Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Ten myths about affirmative action | സംവരണത്തെപ്പറ്റിയുള്ള 10 മിത്തുകള്‍

Ten myths about affirmative action

University of Wisconsin graduate student Elizabeth Wrigley-Field, a member of the Teaching Assistants' Association, unravels the lies of affirmative action opponents.


September 19, 2011

STUDENTS OF color in the incoming freshman class at the University of Wisconsin in Madison must have had a disorienting second week of the semester. On September 13, they were greeted by a small group of old suited white men at podiums, telling them they don't belong here--and over 850 angry students telling those men they're wrong.

The press conference held by the misnamed Center for Equal Opportunity (CEO) and the debate with their uninspiring spokesperson Roger Clegg later that same day left me less than impressed with the argument that the university's affirmative action policies discriminate against white people.
But what did impress me mightily was the students who again and again stood up to share their stories, their anger that men like Clegg don't think they matter, and their determination to assert that they do. Inspired by those students, here is my defense of race-based affirmative action. Put aside that the richest country in world history treats education like a scarce commodity to be fought over. Race-based affirmative action is simply a matter of justice.

Here are ten myths that people like Clegg spin about affirmative action--and the facts that dispel those myths.

Myth Number 1: Students of color admitted under affirmative action aren't admitted on merit.

If there was one phrase Roger Clegg kept using at his debate that made the entire audience hiss, it was "lowered expectations." That's what Clegg says affirmative action means for minority students. But what he calls lowered expectations, I call recognition of a higher achievement.

According to the Black Commentator, "Wisconsin, and in particular the Milwaukee area, justly merit the invidious distinction of the Worst Place in the Nation to be Black." One reason? The staggering extent to which the criminal justice system in this state is directed at young Black men and their communities.

Sociologist Pamela Oliver has shown that Wisconsin's racial disparity in sentencing people convicted of new drug offenses dramatically dwarfs the disparity in every other state--including New York under its infamous Rockefeller Drug Laws.

In short, succeeding in high school under these conditions is a real achievement--one that frankly dwarfs managing to study SAT vocabulary in a well-funded suburban high school where students are expected to go to college.

And speaking of the SAT and other standardized tests, it's worth understanding some of the reasons for the racial discrepancies in test scores. As Adam Sanchez explained for SocialistWorker.org, since standardized tests are created to sort students, they only serve their function if some students consistently perform better than others.
This has two implications. First, test designers need questions that lots of students will get wrong, and the easiest way to do this is to use questions that draw less on classroom experiences that all children share than on home experiences that only some did. (The need for variation in scores is also why the exams are timed, even though this makes them much more artificial.)

Second, test designers need questions to agree on who the high-scoring students are--otherwise, everyone would score somewhere near the middle. This means that before new questions are added, they are vetted to make sure that they pick out the same students who already are scoring well on the tests. (In testing parlance, such questions are "reliable"--which doesn't mean they are "valid" at capturing real intellectual merit.)

These reasons help to explain why the best predictors of standardized test scores are parents' wealth and education.

Myth Number 2: White students are admitted to college solely on merit.
Underlying all the attacks on affirmative action is the idea that without it, college admissions are race-neutral and meritocratic. But as my fellow UW student Paul Pryse wrote after the last attack on affirmative action at UW:
As many as 15 percent of freshmen at America's top schools are white students who failed to meet their university's minimum standards for admission, according to Peter Schmidt, deputy editor of the Chronicle of Higher Education. These kids are "people with a long-standing relationship with the university," or in other words, the children of faculty, wealthy alumni and politicians.
According to Schmidt, these unqualified but privileged kids are nearly twice as common on top campuses as Black and Latino students who had benefited from affirmative action.
There's no such thing as a race-neutral college admissions policy in America. "Colorblind" just means the advantages and disadvantages are rendered invisible.
Myth Number 3: Affirmative action hurts students of color by putting them in environments for which they aren't prepared.
This might have been Clegg's single nastiest argument of the night--that because UW-Madison employs affirmative action, it admits students who are, in Clegg's words, "guaranteed to fail."
Students of color do have a harder road at college than most white students, but it isn't because they're unqualified--it's because discrimination and hostility don't stop at campus gates. Campus cultures have been improved by the victories of antiracist student movements over the past 50 years, but they are still alienating at best and vicious at worst for some students.
Only this past summer at UW, a fraternity hung a life-size black-clad Spiderman doll by its neck from the balcony of its house on fraternity row. If Black students find inhospitable a campus that mere months ago saw the echoes of lynching, only a racist would think that the answer is to keep them off that campus--for their own good.
Myth Number 4: Maybe affirmative action was important once, but those days are long past.
It's hard to imagine anyone making this argument seriously, but then again, Clegg--who, under student questioning, said he wasn't sure whether Black students on average attend less well-funded schools than white kids--didn't seem to be joking. Here are just a few relevant facts:
The median Black family has just 5 percent of the wealth of the median white family (with Hispanics much closer to Blacks than whites)--this is one of the most important ways that advantages and disadvantages are passed down over generations.
Another is segregated schools. A majority of Black students in Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey, and New York attend schools that are over 90 percent Black and Latino, and most white students attend schools that are overwhelmingly white. Here in Wisconsin, the Milwaukee school district, with 77 percent Black and Hispanic students, spends $3,081 less per student than the nearby Maple Dale-Indian Hill district, where 80 percent of students are white. The average Black or Latino K-12 student in the country attends a school in which most students are poor.
Meanwhile, one of the most-ballyhooed areas of progress--the narrowing gap in high school graduation rates between Black and white students--has been shown by sociologists Stephanie Ewert and Becky Pettitt to be a statistical lie: once you include prisoners, the progress disappears. The biggest change is that now the Black students who don't graduate high school are locked up.
Myth Number 5: Affirmative action policies in colleges distract attention from disparities earlier in the pipeline.
This one--which Clegg also threw out at the debate in Madison--is just bizarre. Have you ever heard any proponent of affirmative action say, "Well, I would support equal access to quality K-12 schools, but I'm too busy defending affirmative action at colleges?"
Affirmative action at every level helps future generations at every level. Many students of all races are being taught by teachers who may have benefited from affirmative action programs--and who had their sense of education's power and importance shaped by the struggle for affirmative action and civil rights at their colleges.
On the other hand, we might ask those making this argument about their commitment to reforming "the pipeline." I was next in line to question Clegg when the debate unceremoniously ended, with a long line of students still waiting to speak. My question was simple: Since he and his organization apparently want schooling to be colorblind, what have they done to combat residential segregation, by far the biggest contributor to different schooling for different races?
Myth Number 6: Eliminating affirmative action would be fairer to Asian students.
This might be the CEO's most important left cover for their position--the idea that UW-Madison is discriminating not only against white students, but Asian students as well.
As Chinese-American student government leader and Student Labor Action Coalition member Beth Huang pointed out at a pro-affirmative action rally on campus here in Madison, this argument lumps together very diverse populations into the category "Asian." In particular, Wisconsin has a large Hmong population--settled in the Midwest as refugees after the CIA had recruited them into its "Secret War" in Laos--who are largely segregated and impoverished, and should be beneficiaries of affirmative action.
However, it's also true that some "holistic admissions policies" used at universities--such as privileging certain kinds of extracurricular experiences--can function to limit the number of Chinese and Chinese-American students on campus. The main beneficiaries are not other students of color, who remain underrepresented on campuses, but wealthy white students.
Proponents of affirmative action should fight efforts to divide populations that historically have faced discrimination in the United States.
Myth Number 7: White students are only harmed by affirmative action policies.
As it happens, the biggest beneficiaries of affirmative action programs in general--by far--have been white women. But this article is about race-based affirmative action, and my case is that these race-based programs are essential for white students--for the sake of their own education.
As we waited in line to question Clegg last week, the student in front of me told me that she had multiple white students in her classes tell her they'd never met a Black person before. Can it really be in these students' interest to have African American students kept out of college, so the country's Black population remains an abstraction to them?
As left-wing education expert Jonathan Kozol points out, research shows that "the strongest opposition to integrated schooling among white people is among those who have never experienced it." Kozol cites studies showing that "60 percent of young people of all races feel not only that they will receive a better education in an integrated setting, but that the federal government should make sure that it happens."

