state should have a legislation to ensure minimum wage of Agricultural Workers.

Each family br provided with house site within 1981 with financial assistance for construction of houses.

All the debts be cancelled and cheap institutional credit be supplied to them.

The Agricultural workers of ever 60 years br provided with pension.

The food for work programme be undertaken to provide them work in the lean season.

All the surplus an waste land be distributed to them within a specified period.

They should be ensured the supply of essential commodities through fair price shops.

Severe punishment be given to the landlords and beaurocrats commiting atrocities upon them.

The A.I.K.C. calls upon all its units to fully support these demends and their struggles and protect them from the attacks of landlords and police.

ON SETTING UP AN ALL INDIA AGRICULTURAL WORKERS ORGANISATION

  1. The All India Kisan Council, after considering the incessant demand for setting up the separate All India Agricultural Workers organisation by several A.I.K.C. members working among the agricultural labourers has come to the concluion that such a step is neccessary to spread the agrarian movement in to ever new areas and States in our country.
  2. The Council is fully conscious that the gricultural labourers today costitute a sizable section of our peasantry and they have come to live mainly, on sellig their labour power, though some of them may be having a part of their income either from their small plots of land or other subsidiary occupations. Their immediate and day to day demands no doubt, are for wages, house sites, employment and other amenities, but they constitute the most oppressed class in our agrarian sector, and are vitally interested in the abolition of all kinds of landlordlism and for carrying out the redical land reforms in the interests of the toiling peasantry. Thus the agricultural labourers organisation and movement is an integral part of our Kisan Organisations and movement, the movement which is being carried out since long for the abolition of landlordlism and land to the tiller. A victorious agrarian revolution is inconceivable without a soild unity of the entire peasantry including the agricultural labourers who happen to be the most militant and fighting section of the peasantry.
  3. The A.I.K.C. is of the considered opinion that the existing four to five state’s agricultural labourer associations would become the component parts of the newly formed All India Agricultural Workers organisation, and affiliate other state units whenever they so constitute and wish to affiliate. The different State units of the Kisan Sabha are free to decide whether it is necessary or not to form separate state agricultural labourer organisation, after considering the concrete conditions obtaining in the respective states.
  4. The A.I.K.C. is firmly convinced that a close and systematic coordination is a must between the agricultural labourers organisation and Kian Sabha at all levels, local, District, State and all India, and standing coordination committees will have to be constituted at all levels in order to conduct the agrarian revolutionary movement in close co-operation and co-ordination.

RESOLUTION ON ASSAM

The All India Kisan Council expresses its grave concern about the continuation of the year-long agitation on the “foreigners” issue in Assam. There is no doubt that the Assamese speaking people have a legitimate feeling of being discriminated against. The thirty three years rule of bourgeois landlord classes have kept Assam socially, economically, politically and culturally under developed. The foreign tea planters and the non-Assamese bureaucrats further helped in increasing the feeling among the Assamese speaking people that their distinct identity was being undermined.

The failure of implementation of the land reforms, eradication of unemployment among the educated as well as uneducated, combined with the pursuance of the capitalist path of development in alliance with landlordlism and foreign monopoly capital has further resulted in worsening the conditions of the Assamese people. But this gnuine grievance is sought to be directed into disruptive channels by the Assam chauvinists to whip up passions against the non-Assamese people who have settled and lived in Assam for generations. In fact the Assam agitation today is being encouraged by separatist and secessionist forces.

Everybody knows that the Assam State is a multi-lingual state, where apart from the Assamese speaking people, the Ahoms, the plane tribals, the Bengalees, the Nepaleese and people from Hindi speaking and other Indian States have settled for decades. It is not fortuitous that the Left and Left Democratic Forces who have been fighting for the unity of working class, peasantry and the toiling section have been made special targets of attack.

