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Friday, August 17, 2012

TN takes 70% pie in pharma exports to Sri Lanka!

TN takes 70% pie in pharma exports to Sri Lanka

The New Indian Express By P K Balachandran - COLOMBO
17th August 2012 09:45 AM

Tamil Nadu-based companies account for 60-70% of India’s export of pharmaceuticals to Sri Lanka, according to P V Appaji, Director General of the Pharmaceuticals Export Promotion Council of India.
Currently in the island to do the spade-work for setting up an Indo-Lankan export-oriented pharmaceutical manufacturing hub here, Appaji said that four of the 25 companies which were part of the Pharmexcil delegation were based in Tamil Nadu.

Speaking to Indian correspondents after talks with Lankan Minister of Economic Development Basil Rajapaksa, and Deputy Minister of Commerce Jayarathna Herath, Appaji said that his team had already visited a prospective site for the manufacturing hub near Colombo airport.
=====================================
"Whether it is Sri Lanka's exports or imports, wholesale
business or investment in land and hotels, it is India which is
the main power involved. It is only India which is involved in
the telecom sector too," he said, adding that Sri Lanka will
not hurt India's interests in the region and that any such fear
was unfounded.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa's TOI Interview-100812
=====================================

India’s pharma exports to Lanka increased by 15.95% in 2011 to touch $ 126.9 million, he said. Of this, 93% were formulations, followed by bulk drugs (7%) and herbal drugs (0.15%). India accounted for 24.8% of the bulk drugs and 58 .3% of the formulations in Sri Lanka.

Noting a ‘huge gap’ between the domestic demand and supply, Secretary to Sri Lankan Ministry of Commerce Anura Siriwardene said that the Lankan pharma market was worth $190 million, with local manufacturers’ contributing $38 million to it.

“The arrival of the Indian team is a big eye opener for us. Nobody here believed that we can produce pharmaceuticals for the massive global market, but now we have realised otherwise,” said Premakumar Weyhenage, Director, Healthcare and Consumer Division of CIC Holdings.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

President Mahinda Rajapaksa's TOI Interview-100812



India needs to take relook at dealings with neighbours: Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa

Sachin Parashar, TNN Aug 10, 2012, 11.07PM IST

COLOMBO: In the strongest reaction yet to India's contentious support to a US sponsored resolution at the UNHRC against Sri Lanka earlier this year, President Mahinda Rajapaksa has broken his silence by calling upon the Indian government to have a relook at its dealings with its neighbours.

In a freewheeling interaction with TOI at his Temple Trees residence in Colombo, his first full-length interview since India's vote for the resolution in March, Rajapaksa suggested that India could be abdicating its leadership role in the region.

Rajapaksa, in fact, did not fully agree with India's contention that it had helped tone down the resolution against alleged human rights abuses, saying that if India had continued with its support to Sri Lanka, there may not have been any resolution against his country at all.

 "Any good intentions and actions are always appreciated. But I must add that if India stood by us and supported Sri Lanka's request for more time and space, who knows, there may not have been a resolution at all," the president said when told how PM Manmohan Singh had himself intervened to make the resolution "non-intrusive".

 "The region looks up to India but India must examine itself whether or not it is doing the right thing in dealing with its neighbours... what they are doing is the best thing or not," Rajapaksa said. This was in reply to a question about India's vote and how it seemed to have fuelled an anti-India sentiment in the island nation. "All I can say is that we are not a nation and people without feelings. India and Sri Lanka share common cultural and historic values and so we can feel deeply about such moves," he elaborated.

 However, he stressed that the two countries needed to move on, saying that he didn't see the vote as changing the dynamics of ties between the two countries. "Past is past, let's look at the future now," he said, reiterating his comment in the past that Indians will remain like "relations" and that the two countries remain "much more than good neighbours''.

 The president also brushed aside the issue of growing Chinese involvement in Sri Lanka, one of New Delhi's pressing concerns, describing it as paranoia. In fact, taking a swipe at India for its own burgeoning trade ties with China, the president said, "The way India is doing business with China, Sri Lanka is not."

 "Whether it is Sri Lanka's exports or imports, wholesale business or investment in land and hotels, it is India which is the main power involved. It is only India which is involved in the telecom sector too," he said, adding that Sri Lanka will not hurt India's interests in the region and that any such fear was unfounded.

 Rajapaksa, however, did not give any assurance on whether or not the Chinese will be given operational control of projects like Hambantota port and airport which they are building. It is well known that Hambantota was first offered to India but the president confirmed that even in the case of Colombo port, the contract for which went to a Hong Kong-based company, it was India which did not show any interest.

 "India could have participated in the tender but it did not. These are commercial interests and not a sign of any Sri Lankan strategic drift," he said.

However, he acknowledged the help from the Chinese in decisively ending the conflict in 2009. "When we had to fight the most brutal terrorist outfit in the world, we had to buy arms and ammunition from legal entities that were ready to sell them to us at the best terms," he said.
 "It is important to look at things in the right perspective and not rush to conclusions. India has undertaken to build the northern Kankesanturai harbour as China builds at Hambantota in the south. India is also rebuilding Palaly airport in the north," he said. He described India's decision to allow the sacred Kapilavastu relics to travel to Sri Lanka for the first time since 1978 as a gesture that will be regarded with highest esteem and gratitude.


 Following is the full interview:

 The end of the conflict in May 2009 was described by both countries as a historic opportunity to work towards genuine national reconciliation. After 18 rounds of dialogue with the TNA, the negotiations have ended abruptly. Could you please tell us who, according to you, is responsible for the current stalemate?

The fact that we have had so many rounds of dialogue shows our commitment to reach a suitable consensus. We are always ready to continue the dialogue with the TNA and any others who may have views that could be expressed and shared. We have categorically stated that all these discussions could be had at the proposed Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) and the TNA must make every effort to come to the PSC.

As late as May 2011, when your foreign minister came to India, a joint statement issued by the 2 countries said that a devolution package, building upon the 13th amendment, would create conditions for genuine reconciliation. But the insistence on PSC is being seen by India as another flip-flop by your government over the issue.

You have given the answer in your question, when you referred to the reference in the joint statement of May 2011 that "building upon the 13th Amendment, would create conditions for genuine reconciliation." That is what we are seeking to achieve through the Parliamentary Select Committee. One must not forget that we are in a functioning democracy, and that Parliament is the supreme legislature. Whatever discussions we have with the TNA or any others, the final decision will have to be taken by Parliament. That is why we consider it best to arrive at a solution through a Parliamentary Select Committee, which will make it a more genuine and workable consensus.

