“Miss Banerjee has pulled the trigger and we had no other choice but to pull out of West Bengal. Believe me the situation had not improved and I do not see any change in the horizon”. "A battle has been lost but not the war.Unfortunately, we are facing a very, very irresponsible Opposition that is creating a serious problem. But I believe one battle is lost; the war is not lost."-Trinamul Congress leaders are celebrating a “people’s victory” but ...
মঙ্গলবার, ২ ডিসেম্বর, ২০০৮
Tata bid to shield 'secret'
Farmer suicide in Singur
বৃহস্পতিবার, ২০ নভেম্বর, ২০০৮
Tatas told to disclose pact , but under seal
বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৩ নভেম্বর, ২০০৮
Rs. 60,000 subsidy for 1 lakh-car
Suhrid Dutta and Debu Malik found guilty
Tapasi Malik murder case at a glance
বৃহস্পতিবার, ৬ নভেম্বর, ২০০৮
Singur tour
Calcutta Nov. 5: Representatives of First Automobile Works, China’s largest automobile company, today went to Singur scouting for land to set up a car plant.
The team reached Singur this evening and surveyed the project area that had been leased out for the Tata Nano project for 45 minutes.
This morning, the team visited Kharagpur. The officials were taken to see land near Jakpur and a plot near Guptamoni by officials of the West Bengal Industrial Development Corporation and Ural India. The company wants to set up the plant in collaboration with Ural India.
The team also surveyed a 230-acre plot belonging to the Haldia Development Authority adjacent to the Ural India factory that assembles dumpers. Ural India chairman J.K. Saraff said if land was not available in Haldia, the plant could come up in Kharagpur or Singur. “Search for land is on.”
বুধবার, ৫ নভেম্বর, ২০০৮
Singur chat with China car maker
Singur turns battlefield again
বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩০ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Tata will return land: Buddha
Bhattacharjee clarified that the Tatas had never insisted on retaining the land after shifting the small-car plant out of Singur. “Despite the fact that 85 per cent of the work had been completed, Ratan Tata expressed his desire to return the land the day he announced the pullout. But we have to follow the procedures of taking back the land,” a front leader quoted him as telling the closed-door meeting.
A section of leaders from the CPM and its partners has been insisting on taking the land back so that it can be used for another project.
“The land was acquired for setting up industry and the front today asked the government to take effective steps to ensure that alternative industry comes up in Singur,” Biman Bose, the front chairman and state CPM secretary, said.
Legal provisions allow a leaseholder to retain the land for three years, after which the government can take it back if it has not been used for the purpose cited in the agreement.
Front partners like the RSP criticised the Tatas for “flouting the agreement with the government as it did not have any provision for a pullout because of the Opposition’s agitation”.
Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata drew flak for calling Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi a “good M” as opposed to the “bad M”, an obvious reference to Trinamul Congress chief Mamata Banerjee.
Bhattacharjee, however, steered clear of the blame game and stressed that the company had not deserted Bengal.
“The Tatas still have many units here that employ 16,000 people. Their cancer hospital is expected to open next month. Another Tata unit is coming up in Kharagpur. We are expecting more investments from the company,’’ he said.
The chief minister told the meeting that the Tatas had not paid the lease money for the 997 acres acquired for the Nano project but had taken a soft loan of Rs 200 crore from the government.
Both Bhattacharjee and Bose ruled out returning the acquired land to “unwilling farmers” as Trinamul has demanded. “The government is looking at possibilities of alternative industries in Singur but no specific proposal was discussed today,’’ Bose said.
Bhattacharjee distanced himself from transport minister Subhas Chakraborty’s claim that a deal had almost been finalised for Singur.
“Maybe one of my over-enthusiastic colleagues has said so, but nothing has been finalised. We are considering various proposals, including clusters of several industries and an industrial park for small-scale industries,’’ he was quoted as saying.
Roadblock with request for Tata team
বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৩ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Singur land for industry, says govt
সোমবার, ২০ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
CPM cries bias against governor

In a document adopted by the central committee in Cal- cutta recently, the party attacks the Congress, too, saying it “played a dubious role” with state party chief Priya Ranjan Das Munshi “encouraging” disruption of the Nano project.
“The role of the governor, who acted as a facilitator between the two sides, was also not impartial. Finally, the Tata motor company decided to shift its plant out of Bengal and announced the shifting out on October 3,” the party paper says, adding that this happened when “public opinion in the state was veering around in support of the project”.
The report on political developments says Mamata’s adamance led to the deadlock despite all efforts for negotiations and settlement.