Among those who came and settled in Assam after migrating from Bengal during the British rule and later from East Pakistan, there are Hindus and Muslims. The latter category were forced to come and settle here as a result of the partition of the country. But the organisers of the movement are characterising all these people as foreigners. They are being spported by a section of the top beaurocracy including some higher ranking police officials. Any movement which does not guarantee the democratic rights of all these sections including linguistic and religious minorities is bound to acquire a disruptive character.

Imperialist forces utilising such situations are out to creat a situation of instability in the country and in this context many spokemen of the Government have admitted the hand of foreign powers in the happenings in Assam and the entire North Eastern regions. It is unfortunate that even after prolonged talks in Delhi, the agitators have refused to see reason and give up the agitation and find a solution to the problems of Assam agitation. The continuation of this agitation is very harmful not only for the population of Assam but it also threatens the unity and integrity of the country.

The A.I.K.C. calls upon all its units to mobilise the peasantry and rally the people to defend the unity and integrity of the country by making a common cause with all democratic elements, and to defeat the conspiracies of reactionaries which are aimed at disruption and disunity of the Indian Union.

A.I.K.C. greets the Left, Democratic Forces of Assam who are developing resistance against the successionist movement and are defending the unity of the people living in Assam against heavy odds even at the risk of their lives. It appeals to the democratic minded people of India especially the peasantry to stand by them in this hour of trail and help in defeating the game of reactionaries and imperialists.

ON ATTACKS ON DEMOCRACY

With the deepening crisis of our economy, having failed to fulfil its pledges to the people to bring down price, to tackle the problem of unemployment and ameliorate the conditions of agricultural workers and other poor sections, to protect harijans from barbarities perpetrated by landlords and the minorities from communal carnage, the Indira Gandhi Government in the Centre has resorted to repressive measures to suppress the developing movements of workers, agricultural laborers, peasants, stdents, employees and other toiling people. It has resorted to the promulgation of National Security Ordinance with the declared aim of dealing with the black marketters and anti-social elements but in reality aimed of the democratic movement. It has already been used in many parts of the country to suppress the movements of peasantry, workers, students, and putting behind bars the workers of the political parties A.I.K.C. therefore calls upon the Central Government to withdraw the National Secrity Ordinance.

Not content with raconian measures the Indira Goverment is preparing ground to replace the parliamentary from of Government with the presidential from in order to impose the authoritarian regime in the country. They even intend to change constitution to take away the powers of cheif justices in relation to appointement and transfer of judges making judiciary completely subservient to the executive.

The Central Government goes on discrimination against the Left oriented and Non-congress Governments and encouraging their party people to create law and order problem in order to create condition for central intervention.

A.I.K.C. calls upon all its units to expose this game of the Central Government and in unity with other democratic forces mobilise the people to defeat these manoeuvers, develop a powerful movement to defend democracy and civil liberty.

REPRESSION ON ANDHRA PEASANT

The A.I.K.C. strongly condemns the brutal repression carried on against the peasants and agricultural laborers in some districts of Andhra Pradesh such as Warangal, Nalgonda and Khammam. The Con.(I) Government in the State, in collusion with the local landlords’ goondas and some Naxalite groups, has unleashed a reign of terror against the fighting peasantry and its leaders, killing 46 active Kisan Sabha Workers (Sixteen out of fourty six were activists of Warangal district alone). Foisting cases against 5000 comrades and people, 2000 families were driven out their native villages and have to seek shelter in far away villages in Warangal District; looting and destroying property worth about 10 lakhs of rupees with collusion of police these goondas molested women in the Warangal District. The gravity of the sitation could be understood from the fact that about 3000 people illegally arrested and put to torture.

The Police, instead of acting at the custodian of law, are found in alliance with the landlord’s hoodlums and are including in attacks tortures on the peasants and worker’s militants and also foisting cases in the basis of false reports concoted by landlords and their bullies and at the same time the murders were committed by landlords and their agents were escaped due to the partial attitude of the police with the effective intervention of the ruling party circles.