You said on Sri Lanka's Independence Day this year that all parties should participate in PSC and not rely on "imported solutions'' and "foreign influences''. Is India not justified in believing that your commitment to the 13th amendment is wavering despite TNA leaders having declared they want a solution only within the framework of a united Sri Lanka.

 There is no justification for any consideration that our commitment to the 13 Amendment is wavering. I am glad that the TNA now speaks of wanting a solution within the framework of a united Sri Lanka. But their thinking and strategy as shown at their most recent conference at Batticaloa was a call for its old agenda, when the LTTE was dictating terms to them. These matters must be clarified. That I believe is the democratic approach.

 LLRC, which was set up by your own government to look into allegations of war crime from 2002 to 2009, made some very positive recommendations for national reconciliation but again your government has done little to move forward. Why are these recommendations not been implemented?

This shows a wrong understanding of the actual situation. We appointed the LLRC in May 2010, just one year after the armed conflict ended. Few other countries, if any, have acted so fast in on such an issue. The LLRC submitted its report last November and in December, just a month later, the same was submitted to Parliament. We have also made it available to the whole world by placing it on the web. A Task Force headed by the Secretary to the President was appointed by the Cabinet in May this year to prepare an action plan to monitor the implementation of the 285 recommendations contained in Chapter 9 of the LLRC report. The Task Force presented their action plan to the Cabinet on 19th July 2012 and the Cabinet has approved this plan. It has also been made available to the media, the diplomatic missions and also placed on our websites. We are giving priority to those that can be implemented soonest. Surely, how can it be said that the recommendations are not being implemented? Are we not entitled to due process in this matter? Does any country implement such a wide ranging report the moment it is presented, without proper study as to how best it has to be and can be done? The LLRC was appointed on the basis of restorative justice, instead of retributive Justice. We must ensure that this restorative process does take place.

 Why are you not doing enough for the demilitarization of northern Sri Lanka? Almost 70 per cent of your forces are still stationed there. What are you doing about sensitive issues like high security zones, list of missing people and election in the Northern Province?

To say that almost 70 percent of our forces are still deployed in northern Sri Lanka is what the LTTE rump disseminates in their malicious propaganda against the Govt of Sri Lanka. It certainly is not true. Also, I think this is not a well thought out use of the word "demilitarization". We are recovering from a ruthless armed conflict, carried out by terrorists that lasted three decades. We have steadily reduced the number of troops in the North. In December 2009, the troop strength in Jaffna was 27,000. The current figure, as at June this year is 15,000.This could hardly be the sign of continuing militarization. This is in fact a studied lowering of military presence as conditions and circumstances permit. I believe you are not aware of the numbers still engaged in de-mining activities? Why do you not look at the role they play in development work in the North, to keep up with our massive investment in infra-structure in that region? Are you not aware of the large amounts of hidden arms still being found in the North? Also, are you not aware of the incitement to violence that is being done by the pro-LTTE groups who are living abroad, especially in the West? Are we not entitled to be cautious of what these well-funded groups may do, looking at the experience of the past three decades?I must add that if not for the Armed Forces personnel, the massive post conflict development would not have taken place.

India's leader of opposition in the lower House, Sushma Swaraj, who led a parliamentary delegation to Sri Lanka this year, said the opposition and government in India, as indeed the people of India, are together over the issue of political settlement. She also expressed concern over the lack of development on the issue of reconciliation. Does your government realize that what is happening in your country is no longer an emotive issue only for a particular state in India?

 I had a good exchange of views with Hon. Sushma Swaraj. If you say that the people of India, with the many regional and other problems they have, are together over the issue of a political settlement here, I must say that the people of Sri Lanka are also together on the same issue. The observations she made to the media here were most encouraging. We are moving towards reconciliation. I have already told you about the LLRC. It would be good to know the progress we are making in the area of bringing the Tamil language to the administration. There is a marked increase in numbers of Tamils and Tamil speaking Muslims in the Police Service, especially in the North & East. This is so in the Civil Defence Force too, and many Tamils are also showing eagerness to join the armed forces. These are all aspects of reconciliation. Our governmentis fully aware of the feelings in India and we are most aware that it is an emotive issue that is strongly manipulated by the political forces in a particular state thatyou did not, or preferred not to mention.

 Did it hurt when India voted for the US backed resolution at the UN Human Rights Council and why do you think India did it?

All I can say is that we are not a nation and people without feelings. India and Sri Lanka share common cultural and historic values, so we can feel deeply about such moves. But it does not alter our friendship and good relations. I trust there is no change in the dynamic of the relations between our two countries. The visit of Indian Ministers and key officials including the National Security Advisor did not show that in any way. Our position was that Sri Lanka needed time and space to resolve issues that have accumulated due to a long drawn conflict that became the hurdle for our development.

 While India voted in favour of the resolution, truth is that PM Manmohan Singh himself took interest in ensuring that the language of UNHRC the resolution was diluted making it ``non intrusive'' and that it wasn't a monitoring mechanism. Also, do you think India is being influenced heavily by the US in conducting its foreign policy?

I think it is best to move away from this resolution, which is done and over. What is necessary is to go beyond that. Any good intentions and actions are always appreciated. But I must add that if India stood by us and supported Sri Lanka's request for more time and space, who knows, there may not have been a resolution at all. The region looks up to India and India must examine itself whether or not it is doing the right thing in dealing with its neighbours...what they are doing is the best thing or not.

There is a concern within the Indian establishment that Colombo, whose growing proximity to China is no secret, may now decide to have what it believes is a more realist policy orientation rather than non-aligned.

I think it is necessary to state very clearly that Sri Lanka remains fully committed to being a non-aligned state. Non-alignment is a policy that we shall follow, even in the absence of the old power blocs, and also taking the new geo-political realities into consideration. We recognize that India is a land of considerable importance to Sri Lanka. But I think the many fears that the Indian establishment may be having, as you state, about Sri Lanka's growing relations with China are unfounded. Yes, there is increased Chinese investment in Sri Lanka. These are all commercial transactions. We need to catch up with our lost development opportunities of a three decade period and we need to explore funding sources that make low cost funds available to us.

China is building not just Hambantota port but also Colombo terminal, roads, railways and power plants. Many in India believe that this is aimed at undermining India's natural influence in the region and that it can be a long-term economic and security threat for India. What assurances can you give to India, if at all, about not hurting India's interests in the region with this strategic drift towards Beijing?