Myth Number 8: Anything that smacks of "quotas" is rigid and suspect.
Quotas became a dirty word in the 1990s, when Democratic President Bill Clinton led the effort to get rid of them--in the name of "mending, not ending" affirmative action. A series of Supreme Court decisions then sharply limited the ways that colleges are allowed to use race in admissions.
But what a quota really means is that there is accountability to stated diversity goals. Here at UW-Madison, the university's 10-year diversity initiative, Plan 2008, fell far short of its goals--which the college's Academic Planning Analysis division attributed to a lack of increased financial aid. Today, the university is less than 4 percent Hispanic, less than 3 percent Black, less than 2 percent Southeast Asian and less than 1 percent Native American. And a third of these students never graduate.

In the same 10 years, the university recruited faculty of color, but failed to increase its rates of granting tenure to them. Faculty of color often face a dilemma in which they are expected to mentor many students of color and serve on every diversity committee, but are not really rewarded for this work in the tenure system.

A system that enforced more accountability to its stated diversity aims would force departments and the university administration to address this kind of discrepancy. Without this accountability, it is far too easy to never question the basic operating and funding structures of the university, while bemoaning the lack of progress on diversity.

Myth Number 9: If we had class-based affirmative action, we wouldn't need race-based affirmative action.

Racial and economic disadvantages in education are deeply intertwined, but that doesn't mean the racial disadvantages can be reduced to class.
Because of residential segregation, even when a Black and a white family have the same household income, it's very likely that the Black family's children go to far worse schools. The "war on drugs" has led to an all-out assault on Black communities in particular. And in the current era--to quote sociologist Matt Desmond, commenting on his study of evictions in Milwaukee--"eviction is for Black women what incarceration is for Black men." It should be obvious that these processes have a tremendous effect on children.
Moreover, the most important dimensions of class--wealth, not income--are the hardest to account for in college admissions, especially when it comes to ensuring racial justice.
One reason wealth is harder to measure is that many government programs are designed to make sure the poor--as opposed to the rich--don't get benefits they don't qualify for. One result is that it is generally easy to verify whether someone is officially living in poverty, but not always whether another family has been living paycheck to paycheck, while still another with the same income has valuable assets.

Myth Number 10: We have to choose between class-based and race-based affirmative action.

Have you ever noticed that the only time Republicans seem to care about how poor kids will get to college is when they can use this concern as their battering ram against racial justice?

There is every reason to support affirmative action based on both race and class. And although I began by setting aside the way education is being made a scarce commodity, there's every reason to fight that, too.
Beneath the attack on affirmative action is the idea that not everyone is entitled to a good education. But the money is there for quality, integrated schools--in the military budget; in the bailouts going to the banks; in the taxes never paid by corporations and the extremely wealthy. Any social organization that requires children to spend their childhoods competing to see whether they'll be among the lucky few to attend the right schools isn't rational.
So at the same time that we fight for justice in college admissions--and justice means affirmative action--we should fight for more educational opportunity for all students. The rallying chant of this defense of education should be: "Black, Latino, Arab, Asian and white, rich or poor--education is a right!"
Or maybe it will be the cry that we came back to last week, over and over again: "Power to the people!"