Mamata, who had refused to talk to the government repeatedly, had finally relented following Gandhi’s request. The talks at Raj Bhavan failed, though, with the Trinamul Congress chief insisting on the return of 400 acres from the 1,000-acre small-car plant.
The governor had earlier earned the CPM’s wrath on Nandigram, when he expressed “cold horror” after the party’s recapture of the area. His decision to switch off Raj Bhavan lights for two hours every day when the state was going through a power crisis” had also not gone down well. ( END ) Source : The Telegraph
Singur: A lesson learnt
CPM goes for Gandhi
রবিবার, ১৯ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Pro-Nano procession by Singur residents
শনিবার, ১৮ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Politically motivated, says Trinamool Congress
Trinamul threat to Tata
Trinamul demands apology from Tata
বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৬ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Ratan Tata asks Young Bengal: Jobs or lawlessness?

বুধবার, ১৫ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Nano Land: PIL against Gujarat govt
মঙ্গলবার, ১৪ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Our fight will continue, says Mamata Banerjee
By Gargi Parsai
PM briefed on farmers’ problems in Singur: Amar Singh
Seeking dismissal of the State government for the “breakdown of a constitutional agreement,” Ms. Banerjee told journalists here that she was not looking for the 600 acres earmarked for Tatas’ Nano project.
“There are many Tatas, anyone can come there. We want the 400 acres acquired for the adjoining ancillary unit returned to farmers who did not want to part with their land and who have not accepted any compensation. The government will have to implement it or go out of power.”
The Trinamool chief said nobody knew why Tatas withdrew from Singur. “They withdrew unilaterally and the government withdrew unilaterally. The Left parties withdrew support to the United Progressive Alliance government over the nuclear agreement, while they themselves failed to honour the agreement on Singur. We will continue to fight this socially, legally and politically.”
Accompanied by leaders of the West Bengal SP and Janata Dal (United), among others, Mr. Amar Singh said at the joint press conference that they briefed the Prime Minister and the President on the Singur farmers facing tough time due to the policies of the State government. “No jan andolan can run for so long unless the people are with it.”
On Mr. Ratan Tata’s remarks after he shifted the Nano project to Gujarat, Mr. Amar Singh said: “To say Ms. Mamata, who was fighting for the poor, was the bad M and Mr. Modi [Gujarat Chief Minister] was the good M was a personal attack on Ms. Banerjee for which she should sue him. Mr. Tata should decide whether he wants to be an industrialist or politician.”
Mr. Singh said he would raise the issue of special economic zones with the Congress leadership when the UPA-SP Coordination Committee met here on Friday. ( END)
'Alternative car plant possible'
Statesman News Service
Statesman News Service
CHANGING COURSE
- After years of agitation, Bengal’s Left needs to use persuasion
By ANDRÉ BÉTEILLE
The failure at Singur has been attributed variously to the intransigence of the Opposition and the ineptitude of the government. Ordinary people have come to accept inept responses to intransigent demands as a part of everyday political life in India. Some have drawn attention to the decay of public institutions through the sustained use of political patronage and thuggery. But this is not unique to West Bengal. The displacement of rules by persons in public institutions has taken place throughout the country and is probably due to forces that are deeply rooted in India’s social tradition. Perhaps because of the discipline of the Left cadres and the uninterrupted rule by the Left parties for more than 30 years, political thuggery has been better organized at the grassroots level in West Bengal.
Is there no singularity in the state of West Bengal that can help us explain either the intransigence of the Opposition or the ineptitude of the government? A part of the singularity of West Bengal lies in the very distinctive ideological climate that has been nurtured in the state. While all political parties find it convenient to speak against the rich and for the poor, no party has mounted such a sustained ideological assault on the capitalist system as the Communist Party of India (Marxist). The problem in West Bengal today is that an attempt is being made to act against the prevalent ideological climate by the very people who created that climate and sought to protect it zealously from reasoned criticism. An important factor behind the inept handling of the crisis by the CPI(M) is its failure to recognize the power that ideology and doctrine can acquire over minds that have been exposed to them continuously and with little room for dissent.
The Bengali intelligentsia has developed a distinctive language of public discourse. What is loosely described as the ‘class approach’ to society and politics has been made a part of the common sense of large sections of the Bengali-speaking population. This discourse is no longer confined to social analysts or political activists. It provides a set of unstated assumptions for the discussion of every kind of social and political issue. The fulcrum of the discourse is the ineluctable division of society into capitalists and workers, the relentless exploitation of workers by capitalists, and the need to resist that exploitation by every available means.
