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Monthly Archives: November 2015

India to pay 45 rupees/T incentive to cane growers – minister

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Economics, Farmers, NATIONAL NEWS

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Farmers, sugarcane

 NEW DELHI

 India will for the first time pay sugarcane farmers part of the cost for produce that they sell to money-losing mills, a government minister said on Tuesday after a cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The move will help mills hit by a free-fall in local sugar prices that was triggered by five years of surplus output. Citing poor finances, mills have not been paying millions of dollars to cane growers, who form a major voting bloc.

The sugar industry has been going through a crisis that has led to an arrears in payment of 60 billion-65 billion rupees ($905.87 million-$981.35 million), and the decision for the government to shoulder some of the payments would help mills clear cane dues to farmers, Coal and Power Minister Piyush Goyal told a news conference.

“Under this scheme, the production subsidy will be given to offset the cost of cane and facilitate timely payment of cane prices to the farmers,” he said.

 The government would directly pay farmers 45 Indian rupees ($0.68) for every tonne of cane produced, leaving sugar mills to bear nearly 98 percent of the cost.

The move is aimed at wooing politically influential cane growers and helping sugar mills recovering from a global glut.

Shares of Indian sugar companies have been rising on expectations of government help, with stocks of Shree Renuka Sugars (SRES.NS), Simbhaoli Sugars (SIMB.NS) and Bannari Amman Sugars (BANN.NS) shooting up further on Wednesday.

Last month Reuters reported that India, the world’s biggest sugar consumer and the No. 2 producer after Brazil, was considering directly paying millions of cane farmers.

Separately, the government has asked mills to export 4 million tonnes of sugar in the 2015/16 season beginning October.

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International Tribunal Reopens Indonesia’s ‘Forgotten Genocide’ · Global Voices

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in History, International, Left politics

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The Indonesian government is accused of orchestrating an anti-communist purge that killed at least half a million people. What kind of reconciliation is possible today?

Source: International Tribunal Reopens Indonesia’s ‘Forgotten Genocide’ · Global Voices

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Twenty-six years after Velvet Revolution, Czech Communists say history’s still in their favour

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in History, International, Left politics

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Czech Communists, Velvet Revolution

Jan Richter,  radio.cz

 Since the fall of communism, the Czech Communist party has well established itself on the Czech political scene. It has a stable support base, and since 1990 has not been voted out of the lower house. What is the Communist Party’s appeal for Czech voters? What is its role in the country’s political system? And what are the outlooks for the Czech Communist movement?

The leader of the Communist Party Vojtěch Filip, photo: Filip JandourekThe leader of the Communist Party Vojtěch Filip, photo: Filip Jandourek

The end of one-party rule was one of the slogans frequently heard at public rallies during the Velvet Revolution 26 years ago. Indeed, the Czechoslovak Parliament changed the Constitution as early as November 29, cancelling Article 4 which maintained the Communist party was “the leading power in the society and the country.”

On that day, the Communist party lost its dominant position to become just one of many political groups in the newly formed democracy. But few would guess that 26 years later, its direct successor, the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia, would be a stable and influential force in the Czech political system. One of the organizers of that student march on November 17, 1989, which triggered the Velvet Revolution, was Pavel Žáček.

“The situation right after November 1989 was very special. There was a general consensus that the Communist party should not be outlawed. In the early 1990s, Václav Havel was one of those who believed that after several elections, the party will naturally disappear in the foreseeable future.

“That was one of the reasons why the party was not banned. As it has turned out, however, the party has survived. It was a very serious mistake that has had a lasting impact on all political processes to date.”

In the early 1990s, there was a general belief the Communist party would gradually diminish both in size and influence. But the group remains a power to be reckoned with on local, regional and national levels.

Josef Skála, an influential Communist politician from Prague, says he knew right from the start the time for the party would come again, despite the massive flight of its members at that time.

“There were many people who left the party in 1989 and 1990 because wanted to follow their careers and spat in their own faces. There were others who left the party because they were frustrated. But there were also those who understood this was not the end of history.

Josef Skála, photo: archive of Radio PragueJosef Skála, photo: archive of Radio Prague“They knew it was a moment in history which will weigh up all the elements to be reckoned with, and that this big change, let’s say, was inevitably heading towards a big crisis. That was my conviction, and I’m somewhat proud that later developments confirmed my views.”