The goonda attack on a public meeting which was attended by Com. C. Rajeswara Rao, the General Secretary, Communist Party of India has proved further how far the anti-social elements have been abetted by the vested interest in connivance with the police in Andhra Pradesh. This meeting was held just near a police station and the attack committed by hooligans in the presence of police is a best evidence of this conspiracy. A.I.K.C. expresses its strong protect against this goondaism.

A.I.K.C. calls upon its units all over the country to protect against this terror rule of the Congress(I) governemnt in Andhra Pradesh, and demands the release of all the arrested, withdrawal of all foisted cases and remove the police camps.

GREETINGS OF COM. E. K. NAYANAR, CHIEF MINISTER OF KERALA

Dear Comrades,

Lands Reforms in Kerala has been a bitterly fought out struggle extending over many decades. You all know that the peasant movement in Kerala has been faithful to the traditions of innortal martyres of the movemnet, and also to the leadership given by Com. A.K. Gopalan. I take this opportunity to salute their memory.

The first major step towards agrarian reforms was undertaken in 1959 during the time of the first Communist Ministry headed by Com. E.M.S. Namboodiripad. The reactionary forces did not allow us to implement the reforms and the legislation itself was refused assent by the President. The next step was taken again in 1968 under a united front Ministry headed by Com. E.M.S. Namboodiripad. In fact, this was the most comprehensive legislation enacted on this subject. Here too, the reactionary forces succeeded in outstanding us from the Ministry. But unlike in 1959, they could not throw out the land reforms bill. A widespread mightly movement was launched to seize surplus land and distribute it. Seeing this writing on the wall, the centre was forced to give assent to the bill and it became an Act. Since then, we have fought innumerable battles for the implementation of these reforms and today Kerala is the one State in India where fuedal landlordism has been put an end to and tenants have been made real owners of land.

The 1959 Act itself had envisaged the ending of feudal landlordism in Kerala and fixing of ceiling on landholdings. Takeover and distribution of surplus lands and confirment of full ownership on the cultivating tenants were the two main features of the bill. Another feature of the act was the occupancy right to house-site dwellers who were mainly agricultural workers. Even though the 1959 Bill was not implemented, it may be noted that since then eviction of tenants or house-site dwellers was not an easy problem in Kerala. The powerful movement of the peasants and agricultural workers saw to it that the right of the tiller and the agricultural worker to land was protected. It was a struggle first to establish the right to land. It was a struggle to get that right legalised. It was also a struggle to get that legal right implemented in practice. And in this great battle we have in the main succeeded in bringing about basic changes in the land relations in our State. The Left Democratic Front Ministry has given top priority to implement and complete the land reforms process in te State.

Over 36 lakhs of tenant-cultivators have been made owners of land. Over 4 lakhs of house-sites dwellers have also been made owners of house-sites, Thus over 40 lakhs of persons have been given ownership titles to the land they were holding.

Our effort at taking over the surplus land over and above the ceiling has not been very successful. The area of such surplus land is estimated at over a 1.5 lakhs of hectres. But so far we have been able to take over about 50 per cent of it only and we have distributed about 50,000 hectres. The surplus land take over is caught up in innumerable litigations. But in the matter of distribution of Government surplus lands including the land from nationalised private forests, we have been able to make considerable headway. The area of such land is about 1.76 lakhs hectres out of which 1.65 lakhs have already been distributed.

The ending of feudal landlordism hascreated a peculiar social phenomenon. As a result of the land reforms, a large number of petty feudal families have become virtually without any tangible means of livelihood. We examined this problem in depth and cash payment of compensation to the weaker sections among them was raised from Rs. 5,000/- to Rs. 10,000/-. Besides, we have started a rehabilitation scheme to help them find useful occupation in cottage industries. Four such unite have already been established.

The Land Reforms, of course, could not give land to all those who were landless. In this connection, the condition of the poor fishermen community on the coastal area and already 15,000 fishermen have been allotted land in the past ten months.

