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Indian People's Front

The Indian People's Front (IPF) was a mass front organisation founded in Delhi between 24–26 April 1982. It was conceptualised by Vinod Mishra and it was operated as the open mass front of the CPIML Liberation between 1982–1994. The front primarily worked for the social and economic upliftment of Adivasis, Dalits and impoverished sections of society and mobilised them through the means of unions, rallies and conventions.

Indian People's Front
PresidentNagbhushan Patnaik[1]
SecretaryDipankar Bhattacharya[2]
FounderVinod Mishra
FoundedApril 1982
Dissolved1994

It had a significant presence in the state of Bihar (including present day Jharkhand) and also operated in the states of Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Punjab and West Bengal attempting to project itself as a national party. It was disbanded when the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation began contesting elections on its own, inheriting its organisation.

The leadership of the front included Nagbhushan Patnaik and Dipankar Bhattacharya.[3] The chairperson of the Autonomous State Demand Committee, Jayanta Rongpi was also a member of the central committee. The central committee also included Rameshwar Prasad and Ganauri Azad Harijan, among others.

History edit

Foundation edit

In 1979, the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation held a conference which sanctioned the formation of an open mass organisation. The idea was conceptualized by the general secretary Vinod Mishra to enable the party to organise with other democratic forces on the lines of a "popular, democratic and patriotic programme" and participate in electoral politics. The party had been underground since the imposition of the Emergency in India.[4] The Indian People's Front was launched in a conference organised by the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation which was held in Delhi between 24–26 April 1982. The conference was attended by the splinter factions of the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) led by Nagbhushan Patnaik and Chandra Pulla Reddy. It was intended to project itself as a "national alternative" to the Indira Gandhi led Indian National Congress.[5][6] In the beginning, the front was projected as a united front of different revolutionary groups but most other factions dropped out during its formation and it effectively became a mass organisation of the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation.[7] Satyanarayan Singh publicly denounced and ridiculed the notion of the front becoming a "national alternative".[5] On 15 October 1982, the front organised a mass rally against the Bihar Press Bill which witnessed a participation of 100,000 people according to mainstream media sources.[8]

Second conference edit

The Indian People's Front (IPF) held its second conference in Kolkata between 4–6 November 1984, in midst of the turmoil following the assassination of Indira Gandhi.[9] It contested 49 seats in the 1985 Bihar Legislative Assembly election but failed to win a single seat.[10] On 19 April 1986, the police opened fire on a protest gathering of landless farmers (primarily dalits) which resulted in the deaths of 23 people in Arwal, Bihar. Civil rights activists described the massacre as part of a systematic eradication of the moblisation of impoverished people by branding them as "Naxalite" and killing them in police encounters in collaboration with private armies and militias of rich zamindars (landlords) such as the Ranvir Sena.[11] In August, the IPF organised an armed gherao (picketing) of the Bihar Legislative Assembly in protest of the massacre. The protest is claimed by the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation, to mark a new phase in the assertiveness of revolutionary democratic forces.[6] In the same year, the front organised a "national convention of women" in Kolkata which saw a participation of around 1000 women. The convention took the initiative of giving attention to women's issues while attempting to foster cooperation and synthesis between communist women's organisations and autonomous women's groups. In an address to the convention, the president of the women's cell of the front stated that feminism and Marxism were complementary ideologies.[12] The front also organised an "all India worker's convention" in Ambernath, near Mumbai in November 1987, with trade union leader Datta Samant as the convener.[6]