As its members are quick to point out, the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia is formally a different entity than the totalitarian Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.

The group that exists today was officially established in March 1990, during the formative years of modern Czech democracy. For many of those who stayed on, the dawn of the new era was not a time they like to remember.

Communist MP Jan Klán, who comes from a small village in central Bohemia, was in first grade in 1989. I sat down with him in his lower house office and asked him what he recalled from the Velvet Revolution.

“The change was apparent in that for one, we stopped calling teachers comrades which is what I remember vividly. I also remember the change at the post of the president immediately after November 1989 and how the president’s portraits were replaced in the classrooms.

“Looking at the first years after 1990, my mother was the head of a local communist party group – she was the only member in fact after everyone else had quit the party – I remember some things that were not that nice. For instance, people would paint gallows in front of our house, and things like that.”

In 1989, right before the collapse of the totalitarian regime, the Communist party had 1.5 million members, an incredible 10 percent of Czechoslovakia’s total population.

During and after the Velvet Revolution, there was a massive flight, just like in the group in Mr Klán’s village. In 2004, the party had over 100,000 members and the number has since dropped by half. Josef Skála again.

“There were big fears in the early 1990s that the party could be banned. As you know, there were such attempts, with legislation prohibiting a certain category of people from any sort of public jobs, and so on.

“But in the early 2000s, we were successful at the polls both in the national and the European election where we won over 20 percent of the vote in 2004. This showed that today’s Czech president Miloš Zeman was wrong in his expectation the Communist party will disappear due to a generational change. He was wrong, we were alive and well and moving ahead.”

Do you think it was a good idea to keep the name of the party, which your members agreed on, and the party didn’t transform into one a new grouping as we saw in Slovakia, Poland and Hungary?

“I’ll be honest. In the 1992 inner-party referendum, I was proposing a different name because I understood that at that time, it would take away certain pressure. The referendum said what it said and we should respect it but today, the situation is different. I’m not sure that if we changed our name today, it would help.

“Also, the parties you mentioned in other countries – they are all gone. People had big expectations from them but were disappointed. So in this respect, it‘s them who lost, not us.”

Since 1990, the Communist party’s ideology has undergone major alterations. Addressing requests to disband the party on grounds of extremism, the Czech Interior Ministry has repeatedly ascertained the Communist party does not pose a threat to democracy.

The Communists still want to achieve socialism but unlike their predecessors, they say they want to arrive there via democratic and pluralistic means. Jan Klán joined the party in 2003, and has been a communist MP since 2010.

“We see the future in socialism, in a socially-just society. The 2008 crisis showed that capitalism is not working properly, so we are searching for a system that would replace it and end the plundering of the planet and the enormous social inequality. If that does not happen, we will face worse crises than the one in 2008.”

With time, these views, along with consistent criticism of the country’s post-communist transformation and apologetic attitudes towards the 40 years of totalitarianism, have paid off.

In the general election of 2002, which followed a four-year rule of a grand coalition, the Communist party scored its best result to date. It received more than 18.5 percent of the vote, coming in third and winning 41 seats in the 200-member lower house.

Another major success, and a more recent one, came ten years later in regional elections. The party did so well that it is now part of regional government coalitions in nine out of 14 of Czech regions, and has one post of the regional governor.

Pavel Žáček, photo: Anna DuchkováPavel Žáček, photo: Anna DuchkováPavel Žáček in 1998 became the first head of the Czech Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes, a government agency researching documents from the Nazi and Communist regimes. He says the successes of the Communist party have had an adverse effect on the entire Czech political system.

“Since the 1990s until today, there has been no chance to form a left-wing coalition. So it’s not an issue of just one political party. It’s a problem for the entire political system.”

Compared with the 1990s, do you see a shift in how the Czechs view their communist past? In 2010, you were dismissed as the head of the Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes in a big brawl over what it should do and how we should look at the past. Was that a symptom of the changing understanding of the past?

“It’s a symptom of a larger issue. There is a political as well as a moral point of view held by the people trying to redefine what communism was. This has to with a struggle against the post-1989 Czech establishment, and it looks like some part of our past is coming back.