 China's recent investments in Sri Lanka far preceded the UNHRC vote. It is necessary to look at these matters in the correct perspective and not rush to conclusions. India has undertaken to build the northern Kankesanturai Harbour, while China builds at Hambantota in the Southern extreme. India will be rebuilding and expanding the Palaly Airport in the North. India is investing in the Sampur Coal Fired Power Plant in the East. India is also building the railways in the North and South. Who undertakes development in the Colombo Port that is much needed, has been decided on a global tender, and it is a Hong Kong based company that won the contract. It is wrong to say that Sri Lanka offered these contracts to China. India too could have participated in this tender. But they did not. Let me tell you that these are commercial interests and not in any way related to a "strategic drift" that you mention. When we had to fight the most brutal terrorist outfit in the world, yes, we had to buy arms and ammunition from legal entities that were ready to sell them to us at the best terms. Sri Lanka has no reason to do anything that would hurt India's interests in this region. There is no rationale for us to do such things, and we also believe that India also would not do anything that would harm Sri Lanka. Our best neighbourly relations will remain, and there are many more areas for investment that India could be interested in.

 What is your response to concerns in India about your allowing other countries to explore oil and gas in the region? China already has many oil survey ships operating in the region.

Our energy requirements keep increasing and to find oil within in our own ocean region will be a great boon. I see no reasons whatever for concern by India at our allowing other countries to explore for oil in this region. The company that is doing the initial work now is one that has a large presence in India, too. One must not forget that we did make the first offer of oil exploration sites in the Mannar Basin to India. So what is the need for any concern?

 India and Sri Lanka were the first to sign a free trade agreement in South Asia in the late 90s and so it is strange that the proposal for a comprehensive economic partnership agreement (CEPA) has not yet come into effect. India, in fact, continues to wait for you to make up your mind. What are the constraints which are preventing you from going ahead?

 I do not think that is a correct assessment. Discussions at the official level have been going on for quite some time. There are areas which are very complex and such matters take time to be resolved. I think anything hurried will not yield desired results. There must be in depth analysis of all possible issues that may not surface now, but many years later. Then only any agreement becomes meaningful to both stakeholders.

 There have been some talks recently in Sri Lanka about lowering of imports from India.
There is no official policy on these lines, specific to India. There is always talk of lowering imports, this is inevitable. Like any other country Sri Lanka will look at the possibilities of import substitution. This will not apply to India alone. We must narrow our trade gap. We must produce in our country what we can best produce. In fact India may be able to help us in this, to mutual benefit. There is nothing in our thinking of lowering imports from India alone.

India's line of credit to Sri Lanka is close to a billion dollars. It has also given about $ 350 million in grants and aids apart from making massive reconstruction and development efforts in the north and east. As a goodwill gesture, it has decided to allow the sacred Kapilavastu relics to travel to Sri Lanka later this year. It has rarely made an exception like that for any other country. Do you think India has done enough to fulfil Sri Lanka's expectations from its, geographically at least, most significant neighbour?

India has done a great deal in this regard. Its contributions in fulfilling Sri Lanka's expectations are many. Allowing the sacred Kapilavastu relics to be brought to Sri Lanka is a gesture that will always be regarded with the highest esteem and gratitude. I am glad that my request to Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh during my last visit to India bore fruit. This underscores our close relations through the centuries, especially the links through Buddhism. India's grants and aid for construction and development especially in the conflict affected areas is most encouraging and helpful in our efforts to move on the path of development in peace and reconciliation. All of this emphasises India's role as our closest and most significant neighbour, to use your own words.
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Source: http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-08-10/south-asia/33136838_1_hambantota-unhrc-resolution-non-intrusive

தனக்கில்லாத் தானம்: இந்தியாவின் வீடமைப்புத் திட்டம்!



Indian housing project for Tamils in Sri Lanka on track
R. K. Radhakrishnan

After huge delays, the US $ 270 million Indian housing project for displaced Tamils in Sri Lanka is now on track.

“The pilot phase of the project for construction of 1,000 houses has been completed. The next phase of the Indian Housing project for 43,000 housing units under the owner-driven mode in the Northern and Eastern provinces has been launched,” said Ashok K. Kantha, High Commissioner of India in Sri Lanka in an Independence Day message.

After the initial hiccups, the pilot project of building 1000 houses was completed in July this year. Soon after, the High Commission of India signed agreements to award work to four Implementing Agencies - UN-HABITAT, International Federation of Red Cross & Red Crescent Societies in partnership with Sri Lanka Red Cross, National Housing Development Agency (NHDA) of the Government of Sri Lanka and Habitat for Humanity, Sri Lanka - signalling the launch of the next phase of the Indian Housing Project for 43,000 housing units in Northern and Eastern Provinces.

In the owner-driven model, beneficiaries will be selected through a transparent and norm-based process on the basis of clearly defined and objective criteria. These beneficiaries will undertake the construction/repair of their houses with technical assistance and support provided by the Implementing Agencies. The money will be released directly by the High Commission of India into bank accounts of beneficiaries based on certification of progress of work.

This phase is expected to meet bulk of the housing needs in these areas. In the last phase of the project, which is also expected to commence soon, about 6,000 houses will be directly built by construction agencies for people from most vulnerable sections of IDPs in the Northern and Eastern provinces and for estate sector in the Central and Uva Provinces.

The construction of 43,000 houses for resettlement and rehabilitation of IDPs in Northern and Eastern Provinces is part of the overall commitment to build 50,000 houses announced by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during the State visit of the President of Sri Lanka Mahinda Rajapaksa to India, in June 2010.

The pilot project for the construction of 1,000 houses in the five districts of Northern Province was launched in November 2010. Till July 13, as many as 950 houses were completed under the pilot phase, and most of these were handed over to beneficiaries. The remaining 50 houses were completed by end-July.

