Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The Singur Conspiracy Case

The Singur Conspiracy Case

Singur’s Tapasi Malik’s murder case is currently ongoing at the Fast Track court of Justice A.K. Acharya at the Chandannagar Sub-Divisional Court.
Examination of witnesses is over. Ganashakti was present at the court during the questioning of each and every witness.
Aniket Chakroborty of Ganashakti exposes the known, unknown facts and important questions arising from the testimonies and cross examination of the witnesses.
http://www.leftvoice.org/news_detail.php?newsid=24
the complete report

Friday, October 3, 2008

Javed ubach....


Javed ubach....

javed khan riz ke humki diyechilen je : ekjon teacher hoye sey tar studenter sathe je acron korechen seta jonosadharoner mone birup potikriya sristi korte pare, ebong jonogan sikhyak somajer opor theke bhorsa harate pare. sutorang humki dewar dai tmc er prothom sarir netar ghare ese pore gelo. othocho cbi sukousole javed ke char keno dilo?? oke keno greptar kore jail e patathano holo na??? r riz er kaka??? riz er dada chup keno?? didi javed issue te mukhe kulup etechen, jini riz er mirtu niye onek boro boro kotha bolechlen....ro kotha bolechilen, andoloner name cpim birodhitai nemechilen, uni ki bolben??? r kalyan babu jini nije cbi ke riz mamla dewa hok bole dabi korechien tini ekhon keno ulto sur gaichen!!!

Don't Sign Nuclear Deal : It Will Be A Surrender


.The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:



Don't Sign Nuclear Deal : It Will Be A Surrender



The US Congress has adopted an Act to approve the 123 Agreement.  This Act is a Hyde Act plus  version which has the key provisions of the Hyde Act and much more.  The Act passed by the Congress spells out clearly that:



·        India does not have fuel supply assurance

·        No assurance regarding building a strategic fuel reserve for the life time of the reactor

·        Whatever corrective measures it takes regarding fuel supply failure does not permit taking the reactors out of safeguards

·        The consent to reprocess is only notional

·        The US will also work to prevent other countries from providing nuclear supplies to India, if the US terminates the 123 Agreement.



Condoleezza Rice has further assured the Congress that India will be barred from Enrichment and Reprocessing Technology in the next NSG meeting to be held in November, formalizing an unofficial consensus reached during the NSG waiver meeting of September 4-6.



The letter written by the Indian Foreign Secretary to Under Secretary William Burns on September 10 also makes clear the other terms of the Agreement.  India is committing  to buy a minimum of 10,000 MW from the dying US nuclear industry, which has not received any new order for the last 30 years.  It is going to indemnify suppliers from all consequences of a nuclear accident.  



The device of getting a Presidential signing statement to waive the objectionable provisions of the Act will not hold water, as this is a law passed by Congress and Bush will not be President after four months.



The Manmohan Singh government has been claiming that the Hyde Act will be overridden by the last Act passed by the US Congress as per US jurisprudence.  Now the last Act contains all the Hyde Act restrictions and they have been made more explicit.  



After this, if the Congress led government still goes ahead and signs the 123 Agreement, it will be a complete surrender to the United States and a betrayal of India's vital interests.  

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Birodhira itihas bhule gechen!!!

desh swadhin howar tik porei, 1948 sale 16 th march chittoranjan elakar 8000 ekor jomi newa hoi, rail engine tairy korar factory korar jonyo, duggadihi bole ekta gram okhane chilo jar area chilo 338 ekorer moto, sei jaiga ta prthome dakhal kore newa hoyechilo, er protibade okhane adibasi ra probol andolon gore tulechilo, kintu tokhon kar congressi sorkar kintu amader rajyo sorkare moton eto darjya dekhai ni, police soja guli chaliye oder andolon venge chilo, 7 jon mara gechilo tate. poroborti kale aro jomi adhigrahon hoyechilo okhane, kintu ekhon sekhane chitro ta puropuri palte geche oi elakar 13000 hajar manush oi karkhanar sather jukto, chittoranjan rajyer ekti bardhinu sohor ekhon. echara dugrape ispat karkhana gorte giyeo 22000 ekor jomi niyechilo bidhan babu, 8 ti gramer manusher bhite mati chara hoyechilo, r tader ke policer bhoi dekhiyei uchhed kora hoyechilo, jai hok durgapur ekhon ekti safal silponagori. kintu takhan birodhir asone chilo bamponthi ra, r tara trinomulider moton rajyer unnatite neti bachok rajniti kore ni, badha dei ni oi sob prokolpyer , kintu ekhonkar birodhira ki korchen???