Sunday, September 4, 2011

ക്ഷേത്രസ്വത്ത്‌: അഡ്വ. കമ്മിഷന്‍ റിപ്പോര്‍ട്ട്‌ നിര്‍ണായകമാകും



മംഗളം | Sep 4, 2011

ന്യൂഡല്‍ഹി: ശ്രീപത്മനാഭ സ്വാമി ക്ഷേത്രത്തില്‍ ദേവപ്രശ്‌നം നടത്തിയതുമായി ബന്ധപ്പെട്ടു തിരുവിതാംകൂര്‍ രാജകുടുംബം സുപ്രീം കോടതിയില്‍നിന്നു രൂക്ഷവിമര്‍ശനം ഏറ്റുവാങ്ങിയ സാഹചര്യത്തില്‍ കോടതിക്കു മുമ്പാകെയുള്ള അഡ്വക്കേറ്റ്‌ കമ്മിഷണറുടെ റിപ്പോര്‍ട്ട്‌ നിര്‍ണായകമാകും. 2008 ല്‍ തിരുവനന്തപുരം സബ്‌ജഡ്‌ജ് കോടതി മുമ്പാകെ സമര്‍പ്പിച്ച റിപ്പോര്‍ട്ട്‌ കഴിഞ്ഞ ദിവസം നടന്ന വാദത്തിനിടെ ഹര്‍ജിക്കാര്‍ സുപ്രീംകോടതിയില്‍ നല്‍കിയിരുന്നു. ക്ഷേത്രത്തില്‍നിന്ന്‌ ആരാധനയ്‌ക്കു ശേഷം മടങ്ങുന്ന ചിലര്‍ ചെറിയ അളവില്‍ വീതം ക്ഷേത്ര സമ്പത്ത്‌ കടത്താനുള്ള ശ്രമങ്ങള്‍ നടത്തുന്നുണ്ടെന്നു ഹര്‍ജിക്കാര്‍ സുപ്രീംകോടതിയില്‍ അറിയിക്കുകയും ചെയ്‌തിരുന്നു.

ക്ഷേത്രത്തിലെ വസ്‌തുവകകള്‍ സംബന്ധിച്ചു കണക്കെടുക്കാന്‍ പോവുകയാണെന്ന്‌ 2007ല്‍ ക്ഷേത്രം കമ്മിറ്റി നോട്ടീസ്‌ പുറപ്പെടുവിച്ചിരുന്നു. എന്നാല്‍ ഇതില്‍ വന്‍ ക്രമക്കേടുണ്ടെന്നും ആരും ഇല്ലാത്ത സമയത്താണു കണക്കെടുപ്പു നടത്തുന്നതെന്നും അതിനാല്‍ ഇതു തടയണമെന്നും ആവശ്യപ്പെട്ട്‌ എം. വിശ്വംഭരന്‍ എന്നൊരാളും മറ്റൊരു ഭക്‌തനും ചേര്‍ന്നു കോടതിയില്‍ ഹര്‍ജി നല്‍കി. തുടര്‍ന്ന്‌ 2008 ഒക്‌ടോബറില്‍ രണ്ടു പേരടങ്ങുന്ന അഡ്വക്കേറ്റ്‌ കമ്മിഷനെ ക്ഷേത്ത്രിലെ വസ്‌തുക്കളുടെ പരിശോധന നടത്താന്‍ കോടതി നിയോഗിച്ചു. സാധാരണ ദിവസങ്ങളില്‍ പൂജയ്‌ക്ക് ഉപയോഗിക്കുന്നതും വിശേഷാവസരങ്ങളില്‍ പൂജയ്‌ക്കും മറ്റു കാര്യങ്ങള്‍ക്കുമായി തുറക്കുന്ന അറയുമാണ്‌ ഇവര്‍ പരിശോധനയ്‌ക്കു വിധേയമാക്കിയത്‌. എന്നാല്‍ വ്യാപകമായ ക്രമക്കേടാണ്‌ ഇവര്‍ അവിടെ കണ്ടെത്തിയത്‌.

മരതകം പിടിപ്പിച്ച തങ്കക്കുടയുടെ 14 സ്വര്‍ണ തൂക്കുകള്‍ കാണാനില്ലെന്നു കമ്മിഷന്‍ കണ്ടെത്തി. വെള്ളിപ്പിടിയുള്ള ഒരു സ്വര്‍ണക്കുടയുടെ 44 തൂക്കുകളും അപ്രത്യക്ഷമായിരുന്നു. ഈ തൂക്കുകള്‍ തൂക്കിയിട്ടിരുന്ന സ്വര്‍ണനൂലിനു പകരം ഇരുമ്പിന്റേയും ചെമ്പിന്റേയും നൂലുകള്‍ ഉപയോഗിച്ചിരുന്നതും കമ്മിഷന്‍ കണ്ടെത്തി. സ്വര്‍ണ നൂലുകള്‍ മിക്കതും അപ്രത്യക്ഷമായിരുന്നു. ക്ഷേത്രത്തിലുണ്ടായിരുന്ന രണ്ടു മുളപാലികകളും പൊട്ടിയ നിലയിലാണു കണ്ടെത്തിയത്‌. നാലു വെള്ളിമണികള്‍ ഉണ്ടായിരുന്നതില്‍ രണ്ടെണ്ണം കാണാനില്ലായിരുന്നു. അവിടെ സൂക്ഷിച്ചിരുന്ന നീല അങ്കിക്കൂട്ടം നഷ്‌ടപ്പെടാന്‍ സാധ്യതയുണ്ടെന്നും കമ്മിഷന്‍ കണ്ടെത്തി. എന്നാല്‍ വസ്‌തുവകകള്‍ നഷ്‌ടപ്പെട്ടതു സംബന്ധിച്ചു ക്ഷേത്രം അധികാരികള്‍ക്കു യാതൊരു വിവരവും ഉണ്ടായിരുന്നില്ലെന്നു നവംബറില്‍ കോടതിയില്‍ സമര്‍പ്പിച്ച റിപ്പോര്‍ട്ടില്‍ കമ്മിഷന്‍ പറഞ്ഞു. വസ്‌തുവകകളുടെ ഭാരം നോക്കാന്‍ ശ്രമിച്ചപ്പോള്‍ പരിശോധനാ സമയത്ത്‌ കൂടെയുണ്ടായിരുന്ന രാജകുടുംബാംഗം ഇതു തടഞ്ഞെന്നും റിപ്പോര്‍ട്ടിലുണ്ട്‌. എത്രയും വേഗം ക്ഷേത്രത്തിലെ വസ്‌തുക്കളുടെ മൂല്യനിര്‍ണയം നടത്തണമെന്നും സുരക്ഷ ഉറപ്പാക്കണമെന്നും കമ്മിഷന്‍ നിര്‍ദേശിച്ചിരുന്നു.

