Saturday, March 20, 2010

STOP COMMERCIALISATION AND PRIVATISATION OF EDUCATION

In yet another attempt to further the agenda of commercialization and privatization of education, the MHRD has come with a proposal to encourage renting out of infrastructural facilities of government educational institutions to private sector players. As per reports in the media the government is planning to bring legislation in this regard. This legislation would be applicable for central government institutions and be forced on the state government institutions as well. The logic which has been forwarded for this is that after classes most of the infrastructure in these institutions is unused.
The SFI strongly condemns this move. This will only encourage the moves to commercialize and privatize our educational institutions. A similar directive was sent to educational institutions earlier under the garb of the austerity drive of the UPA government. Glimpses of such moves can also be seen in the Yashpal Committee Report which has stressed on the need for finding new ways to resource generation. Such subletting of infrastructural facilities would create commercial enclaves within educational campuses.
The most alarming part about this move is that the government is planning to wash off its hands from the need to expand our educational sector. Instead what it is trying to do is encourage private players to come and reap huge profits by charging hefty fees from students by setting up these new institutions and get away with paying some rental for facilities and infrastructure created by the taxpayer’s money. The argument that such moves would increase the access to education is completely spurious, as only the rich would be able to pay the huge amount of fees which these institutions would charge.
The government must realize that the way to increase access to education is through increasing spending on the education sector and not allowing foreign universities or public private partnerships of this kind. It has been a long standing demand of the SFI in places like Delhi that all colleges in Delhi University must start evening shifts so that more students can come and study there. Rather than increasing its expenditure to open more such colleges MR Sibal has decided on renting our government’s infrastructure to private entities. This only reaffirms the pro-rich and anti-student and neo-liberal vision of the government.
The SFI appeals to the student community to unite against any such moves which would create rented enclaves in institutions and help a selected few reap profits. We also warn Mr Sibal to desist from bulldozing his neo-liberal agenda on the student community in this country or else be should be ready to face the wrath of the students.

CITU All India Conference elects new Office Bearers

A K PADMANABHAN TAPAN SEN


The 13th All India conference of CITU, the biggest trade union in the country elected new office Bearers. Com. AK Padmanaban is elected All india President. Currently he is working as Tamil Nadu Unit President. Com. Tapan Sen is elected All India Secretary. He is currently working as national vice president. He hails from West Bengal. Com. M K Pandhe and Com. Muhammed Amin, the present President and General Secretary will continue in the positions of Vice Presidents of the organisation. Com Ranjana Nirula is elected Treasure. It is for the first time that a women become an office bearer of the organisation. A total of 16 vice presidents and 16 Secretaries are also elected at the conference. The conference will conclude tommorow with mass rally and public meeting.

Stop Pussyfooting on Headley Case

The Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following statement:
It is six months since David Headley was arrested by the US authorities for his role in terrorist related activities. The plea bargain struck by David Headley in a US Court has seen him pleading guilty to all twelve charges which include complicity in the 26/11 terror attack in Mumbai.
Despite all these, the Indian authorities have been denied access to him. On the other hand, the Indian government allowed the FBI to interrogate Ajmal Kasab in Mumbai.
It has been established that Headley has been an agent for the Drug Enforcement Authority (DEA) of the United States. It is also a fact that he had visited Mumbai both before and after the terrorist attack in 2008. The attitude of the US authorities suggests that he has been a double-agent. It is inexplicable therefore why the UPA government is pussyfooting around the issue with the US administration.
The UPA government is more concerned about justifying the US stance. If access cannot be given to Headley as the issue has already gone to court, why was access not granted earlier when the Indian team was sent to the United States?
The Home Minister knows very well that extradition is ruled out by the plea bargain. Yet, he declares, he is prepared to be patient. The Manmohan Singh government has once again shown how unequal the US-India relationship is. The US is only concerned about its AfPak Strategy. It is not willing to cooperate in an investigation concerning a prime accused of the Mumbai terror attack. Yet the FBI and the CIA have access to all our intelligence and security related material and personnel. The least that the Government of India can do is to demand immediate access to Headley. The US needs to be told that cooperation has to be reciprocal.