Mandal commission & Economic liberalisation edit

In the 1989 Indian general election, the Indian People's Front (IPF) was able to win the Arrah constituency in Bihar with Rameshwar Prasad as the candidate. It was also able to win 7 seats and secure the second highest vote share in 14 constituencies in the 1990 Bihar Legislative Assembly election.[13] Over the years, the front had acquired a large share of the Scheduled Caste voters from the Indian National Congress in Bihar. It took the position of supporting reservations solely on the basis of social and educational backwardness and supported the implementation of the recommendations of the Mandal Commission.[14] In the 1990 election, the IPF had contested 82 seats and received a vote share of 10.56% on the contested seats.[15] During the economic liberalisation in India, it launched campaigns against price hikes and for the right to work, adopting a traditional leftist discourse.[16] On 8 October 1990, a national rally with the slogan of dam bandho kaam do (check prices and give jobs) was organised in Delhi by the front.[9] In the same month, it organised a mass rally in Patna which was noted to be the largest rally in the recorded history of the city.[10]

In the 1991 Indian general election, the IPF lost the seat of Arrah constituency but was able to send a member to the parliament (Jayanta Rongpi[17]) through the Autonomous State Demand Committee in the Karbi Anglong constituency. In the same year, four of its members in the Bihar Legislative Assembly defected to the Janata Dal under the leadership of Lalu Prasad Yadav at the height of polarisation on the Mandal issue.[10] In Uttar Pradesh, the party publication Liberation accused the Samajwadi Party of targeting the cadre and lower caste support base of the Indian People's Front with state violence and then providing them with protection if they defected preventing it from successfully organising the way it had in Bihar.[14] On 14 February 1992, in the wake of rising Hindu nationalism in India, the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (farmer's union affiliated to the Bharatiya Janata Party) killed 14 Scheduled caste landless labourers for supporting the Indian People's Front in Tikshora village near Patna.[18] At the same time, the front was able to expand its footprint in Punjab when its candidate Surjan Singh Joga won the Joga constituency in the 1992 Punjab Legislative Assembly election.[19]

Disbandment edit

In December 1992, the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation held its fifth congress in Kolkata. Following which the party came out of the underground and eventually disbanded the Indian People's Front in 1994.[6] The Samajik Parivartan Rally (Social Change Rally) on 18 March 1994, was the last rally called by the front. The rally was reported to been a gathering of tens of thousands of bare-footed and starving workers who had marched to Patna from all over Bihar; some having traveled over 100 kilometres (62 mi) on foot to reach the venue. At the time, political observers described the front to be the fastest growing leftist movement in India. From 1995 onward the party began contesting elections on its own, substituting the role of the former front.[10]

Affiliated organisations edit

The Indian People's Front (IPF) had a number of unorganised sector unions in Bihar.[8]