“But I think it’s only temporary but we have to be active and keep explaining these issues, particularly to the young people who are a relevant force when it comes opposing today’s establishment of the Czech Republic.”

Another recurring theme in the Communist party ideology lies in the field of foreign policy. The party remains highly critical of the United States and the West in general, while being much more understanding of the policies of the Kremlin. I discussed their approach to international relations with MEP Miloslav Randsforf, the party’s shadow foreign minister.

“In Russia, there is a radical capitalist regime with many savage aspects. But demonizing Russia is also foolish. The US is not the good guy and Russia is not the bad guy. I think for instance that the [EU and US] sanctions against Russia are irrational and are directing Europe which is losing more than the United States.

But they were imposed over the annexation of Crimea and the war in Ukraine.

“There is no war in Ukraine. This war was launched by the authorities in Kiev. Over the last year, I’ve been to Ukraine on a weekly basis and I have to say that without these new arrogant attitudes of the Kiev authorities, even Crime would not make secession.

Well, Crimea did not make secession; it was occupied by Russian troops.

So if there would have been positive attitudes towards the decentralization of power on the side of Kiev, even Crimea would remain part of Ukraine. I’ve been to Crimea; nobody was prepared for the crisis and nobody was planning to secede. It was a coincidence of various factors.

Miloslav Ransdorf, photo: archive of Radio PragueMiloslav Ransdorf, photo: archive of Radio Prague“But the situation in Ukraine is desperate because it’s economically mismanaged. The prices of gas have gone up seven times, the prices of water and electricity three times, the inflation rate is 60 percent. It’s irrational. The real power was handed over not to the people and democratic structures but to oligarchs, and the oligarchs are the ruling force in Ukraine.”

Following the 2008 global financial crisis, dissatisfaction with capitalism took solid roots in Greece, Spain and other countries in Europe and elsewhere. Is this an opportunity for the Czech Communists to position themselves as leader of these “liquid” movements and win over new supporters? Josef Skála is sceptical of groups such as Greece’s Syriza and Spain’s Podemos but is certain that in the future, the Communist party will grow.

“The season for the Communist party is yet to come. The crisis of overproduction and of capital, is converting into a permanent state. You see it on a number of issues – the Greek crisis, the Ukrainian crisis, the migration wave, or the TTIP story that is a big danger of Europe and is another desperate attempt by the US to somehow solve their debt trap.

“So the period of a deep crisis is coming and all the key items will again be on the agenda. The question is whether we can tolerate and follow developments moving to an ever deeper crisis, or if there will be a new attempt, a new scenario to overcome the crisis. And I’m deeply convinced, which is a topic for a deep philosophical discussion, that Marxism has many things to about this.”

The question is, however, why should Czechs trust the Communists once again given the fact their attempt at building up a socially just society after the Second World War ended in 40 years of totalitarianism. I asked MP Jan Klán what he would say to that.

“I would tell them that was a different party. KSČM was founded in 1990. Before 1989, the socialist idea was good but the elites also became disconnected from the people. I think that if they had been more flexible, nothing would have happened in 1989 and the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia would be here today.”

The lack of modernization has worked well for the Communist party, which has been capitalizing on disenchantment with democracy and nostalgia for the past. But will this be enough for the future, or does the party need to adapt itself to the era of grassroots movements and social media campaigns? Josef Skála says he has a vision to make the Communist party a relevant force.

“Personally, I’m not very happy about the party’s capability to address the new situation which originated after the 2008 financial crisis. It looks as if we are still frozen in the period of the 1990s when it was necessary to make concessions, to be softer, and so on.

“I think the train has moved along but we have not been able to cope. That’s problem which we’ll address at next year’s party congress.

Where, as I understand, you are going to run for the chair of the party?

“Yes, there are certain rumours of this kind, yes.”

Michel Perottino, photo: archive of Charles UniversityMichel Perottino, photo: archive of Charles UniversityWhile Communist officials are happy to share optimistic visions of their future, others are more sceptical. I discussed the party’s prospects with Michel Perottino, the head of the political science department at Charles University’s Faculty of Social Sciences and a co-author of Between Mass and Cartel Party, a study of recent developments in the Czech Communist and Social Democrat parties. I began by asking him what the Communist party really stood for.