Besides the above reforms, a variety of intermediary tenures have also been abolished and the tenants occupying this land have been made owners. This covers an area of about 11/2 lakhs hectres of lands.

Unfortunately, conditions are such that we are never able to implement land reform at a stroke and bring about basic transformation in the society. Even today, the land reforms process is not complete. The latest in the series is the land gift amendement bill for which we are still awaiting the assent from the President. Another issue is that of the forest encroachers which is often organised by powerful, economic and political interests in the State. The government have, of course, from time to time taken necessary steps to stem the tide of attack to protect the nationalised private forest and distribute it among the landless and deserving.

The long drawn-out struggle of the peasants of our State during the last 23 years has won legal recognition to their rights. As also, the implementation of these rights in practice. This has brought about a basic social transformation in the Class-relations of our State. The once-tenants has become owners of land; in fact, they have become a new class of land owners. According to the area of land they own, they have become rich peasants, middle peasants and poor peasants. Certain landlords by benami and other transactions have protected their holdings and they continue to hold powerful away in the rural economy of the State, as well as in the Kulak politics of the State of course, this is a new class-relation that has developed in our state. This has also thrown up new problems of agricultural development.

Along with the fight for land reforms, we have carried on the struggle for the protection of ten rights of agricultural workers as well. One of the first acts of E.M.S. Ministry in 1957 was the fixation of a minimum wage for agricultural workers. Since then, this wage has been revised many times an today Kerala may boast of the highest minimum wage for agricultural workers in India. There is a statutory law fixing the wage and even this year this has been revised upwards in keeping the general wage-rise in other fields of economic activity. Here I may also mention the agricultural workers pension which we have started implementing from this year onwards.

Through the implementation of Lands Reforms, Agricultural Workers’ Minimum Wage and Pension a new social, economic and political class relations have developed in our state. It is a subject which needs in-depth study. And I would request the C.K.C. to go into this question and help us with the real state of affairs so that we could plan more concretely and more effectively.

I thank you very much for having given me this opportunity for this exchange of ideas.

RESOLUTION ADOPTED BY THE CENTRAL KISAN COORDINATION COMMITTEE ON 16.12.1980

This meeting of the representatives of the peasant masses in the country feels deeply concerned about the deteriorating situation in the countryside due to growing inflation, rapidly rising prices of inputs and the refusal of the Government to ensure remunerative prices to the peasant for agricultural produce. Neither there is any relation in the prices of agricultural produce with those of their manufactured products like, Sugar, Cotton cloth, Gunny bags etc. nor do they take into consideration the cost of production. This policy is denuding the peasants of their purchasing power and driving them to destitution. There is no guarantee of the peasants getting even the support prices declared by the Government and they are forced to sell their purchase much below these prices, at “distress” rates.

In such a situation the peasantry in the country is in ferment and is forced to take to the path of struggles. The movements for remunerative prices, against tax burdens and for debt relief are going on in various states like Maharashtra Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamilnadu. Gujarat, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar etc. The meeting greets the heroic peasants of these states who are forging unity and fighting to defend their interests. The meeting pays homage to the martyrs who have laid down their lives in these heroic struggles.

The meeting considers the demands of these movements as genuine and justified and expresses its full support and solidarity with these movements. It denounces the efforts of the government spokesmen to dub such movements as ’Politically motivated’ and condemns the repression let loose against them including the use of the notorious National Security Ordinance. The meeting demands the withdrawal of all repressive measures and the release of all arrested in these movements.

The meeting demands that the peasants be ensured remunerative prices which balance the prices received by the peasants for their produce with the prices which they have to pay for their necessities. To prevent distress sales the government must establish a chain of rural godowns with warehousing facilities.

Export of farm products be so managed that the benefit of higher prices in international markets accrues to agricultural producers.

Sufficient credit facilities be made available at cheap interest rates and immediate legislative measures be adopted to give debt relief to the peasants ad till then a moratorium on rural debts be declared.