  • Rickshaw-Thela Chalak Mazdoor Sangha (RTCMS): an union of rickshaw and handcart drivers. Ganauri Azad Harijan was the president of the union and a member of the national executive of the Indian People's Front.
  • Bihar Jhuggi-Jhopri Bashi Sangha (BJJBS): an organisation of slum dwellers in Patna. Dinesh Singh was a fish seller and the president of the BJJBS.
  • Uttarakhand Popular Anti-Liquor Movement: The movement for the restriction and regulation of liquor sales in Uttarakhand was also affiliated to the IPF from the founding conference.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ JPRS Report: Near East & South Asia, Issue 92061. United States: Foreign Broadcast Information Service. 1987. p. 50.
  2. ^ Chand, Attar (1992). President Shankar Dayal Sharma, the Scholar and the Statesman. New Delhi: Anmol Publication. p. 128. ISBN 8-17041-678-7.
  3. ^ Farz, Ahmed (31 March 1994). "Indian People's Front loses its status as a political party". India Today. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
  4. ^ Sen, Arindam. The Life of Vinod Mishra 2015-09-23 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Karat, Prakash. Naxalism Today; At an Ideological Deadend. The Marxist, Volume: 3, No. 1, January- March 1985
  6. ^ a b c d e "Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation". from the original on 18 February 2009.
  7. ^ Omvedt, Gail. Reinventing Revolution: New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India. London; Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1993. p. 163
  8. ^ a b Joshi, Barbara R. (1986). Untouchable!: Voices of the Dalit Liberation Movement. London: Zed Books Ltd. pp. 101–102. ISBN 0-86232-459-9.
  9. ^ a b Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation. 30 years of CPI(ML) February 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ a b c d Nedumpara, Jose J. (2004). Political Economy and Class Contradictions: A Study. New Delhi: Anmol Publication. p. 114. ISBN 978-81261-171-85.
  11. ^ Ahmed, Farzand (31 May 1986). "Arwal massacre: Bihar CM Bindeshwari Dubey justify police action". India Today. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  12. ^ Omvedt, Gail (1993). Reinventing Revolution: New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India. Armonk & London: M. E. Sharpe. pp. 207-208. ISBN 0-87332-784-5.
  13. ^ Nedumpara, Jose J. (2004). Political Economy and Class Contradictions: A Study. New Delhi: Anmol Publication. pp. 5 & 144. ISBN 978-81261-171-85.
  14. ^ a b Pai, Sudha, ed. (2007). "National Seminar on Uttar Pradesh in the 1990s: Critical Perspectives". Political Process in Uttar Pradesh: Identity, Economic Reforms, and Governance. New Delhi: Pearson Longman. p. 168. ISBN 978-81-317-0797-5.
  15. ^ "Bihar 1990". Election Commission of India.
  16. ^ Omvedt, Gail (1993). Reinventing Revolution: New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India. Armonk & London: M. E. Sharpe. pp. 233. ISBN 0-87332-784-5.
  17. ^ Dutta, Madhushree; Agnes, Flavia; Adarkar, Neera (1996). The Nation, the State, and Indian Identity. Kolkata: Samya. p. 129. ISBN 81-85604-09-6.
  18. ^ Nedumpara, Jose J. (2004). Political Economy and Class Contradictions: A Study. New Delhi: Anmol Publication. p. 120. ISBN 978-81261-171-85.
  19. ^ Aggarwal, J. C. (1992). Agarwal, S. P. (ed.). Modern History of Punjab: Relevant Select Documents. New Delhi: Concept Publication Company. p. 192. ISBN 81-7022-431-4.

