Saturday, October 12, 2013
“Indeed, it is a great loss not only for those of us in India but also for the world communist movement. Basu certainly wrote a new history, showing the way for communists in parliamentary elections. He played a crucial role in building the Left, secular, Third Front coalition against communal forces and the one-party domination at the Centre, and in making the Third Front a democratic force. He anchored the continuous victory of the Left movement in West Bengal for 23 years from 1977. After Nehru’s death, he took up Nehru’s legacy of insisting that Bangladesh, which shared a border with West Bengal, should get its due share of the waters of the Ganga. He was not just a political leader but a great statesman, and a true representative of the Indian people.” - V.S. Achuthanandan, Kerala Chief Minister.
“I REMEMBER meeting Jyoti Basu for the first time at the undivided Communist Party of India’s national council meeting soon after the party’s Amritsar congress in 1958, when [S.A.] Dange was the chairman. Though I was selected by the party to attend the congress, at the last minute I was assigned to oversee a crucial election campaign at Devikulam [in Idukki district, Kerala]. So, though I could not attend the party congress, I was chosen as a member of the national council. I met Jyoti Basu at the Council meeting. From then on, until his death, we maintained a close relationship and worked together closely as members of the national council, the central committee and other bodies of the Communist party. He was a dear comrade and we shared a warm relationship throughout. For me, his death is all the more painful.” V.S. Achuthanandan, Kerala Chief Minister.
Friday, September 27, 2013
JYOTI BASU: “He had a fund of goodwill for the DMK.” – M. Karunanidhi, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister.
ON January 30, 1991, the Centre dismissed
the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam government in Tamil Nadu, citing the DMK’s
support to Sri Lankan Tamils. That was an allegation made by the then Prime
Minister Chandra Shekhar, and Jyoti Basu, who was the Chief Minister of West
Bengal, issued a statement demanding the resignation of President R.
Venkataraman for illegally dismissing the DMK government and for targeting
Tamil Nadu where peace reigned.
Not only that. Jyoti Basu ordered that a
hartal be observed all over West Bengal on February 6, 1991. That is, the Chief
Minister himself called for a hartal! His fund of goodwill for the DMK was
such. Besides, he was firm in his viewpoint that the dismissal of a State
government was unacceptable.
In 1991, when news leaked out that the DMK
government would be dismissed for its support to Sri Lankan Tamils, I informed
Jyoti Basu, V.P. Singh and N.T. Rama Rao about it. Even today, I remember all
of them counselling me to be courageous.
Towards the end of November 1989, I went
to New Delhi and held discussions with political leaders on who should be
chosen as the Prime Minister. I met Jyoti Basu on November 30, 1989. There was
a difficulty in choosing the Prime Minister because of the bickering in the
National Front.
When a meeting was held on December 1,
1989, to choose a person for the prime ministership, V.P. Singh rose and
proposed the name of Devi Lal, and Chandra Shekhar seconded it. This greatly
disappointed those who expected that V.P. Singh would be chosen as the Prime
Minister.
But the disappointment did not last long.
Devi Lal got up and declared that he would like to be like the elder brother of
the family [of the National Front] and then proposed V.P. Singh’s name for the
prime ministership. Jyoti Basu played a great role in bringing about an
amicable atmosphere at that time.
A public meeting was organised in 1989
near Panagal Park, Chennai, to explain the reasons for the National Front
calling an all-India bandh. Jyoti Basu, N.T. Rama Rao, V.P. Singh, Ramakrishna
Hegde and C. Rajeswara Rao addressed the public meeting. My conversations with
them at that time remain in my memory.
When a National Integration Council
meeting was held in New Delhi, I suggested that such meetings should be held in
State capitals, too, instead of only in New Delhi. V.P. Singh and Jyoti Basu
supported that suggestion.
The next National Integration Council
meeting, therefore, was held in Chennai on September 22, 1990. Former Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi, who was then the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok
Sabha, and Jyoti Basu, who was West Bengal Chief Minister, came to Chennai and
took part in that meeting.
I organised a meeting on June 19, 1990, at
the residence of the then Prime Minister V.P. Singh, after consulting V.P.
Singh, to remove the confusion that existed among the then leaders on the Sri
Lankan Tamil issue. Jyoti Basu, then West Bengal Chief Minister, Kerala Chief Minister
E.K. Nayanar, Orissa Chief Minister Biju Patnaik, Rajasthan Chief Minister
Bhairon Singh Shekhawat, Bihar Chief Minister Lalu Prasad, Assam Chief Minister
Prafulla Kumar Mahanta, Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Shanta Kumar,
Puducherry Chief Minister D. Ramachandran, Sikkim Chief Minister Nar Bahadur
Bhandari, and Union Ministers Arun Nehru, Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, Murasoli
Maran, M.S. Gurupadaswamy, Dinesh Goswami, K.P. Unnikrishnnan and P. Upendra
took part in that meeting. Other all-India leaders who participated included
[A.B.] Vajpayee, [L.K.] Advani, [E.M.S.] Namboodiripad, Indrajit Gupta, M.
Farooqui, Jaswant Singh and Chitta Basu.
In that meeting, Murasoli Maran and I
explained to them for more than an hour the nuances of the Sri Lankan Tamil
problem, and how to solve it. All these leaders understood the truth of what I
told them and gave an assurance that they would provide support to protect Sri
Lankan Tamils’ rights and freedom. I accepted their assurances. But before I
could return to Chennai, I received the news that 10 Tamil militants, including
Padmanabha (all belonging to the Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation
Front), had been murdered by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
I then wondered whether a stumbling block
had been created for the decisions that the leaders had taken at the meeting. I
told V.P. Singh and Jyoti Basu about the sad incident, and consulted them
[about the Sri Lankan Tamil issue], appealed to them for their continued
support and returned to Chennai.
Jyoti Basu and I had mutual affection.
After I organised a National Front meeting in Chennai, Basu organised another
at Kolkata, in which I took part. After the meeting was over, when Basu and I
met separately, he told me many things that generated a lot of laughter and
happiness.
After I became the Chief Minister in 1969,
I went to New Delhi in July to take part in a National Development Council
meeting. Ajoy Mukherjee was West Bengal Chief Minister then and Jyoti Basu was
Deputy Chief Minister. When I made a forceful plea in my speech for the
nationalisation of banks, newspapers in North India highlighted it in a big
way. Morarji Desai, who was then Deputy Prime Minister and Union Finance
Minister, opposed my viewpoint.
I still vividly remember how, on the
second day of the meeting, Jyoti Basu went to a great extent to forcefully back
my views. Even though Indira Gandhi, who was then Prime Minister, kept quiet
when we spoke, she announced the nationalisation of banks a few months later.
That also remains in my memory.
T.S. Subramanian
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