நாடாளுமன்றத் தெரிவுக்குழு ஊடாகவே இனப்பிரச்சினைக்குத் தீர்வு முன்வைக்கப்படும்: ஜனாதிபதி

நாடாளுமன்றத் தெரிவுக்குழு ஊடாகவே இனப்பிரச்சினைக்குத் தீர்வு முன்வைக்கப்படும்: ஜனாதிபதி

By General
2012-08-12 09:56:33

நாடாளுமன்றத் தெரிவுக்குழுவின் மூலமே தீர்வுத் திட்டம் முன்னெடுக்கப்படும். தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பு அல்லது வேறு அரசியல் கட்சிகளுடன் தனித் தனியாக பேச்சுவார்த்தை நடத்தினாலும் இறுதித் தீர்மானம் நாடாளுமன்றின் ஊடாகவே ௭ட்டப்படும். இதன் காரணமாகவே அனைத்துத் தரப்பினரும் நாடாளுமன்றத் தெரிவுக்குழுவில் அங்கம் வகிக்க வேண்டுமென வலியுறுத்துகின்றோம். – இவ்வாறு ஜனாதிபதி மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷ திட்டவட்டமாகத் தெரிவித்துள்ளார். இந்திய ஊடகமொன்றுக்கு அளித்த விசேட நேர்காணலில் ஜனாதிபதி மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷ இதனைக் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்.

அதில் அவர் மேலும் தெரிவித்திருப்பதாவது, ஜனநாயக ரீதியில் பிரச்சினைக்கு தீர்வு காணப்பட வேண்டும் ௭ன்பதே ௭னது நிலைப்பாடாகும். கற்றுக்கொண்ட பாடங்கள் மற்றும் நல்லிணக்க ஆணைக்குழு   அறிக்கை அமுல்படுத்தப்படவில்லை ௭ன சுமத்தப்படும் குற்றச்சாட்டுகளில் உண்மையில்லை. ஆணைக்குழுவின் பரிந்துரைகள் உரிய முறையில் ஆராயப்பட்டு அதன் பின்னர் அமுல்படுத்தப்படும்.

70 சதவீதமான இராணுவத்தினர் வடக்கில் நிலைநிறுத்தப்பட்டுள்ளதாக விடுதலைப் புலி ஆதரவாளர்கள் பிரசாரம் செய்கின்றனர். இந்தப் பிரசாரத்தில் உண்மையில்லை. 2009 ஆம் ஆண்டு டிசம்பரில் 27000 படையினர் யாழ்ப்பாணத்தில் நிலைநிறுத்தப்பட்டிருந்தனர். தற்போது அந்த ௭ண்ணிக்கை 15000 மாக குறைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

மறைத்து வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ள ஆயுதங்கள் தொடர்ந்தும் வடக்கிலிருந்து மீட்கப்பட்டு வருகின்றன. இலங்கைக்கும் இந்தியாவிற்கும் இடையில் நீண்ட காலமாக நெருங்கிய உறவு பேணப் பட்டு வருகின்றது. அயல் நாடுகளின் விவகா ரங்கள் தொடர்பில் இந்தியா ௭டுக்கும் தீர்மானங்கள் நிதானத்துடன் ௭டுக்கப்பட வேண்டும் ௭ன்றும் கூறியுள்ளார்.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

உன்னிச்சைத் தாக்குதல்: ``தமது சொந்தப் பூமியில் மீள் குடியேறி வசிக்க முற்படுவதை தடுத்து நிறுத்தும் சதி முயற்சி``


உன்னிச்சையில் மீள்குடியேறிய முஸ்லிம் மக்கள் மீது தாக்குதல்! வதிவிடம்,வர்த்தக நிலையம், வழிபாட்டுத் தலம் தீக்கிரை!



1985-1987 காலப்பகுதியில் உன்னிச்சையில் இருந்து இடம்பெயர்ந்த முஸ்லிம் மக்கள், முள்ளிவாய்க்காலுக்குப் பின்னால் உன்னிச்சைப் பகுதியில்
மீளக்குடியமர்ந்துள்ளனர்.தற்காலிகக் குடியிருப்புக்களாக அமைக்கப்பட்ட தகரக் குடில்களில் இவர்கள் வாழ்ந்துவந்துள்ளனர்.இதைத் தொடர்ந்து சில்லறை வியாபாரக் கடையையும்,மத வழிபாட்டுக்காக முஹைதீன் ஜும்ஆ பள்ளிவாசலையும் அமைத்துள்ளனர்.

இந்நிலையில் இவர்களுக்கெதிராக சிங்களவர்களை ஏவி கடந்த சனிக்கிழமை (11 ஓகஸ்ட் 2012) நள்ளிரவில் தாக்குதல் நடத்தப்பட்டுள்ளது.

இதன் விளைவாக ஒரு குடும்பப் பெண் கோடரியினால் வெட்டித் தாக்கப்பட்டு வைத்தியசாலையில் அநுமதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளார்.மூன்று வீடுகள், ஒரு கடை
,பள்ளிவாயல் என்பன இரவோடு இரவாக தீ மூட்டப்பட்டு சேதப்படுத்தப்பட்டுள்ளது.

தாக்கப்பட்ட பெண் மட்டக்களப்பு போதனா வைத்தியசாலையில் 12ஆம் இலக்க வார்ட்டில் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாக குறித்த பெண்ணின் சகோதரன்
காசிம் தெரிவித்தார். குறித்த பெண்ணின் கழுத்துப் பகுதி மற்றும் கைப்பகுதி ஆகியன கடுமையாக கோடாரியினால் கொத்தப்பட்டு தாக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாகத் தெரிவித்த அவர், இரவு குறித்த பெண் மயக்க நிலையில் இருந்து தற்போது நினைவு திரும்பியுள்ளதாகத் தெரிவித்தார்.எக்ஸ்ரே எடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாகவும் மேலதிக சிகிச்சைகள் இன்று வைத்தியர்கள் சமுகமளித்ததன் பின்னரே மேற்கொள்ளப்படுமெனவும் தெரிவித்த அவர் தற்போது வைத்தியசாலையில் பொலிஸார் குறித்த பெண்ணிடம் வாக்கு மூலம் எடுப்பதாகவும் தெரிவித்தார்.

இச்சம்பவத்தை பல முஸ்லிம் சமுகத் தலைவர்களும் நிறுவனங்களும் கண்டித்துள்ளன.குற்றவாளிகள் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டு தண்டனை வழங்க வேண்டுமெனக்  கோரியுள்ளன.

மட்டக்களப்பு உன்னிச்சைப் பிரதேசத்தைப் பிறப்பிடமாகவும் வன்செயலின் காரணமாக இடம்பெயரந்து மீண்டும் உன்னிச்சைப் பிரதேசத்திற்கு மீளக்குடியேறியுள்ளமையை  இவர்களால் பொறுக்க இயலாமல் இவ்வாறான அடாவடித்தனங்கள் மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டு வருவதாகவும் இருநூறுவில்
முஸ்லிம் நலன்புரிச் சங்கத் தலைவர் எம்.எஸ்.அப்துல் கபூர் தெரிவித்தார்.