Krishok dorodi

jara ekhon krishok dorodi sajchen tara ki janen ek ekor jomite koto lav hoi??? tin fasali jomi jekhane jekhane dhan, alu, til chas hoi sei ek ekor jomite khoroch korcha bad diye masik income 1500 taka. r kendriyo sorkarer bhranto nitir jonyo kitnashok, bij othoba sarer dam upojupori berei choleche r tar fale lav ta aro kome jai. sekhane singure sorkarer kach theke ja taka pachhe ta jodi kothai invest na kore sudhu banke rekhe dei tahole ja return pabe ta oi chas baser income theke onek besi to boi kom noi. sara deshe jekhane kroshok der modhye chas bas chere chole jawar probonota tairy hochhe krishok der modhye sekhane nijer rajnoitik subidha tairy kore giye amader birodhi netri singurer manush gulo ke aro khotir samne dar koriye dichhen.




Thursday, September 18, 2008

Repudiate the 123 Agreement

marxistindia
news from the cpi(m)
September 17, 2008

Press Statement

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:

Repudiate the 123 Agreement

The documents submitted to the US Congress by the US President along with the Presidential Determination on Indo-US civil nuclear cooperation have made it amply clear that the terms of the 123 Agreement are fully in conformity with the Hyde Act and violate the crucial commitments made by the Indian Prime Minister in Parliament. The time has come for the Indian Government to repudiate the 123 Agreement, which is not in India's national interest. The Government has no other option, as the argument that India has a different interpretation of the 123 Agreement is meaningless. The US as a supplier of nuclear equipment and materials will undertake such supply only under the terms of what it calls a "framework agreement." A different interpretation of the 123 Agreement by India will in no way bind the US as a supplier.

The Left Parties have repeatedly pointed out the provisions of the 123 Agreement, which are inimical to India's interests:

Ø India will not have any uninterrupted fuel supply assurance;

Ø India will have to place its civilian reactors under IAEA safeguards in perpetuity without such a fuel supply assurance;

Ø India will not have any assurance regarding stock piling fuel reserve for the life time of the reactors;

Ø Whatever corrective measures India may contemplate vis-à-vis fuel supply disruption, taking the reactors out of IAEA safeguards will be impermissible;

Ø India will not have access to full civilian nuclear technology;

Ø The consent to India's reprocessing of spent fuel is only notional;

Ø The US can terminate the 123 Agreement at will and stop all supplies immediately;

Ø India will have to align its foreign policy to that of the US, particularly on Iran.

All these points raised by the Left Parties have been confirmed by the documents accompanying the US Presidential Determination and have exposed the hollowness of the claims made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in Parliament.

Fuel Supply Assurance and IAEA Safeguards: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had made a solemn commitment in Parliament on March 7, 2006 that India would place its civilian nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards in perpetuity only on the basis of strict reciprocity vis-à-vis the US guaranteeing uninterrupted fuel supply in perpetuity. In case the US defaults on its fuel supply agreement (as it did in Tarapur), it would ensure that other members of the NSG would take over its obligations. In a signed covering note to the Presidential Determination (President's Transmittal of Text to Congress) George Bush has made it clear that the fuel supply assurance in the 123 Agreement is not legally binding. It states:

"In Article 5(6) the Agreement records certain political commitments concerning reliable supply of nuclear fuel given to India in March 2006. The text of the Agreement does not, however, transform these political commitments into legally binding commitments because the Agreement, like other US agreements of its type, is intended as a framework agreement."

This categorical denial of any legally binding fuel supply assurance in the 123 Agreement by the US President is accompanied by a specific observation contained in the Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act Regarding Civil Nuclear Cooperation with India accompanying the Presidential Determination, which states:

"Once a facility is listed in the Annex, safeguards will continue indefinitely unless 'India and the Agency have jointly determined that the facility is no longer usable for any nuclear activity relevant from the point of view of safeguards'.Thus the facilities and materials subject to safeguards.are under 'safeguards in perpetuity in accordance with IAEA standards, principles, and practices'."

This clearly shows that India can never withdraw its civilian nuclear facilities from IAEA safeguards unilaterally, even the indigenously built reactors, in the event of a disruption of fuel supply or if the 123 Agreement is itself terminated. The Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act has also left the quantity of nuclear material transferred under the 123 Agreement undefined. Therefore the US is under no obligation to help India build up adequate fuel reserves for life time operations of the reactors.

Full Co-Operation in Civilian Nuclear Technology: The Prime Minister in a suo moto statement to Parliament on July 29, 2006 had stated:

"...we committed ourselves to separating the civilian and strategic programme. However this was to be conditional upon, and reciprocal to, the United States fulfilling its side of the understanding. steps to be taken by India would be conditional upon and contingent on action taken by the United States...Before voluntarily placing our civilian facilities under IAEA safeguards, we will ensure that all restrictions on India have been lifted."