ഇപ്പോള്‍ സുപ്രീംകോടതിയുടെ പരിഗണനയിലുള്ള കേസില്‍ വിശ്വംഭരനും കക്ഷിയാണ്‌. അദ്ദേഹത്തിനുവേണ്ടി കഴിഞ്ഞ ദിവസം ഹാജരായ അഡ്വ. പി.ബി. സുരേഷ്‌, ക്ഷേത്രത്തില്‍ ദിവസവും ആരാധനയ്‌ക്ക് എത്തുന്നവര്‍ ക്ഷേത്രത്തിലെ വിലപിടിപ്പുള്ളവ ചെറിയ അളവില്‍ വീതം കടത്താന്‍ ശ്രമിക്കുന്നുണ്ടെന്ന്‌ അഡ്വക്കേറ്റ്‌ കമ്മിഷണര്‍ ചൂണ്ടിക്കാട്ടിയ വിവരം കോടതിയുടെ ശ്രദ്ധയില്‍പ്പെടുത്തിയിരുന്നു. ഈ മാസം 12നാണ്‌ സുപ്രീംകോടതി വീണ്ടും കേസ്‌ പരിഗണിക്കുന്നത്‌. നേരത്തെ ക്ഷേത്രത്തില്‍നിന്ന്‌ ഉത്രാടം തിരുനാള്‍ മാര്‍ത്താണ്ഡ വര്‍മ സ്വത്തുക്കള്‍ കടത്തുന്നുവെന്ന പ്രതിപക്ഷ നേതാവ്‌ വി.എസ്‌. അച്യുതാനന്ദന്റെ പ്രസ്‌താവന ഏറെ വിവാദമായിരുന്നു.

Friday, September 2, 2011

വിക്കിലീക്സ് : കൊക്കക്കോള, പെപ്സിക്കോള, പ്ലാച്ചിമട സമരങ്ങളും ഇടതുപക്ഷവും

AFTER CLOSING COKE, KERALA ACTIVISTS TARGET PEPSI

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 CHENNAI 000314

SUBJECT: AFTER CLOSING COKE, KERALA ACTIVISTS TARGET PEPSI

REFS:  (A) 06 CHENNAI 0109, (B) 05 CHENNAI 2087
Link: http://wikileaks.org/cable/2007/05/07CHENNAI314.html

¶1. (SBU) SUMMARY: On April 10, Pepsi won a four-year court battle  for survival in Kerala.  But the legal victory has spurred a battle  on another front:  a virulent media campaign directed against it.  A
similar campaign succeeded in locking out Coca Cola in 2004, despite  court verdicts in Coke's favor.  Pepsi's case is somewhat different. Unlike Coke, Pepsi's Kerala plant is located in an industrial park
which offers legal protection from hostile village councils. Nonetheless, activists opposed to multinational corporations are clamoring for government action to close down Pepsi, but the state
government is divided on the advisability of such a move. 

END SUMMARY.
 
COKE'S EXPERIENCE: CAUGHT ON THE WRONG SIDE OF POLITICS


¶2. (SBU) When Coke began production in Kerala in 2000, a leftist  coalition led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) governed the state.  A year later Kerala voted out the CPI(M) coalition and Congress took power.  Local resentment over a shortage of drinking water in the drought-prone villages around Coke's premises soon led to regular agitations against the company.  In April 2003, the panchayat (village council) of a nearby village ruled by the leftist Janata Dal party refused to renew Coke's license.  Despite the panchayat's ruling, Coke was able to continue operations for almost a year due to the support of the Congress-led state government and the Kerala High Court.  But, the Congress-led state government reversed itself in February 2004 and barred Coke from drawing groundwater, effectively ordering the plant to cease operations.  In April 2005, Coke obtained a High Court verdict in its favor, which permitted the use of up to 500,000 liters of water daily.

¶3. (SBU) In May 2006, the CPI(M) returned to power with Coke's fiercest opponent, V.S. Achuthanandan, as Chief Minister.  When an Indian nongovernmental organization alleged in August 2006 that Coke and Pepsi contained high levels of pesticides, Achuthananandan's government promptly banned the production and sale of both companies' products.  Though it was not actually producing in the state, Coke was forced to halt Kerala sales of product it was bringing in from neighboring Tamil Nadu.  The Kerala High Court, however, rescinded the government order in September 2006, allowing both companies to resume sales of their products in Kerala.

¶4. (SBU) "Technically, we can restart production because the panchayat has given us a conditional license following the April 2005 High Court order," said Coke's General Manager Vikas Kochar. But Kochar added that Coke has not restarted production and has no plans to do so because of the prevailing hostility of the local community.  