“It is in a sense a party of the past. Trying to understand why this party still exists requires a look back in the history. It is one of the ‘real’ Communist parties in Central Europe in that it was not installed by the Soviets after 1945. So from this point of view, they do have a base in the society. On the other hand, in the 1990s it was mainly a party of losers of the transition, at least politically.”

How have they developed since then? What is their attraction now?

“Partly, it’s a continuum. There are people who were in the party and they don’t have any reasons not to support it now.

“But the party has of course adapted to the new conditions. As it has not been in power, they can for instance very criticize issues such as corruption, and present themselves as not corrupt, and as an alternative for the Czech Republic.”

They also present themselves as the only left-wing opposition. How would you describe the party’s values and policies?

“First of all, they claim they are only left-wing party in the Czech Republic. They consider the Social Democrats to be centrists.

“They are mainly conservative – socially, economically in the sense that they look back to the system before 1989 and they claim the system was very effective and very positive from many points of view.

They are very different from Western communist parties because they are not a genuine workers’ party, they are not linked to the lowest class of the society. Typically for the post-communist context, it is much more a party of former bureaucrats and pensioners. They might claim they are a workers’ party but the reality is quite different.”

How do you see the party’s attitude to Russia? For decades, they were vassals to the Soviet Communists and they seem to have a soft spot for Russian policies.

“Yes, that’s certainly true to a certain extent. They are one of the last pan-Slavic organizations, and they say that we have to fix the broken ties with the East. So they are active in this respect, although perhaps less towards the former Soviet Union than towards China, Vietnam, and so on. So they are pro-Russian, but not necessarily pro-Putin.

Communist Party headquarters in Prague, photo: Anette KrausCommunist Party headquarters in Prague, photo: Anette Kraus“And another point: although they say they are an internationalist party, they have developed very nationalist and self-centred policies.”

I was going to ask you about that because at school under communism, we heard quite a bit about ‘proletarian internationalism’. What happened to that?

“It’s quite typical for every Communist party, it’s not just the case of the Czechs. It’s also very typical for Communist parties in the West which have developed very nationalist attitudes and programmes, even though they might always claim they are internationalists.

“In the Czech case, it’s also due to the fact they have not been in government and they say they know how to run the country. We can see this on the example of the ongoing migration crisis. To some extent, we could expect the Communists would be positive towards the migrants, and say they are brothers and so on. But they also see them as ‘competitors’ for ‘our people’. So it’s quite difficult for them to cope with this issue.”

One thing that has changed very little since before 1989 is the Communist party’s attitude towards the US. Is that based on pragmatism or rather on their ideology?

“I think it’s mainly ideological that they position themselves against the United States and also against NATO. This is one of the most important themes of the Communist approach to international relations.”

Is this an issue that could drum up support from some of the Czech grassroots movements that in the past vocally opposed some US policies, such as the plan to station an US radar base in the Czech Republic? Are they in a position to bring these groups together?

“I’m not sure that some of those people would want to be drafted by the Communists. The situation is complicated and very heterogeneous. The opposition against the American radar base was formed by other groups, not just by the Communist movement, and the Communists were not very successful in acquiring new supporters.

“They are very conservative and turned inwards. Also, they to a certain degree fear the new movements.”

So you don’t think we will see a revival of the Communist party along the lines of what we see in Greece or Spain where new movements critical of capitalism have emerged?

“I don’t think there are such scenarios in the Czech society. The society is not that comparable to those in Greece and Spain, it is too post-communist to accept new forms of anti-capitalist movements.

“I think the main line here is held for instance by the ANO 2011 group which has a much more right-wing concept of the society.”

How do you see the future of the Communist party? When do you think it will return to power, maybe not in terms of years but of conditions that need to be here for them to be in government?

“Right now, they are in regional governments. On the national level, they are blocked by a 1995 provision of the Social Democrats not to cooperate with them on the national level. This could change but we should not at least two aspects here

“First, I’m not sure the Communists want to play this game because being in the opposition is much more practical and efficient for them. Also, we should expect that if the Communists join government, they will disappear. That is in fact the condition for them to disappear – that they come to power and show they are the same as the others.”

