In the first decade of the century, the Indian economy has seen
growth rates unprecedented in its history. A "development"
modelled according to the dictates of the imperialist international
institutions (WB, IMF, WTO etc.), subordinated to the interests of
the domestic comprador bureaucratic bourgeoisie and landlords in
collusion with imperialist multinationals and big international
investors. This “development” has not brought any significant
improvement in the living conditions of the vast poor masses of
India, 80% of which continue to survive on less than one euro a day.
Instead, all inequalities actually grew and developed. Few tycoons
have amassed fabulous wealth. The great Indian groups of which they
are at the head, Jindal Mittal and Tata first, have grown to the
point of conquering markets, properties and production quotas in the
imperialist countries, particularly in the steel sector, where in
many countries the Indian groups have become the top producers.
With Narendra Modi, the Indian ruling classes and their imperialist
masters found the "strong man" they sought, to try to get
out of the relative slowdown due to the global crisis and the growing
resistance of the masses to their policies.
With an unprecedented pace and efficiency, in few days the government
Modi has approved hundreds of mining and industrial projects, Special
Economic Zones. It systematically open to imperialism all sectors of
the Indian economy: from defense to insurance to natural resources -
everything is for sale. It passed a labor reform that makes dead word
rights and achievements of decades struggles of workers around the
world, bringing back the clock of history.
This way India enters strongly the world stage of imperialism, while
Indian multinationals win positions and an active role, while in the
imperialist countries the ties between the Indian multinationals and
local bosses consolidate in a relationship of collusion and alliance
- still within strife and competition on the world market and through
the economic and financial crisis. This way Indian multinationals
become for the proletariat of the imperialist countries also an
internal enemy and, on the other hand, the multinationals of the
imperialist countries fully participate in the super-exploitation of
the Indian proletariat and the loot of resources of India.
The proletarians in India and in the world are experiencing the hard
way that the bosses, from America, to Europe, to India, are united in
pursuing their bloody profits on the skin of the proletariat and the
masses. This tie on the economic sphere, results in a new political
harmony between the fascist Hindu government of Modi and the modern
style fascist governments of imperialist powers. These governments
want to walk hand in hand and the Indian government reiterate the
international pressures to stop the support to the People's War and
the struggle of the Indian people. But the workers are a single class
at the international level and they have to tighten strongly their
ties of solidarity and struggle.
For this we call on January 30 2019 an international day of action at the
factories of Indian multinational, Jindal Mittal and Tata in
particular, to bring this message, both to the workers and the
bosses, in India and the world.
We appeal to organize rallies, speeches, graffiti and all other forms
of mobilization and action that are appropriate at the level of each
country.
There is a wide range of agitation and propaganda publication, and a
mapping of the possible objectives of mobilization.
Ask for them to csgpindia@gmail.com
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