indian, people, front, mass, front, organisation, founded, delhi, between, april, 1982, conceptualised, vinod, mishra, operated, open, mass, front, cpiml, liberation, between, 1982, 1994, front, primarily, worked, social, economic, upliftment, adivasis, dalits. The Indian People s Front IPF was a mass front organisation founded in Delhi between 24 26 April 1982 It was conceptualised by Vinod Mishra and it was operated as the open mass front of the CPIML Liberation between 1982 1994 The front primarily worked for the social and economic upliftment of Adivasis Dalits and impoverished sections of society and mobilised them through the means of unions rallies and conventions Indian People s FrontPresidentNagbhushan Patnaik 1 SecretaryDipankar Bhattacharya 2 FounderVinod MishraFoundedApril 1982Dissolved1994Politics of IndiaPolitical partiesElections It had a significant presence in the state of Bihar including present day Jharkhand and also operated in the states of Uttar Pradesh Uttarakhand Punjab and West Bengal attempting to project itself as a national party It was disbanded when the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation began contesting elections on its own inheriting its organisation The leadership of the front included Nagbhushan Patnaik and Dipankar Bhattacharya 3 The chairperson of the Autonomous State Demand Committee Jayanta Rongpi was also a member of the central committee The central committee also included Rameshwar Prasad and Ganauri Azad Harijan among others Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Second conference 1 3 Mandal commission amp Economic liberalisation 1 4 Disbandment 2 Affiliated organisations 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory editFoundation edit In 1979 the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation held a conference which sanctioned the formation of an open mass organisation The idea was conceptualized by the general secretary Vinod Mishra to enable the party to organise with other democratic forces on the lines of a popular democratic and patriotic programme and participate in electoral politics The party had been underground since the imposition of the Emergency in India 4 The Indian People s Front was launched in a conference organised by the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation which was held in Delhi between 24 26 April 1982 The conference was attended by the splinter factions of the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist led by Nagbhushan Patnaik and Chandra Pulla Reddy It was intended to project itself as a national alternative to the Indira Gandhi led Indian National Congress 5 6 In the beginning the front was projected as a united front of different revolutionary groups but most other factions dropped out during its formation and it effectively became a mass organisation of the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation 7 Satyanarayan Singh publicly denounced and ridiculed the notion of the front becoming a national alternative 5 On 15 October 1982 the front organised a mass rally against the Bihar Press Bill which witnessed a participation of 100 000 people according to mainstream media sources 8 Second conference edit The Indian People s Front IPF held its second conference in Kolkata between 4 6 November 1984 in midst of the turmoil following the assassination of Indira Gandhi 9 It contested 49 seats in the 1985 Bihar Legislative Assembly election but failed to win a single seat 10 On 19 April 1986 the police opened fire on a protest gathering of landless farmers primarily dalits which resulted in the deaths of 23 people in Arwal Bihar Civil rights activists described the massacre as part of a systematic eradication of the moblisation of impoverished people by branding them as Naxalite and killing them in police encounters in collaboration with private armies and militias of rich zamindars landlords such as the Ranvir Sena 11 In August the IPF organised an armed gherao picketing of the Bihar Legislative Assembly in protest of the massacre The protest is claimed by the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation to mark a new phase in the assertiveness of revolutionary democratic forces 6 In the same year the front organised a national convention of women in Kolkata which saw a participation of around 1000 women The convention took the initiative of giving attention to women s issues while attempting to foster cooperation and synthesis between communist women s organisations and autonomous women s groups In an address to the convention the president of the women s cell of the front stated that feminism and Marxism were complementary ideologies 12 The front also organised an all India worker s convention in Ambernath near Mumbai in November 1987 with trade union leader Datta Samant as the convener 6 Mandal commission amp Economic liberalisation edit In the 1989 Indian general election the Indian People s Front IPF was able to win the Arrah constituency in Bihar with Rameshwar Prasad as the candidate It was also able to win 7 seats and secure the second highest vote share in 14 constituencies in the 1990 Bihar Legislative Assembly election 13 Over the years the front had acquired a large share of the Scheduled Caste voters from the Indian National Congress in Bihar It took the position of supporting reservations solely on the basis of social and educational backwardness and supported the implementation of the recommendations of the Mandal Commission 14 In the 1990 election the IPF had contested 82 seats and received a vote share of 10 56 on the contested seats 15 During the economic liberalisation in India it launched campaigns against price hikes