``கொஞ்சம் கூட ஈவிரக்கம் இல்லாமல் புனித நோன்பு காலத்தில் ஒரு பெண்ணை கோடாரியினால் வெட்டி காய்யப்படுத்தியதுடன் உன்னிச்சை

       சல்மா அமீர் ஹம்சா

பள்ளிவாயலையும் தீ வைத்து எரித்த சம்பவமானது சகலரின் உள்ளங்களையும் காயப்படுத்தியுள்ளது`` என காத்தான்குடி நகர சபை உறுப்பினரும் பெண்களுக்கான வலுவூட்டலுக்கும் அபிவிருத்திக்குமான அமைப்பின் தலைவியுமான சல்மா அமீர் ஹம்சா தெரிவித்தார்.

உன்னிச்சை சம்பவம் தொடர்பாக சல்மா ஹம்சா விடுத்துள்ள அறிக்கையில் மேலும் தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாவது,

உன்னிச்சையில் முஸ்லிம்கள் 1987ம் ஆண்டு இடம் பெயர்ந்த நாளன்று இடம் பெற்ற மிக கொடூரமான சம்பவம் போன்றே சனிக்கிழமை அதிகாலையும்
உன்னிச்சையில் கொடூர சம்பவம் இடம் பெற்றுள்ளது. புனிதமான நோன்பு காலத்தில் இப் பெண் கோடாரியினால் தாக்கப்பட்டதுடன் உன்னிச்சை
கிராமத்தின் ஜும் ஆ பள்ளிவாயலும் தீ வைத்து சேதமாக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

இச் சம்பவத்தை எந்த ஒரு மனித நேயமுள்ள சமூகமும் ஏற்றுக்கொள்ள மாட்டாது. யுத்தம் நிறைவடைந்து அமைதிச் சூழ் நிலை நிலவும் இக்கால
கட்டத்தில் யுத்தத்தினால் இடம் பெயர்ந்து காத்தான்குடியில் இருந்த போது சுனாமி அனர்த்தினாலும் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு பின்னர் மீண்டும் தமது சொந்தப்
பூமியில் மீள் குடியேறி வசிக்க முற்படும் போது இதை தடுத்து  நிறுத்த எடுக்கும் சதி முயற்சியாக இந்த சம்பவம் இடம் பெற்றுள்ளது.

இந்த சம்பவத்தை வன்மையாக கண்டிப்பதுடன் இதில் சம்பந்தப்பட்டவர்களுக்கெதிராக சட்ட நடவடிக்கை எடுக்க வேண்டும் என நான் வேண்டுகோள் விடுக்கின்றேன் என அவ்வறிக்கயில் மேலும் தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

கூட்டமைப்பும் வன்மையாகக் கண்டிக்கின்றது.

கிழக்கு மாகாண சபை தேர்தலுக்கான பிரச்சார நடவடிக்கைகள் இடம் பெற்றுவரும் இந்த வேளையிலும் முஸ்லிம் மக்கள் புனித நோன்பு அனுஷ்டிக்கும் இக்கால கட்டத்திலும் இவ்வாறான ஒரு வழிபாட்டுத்தலத்தையும் முஸ்லிம் பெண்ணொருவர் தாக்கப்பட்ட சம்பவத்தை வன்மையாக கண்டிக்கின்றோம்.

ஆயுதப்போர் இடம்பெற்று முடிவுக்கு வந்து சமாதான காலம் என அரசாங்கம் அறிவித்த பின்பும் தமிழ் முஸ்லிம் மக்களின் இயல்பு வாழ்வையும் தமிழ்
முஸ்லிம் மக்களின் ஒற்றுமையையும் சீர்குலைப்பதற்காக திட்டமிட்டு இந்த செயலை யார் செய்திருந்தாலும் அவர்களை கைது செய்து சட்டத்தின்
முன் நிறுத்தி இவர்களுக்கான தண்டனை வழங்கப்படவேண்டுமென கோரியுள்ளது.

தீக்கிரையாக்கப்பட்ட பள்ளிவாசலை ஹக்கீம், ஹிஸ்புல்லாஹ் பார்வையிட்டனர். இதன்போது கிழக்கு மாகாணசபை முன்னாள் உறுப்பினர்களான யு.எல்.எம்.என்.முபீன், கே.எல்.எம்.பரீட், காத்தான்குடி நகரசபை உறுப்பினர் சல்மா ஹம்சா, நல்லாட்சிக்கான மக்கள் இயக்க சூறாசபை உறுப்பினரும் காத்தான்குடி நகரசபை உறுப்பினருமான பொறியியலாளர் எம்.எம்.அப்துர் றஹ்மான் ஆகியோரும் சென்று பார்வையிட்டனர்.


முஹைதீன் ஜும்ஆ பள்ளிவாசல்

மேலும் இச்சம்பவம் ``தனிப்பட்ட பிரச்சனை`` என்றும், இது எவ்விதத்திலும் எந்த இனத்தினருடனோ,மதத்தினருடனோ தொடர்புடையதல்ல என
தெரிவித்த பொலிசார், இச்சம்பவத்தைச்சாட்டி இன மத கசப்புணர்வைத் தூண்டும் வண்ணம் செய்திகளை வெளியிடக்கூடாதென இணையங்களை
எச்சரித்தும் உள்ளனர்.

இந்த சம்பவத்துடன் தொடர்புடையதாக கருதப்படும் ஒருவர் கைதுசெய்யப்பட்டுள்ளதாக வவுணதீவுப் பொலிஸார் தெரிவித்தனர்.

பள்ளிவாசல் தீக்கிரையாக்கப்பட்ட சம்பவம் தொடர்பில் பொலிஸார் தொடர்ந்து விசாரணையை மேற்கொண்டுவருவதாக ஊடகச் செய்திகள்
தெரிவிக்கின்றன.

மன்னார் உப்புக்குளம் சம்பவமும், மட்டக்களப்பு உன்னிச்சைச் சம்பவமும், மீள்குடியேற்றம் எதிர் நோக்கும் பிரச்சனைகளை வெளிக்காட்டுகின்றன.
மேலும் இச்சம்பவங்கள் ``யுத்தம் நிறைவடைந்து அமைதிச் சூழ் நிலை நிலவும் காலமாக`` இன்றைய சூழ்நிலை இல்லையென்பதையே காட்டுகின்றன.

