Fascism: August 2007 Archives

By Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK (IPS) - Thailand's rural voters stood up to the country's powerful military by refusing to march in step with the junta's drum-beat for political change at the first-ever referendum for a new constitution held here.

Voters from the country's north-east, home to the poorest section of the electorate, delivered an emphatic 'no' vote in the plebiscite held on Sunday to approve the country's 18th constitution. According to the final tallies confirmed on Monday, nearly 62 percent of those from the north-east who voted, or 4.6 million people, cast a ballot against the constitution drafted by a military-appointed committee.

This rejection echoed in other areas, too, such as the northern provinces, where 46 percent, or 2.29 million, of those who voted marked the negative box on the ballot paper. In all, some 10.2 million people, or 41.4 percent of the electorate that participated, came together as part of the 'no' bandwagon.

It is a number that takes the sheen off the pro-military political establishment claiming an emphatic victory at the referendum, where those who voted for the constitution accounted for 56.7 percent of the ballots cast, or an estimated 14.3 million voters. ... Full story

SINGUR : TATA Car Project

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(Videos and Photo Essay)




     


 


 


CNN : (click on the picture to play)

 Description: Singur's ground reality unearthed





    

 


 


CNN : (click on the picture to play)

Description
: Compensation for Singur farmers







    

 


 


Google Video Clip: 3 min: (click on the picture to play)

Description
: Budhdhadeb-er Gestapo bahinir Singur-dholai abhijaan.
Police atrocities on villagers of Singur. The CPIM-     path of industrializatin
of West Bengal.

That Night in Nandigram

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By Soumitra Basu, Editor, Anyaswar

Published in : Guruchandali (in Bengali)

It is a story of that horrific night. The night of 14th of March, 2007. After the completion of "Operation Nandigram" in broad day light, CPM called a local 12 hour strike (bandh) in Nandigram. A bandh was called in the evening hours in such a remote place where people mostly keep themselves indoor after sunset. Why was that called then?

After the first bout of police action in the daylight when the news came that around 60 were killed, the second phase and the most horrendous phase was waiting to happen.

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About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Fascism category from August 2007.

Fascism: April 2007 is the previous archive.

Fascism: October 2007 is the next archive.

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