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Now is a time of reflection and action

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, International

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ISIS, MIDDLE EAST, Paris, terrorist

BEN CHACKO ON MIDDLE EAST – Now is a time of reflection and action

Ben Chacko, Morning Star editor,  calls on anti war activists to step up the level of thinking and action, to support the beleaguered peoples of the Middle East.

MIDDLE EAST

has reeled in shock this weekend, as the appalling scale of the terrorist murders in Paris becomes clear. One hundred and twenty-nine people killed, nearly 400 injured, in seven separate but co-ordinated massacres.
Isis has been waging its war of unparalleled brutality in Iraq and Syria for years. Murdering civilians is nothing new to an organisation that executes 10-year-olds, stones women to death and flings gay people from the roofs of buildings, that deems entire villages, towns and peoples unfit to live if they belong to supposedly undesirable religious or ethnic groups.
Nor has its violence been confined to the vast territory it now controls. The 224 people on the doomed Russian airliner departing from Sharm el-Sheikh on October 31 most likely fell victim to its vengeance for the Russian air force’s attacks on Isis.
Thursday evening saw 41 killed in Beirut, probably because Lebanese militant group Hezbollah is helping the Syrian government fight Isis.
On the same evening as the Paris atrocities another 19 died in Baghdad, Shi’ites slaughtered by a suicide bomber for their religion.
Isis is the most recent and the most dangerous of the terrorist movements based on Saudi Arabia’s extremist Wahhabi version of Islam, but there are of course others, most famously al-Qaida, from which Isis originated as a split and whose affiliate the Nusra Front also fights in Syria for the overthrow of the government.
More than the other groups, though, Isis is frightening because it has succeeded in attracting people from our own countries to join it.
The first identified attacker from the Paris attacks was a French citizen, Omar Ismail Mostefai, born in 1985 in the Paris suburb of Courcouronnes.
Last week we had news that a US drone had killed Mohammed Emwazi, who slit the throats of prisoners for propaganda videos and was better known as “Jihadi John,” raised in London. And we know that large numbers of British, French and other European citizens have travelled to Syria to join the terrorists.
Pitiless, apocalyptic and irrational, there is no point in seeking to come to terms with murderers like Isis. The organisation must be defeated. But how?
Any attempt to pin the blame on Islam or Muslims for atrocities like these must be rejected immediately. Muslims across the world have expressed their horror at last Friday’s sickening events.
And, as President Francois Hollande has previously remarked, most victims of terror worldwide are Muslims. Certainly Isis spends most of its time murdering Muslims.
Sectarian hatred has to be faced down by unity and solidarity between people of all faiths and none. Those on the British right such as Ukip who rail at multiculturalism should note that France’s more prescriptive approach to national identity and “French values” has not spared it.
All too often, as with the ban on wearing veils, it has been perceived by disadvantaged communities as racism, however much socialists may respect the tradition of state secularism that goes back to the French Revolution.
Racism and discrimination can only increase the terrorist threat. But neither can we ignore the fact that Isis is currently a very powerful organisation, controlling a territory the size of a country — a first for an organisation of its type — fighting a bitter war to overthrow the Syrian government.
A united front against Isis in Syria is essential. Hilary Benn’s decision to support the peace talks among all anti-Isis forces in Syria, announced to the Independent on Sunday, is a massively positive step.
No-fly zones and military intervention against the Bashar al-Assad regime can only assist Isis, which with no air force would benefit enormously if the Syrians were prevented from bombing its positions. All such talk must now cease.
As for “moderate” rebels, where are they? US General Lloyd Austin testified to the Senate armed services committee back in September that only “four or five” such rebels were still in the field.
Russia’s intervention led to a rethink as Western governments rapidly claimed the Kremlin was targeting the “moderate opposition” rather than Isis, but this was political spin.
Defeating a threat of this nature requires a dose of cold realism and an understanding of why the threat exists. Isis in Syria has benefited enormously from the West’s sponsorship of the revolt against President Assad.
Isis itself has thanked the United States for weapons drops intended for other rebel groups, but which Isis hoovered up. Opposition fighters armed and trained by the US have, on entering Syria, joined Isis; others have handed their weapons over to it.
Turkey, a Nato member and close ally of the US, Britain and France, has allowed armed fighters to pour over its border into Syria. It continues to bomb and attack Kurdish forces fighting against Isis, even when those same troops are co-ordinating with Washington.
The collapse of the Gadaffi regime in Libya following Nato’s intervention on the side of Islamist rebel groups has not only created permanent civil war there, but flooded north Africa with arms, boosting terror organisations across the region.
And the longer story is of course that extremist terror has flourished in Iraq — home, of course, of Isis’s leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi — since the US-British invasion of 2003. After years of total denial, even Tony Blair recently acknowledged that there were “elements of truth” in the assessment that Isis was a child of the Iraq war.
Sadly not everyone is willing to learn the lesson. Hence the revolting spectacle of self-righteous Blairites competing to denounce the Stop the War Coalition over the weekend.
Pointing out the causal links between foreign policy decisions and terrorist attacks is a requirement if any serious effort is to be made to prevent such attacks and tackle the situations which give rise to them.
But for posting an article noting that US support for Sunni extremists had helped lead to the Paris atrocities, Stop the War came in for a barrage of Blairite ire.
Barrow and Furness MP John Woodcock called the group “disgusting apologists” for terrorism. Ilford South’s Mike Gapes says it is “beneath contempt.” Shadow Foreign Office minister Stephen Doughty denounced a “shameful” tweet about the article — which has since been removed — and said it “shows [Stop the War] for who [they] are.”
Even if Stop the War had done nothing else, for organising the largest peaceful protest march in our history in 2003 — when it brought two million onto the streets against the invasion of Iraq — it would deserve an honourable place in the history of British political protest.
Certainly on that occasion it was proved right. And since then Stop the War has continued to campaign for peace despite the mockery and hostility of an Establishment with blood on its hands.
Blairites might hate Stop the War on principle, but it is easy to see why it is being targeted now: because of Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn’s long association with the organisation, of which he is a former chairman.
The petty sniping of Woodcock, Gapes and Doughty — all supporters of Liz Kendall in the party leadership contest — stems from the same dishonourable source as the right-wing frenzy over Jeremy’s bow on Remembrance Sunday. They want to paint Labour’s leader as unpatriotic, as a friend of this country’s enemies.
But the warmongers have run this show for decades now. They cannot blame the peace movement for the terrible crimes committed against civilians by Isis.
Those who truly want to end the terrorist nightmare will face up to the role of Western governments in creating it, stop aiding and abetting the rebellion in Syria and start co-ordinating with Damascus and others on the front line in the battle to destroy this menace.