Appeals against the High Court order filed by the panchayat and the state government are pending in the Indian Supreme Court.  In addition, the state's Pollution Control Board repeatedly denied Coke environmental clearance on the grounds that the factory's effluent allegedly contains heavy metals.  Having given up hope of restarting production in the near future, Coke has shifted one of the three production lines out of the state and has either retired or redeployed almost the entire staff.  According to Kochar, Coke has also stopped the free supply of drinking water to the neighboring villages.

WITH COKE GONE PEPSI FINDS ITSELF IN THE CROSSHAIRS


¶5. (SBU) While Coke was bearing the brunt of leftist opposition, Pepsi managed to quietly continue doing businessUnlike Coke, Pepsi's facility is located within an industrial park, which provides it protection against the jurisdiction of the local panchayat.  Undeterred by this legal impediment, the panchayat still canceled Pepsi's license in 2003.  After a four year legal battle, during which Pepsi operated under a stay of the cancellation, the Kerala High Court ruled in April 2007 that the panchayat had no right to cancel the license of a factory located in a notified industrial area under the terms of the Industrial Township Area Development Act of 1999.  (NOTE:  The Act was enacted with cases such as Pepsi's in mind:  to protect investors from cumbersome licensing procedures and hostile bureaucracy it exempted industrial parks from the purview of the panchayats.  END NOTE.)

¶6. (SBU) The unambiguous court verdict did not end the matter.  In fact, it has only served to rile Pepsi's critics.  Janata Dal Member of Parliament, M.P. Veerendrakumar, whose family runs one of Kerala's leading daily newspapers, is spearheading an anti-Pepsi media campaign.  Chief Minister Achuthanandan, whose district is in the area of Pepsi' plant, reacted to the court verdict by saying the panchayat's rights would be restored, and he reportedly indicated that the government would consider amending the Industrial Township Area Development Act.

¶7. (SBU) The architect of the Industrial Township Area Development Act told post that he believes that chances of amending the law are remote, although he added that one cannot be too sure given the CPI(M)'s "crazy leadership."  According to journalists, serious differences still persist between the Department of Industries and the Department of Local Administration (which governs the panchayats) on the issue.  They point out that the Advocate General's office received conflicting directions from these departments, one supporting the company and the other the panchayat. The journalists told post that the Department of Industries is aware that any attempt to restore the panchayat's right to cancel industrial licenses at will would undermine the attractiveness of its industrial parks and expose investors, particularly in the manufacturing sector, to the whims of local politicians.


¶8. (SBU) COMMENT: The judiciary seems to be Coke and Pepsi's only reliable ally in all of Kerala.  But Coke's experience shows that judicial verdicts alone are not sufficient to carry the day in Kerala's rough and tumble political environment.  Although Pepsi's location in an industrial park afforded it the support of the state's Department of Industries, the company still faces a threat to its ability to do business in Kerala.  Companies, particularly multinationals, setting up operations in Kerala will face the possibility of such problems until Kerala's governing class changes its mindset and focuses on the need to create more jobs within the state.  

END COMMENT.

HOPPER



വിക്കി ലീക്സ് : ആര്‍ലെന്‍ സ്പെക്റ്ററിന്റെ സന്ദര്‍ശനം - വി കെ ബാലി, മനോരമ എഡിറ്റോറിയല്‍ ബോര്‍ഡ്, അച്യുതാനന്ദന്‍ എന്നിവരുമായി കൂടിക്കാഴ്ച

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 CHENNAI 000054 SIPDIS

SENSITIVE E.O. 12958: N/A

SUBJECT: CODEL SPECTER IN SOUTH INDIA: COMMUNISTS, COMPUTERS AND CULTURE

¶1. (U) Summary: During a December 17-22 visit to the south Indian states of Kerala and Karnataka, Senator Arlen Specter (R-Pennsylvania) viewed first-hand India's high-tech and business boom, met with judicial officials and journalists, and experienced traditional culture and politics, the latter in a lively meeting with Kerala's communist Chief Minister. Meeting topics included the war in Iraq, the U.S.-India civil nuclear accord, the impact of out-sourcing on U.S. jobs, and judicial activism and reform. The south India destinations for Senator Specter and his small delegation were Kochi and Thiruvananathapuram, the commercial and political capitals of Kerala, and Bangalore, the main city of neighboring Karnataka. End summary.

Chief Minister Revisits the Cold War


¶2. (SBU) On December 21 in Thiruvananthapuram (which is also still known by its former name, Trivandrum), the capital of Kerala, Senator Specter, joined by Chennai Principal Officer Hopper, met with Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan (Communist Party of India-Marxist), the state's highest elected official. 

Senator Specter asked if the Chief Minister carries out Marxist doctrine in governing Kerala. Achuthanandan said that in Kerala, like in West Bengal and Tripura, the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) rules in coalition with other leftist, like-minded, but not necessarily Marxist parties. He nevertheless is guided by the CPI-M election manifesto prepared for the early 2006 state election, and he characterized his government's policies as "left democratic." Achuthanandan said that this means abolishing a "feudal system" of land ownership in which some wealthy people owned 50,000 acres of land they did not use while poor farmers had to make do with a tenth of one acre. He said his government's land reform program operates under the principles of "land to the tiller" and debt forgiveness for poor farmers. Those willing to work on government-owned land pay nominal rent for 12 years and then receive full ownership. 

Achuthanandan said that one million farmers have now received land under this program and hundreds of thousands have been freed from bonded labor. He added that education and health care were also priorities for his government. He claimed that every child has access to 12 years of free education and that 50 percent of the seats in universities are reserved for students from socially and economically disadvantaged segments of society. He said health care is universal and free and is administered at the village level.