and for the right to work adopting a traditional leftist discourse 16 On 8 October 1990 a national rally with the slogan of dam bandho kaam do check prices and give jobs was organised in Delhi by the front 9 In the same month it organised a mass rally in Patna which was noted to be the largest rally in the recorded history of the city 10 In the 1991 Indian general election the IPF lost the seat of Arrah constituency but was able to send a member to the parliament Jayanta Rongpi 17 through the Autonomous State Demand Committee in the Karbi Anglong constituency In the same year four of its members in the Bihar Legislative Assembly defected to the Janata Dal under the leadership of Lalu Prasad Yadav at the height of polarisation on the Mandal issue 10 In Uttar Pradesh the party publication Liberation accused the Samajwadi Party of targeting the cadre and lower caste support base of the Indian People s Front with state violence and then providing them with protection if they defected preventing it from successfully organising the way it had in Bihar 14 On 14 February 1992 in the wake of rising Hindu nationalism in India the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh farmer s union affiliated to the Bharatiya Janata Party killed 14 Scheduled caste landless labourers for supporting the Indian People s Front in Tikshora village near Patna 18 At the same time the front was able to expand its footprint in Punjab when its candidate Surjan Singh Joga won the Joga constituency in the 1992 Punjab Legislative Assembly election 19 Disbandment edit In December 1992 the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation held its fifth congress in Kolkata Following which the party came out of the underground and eventually disbanded the Indian People s Front in 1994 6 The Samajik Parivartan Rally Social Change Rally on 18 March 1994 was the last rally called by the front The rally was reported to been a gathering of tens of thousands of bare footed and starving workers who had marched to Patna from all over Bihar some having traveled over 100 kilometres 62 mi on foot to reach the venue At the time political observers described the front to be the fastest growing leftist movement in India From 1995 onward the party began contesting elections on its own substituting the role of the former front 10 Affiliated organisations editThe Indian People s Front IPF had a number of unorganised sector unions in Bihar 8 Rickshaw Thela Chalak Mazdoor Sangha RTCMS an union of rickshaw and handcart drivers Ganauri Azad Harijan was the president of the union and a member of the national executive of the Indian People s Front Bihar Jhuggi Jhopri Bashi Sangha BJJBS an organisation of slum dwellers in Patna Dinesh Singh was a fish seller and the president of the BJJBS Uttarakhand Popular Anti Liquor Movement The movement for the restriction and regulation of liquor sales in Uttarakhand was also affiliated to the IPF from the founding conference 6 See also editBAMCEF Bahujan Samaj Party Lal Sena All India Students AssociationReferences edit JPRS Report Near East amp South Asia Issue 92061 United States Foreign Broadcast Information Service 1987 p 50 Chand Attar 1992 President Shankar Dayal Sharma the Scholar and the Statesman New Delhi Anmol Publication p 128 ISBN 8 17041 678 7 Farz Ahmed 31 March 1994 Indian People s Front loses its status as a political party India Today Retrieved 22 December 2021 Sen Arindam The Life of Vinod Mishra Archived 2015 09 23 at the Wayback Machine a b Karat Prakash Naxalism Today At an Ideological Deadend The Marxist Volume 3 No 1 January March 1985 a b c d e Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation Archived from the original on 18 February 2009 Omvedt Gail Reinventing Revolution New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India London Armonk NY M E Sharpe 1993 p 163 a b Joshi Barbara R 1986 Untouchable Voices of the Dalit Liberation Movement London Zed Books Ltd pp 101 102 ISBN 0 86232 459 9 a b Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation 30 years of CPI ML Archived February 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Nedumpara Jose J 2004 Political Economy and Class Contradictions A Study New Delhi Anmol Publication p 114 ISBN 978 81261 171 85 Ahmed Farzand 31 May 1986 Arwal massacre Bihar CM Bindeshwari Dubey justify police action India Today Retrieved 5 April 2020 Omvedt Gail 1993 Reinventing Revolution New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India Armonk amp London M E Sharpe pp 207 208 ISBN 0 87332 784 5 Nedumpara Jose J 2004 Political Economy and Class Contradictions A Study New Delhi Anmol Publication pp 5 amp 144 ISBN 978 81261 171 85 a b Pai Sudha ed 2007 National Seminar on Uttar Pradesh in the 1990s Critical Perspectives Political Process in Uttar Pradesh Identity Economic Reforms and Governance New Delhi Pearson Longman p 168 ISBN 978 81 317 0797 5 Bihar 1990 Election Commission of India Omvedt Gail 1993 Reinventing Revolution New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India Armonk amp London M E Sharpe pp 233 ISBN 0 87332 784 5 Dutta Madhushree Agnes Flavia Adarkar Neera 1996 The Nation the State and Indian Identity Kolkata Samya p 129 ISBN 81 85604 09 6 Nedumpara Jose J 2004 Political Economy and Class Contradictions A Study New Delhi Anmol Publication p 120 ISBN 978 81261 171 85 Aggarwal J C 1992 Agarwal S P ed Modern History of Punjab Relevant Select Documents New Delhi Concept Publication Company p 192 ISBN 81 7022 431 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian People 27s Front amp oldid 1111727555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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