However, the signed covering note to the Presidential Determination clearly states:

"It (the 123 Agreement) does not permit transfers of any restricted data. Sensitive nuclear technology, heavy-water production technology and production facilities, sensitive nuclear facilities, and major critical components of such facilities may not be transferred under the Agreement unless the Agreement is amended."

This is also reiterated in the Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act. Clearly, India will not have access to the full fuel cycle and all sensitive technologies are denied under the above. The bar on access to the full nuclear fuel cycle technology is still very much a part of the technology denial regime of the US. Thus India is being asked to place its civilian reactors under IAEA safeguards in perpetuity without all restrictions being lifted.

Consent to Reprocess: The Nuclear Proliferation Assessment Statement accompanying the Presidential Determination states:

"Subsequent to India's March 2006 separation plan, the Indian government decided to pursue development of a new civil facility dedicated to reprocessing material under safeguards. Development of this facility (and agreement with the United States on arrangements and procedures related thereto) will be required to bring into effect the "programmatic consent" in Article 6 of the Agreement."'

Therefore, the supposed consent for India's right to reprocess spent fuel contained in the 123 Agreement is only a "programmatic consent" as per the US. It clearly states that till the arrangements and procedures are agreed to by the US in the subsequent period, this consent cannot be brought into effect. This also belies the claims made by the Government in this regard.

Extraneous Issues Tied with Nuclear Cooperation: The Prime Minister had categorically stated that tying any extraneous issues with civil nuclear cooperation will not be accepted to India. It is clear from the documents accompanying the Presidential Determination that extraneous issues have been coupled with the nuclear deal, which have also been accepted by India.

Iran: The Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act approvingly talks about India aligning with the US on the Iran question both in the IAEA and the UN and that India "maintained a strong public line of support for P5+1 and U.S. diplomatic efforts to resolve international concerns with Iran's nuclear program". This is contradictory to the position stated earlier that India supports the right of Iran to the full nuclear fuel cycle. The issue of nuclear weapons and the right to enrichment are two different issues and India has always maintained a public distinction between the two. However, with the External Affairs Minister's statement, India has formally changed its position and opposed Iran's fuel enrichment, a right which Iran has under Article IV of the NPT.

Missile Technology Control Regime: India has already pledged its unilateral adherence to the MTCR regime of which it is not a part. According to the Report Pursuant to Section 104(c) of Hyde Act mentions that India has written a letter stating its "adherence to the MTCR and its annex in a letter dated September, 9, 2008, to Mr. Jacques Audibert, the MTCR Point of Contact in Paris".

All this makes the 123 Agreement almost identical to the Tarapur one, where India had been forced to run from pillar to post for fuel after the US unilaterally terminated the Tarapur 123 Agreement. India still continues to hold spent fuel as the US has never given its consent to reprocessing, even though such a "programmatic consent" was there in the Tarapur 123 Agreement also. It is with the experience of Tarapur that India had sought fuel supply assurances and various other terms including the right to reprocess spent fuel. With the documents accompanying the Presidential Determination, the US has made its intentions clear - this 123 Agreement is no different from the earlier Tarapur one, with all the Tarapur problems. And India can again land into the Tarapur mess, as the right of the US to terminate the agreement is an unfettered one.

The Polit Bureau of the CPI (M) demands that the Prime Minister fulfil his pledge to the nation that he will walk away from the Nuclear Deal if it does not meet India's expectations.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Bhumisonskar niye kichu information.

Didi ebong tar anugami ra bare bare bole aschen je uni naki krishok dorodi r rajyo sarkar naki krishokder jonyo kono kotha chinta koren na, tahole choto ekta porisonkhyan diye ajker moton katchi:

05-06 silper jonyo jomi adhigrohon hoyeche ----2322 ekor
bhumhin der modhye bhumi bontan hoyeche--8136 ekor

06-07 silper jonyo jomi adhigrohon hoyeche-----4135 ekor
bhumhin der modhye bhumi bontan hoyeche---10,848 ekor

07-08 silper jonyo jomi adhigrohon hoyeche-----3750 ekor
bhumhin der modhye bhumi bontan hoyeche---10953 ekor


ei bhabe rajyo sorkar tar bhumi bantan pokriyar madhome bhumi hin der jomi bantan kore geche abar rajye kormosonsthaner proshne silper ekta jaiga tairy korechen. didi ei pokriya bhandul korte chiche r kichui noi.

Bhmi bantoner source: rajyer bhmi sonskar bibhag.