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GRAIN — Foreign pension funds and land grabbing in Brazil

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Economics, Farmers, International

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Source: GRAIN — Foreign pension funds and land grabbing in Brazil

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Seaweed component found to be a rice fertilizer

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Farmers

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fertilizer, rice, Seaweed

Scientists at the National Crop Protection Center (NCPC) at the University of the Philippines Los Baños, the country’s premiere agricultural school, reports that carrageenan, a carbohydrate found in edible seaweeds, can increase rice yield by up to 65 percent under that country’s rice production practices.

A trial reportedly showed that adding a small amount of carrageenan to fertilizer led to higher grain weight, thereby increasing rice yields. News of the research results was recently posted on Rappler.com.

The research team led by Gil Magsino of NCPC furthered findings of previous studies showing that when carrageenan is degraded or reduced to tiny particles through irradiation technology, it can promote growth in rice plants and make it resistant to certain pests. Thus, it also becomes an effective natural fertilizer.

An additional contention is that carrageenan can improve rice productivity by strengthening rice stems and help prevent lodging when stems become too weak to carry the weight of the rice heads before harvest.

The researchers are also contending that carrageenan can also promote resistance to rice plant diseases like the rice tungro virus and bacterial leaf blight.

“This innovation of applying seaweed as fertilizer empowers our farmers to have access to cheaper but highly effective plant growth enhancers that boils down to improved harvest and increased income,” said Philippine Science Secretary Mario Montejo, as reported on Rappler.com.