¶3. (SBU) Senator Specter also asked about the application of Marxist theory in the wider world where so many communist regimes have been discredited and have fallen. Achuthanandan responded that "the Soviet Union had been a huge success for 75 years but collapsed in the end because of wrong practices and the actions of the CIA." He said that even Russian President Putin, though not a communist, "is engaged in a struggle against the United States." Achuthanandan claimed that "despite U.S. efforts to encourage counter-revolutionaries" in China during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 and "despite 180 attempts by the CIA to kill Castro in Cuba," communism is flourishing in those countries as well as in North Korea and Vietnam.

¶4. (SBU) Achuthanandan then asked a number of rhetorical questions: "How many democratically elected leaders have been assassinated by the U.S. government?" "How can the United States justify attacking Iraq?" "Why does the U.S. not free Saddam Hussein after a farcical trial?" Achuthanandan also claimed, "Saddam in his entire life used a fraction of the weapons of mass destruction that the U.S. used in Vietnam." Senator Specter pointed out that Saddam had used WMD against Iranians and Iraqis alike, that U.S. intelligence, although later proved wrong, pointed to continuing stockpiles of WMD, and that Saddam had been proved in Iraqi courts to have tortured and murdered his own people and must now face Iraqi justice. Senator Specter added that a precipitous withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq would result in even more killing. The sometimes contentious discussion between the Senator and Chief Minister ended with the Chief Minister's backhanded comment: "We don't like Bush, but we are with the American people."

Technology and Culture in Thiruvananthapuram


¶5. (U) Senator Specter visited U.S. Technologies, a California-based information technology corporation with a large software development and customer support facility in Thiruvananthapuram's "Techno-Park." U.S. Technologies made a presentation highlighting the core values and features of the company, including its information technology consulting and development services to industry verticals such as healthcare, retail financial services, and manufacturing utilities and logistics. When the U.S. Technologies briefer proudly pointed out that Independence Healthcare in Philadelphia is one of the many U.S. companies supported from the Kerala office, Senator Specter asked about the number and location of employees who were doing CHENNAI 00000054 002 OF 003 that work before U.S. Technologies was engaged.

¶6. (U) The head of the Travancore royal family, who were the pre-Indian independence rulers of the area, Marthanda Varma Maharaja, along with his sister Lakshmi Bai and their immediate family members, received Senator Specter at the Kowdiar Palace and discussed the history and culture of Kerala. The erudition of the Kerala royal family was in rich display, as much as the religious and cultural heritage of the state, deeply impressing Senator Specter and the accompanying visitors. Senator Specter also visited the art gallery housing many of the painting of Raja Ravi Varma, a member of the royal family who was one of India's leading artists in oils.

Kochi: Press, Judges and Business People


¶7. (U) Earlier, in Kochi (which is also still known by its former name, Cochin), the economic and business hub of Kerala, Senator Specter met with the editorial board of the Malayala Manorama, the state's leading daily newspaper, including director and managing editor Philip Mathew. The questions put to Senator Specter focused on U.S.-Indian relations and India's standing in the world. Senator Specter said that because of India's position as the world's largest democracy and as a growing economic power, the country should be considered for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council.

He said that the U.S. should forge closer trade relations with India, and he saw cooperation in the area of nuclear energy as a boon to both nations. Senator Specter said that the U.S. government has not effectively communicated its policies to the world's Muslims, many of whom wrongly believe that the U.S. is against Islam.

¶8. (U) Another highlight of Senator Specter's Kochi visit was a meeting with Chief Justice V.K. Bali and four senior judges of the Kerala High Court. The judicial appointment system in India and the relations between the Indian judicial and legislative branches of government formed a good part of the discussions. "Do you legislate?" Senator Specter asked the judges, touching off discussions on the theme of judicial activism for which the Kerala High Court is especially reputed. "We fill the gaps (in the laws and the Constitution)," the judges replied, pointing to the powers vested in them to issue orders and writs for ensuring the fundamental rights of the citizens guaranteed in the Indian Constitution.

¶9. (U) Senator Specter had lively discussions with Kochi businessmen at two events -- a dinner hosted by the Kerala Indo-American Chamber of Commerce and a lunch hosted by the Cochin Chamber of Commerce. At both events, Senator Specter acknowledged the growing importance of India on the world stage and the fair claim for a greater role for India at the United Nations. He conceded that the U.S. involvement in Iraq was based on inaccurate intelligence but pointed out that now that the U.S. is there, it cannot withdraw precipitously, leaving the country in chaos. (compare this with the statements made during the in meeting with VS - suraj)

¶10. (U) Senator Specter toured the AD 1568 Mattancherry Synagogue guided by Samuel Hallegua, the leader of the small Jewish community in Kochi. He saw with great interest the scrolls of Jewish scriptures and the historic copper plates in which the privileges granted by the erstwhile Kochi kings to the Kerala Jewish community are recorded. The delegation also visited the "backwaters" area of Kerala, near Kochi, which is growing as a destination for international and domestic tourism, an important industry for Kerala's economy.

Bangalore: High-Tech City


¶11. (U) On December 20 in Bangalore, the capital of the state of Karnataka and the center of India's information technology industry, a visit to IBM India's facility provided an opportunity for Senator Specter to witness some of the company's worldwide operations directed from the Global Operations Center. Senator Specter asked IBM India executives about the number of jobs that have been moved from the U.S. to India, to which the executives replied that there has been no migration of jobs to India.

¶12. (U) A visit to General Electric's John F. Welch Technology Center (GE-JWTC) brought Senator Specter up close to some of the next generation technologies that the company plans to bring to the market. The qualifications of the scientists employed and the wages paid to them were the focus of the Senator's discussions with scientists present during his visit. GE-JWTC's next generation imaging systems with medical applications caught the Senator's interest as it enabled him to virtually enter the human brain.