இன ஒடுக்குமுறையின் மீது கட்டப்பட்ட சிங்களம், தனது இருப்புக்கு இன ஒடுக்குமுறையை ஆதாரமாகக் கொண்டிருக்கும் சிங்களம், அத்தகைய ஒரு
அமைதிச் சூழல் உருவாக அநுமதிக்காது என்பதையும் இச்சம்பவங்கள் விளக்குகின்றன.

எனவே தாக்குதல்தாரிகளைக் கைது செய்து தண்டனைவழங்குவது. மீள்குடியேற்றப் பிரச்சனைகளுக்கு ஜனநாயக ரீதியான தீர்வு காணக்கோருவது, இவற்றுடன் கூடவே இன ஒடுக்குமுறைக்கு முடிவுகட்ட சுயநிர்ணய உரிமையை அங்கீகரிக்கக் கோரிப் போராடுவதும் புரட்சிகர ஜனநாயக தேசிய சக்திகளின் கடமையாகும்.

நன்றி: ஊடகத் தகவல்கள்.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

PFLP strongly denounces criminal killings of Egyptian soldiers in the Sinai

PFLP strongly denounces criminal killings of Egyptian soldiers in the Sinai
Aug 052012

Commenting on the criminal assault on Egyptian soldiers in Sinai this evening, Sunday August 5, 2012, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and its armed wing, the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades, expressed their strongest condemnation of this heinous crime, which killed at least 13 and wounded a number of Egyptian soldiers. The Front emphasized that Egyptian Arab blood is precious and that the Palestinian people will never forget the thousands of Egyptian martyrs who gave their lives for the Arab cause and Palestinian liberation, whose blood mixed with the martyrs of the Palestinian people.

The Front emphasized that this action is unacceptable to all Palestinians and all Palestinian forces, urging all parties to be accurate in reporting the details of this criminal operation, as the Palestinian people and their struggle will never be involved in such an act. The Front also warned that the only beneficiary of such an action is the state of Israel and its plans for hegemony and control over Sinai, all of Palestine, and the Arab world, and that the Zionist state has as a strong goal undermining any and all relations – particularly improved relations – between the Arab Republic of Egypt and the Palestinian people, and fraying the deep ties between the Egyptian and the Palestinian people.

The Front expressed its condolences to the families of the martyrs, the Egyptian people and leadership, and the entire Arab nation for the loss of these martyrs of the Egyptian people.


PFLP leaders: Sinai attacks fit into the Zionist plan

Aug 122012

 Comrade Rabah Muhanna, member of the Political Bureau of the PFLP, said that the criminal attacks against the Egyptian soldiers in Sinai fit into the Zionist plan, aimed at straining the relationship between the Arab Republic of Egypt and the Palestinian people at a memoriaal service for the Egyptian martyrs organized by Palestinian factions in Gaza. Hundreds of Palestinians attended the memorial, held at the Red Crescent hall in Gaza City, to express solidarity with the Egyptian people.

Comrade Jamil Mizher, member of the Central Committee of the PFLP, said that the heinous crime committed against Egyptian soldiers in Sinai bears the hallmarks of Zionism and an attempt to disrupt the relationship between the Egyptian and Palestinian people, considering that Egyptians have always stood beside the Palestinian people and supported by all means. Mizher emphasized in an interview with Voice of the People radio that the information and warnings distributed by the Zionist occupation prior to the incident do not indicate that it is innocent, especially as it is always trying to tamper with Arab countries and their relations, and is always trying in every way to place a wedge in Egyptian-Palestinian relations, particularly following the Egyptian revolution and changes that have been to the benefit of the Palestinian people and their cause.

Mizher emphasized that Zionist forces always try to download upon the Palestinian people and the Gaza Strip the responsibility for everything that goes on in the region. He said that the fingers of Zionist intelligence and the Mossad are not far from this terrorist operation, which seeks to drive a wedge, damage relations, and tighten the grip of the siege on our people, and undermine all attempts from Egyptian leadership to lift the siege on the Palestinian people.

He noted that the occupation wants, at this moment, at which time the progress in Egypt promises to lift the siege, to scramble the cards and disrupt progess. He said that a message must be delivered to the Zionist occupation, that the Palestinian people will not be harmed in the Gaza Strip, and the Zionist occupation will not maintain the unjust siege imposed on Gaza by such actions. He expressed his condolences on behalf of the Popular Front to the Egyptian people, leadership and army, noting the great sacrifices made over history by Egyptians for the Palestinian cause.

Asked about the closure of tunnels in Rafah, Mizher pointed out that the reason for the tunnels is to lift the siege on Gaza, saying that our people don’t seek to continue the use of tunnels indefinitely, but that it is an important factor in supporting the steadfastness of the Palestinian people in light of the lack of basic materials in the Strip. The alternative, he pointed out, is to open the Rafah crossing for people and goods, emphasizing that the Egyptian and Palestinian people can work together to end the siege – and then we will not need the tunnels.

இன மதச் சிறுபான்மை மக்களுக்கு எதிராக மேலை நாடுகளில் ஏவப்படும் பாசிசத் தாக்குதல்கள் -1

அமெரிக்கா: சீக்கிய ஆலயப் படுகொலை ஓகஸ்ட் 5 2012



 
Sikh temple shooter was Army veteran: Pentagon AP | 6th August, 2012
WASHINGTON: The gunman who killed six people inside a Sikh temple in the US and was killed in a police shootout was a 40-year-old Army veteran, officials said Monday, and a civil rights group identified him as a “frustrated neo-Nazi” who led a white supremacist band.


Sikh temple holds 1st Sunday service since attack 
Associated Press 12:53 p.m. CDT, August 12, 2012

OAK CREEK, Wis. -- More than 100 people gathered in suburban Milwaukee for the first Sunday prayer service at a Sikh temple since a white supremacist shot and killed six people there before fatally shooting himself.

Women sang hymns as a group lowered a flag pole outside the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin. A group of about 50 men and boys unwrapped the orange cloth covering the pole, washed the pole with water and milk and then rewrapped it with a fresh cloth. The group then planned to go inside the temple for more prayers and hymns.

Army veteran Wade Michael Page used a 9 mm pistol Aug. 5 to kill five men, one woman and wound three other people, including a police officer, in an ambush on the temple that took place shortly before a service was to begin. He took his own life after exchanging gunfire with officers, including one he shot nine times.