Demand for the seawood from which the substance is refined could increase dramatically. There already are seaweed farmers in the Philippines, and the Philippines is a major global supplier of carrageenan. In 2011, it reportedly supplied 80 percent of the world’s seaweed. The seaweed components have been commonly used as a thickener or stabilizer for food products like ice cream and salad dressing, or as a binding agent for toothpaste and shampoo.

 

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China released new “seed law”

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Farmers, International

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China, seed law

On November 4th, China’s National People’s Congress voted through the “seed law” amendment. Important modifications about seed production and management were made on the new “seed law”, which will effect on January 1st, 2016.

This revised “seed law” keep the variety approval system, improves the main crop variety approval system which promotes the integration of seed breeding and commercialization. For the management of genetically modified seeds, the new “seed law” is clear on the GM varieties to track the supervision and information disclosure. And those approved genetically modified crops must get production and operation licenses, variety authorization, registration and other requirements.

To protect the national food security, the new “seed law” has clarified in the general part that in order to promote the healthy development of seed industry, it should add more seed security review mechanisms when having external cooperation.

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Communist Party of India (Marxist) on recent political developments

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in CPI(M), Left politics, NATIONAL NEWS

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CPI(M)

The Central Committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) met in New
Delhi from November 13 to 16, 2015. It has issued the following statement:

Bihar Elections
The people of Bihar have given a resounding defeat to the BJP alliance in the assembly elections. They have rejected the rank communal campaign conducted by the BJP, led by the Narendra Modi-Amit Shah duo with divisive issues including prescribing eating habits of the people and the bogey of reservations for minorities etc.This Bihar verdict should strengthen the fight against the rightwing communal forces all over the country.The campaign by the United Left bloc including the CPI(M), CPI and CPI(ML)-Liberation was well received by the people of Bihar.  The CPI(ML) won three seats.

Kerala Panchayat Elections
The verdict of the people in the elections to the local bodies in Kerala is
a rejection of the UDF government?s anti-people record and corruption. The
people have also rebuffed the communal politics of the BJP and its efforts
to rally leaders of caste-based organisations.The Central Committee congratulated the people of Kerala for reposing such faith in the LDF. The LDF campaigned unitedly and directly took up issues with the people.

Punjab Developments

The Central Committee expressed serious concern over the ominous political
developments taking place in Punjab, which are gravely disrupting peace and
communal harmony in the state. The failure of Badal Government in capturing
the culprits responsible for the desecration of the Guru Granth Sahib and
its inept handling of mass protests leading to the death of two Sikh youth
in police firing, is providing ammunition to Sikh fundamentalists and
pro-Khalisthani elements.

Economic Situation

PM Modi has unilaterally announced measures to further facilitate the loot
of Indian resources and markets by vastly enhancing the access of foreign
capital into India. All these decisions have been taken on the eve of the
winter session of the Parliament.  Worse they have been taken even without
the Cabinet approval.  This is a complete travesty of our system of
parliamentary democracy. PM Modi made these announcements with an aim to
appease foreign capital prior to his foreign visits.

Further Economic Burdens on the People

This license to loot for foreign capital comes at a time when the majority
of the Indian people continue to groan under newer economic burdens. Price
rise of essential commodities continues unabated. The prices of ?dal?, an
essential source of protein nutrition for the vast majority of the Indian
people, have risen beyond their reach. The prices of all other essential
commodities continue to rise.The agrarian distress is deepening. The announced MSP increases are so meagre that they do not even cover the production costs. This is
accelerating the distress suicides of our farmers.The latest data shows that compared to a 6.4 per cent growth rate last month
the index of industrial production has now fallen to 3.6 per cent.
Consequently, the growth rate of the manufacturing sector, the main
generator of jobs, has fallen from 6.9 per cent to 2.6 per cent. Appeasing
foreign capital under these conditions cannot translate automatically into
GDP growth. This is because the purchasing power in the hands of the Indian
people is sharply declining, leading to the contraction of domestic demand.

The staple daal roti has gone beyond the reach of the common people. On top
of this, petrol and diesel prices have been hiked once again.  Various
railway charges are increased.  A cess for `Swach Bharat?  has been imposed.

In this background whatever little relief that was being provided to the
Indian people through schemes like the Rural Employment Guarantee are also
being drastically cut.