The peasants be given relief from betterment levies and also the option for payment of electricity dues either at flat rates or on basis of meter readings.

Taking into consideration the importance of the farm economy the demand for power and deisel for the farm sector be fully met.

The meeting appeals to the peasants to forge unity irrespective of their political affiliations to fight by peaceful means for the above demands.

It calls upon the peasants of the whole country to observe January 17, 1981 as a Kisan Solidarity Day by holding meetings and rallies in support of the demands and in support of peasant struggle.

The meeting decides to set up a Central Kisan Coordination Committee with representatives of various Kisan Organisations to support the peasant struggles and to coordinate the fight for the fulfillment of their demands.

CENTRAL KISAN CO-ORDINATION COMMITTEE

The following are the members of the Central Kisan Co-ordination Committee:

  1. Shri Bhanu Pratap Singh (Chairman)
  2. Shri Devi Lal (Convener)
  3. Shri Virendra Verma
  4. Shri Prakash Singh Badal
  5. Shri Brahma Prakesh
  6. Shri Kumbharam Arya
  7. Shri Chandrajit Yadav
  8. Shri Purushottam Kaushik
  9. Shri Har Kishan Singh Surjeet
  10. Shri Jaipal Singh
  11. Shri Z.A. Ahmad
  12. Shri George Fernandes
  13. Shri Karpoori Thakur
  14. Shri Chiman Bhai Patel
  15. Shri Ambubhai Patel
  16. Shri Nathu Ram Mirdha
  17. Shri A.G. Kulkarni
  18. Shri Kalyan Singh Kalvi
  19. Shri Gauri Shankar Rai
  20. Shri Muthuswami Gounder
  21. Shri Indradeep Sinha
  22. Shri Ramdhari Shastri
  23. Shri G. Latchhana
  24. Shri Narayan Singh
  25. Shri Chitta Basu
  26. Shri A.P. Rastogi
  27. Shri Harihar Patel
  28. Shri Sharad Pawar
  29. Shri B.D. Desai
  30. Shri S.R. Gadam

A.I.K.S. ALL INDIA MEMBERSHIP

YEAR 1956-57 1957-58 1967-68 1968-69 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80
MEMBERSHIP 7,36,575 6,09,301 9,71,473 9,64,430 22,91,980 41,16,212 45,24,243

STATEWISE MEMBERSHIP FOR THE YEARS 1967-68 TO 1979-80

S.No. Name of the State 1967-68 1968-69 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80
1. West Bengal State Kisan Sabha 5,21,694 5,89,833 12,84,992 28,45,709 31,82,965
2. (a) Kerala State Kisan Sabha 1,00,143 1,17,116 2,54,210 2,81,476 3,43,759
(b) Kerala Agri. Cul. Lab. Union 1,64,820 1,06,144 2,17,460
3. Tripura State Kisan Sabha 30,000 10,133 10,000 67,083 70,092
4. (a) A.P. Agri. Cul. Lab. Union 1,45,400 1,50,000 1,35,000
(b) A.P. State Kisan Sabha 9,000 23,000 65,550 1,00,000 86,400
5. Tamil Nadu State Kisan Sabha 52,200 40,000 81,500 1,60,400 1,28,740
6. (a) Punjab State Kisan Sabha 85,087 50,076 57,272 70,524 58,565
(b) Punjab Dehati Mazdoor Union 21,940 33,526 29,702
7. Bihar State Kisan Sabha 15,531 12,066 47,000 1,27,400 85,400
8. U.P. State kisan Sabha 45,000 16,397 63,196 58,582 64,360
9. Assam State Kisan Sabha 8,718 24,622 27,300 38,000 42,000
10. Maharashtra State kisan Sabha 17,000 29,000 26,500 32,000 18,000
11. Karnataka State Kisan Sabha 18,000 25,482 18,211 16,000
12. Gujarat State Kisan Sabha 5,000 8,000 11,600
13. Rajasthan State Kisan Sabha 22,000 16,666 20,000 30,000 10,000
14. J & K State Kisan Sabha 17,000 2,000 2,000 7,000
15. Orissa State Kisan Sabha 1,500 6,333 14,000 15,157 6,200
16. Haryana State kisan Sabha 17,600 3,100 4,000 4,000 6,000
17. H.P. State Kisan Sabha 1,000 1,600 2,000 4,000
18. M.P. State Kisan Sabha 1,000 3,000
19. Manipur State Kisan Sabha 5,000
20. Goa Kisan Sabha 606
Total Membership 9,71,473 9,64,430 22,91,980 41,16,212 45,26,243