Uninterrupted rule for more than 30 years by the Left parties has not only created new structures of patronage, it has also led to shifts in the ways in which ordinary people speak and even think. I am impressed by the extent to which terms and phrases taken straight from the Marxist lexicon have now become a part of ordinary Bengali conversation through more than half-a-century of usage. I would venture to say that Bengali has gone further than any Indian language in appropriating the idiom of Marxism and giving it a vivid and distinctive colouring.
The evils inherent in private capital and the sinister designs of businessmen and entrepreneurs have been attacked single-mindedly, and sometimes mindlessly, at party meetings and in party literature for decades on end. One does not have to be a market fundamentalist to acknowledge that business and enterprise might contribute usefully to the wealth and well-being of a nation. But such acknowledgment was ruled out of court in the communist discourse on capitalism and socialism. There is no match for the vigour and sophistry with which Left intellectuals in Calcutta habitually assault any argument about the positive role of private capital in economic development.
Perhaps the powers that be in West Bengal no longer take very seriously the tirades they have themselves kept alive against liberalization, privatization and globalization. Some of them may have the delusion that they can do what the communist leadership has done in China to turn the economy around. But China is a different universe from West Bengal. It has a determined and unitary communist leadership that can move the people in a particular direction at one time and in a different direction at another. The leadership in West Bengal is too insecure and too divided to be able to do that. It has to make its way through the discord and disorder that is the staple of a multi-party democracy. After so many decades of agitation and propaganda, it has to devote a little more care and attention to persuasion. Persuasion may appear more tedious and time-consuming than propaganda, but it is the only path that is now open if development is to be given a chance in West Bengal.
Under present conditions of economic and social change, the communist leadership in West Bengal cannot take its followers and supporters for granted. It is not enough for the chief minister or the industries minister to engage with the politburo or with Ratan Tata. The leaders must explain to their own supporters and followers why private capital is sometimes beneficial for economic development. Changing the social perceptions of a whole population, or even a large segment of it, requires far more patience and care than a mere change in political strategy.
I cannot judge how clearly the communist leadership realizes that a more friendly attitude to private capital, including global capital, requires a change not only in the political climate of West Bengal, but also in its intellectual climate. Left intellectuals have played no small part in forging and supplying the ammunition for the critique of capitalism. This critique, which attracted some of the best minds of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, has lost much of its intellectual excitement with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the slump in the Cold War. But there is still no match for the zeal with which the Left intellectual can pounce on anyone who is so foolhardy as to even mention the common interest of capital and labour in the benefits of development.
The intellectual custodians of the social and economic theories of the Left have had an easier time in India than in the Soviet Union or China. The discipline of the party and the State never weighed as heavily on them as it did on their Soviet or Chinese counterparts. They could remain men of the Left without surrendering their liberal conscience. They have been increasingly critical of the high-handed acts of the leaders and the cadres of the Left parties. This does not go very far below the surface. They have a deeper responsibility to revise and re-examine a representation of the social and economic reality in whose propagation they have played no small part and that has now become obsolete and anachronistic. Their obligation is to keep under scrutiny not only the political practices of the Left parties but also the economic doctrines by which those practices have been sustained.
The author is Professor Emeritus of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, and National Research
সোমবার, ১৩ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Singur residents seek Governor's intervention
By Staff Reporter
Seek his intervention in bringing back Tata Motors project
Agitation by the committee at Singur enters fourth day
Governor asks residents to meet Buddhadeb
KOLKATA: A delegation of Singur residents met Governor Gopalkrishna Gandhi here on Monday and submitted a memorandum seeking his intervention in bringing back the Tata Motors small car project to Singur.
“We told the Governor about the hardship faced by the 11,000 farmers who have lost their land as well as their means of livelihood following Tata Motors’ decision on relocation and urged him to take concrete steps to return back the project to the State,” said Manas Ghosh, secretary of the Singur-based Nano Bachao (Save Nano) Committee. Members of this committee were part of the delegation.
Mr. Ghosh said the Governor sympathised with their cause and assured them to take up the issue with both the State government and the Opposition.
He said: “The Governor asked us to meet Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and explain the situation to him.”
The Committee was trying to get an appointment with the Chief Minister. Agitation enters fourth day
The indefinite agitation started by the committee at Singur entered its fourth day on Monday.
Busloads of people from Singur came to the city and a gathering was held before the delegation met the Governor.
Kolkata Mayor Bikash Bhattacharya was present at the gathering to express solidarity with the Singur residents.