Growing Communalisation And Intellectuals? Protest

All across India, communal tensions are being sharply escalated by the
RSS/BJP outfits.  Particularly in the run up to the Bihar elections, such
tensions were intensified.

Given the patronage by the BJP Central and state governments and the refusal
by PM Modi to take any action, various outfits of the RSS are being
emboldened by the day to mount such attacks that seek to undermine the
secular democratic foundations of our country and create widespread
insecurity amongst the religious minorities.

Protests by Intellectuals

The growing intolerance and the spread of hatred across the country has led,
amongst other violent attacks, to the murders of rationalist thinkers. A
large number of award winning litt?rateurs have returned their Sahitya
Academy and other recognition of excellence awards to the government in
protest.

They have been joined by internationally reputed historians, film and
theatre personalities. Hundreds of Indian scientists of international repute
have joined this form of protest. Such action by Indian intellectuals,
scientists and creative artists strengthens the resolve of all Indians who
cherish the secular democratic foundations of our Republic to defend our
country and people?s unity.

Left Parties Call

The six Left parties, CPI(M), CPI, CPI(ML)-Liberation, AIFB, RSP & SUCI (C)
have given a call to launch a nationwide campaign against the communal hate
offensive spearheaded by the RSS and patronized by this BJP led government,
from 1st to 6th December, 2015.

The Central Committee called upon all Party units to organise protests all
over the country.

Paris Attacks

The Central Committee of the CPI(M) strongly condemned the terror attacks
in Paris.  These recent spate of terror attacks in Baghdad, Beirut and now
Paris clearly indicate the mushrooming of such terrorist groups as a counter
to US/NATO military operations in Syria and military interventions elsewhere
in West Asia.

The Central Committee of the CPI(M) deeply mourns the death of innocent
people in these terror attacks and condemns such barbaric terror.

Myanmar

The Central Committee congratulated the National League for Democracy (NLD)
led by Aung San Su Kyi for winning a record three-fourths of the seats in
the elections in Myanmar. This emphatic expression for the restoration of
democracy in Myanmar is indeed historic for the people of that country and
will have an impact in the region.

Nepal

The Central Committee congratulated the people of Nepal for the adoption of
the secular Republican constitution. K.P Oli of the CPN(UML) was elected
Prime Minister and  Bidhya Devi Bhandari also of the CPN(UML) elected
President.

The opposition to this Constitution by certain Madhesi groups, supported by
Indian Hindutva organisations is resulting in violent protests in some parts
of this area. The virtual blockading of the border between India and Nepal
in many border points by the BJP central government is having a crippling
effect on Nepal. Consequently, anti-India sentiments have sharply escalated
in Nepal.  The Central Committee demands that the Indian Government must
immediately restore the movement of goods and supplies to Nepal.

Bangladesh

The Central Committee expressed serious concern at the growing
fundamentalist attacks in Bangladesh. There are contesting reports. On the
one hand the activity of the ISIS is reportedly growing and on the other the
Awami League government alleges that the rival opposition BNP and its
Islamic fundamentalist allies are whipping up such attacks as a part of
their agenda to destablise the present government.

These developments however have a very strong impact on the neighbouring
states in India particularly West Bengal and Assam.

The Central Committee finalized the Draft Report on Organisation to be sent
to all State Committees. The Central Committee will meet on December 26 and
finalise the report to be presented to the Plenum beginning December 27,
2015 at Kolkata.

Massive preparations through state wide jathas and mass contact programmes
are underway in West Bengal to make this plenum a big success.

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India doesn’t require dream merchants, but a leadership with vision | columns | Hindustan Times

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in CPI(M), Current Affairs, Left politics

≈ Leave a comment

India does not require dream merchants, but a leadership with a vision that will save the people from the present state of misery.

Source: India doesn’t require dream merchants, but a leadership with vision | columns | Hindustan Times

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India doesn’t require dream merchants, but a leadership with vision | columns | Hindustan Times

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in CPI(M), Current Affairs, Left politics

≈ Leave a comment

India does not require dream merchants, but a leadership with a vision that will save the people from the present state of misery.

Source: India doesn’t require dream merchants, but a leadership with vision Sitha ram Ychuri Hindustan Times

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