Indian Sikh men hold placards and shout slogans during a protest against the deadly shooting attack at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, in Jammu, Monday, Aug. 6, 2012.—AP Photo

Page was a 40-year-old Army veteran with a record of minor alcohol-related crimes and spotty employment history. He had performed with several so-called hate rock bands associated with white supremacists and neo-Nazi groups.

Although investigators have interviewed more than 100 people, combed through Page's email and recovered hundreds of pieces of evidence from his home and the temple, they say they may never know for certain what prompted the attack on the temple.

Members began returning Thursday, after the FBI completed its onsite investigation. They replaced carpets and repaired walls damaged by gunfire. A dime-sized, waist-high bullet hole in a door jamb near the main prayer room was left unrepaired as a memorial to those killed. They included three priests and the temple president, president Satwant Singh Kaleka, 65, who was shot as he tried to fend off Page with a small knife.

Hundreds more visitors showed up Friday after a memorial service at a nearby high school. They brought flowers and offered their support.

Gunman Kills 6 at a Sikh Temple Near Milwaukee
Allen Fredrickson/Reuters


A vigil in downtown Milwaukee for the dead and the wounded. “Everyone here is thinking this is a hate crime for sure,” said Manjit Singh, who goes to a different temple in the region. “People think we are Muslims.” 

By STEVEN YACCINO, MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ and MARC SANTORA
Published: August 5, 2012 NYTimes

OAK CREEK, Wis. — The priests had gathered in the lobby of the sprawling Sikh temple here in suburban Milwaukee, and lunch was being prepared as congregants were arriving for Sunday services.

Instead of worshipers, though, an armed man stepped through the door and started firing.
In an attack that the police said they were treating as “a domestic terrorist-type incident,” the gunman stalked through the temple around 10:30 a.m. Congregants ran for shelter and barricaded themselves in bathrooms and prayer halls, where they made desperate phone calls and sent anguished texts pleading for help as confusion and fear took hold. Witnesses described a scene of chaos and carnage.
Jatinder Mangat, 40, who was on his way to the temple when he heard reports about the shooting, said he had tried to call his uncle, the temple’s president, but reached the head priest, Gurmail Singh, instead. “He was crying. Everyone was screaming,” Mr. Mangat said. “He said that my uncle was shot and was lying on the floor and asked why you guys are not sending an ambulance and police.”
Mr. Singh, he said, had locked himself in a bathroom with four other people, including two children.
Six people were killed and three others were wounded on Sunday at the 17,000-square-foot Sikh Temple of Wisconsin in Oak Creek, a city of about 35,000 just south of Milwaukee, officials said.
The gunman’s rampage ended when one of the first police officers to arrive shot and killed him. Another police officer, who tried to aid a victim, was ambushed by the gunman and shot multiple times. He was in critical condition but was expected to survive, the authorities said.


The police did not release any details about the gunman or a possible motive for the shooting, beyond raising the prospect of terrorism. Thomas Ahern, a spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, said the killer was a 40-year-old white man.

John Edwards, the police chief in Oak Creek, said at a news conference that weapons had been found at the scene. He said the F.B.I. would lead the investigation.

“This remains an active investigation in its early stages,” Teresa Carlson, the special agent in charge of the F.B.I.’s Milwaukee division, said in a statement. “While the F.B.I. is investigating whether this matter might be an act of domestic terrorism, no motive has been determined at this time.”

The shootings reverberated from this small community to Washington and beyond, including India, where the religion was founded and many of the congregants have family ties.

President Obama and his Republican challenger, Mitt Romney, released statements on Sunday expressing sorrow.

“Michelle and I were deeply saddened to learn of the shooting that tragically took so many lives in Wisconsin,” the president said. “At this difficult time, the people of Oak Creek must know that the American people have them in our thoughts and prayers, and our hearts go out to the families and friends of those who were killed and wounded.”

Mr. Romney called the shootings “a senseless act of violence and a tragedy” that he said should never befall any house of worship.

“Our hearts are with the victims, their families and the entire Oak Creek Sikh community,” Mr. Romney said. “We join Americans everywhere in mourning those who lost their lives and in prayer for healing in the difficult days ahead.”

Many members of the close-knit Sikh community here said the attack had shattered their sense of security.

“Everyone here is thinking this is a hate crime for sure,” said Manjit Singh, who goes to a different temple in the region. “People think we are Muslims.”

Though violence against Sikhs in Wisconsin was unheard of before the shooting, many in this community said they had sensed a rise in antipathy since the attacks on Sept. 11 and suspected it was because people mistake them for Muslims. Followers of Sikhism, or Gurmat, a monotheistic faith founded in the 15th century in South Asia, typically do not cut their hair, and men often wear colorful turbans and refrain from cutting their beards.


 
“Most people are so ignorant they don’t know the difference between religions,” said Ravi Chawla, 65, a businesswoman who moved to the region from Pakistan in the 1970s. “Just because they see the turban they think you’re Taliban.”

There are around 314,000 Sikhs in the United States, according to the Association of Religion Data Archives. The temple in Oak Creek, one of two large congregations in the Milwaukee area, was founded in 1997 and has about 400 worshipers.

Threats against Sikh-Americans have become acute enough that in April, Representative Joseph Crowley, Democrat of New York and co-chairman of the Congressional Caucus on Indians and Indian-Americans, sent a letter to Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. urging the F.B.I. to collect data on hate crimes committed against them. In the previous year alone, he said in the letter, two Sikh men in a Sacramento suburb were slain, a Sikh temple in Michigan was vandalized, and a Sikh man was beaten in New York.

“The more information our law enforcement agencies have on violence against Sikh-Americans, the more they can do to help prevent these crimes and bring those who commit them to justice,” Mr. Crowley said in a statement at the time.

By Sunday evening, the F.B.I. had cordoned off a street in Cudahy, a town about five miles from the temple, where it was executing a search warrant related to the shooting, Ms. Carlson said at a news conference. “It’s going to be a long night,” she said, declining to give further details. A law enforcement official said some residents on the street had been ordered to leave their homes.

At a news conference, Chief Edwards described a dramatic scene when officers arrived at the temple soon after the first 911 call. After the gunman ambushed the first officer, Chief Edwards said, another police officer exchanged fire with the gunman, bringing him down.

Bradley Wentlandt, the chief of police in nearby Greenfield, said the wounded officer was a 20-year veteran whose actions probably saved many lives.