“The Opposition has duped the farmers by saying that the acquired land can be returned back, when the truth is that according to the country’s Constitution it is not possible,” Mr Bhattacharya said.(END) Source: The Hindu
রবিবার, ১২ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Modi's open letter to Buddhadeb, Mamata



The open letter was published in Ananda Bazaar Patrika
Dialogue with Opposition is a must on land acquisition issues
KOLKATA: Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi has, in an “open letter” to his counterpart in West Bengal, told Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee that given the work culture in the State, the situation is not yet one in which Tata Motors’ Nano project can come up, much that the latter would want it to.
Mr. Modi said that despite Mr Bhattacharjee’s efforts to usher in industrialization in West Bengal neither the party he belongs to nor his administration is yet totally by his side on the matter.
The letter that was published in Sunday’s edition of the Bengali daily Ananda Bazaar Patrika was being released through the newspaper with the intention that it reached the largest section of the State, Mr. Modi said.
It was written to clear any misunderstanding that might exist among the people of West Bengal that the Gujarat had snatched away the project from them, he added.
Tata Motors have decided to relocate their Nano project at Sanand in Gujarat that was to have come up at Singur.
Instead, the right-wing path should be pursued in West Bengal to forge an alternative.
Citing the case of the Nano project, he told Ms. Banerjee, that in Gujarat even Opposition doesn’t engage in politics over industrialisation.
The task of creating something is difficult; but to destroy it takes a minute, he said.
New plant: Subhas
Calcutta, Oct. 12: Bengal transport minister Subhas Chakraborty has said an automobile company would set up a plant in Singur following the Tata pullout.
“Just wait for six months. You will find another car manufacturing factory coming up there for which we have already started preparations. It will take one or two months for us to sort out legal complications and administrative matters,” Chakraborty told a television channel.
However, chief secretary Amit Kiran Deb said from Delhi tonight that he had no knowledge of another car manufacturer setting up a plant in Singur.
State transport secretary Sumantra Chowdhury, too, said he was not aware of “any such development”.
Source : The Telegraph
CPM cries Ma-Mo plot
The CPM today accused Mamata Banerjee of plotting with Narendra Modi to take the Nano project from Bengal to Gujarat, providing a preview of the campaign it plans to run ... Read..
শুক্রবার, ১০ অক্টোবর, ২০০৮
Dial 'M' for Nano
Mamata ‘helped’ relocate Nano: CPM
Statesman News Service
NEW DELHI, Oct. 10: The Trinamul Congress leader, Miss Mamata Banerjee, not only succeeded in driving Tata’s Nano project out of West Bengal but “facilitated” its re-location in Gujarat, according to the CPI-M. An editorial in the forthcoming issue of the CPI-M mouthpiece, People’s Democracy, said “being the loyal steadfast ally of the BJP in the NDA, she (Mamata) facilitated the project’s re-location to Gujarat.” The write-up said, “Remember, she continued to remain with the NDA and, thus, in a way endorsed the communal carnage unleashed in the state by the BJP’s Narendra Modi government.” The party maintained the Mamata-led agitation had the support of less than 10 per cent of the owners of the acquired land who had not taken the compensation cheques. The agitation had adversely affected “the future prosperity and improved livelihood for a large number of people in the area as well as the process of industrialisation that would have generated greater employment opportunities”, it said. The editorial said the CPI-M had, in the last Assembly elections, “received a massive mandate to carry out rapid industrialisation on the basis of the consolidation of land reforms,” and the current opposition was in fact “a negation of the people’s mandate”. Answering criticism that the Left Front government failed to provide adequate security, forcing the Tatas to leave Singur, the party journal said, “That is not the reason, as Ratan Tata himself has stated as the reason for the Nano project to leave.” “Indeed, adequate protection was provided and the state government was discharging its responsibilities towards the maintenance of law and order. The Tatas, however, took a stand that unless everybody cooperates, they are not going to continue to remain in Singur,” the editorial said. “One can, surely, disagree with such a position. For, after all, no one can say that they shall build their house in a locality only when all others living there will give an assurance that their house will not be burgled. However, like Mamata Banerjee, the Tatas also have an equal right to take an unreasonable position,” the party journal said.
Singur residents demand Nano back
By Staff Reporter
KOLKATA: A section of residents of Singur started an indefinite agitation there from Friday demanding that the Tata Motors small car project — which has now been relocated to Sanand in Gujarat — be set up in Singur as originally planned. The agitation is being held outside the site where the project had been coming up prior to the decision to relocate it.
“We want the small car project back in Singur at any cost. Our future depends on it,” said Manas Ghosh, Secretary of the ‘Nano Bachao (Save Nano) Committee,’ under whose banner the agitation is being held.(END) Source : The Hindu