¶13. (U) During a lunch meeting with Justice Mallimath, chairman of India's Judicial Review Committee, Senator Specter asked about the current state of the Indian criminal justice system and the measures CHENNAI 00000054 003 OF 003 taken to speed up the judicial process, a major aim of the Committee. Justice Mallimath outlined some of the recommendations made by his Committee and the government's effort to implement one of the key recommendations, a witness protection program.

¶14. (U) For his visit Senator Specter was accompanied by Mrs. Joan Specter, staffer Scott Boos, military escorts and Consulate General Chennai staff. This message was not cleared by the delegation. HOPPER

ഇനം

മാധ്യമം (35) CPM (29) VS (28) HMT (26) HMT-മാതൃഭൂമി (24) മാതൃഭൂമി (19) മനോരമ (17) മംഗളം (16) SEZ (14) ലാവ്‌ലിന്‍ (13) ലോട്ടറി വിവാദം (13) പിണറായി (9) ലാവലിന്‍ (8) MetroVaartha-VS (7) ഒഞ്ചിയം (7) ടിപി ചന്ദ്രശേഖരന്‍ (7) എം. ജയചന്ദ്രന്‍ (6) ലാവ്‌ലിന്‍ CPM (6) ലാവ്‌ലിന്‍-മാതൃഭൂമി (6) സ്മാര്‍ട്ട്‌സിറ്റി (6) ഇന്ദു (5) സിപിഎം (5) Revolutionary Marxist Party (4) ആണവക്കരാര്‍ (4) ആലുവാപ്പുഴ (4) ദേശാഭിമാനി ലേഖനം (4) നിധി (4) ലാവലിൻ രേഖകൾ (4) ശ്രീപദ്മനാഭസ്വാമി ക്ഷേത്രം (4) സുഭാഷ് (4) HMT-സി.പി.ഐ (3) LDF (3) Wikileaks (3) Wikileaks-Kerala (3) smartcity (3) ആണവക്കച്ചവടം (3) ആണവക്കരാർ (3) കോണ്‍ഗ്രസ്‌ (3) ഗുജറാത്ത് (3) തീവ്രവാദം (3) തോമസ് ഐസക് (3) ദേശാഭിമാനി (3) ബാംഗ്ലൂര്‍ സ്ഫോടനം (3) മദിനി (3) മൂന്നാര്‍ (3) സ്ഫോടനം (3) CBI (2) CPIM Wikileaks (2) Dalit Oppression (2) HMT- അഡ്വ. ജനറല്‍ (2) HMT-അന്വേഷണസമിതി (2) HMT-ഹൈക്കോടതി (2) Reservation (2) അഡ്മിറല്‍ ബി.ആര്‍. മേനോന്‍ (2) അപ്പുക്കുട്ടന്‍ വള്ളിക്കുന്ന് (2) അബാദ് (2) അഭിഷേക് (2) അമേരിക്ക (2) അമേരിക്കന്‍ പതനം (2) ആര്‍.എസ്.എസ് (2) ഇലക്ഷന്‍ (2) കെ.എം.മാത്യു-ദേശാഭിമാനി (2) കോടതി (2) കോടിയേരി (2) ക്യൂബ റീമിക്സ് (2) ക്രൈം നന്ദകുമാര്‍ (2) ഗ്രൂപ്പിസം (2) തിരുവിതാം‌കൂര്‍ (2) ദീപിക (2) പാഠപുസ്തകം (2) പി.കെ. പ്രകാശ് (2) ബാലനന്ദന്‍ (2) ഭൂപരിഷ്കരണം (2) മദനി (2) മുഖ്യമന്ത്രി (2) വി.എസ് (2) വിദ്യാഭ്യാസം (2) വിവരാവകാശ നിയമം (2) വീരേന്ദ്രകുമാര്‍ (2) സാമ്പത്തിക തകര്‍ച്ച (2) സി.ആര്‍. നീലകണ്ഠന്‍ (2) സുപ്രിം കോടതി (2) ഹര്‍കിഷന്‍സിങ് സുര്‍ജിത് (2) 2008 (1) A K Antony (1) Aarakshan (1) Achuthananthan-wikileaks (1) Apple (1) Arlen Specter visit-Wikileaks (1) Army (1) Baby-Wikileaks (1) British India (1) Budget (1) CITU (1) Capitalism (1) Coca Cola-wikileaks (1) Creamy layer (1) Dalits (1) Defence budget 2011-12 (1) Election 2009 Internal Analysis (1) HMT--ഉമ്മന്‍ചാണ്ടി (1) HMT-HMT (1) HMT-UDF (1) HMT-VS (1) HMT-അഡീഷണല്‍ അഡ്വക്കേറ്റ്‌ ജനറല്‍ (1) HMT-കളക്ടര്‍ (1) HMT-ധനമന്ത്രി (1) HMT-നിയമവകുപ്പ്‌ (1) HMT-പി.