Four bodies were found inside the temple and three outside, including that of the gunman, Chief Wentlandt said.

Three men with gunshot wounds were admitted to Froedtert Hospital, the Milwaukee region’s main trauma center, said Nalissa Wienke, a spokeswoman for the hospital. One victim had been shot in the head and extremities and another in the abdomen. The third was described as having neck wounds.
There were initially conflicting reports about whether there was more than one gunman and whether hostages had been taken inside the temple. Local news agencies, citing text messages from people inside, reported that two or more gunmen could have been involved.

“The best information is that there was only one gunman,” Chief Edwards said at a news conference.
The shooting came about two weeks after a gunman killed 12 people and wounded nearly 60 in an attack at a movie theater in Aurora, Colo.

In response to the shooting on Sunday, the police in New York said security was being increased at Sikh temples in the city. “There is no known threat against Sikh temples in New York City; however, the coverage is being put in place out of an abundance of caution,” the New York police said in a statement.

Outside the temple here, friends and relatives were struggling to understand what had happened. Many in the community had contacted friends and family who were in the temple when the violence broke out.

Harpreet Singh, a nephew of the temple president, said his aunt, the president’s wife, was in the kitchen with other women preparing food for services when they heard gunshots.

“She said they heard a bang, bang, bang,” Mr. Singh, 36, said in a telephone interview from the basement of a bowling alley near from the temple, where the police and F.B.I. agents were interviewing survivors.

Mr. Singh, recounting the shooting as told to him by his aunt Satpal Kaleka, said the women had hidden in a nearby pantry. The women escaped, witnessing the gunman’s carnage along the way, he said.

Mr. Singh was on his way to services with his wife, his two children and his parents when the police stopped them outside the parking lot. “There were police cars running into the complex,” he said. “A couple of weeks ago, some kid had set off a fire alarm, so we thought something like that had happened.”

People begin gathering at the temple as early as 6:30 a.m. on Sundays, but most arrive around 10:30 or 11 for services, Mr. Singh said. He believed about 30 to 35 people were inside when the shooting began, but had the gunman arrived just 15 minutes later, Mr. Singh said, 100 to 150 people would have been inside. Steven Yaccino reported from Oak Creek, and Michael Schwirtz and Marc Santora from New York. Ray Rivera and Jack Begg contributed reporting from New York.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

மக்கள் அஞ்சலி! மத ஆராதனை!! விடை பெற்றான் மரியதாஸ் டெல்றொக்சன்!!!


மக்கள் அஞ்சலி! மத ஆராதனை!! விடை பெற்றான் மரியதாஸ் டெல்றொக்சன்!!!

வவுனியா சிறைச்சாலையில் சிங்களச் சிப்பாய்களின் கொலைவெறித் தாக்குதலில் படுகாயமடைந்து மகர சிறைக்கு மாற்றப்பட்டு கோமா நிலையில் உயிரிழந்த, தமிழ் அரசியல் கைதியான மரியதாஸ் டெல்றொக்சனின் இறுதிக் கிரியைகளும், இறுதி வணக்க நிகழ்வுகளும் இன்று மதியம் இடம்பெற்றன.

இறுதி வணக்க நிகழ்வில்  மக்கள் கலந்து கொண்டு அஞ்சலி செலுத்தினர்.

இவ் வணக்க நிகழ்வில் கலந்து கொண்டு உரையாற்றிய நாடாளுமன்ற வாதிகள்,  இது திட்டமிடப்பட்ட கொலையே, உரிய நீதி கிடைக்க வேண்டும். என உரையாற்றினர். எனினும் திட்டமிட்டது யாரென்றோ, உரிய நீதி என்னவென்றோ அவர்கள் எதுவும் உரைக்கவில்லை. இது பாதிக்கப்பட்ட மக்களை மேலும் பாதித்தது.

அதன்பின்னர் சமய முறைப்படி பாசையூர் புனித அந்தோனியார் தேவாலயத்திற்கு உடல் எடுத்துச் செல்லப்பட்டு, இறுதி ஆராதனை நடத்திய பின்னர், கொஞ்செஞ்சி மாதா சேமக்காலையில் டெல்றொக்சனின் உடல் நல்லடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டது.

சமரன்: இந்தியாவின் அனைத்துத் துறைகளையும் அமெரிக்கக் கம்பெனிகளுக்கு திறந்துவிட நிர்ப்பந்திக்கும் ஒபாமாவின் ஆணையை முறியடிப்போம்!

சமரன்: இந்தியாவின் அனைத்துத் துறைகளையும் அமெரிக்கக் கம்பெ...:

இந்தியாவின் அனைத்துத் துறைகளையும் அமெரிக்கக் கம்பெனிகளுக்கு திறந்துவிட நிர்ப்பந்திக்கும் ஒபாமாவின் ஆணையை முறியடிப்போம்!  
மக்கள் ஜனநாயக இளைஞர் கழகம்



புதிய ஈழம்: நாடாளுமன்ற முறை குறித்த பாட்டாளிவர்க்கக் கட்சியின்...

புதிய ஈழம்: நாடாளுமன்ற முறை குறித்த பாட்டாளிவர்க்கக் கட்சியின்...:   நாடாளுமன்ற முறை குறித்த பாட்டாளிவர்க்கக் கட்சியின் போர்த்தந்திரமும், செயல்தந்திரங்களும். சமரன் - ஜனவரி, 1989

''தற்காலிகப் புரட்சி அரசாங்கத்தில் ஒரு பாட்டாளி வர்க்கக்கட்சி பங்குகொள்வது என்பதும் தற்போதைய நிலையிலுள்ள தரகு முதலாளித்துவ,
நிலப்பிரபுத்துவ கூட்டுச் சர்வாதிகார அரசில் உள்ள பாராளுமன்ற முறையிலான அரசாங்கங்களில் பங்கு கொள்வது என்பதும் ஒன்றல்ல. இரண்டும் வெவ்வேறானது. முன்னால் கூறப்படுவது லெனினியக் கோட்பாடு வழியில் அமைந்த ஒரு சரியான பாட்டாளிவர்க்கச் செயல்தந்திரமாகும். இரண்டாவது வகைப்பட்டது இந்நாட்டில் வலது, இடது போலிக் கம்யூனிஸ்டுகள் பயன்படுத்தும் சீர்திருத்தச் செயல் தந்திரங்கள் ஆகும். '' சமரன்

"சயனைட்" நாவல் - ஒரு பார்வை

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