DISTRICT-WISE MEMBERSHIP FROM STATES FOR THE YEAR 1979-’80

1. Midnapore 5,97,871
2. 24 Parganas 4,60,374
3. Burdwan 4,57,577
4. Murshidabad 3,62,200
5. Hooghly 2,71,703
6. Bankura 1,74,345
7. Howrah 1,55,862
8. Nadia 1,35,180
9. Birbhum 1,29,652
10. Coochbehar 1,10,447
11. West Dinajpore 1,00,147
12. Purulia 90,300
13. Jalpaiguri 73,054
14. Maldah 32,253
15. Darjeeling 32,000
Total 31,82,965
1. Allahabad 4,025
2. Azamgarh 1,200
3. Agra 600
4. Aligarh 500
5. Badaun 483
6. Baharaich 688
7. Ballia 2,450
8. Barabanki 500
9. Bareilly 1,600
10. Basti 713
11. Bijnor 7,000
12. Bulandshahar 3,350
13. Chamoli 375
14. Dehradoon 250
15. Deoria 3,500
16. Etawah 1,113
17. Etah 900
18. Faizabad 625
19. Farrukhabad 1,989
20. Fatehpur 1,750
21. Gazipur 2,125
22. Gorakhpur 250
23. Hardoi 913
24. Jalaun 100
25. Jaunpur 207
26. Kanpur 1,038
27. Mainpuri 3,100
28. Mathura 700
29. Mirzapur 438
30. Moradabad 2,000
31. Muzaffarnagar 2,500
32. Nainital 1,100
33. Pilibhit 250
34. Pratapgarh 250
35. Rampur 1,500
36. Sitapur 875
37. Sultanpur 1,000
38. Tehri 750
39. Unnao 1,000
40. Varanasi 5,200
41. P.H.Q 5
42. Farrukhabad 563
43. Faizabad 1,500
44. Jaunpur 309
45. Muzaffarnagar 600
46. Deoria 200
47. Meerut 1,188
48. Fatehpur 450
49. Sultanpur 638
Total 64,360
1. Cannanore 83,860
2. Kozhikode 42,058
3. Ernakulam 35,310
4. Trivandrum 33,720
5. Malapuram 24,586
6. Idukki 21,933
7. Quilon 19,480
8. Alleppey 18,000
9. Palghat 17,900
10. Kottayam 17,500
11. Trichur 16,017
12. Wyanadu 13,395
Total 3,43,759
1. Tanjore(Agri. Cul. Lab. Union) 60,000
(Kisan Sabha) 20,000
2. Madurai 10,000
3. Coimbatore 10,000
4. Tiruchi 5,000
5. South Arcot 4,000
6. Chengal Pattu 3,000
7. North Arcot 2,000
8. Salem 1,800
9. Dharampuri 2,000
10. Kanya Kumari 2,000
11. Tirunelveli 1,550
12. Pudukottai 2,000
13. Ramanathapuram 5,390
Total 1,28,740
1. Hissar 1,200
2. Bhivani 500
3. Kurushetra 2,000
4. Jind 1,500
5. Karnal 1,500
Total 6,700

Date: 29, 30 November and 1st December 1980