സി. ജോര്‍ജ്‌ (1) HMT-പിണറായി (1) HMT-യൂത്ത്‌ കോണ്‍ഗ്രസ്‌ (1) HMT-റവന്യൂവകുപ്പ്‌ (1) HMT-വെളിയം (1) HMT-സര്‍ക്കാര്‍ (1) HMT-സര്‍വേ സൂപ്രണ്ട്‌ (1) Hackers (1) History of Silicon Valley (1) Industrial Township Area Development Act of 1999 (1) Information Technology (1) Iraq and Kerala elections-wikileaks (1) Isaac-Wikileaks (1) Justice VK Bali-wikileaks (1) Kerala Foreign Investment wikileaks (1) Lord Macaulay (1) Manorama Editiorial board-wikileaks (1) Meritocracy (1) Microspoft (1) News Statesman (1) Pepsi-wikileaks (1) Pinarayi-Wikileaks (1) Prabhat Patnaik (1) Presidency College (1) RSS (1) Self Financing Colleges (1) Silicon Valley (1) Social Networking (1) USA (1) Vibrant Gujarat (1) mangalam (1) അഡ്വക്കറ്റ് കെ. രാം കുമാര്‍ (1) അഡ്വക്കറ്റ് കെ.ജയശങ്കര്‍ (1) അണ്ണാ ഹസാരെ (1) അധ്യാപകന്‍ (1) അഭിമുഖം ളാഹ ഗോപാലന്‍ ചെങ്ങറ മാധ്യമം (1) അമിത് ഷാ (1) അറസ്റ്റ് (1) അവയവദാനം (1) അസവര്‍ണര്‍ക്ക് നല്ലത് ഇസ്ലാം (1) അഹമ്മദ്‌ (1) ആരോഗ്യവകുപ്പ് (1) ആസിയാന്‍ കരാര്‍ (1) ഇന്ദിരഗാന്ധി (1) ഇസ്രയേല്‍ (1) ഈഴവര്‍ (1) ഉമ്മഞ്ചാണ്ടി (1) എ.കെ.ആന്റണി (1) എം ജി എസ് (1) എം.പി.പരമേശ്വരന്‍ (1) എന്‍. പി. ചെക്കുട്ടി (1) എന്‍.ജി.ഓ. (1) എന്‍ഐടി (1) എല്‍ഡിഎഫ് സര്‍ക്കാര്‍ (1) എളമരം കരിം (1) എളമരം കരീം (1) ഐജി സന്ധ്യ (1) ഒറീസ (1) കടവൂര്‍ (1) കരിമഠം കോളനി സർവ്വേ (1) കാബിനറ്റ്‌ രേഖകള്‍ (1) കാര്‍ത്തികേയന്‍ (1) കിളിരൂർ (1) കെ എം മാത്യു (1) കെ. സുകുമാരന്‍ (1) കെ.ആര്‍.മീര (1) കെ.ഇ.എന്‍ (1) കെ.എം റോയി (1) കെ.എം.മാത്യു- മാതൃഭൂമി (1) കെ.എം.മാത്യു-പിണറായി (1) കെ.എം.മാത്യു-മനോരമ (1) കെ.എന്‍. പണിക്കര്‍ (1) കെ.ടി. ഹനീഫ് (1) കെ.രാജേശ്വരി (1) കെ.സുധാകരന്‍ (1) കെഇഎന്‍ (1) കേന്ദ്രസിലബസ്സ് (1) കേരള കൗമുദി (1) കേരളം (1) കേരളത്തിലെ ക്ഷേത്രഭരണം (1) കേരളാ ബജറ്റ് 2011 (1) കേശവമേനോന്‍ (1) കൊച്ചി മെട്രോ (1) കൊലപാതകം (1) ക്രമസമാധാനം (1) ഗവര്‍ണ്ണര്‍ (1) ഗവേഷണ വിദ്യാര്‍ത്ഥിനി (1) ഗാന്ധി (1) ഗോപാലകൃഷ്ണന്‍ (1) ഗോള്‍വാള്‍ക്കര്‍ (1) ചാന്നാര്‍ ലഹള (1) ചുംബനസമരം (1) ചെങ്ങറ (1) ജനശക്തി (1) ജന്മഭൂമി (1) ജന്‍‌ലോക്പാല്‍ ബില്‍ (1) ജലവൈദ്യുതപദ്ധതി (1) ജാതി (1) ടി.വി.ആര്‍. ഷേണായ്‌ (1) ടീസ്റ്റാ സെറ്റല്‍വാദ് (1) ഡി. ബാബുപോള്‍ (1) ഡി. രാജസേനന്‍ (1) തേജസ് ദ്വൈവാരിക: ഓഗസ്റ്റ് 1-14 (1) തോമസ് ജേക്കബ് (1) ദാരിദ്ര്യം (1) ദിലീപ് രാഹുലന്‍ (1) ദേവസ്വം ബോഡ് (1) നരേന്ദ്ര മോഡി (1) നാലാം ലോകം (1) നാവീക ആസ്ഥാന സര്‍വേ (1) ന്യൂനപക്ഷ സ്ഥാപനം (1) പത്ര കട്ടിംഗ് (1) പത്രാധിപര്‍ (1) പരമ്പര (1) പലവക (1) പവ്വത്തില്‍ (1) പാര്‍ട്ടികളുടെ സ്വത്ത് (1) പാര്‍ലമെന്റ് (1) പാര്‍ലമെന്റ് ബില്‍ (1) പാലസ്തീന്‍ (1) പാലോളി (1) പി. കിഷോര്‍ (1) പി.കെ പ്രകാശ് (1) പി.സി. ജോര്‍ജ്‌ (1) പോലീസ് (1) പോഷകാഹാരം (1) പ്രകടനപത്രിക (1) പ്രഭാത് പട്‌നായക് (1) പ്രഭാവര്‍മ്മ (1) പൗവ്വത്തില്‍ (1) ഫാഷിസം (1) ഫ്ലാഷ് (1) ബാബര്‍ (1) ബാലന്‍ (1) ബിനു പി. പോള്‍ (1) ബോണ്ട്‌ (1) മണ്ഡലപുനര്‍നിര്‍ണയം (1) മതപരിവര്‍ത്തനം (1) മധ്യരേഖ (1) മന്ത്രിസ്ഥാനം (1) മരണം (1) മാതൃഭൂമി സര്‍ക്കുലര്‍ (1) മാതൃഭൂമി-സംഘപരിവാര്‍ ബന്ധം (1) മാധ്യമം വാരിക: ജൂലൈ 28 (1) മാവോ സെ തുങ് (1) മാർട്ടിൻ (1) മിഡില്‍ ഈസ്റ്റ് (1) മുകുന്ദന്‍ (1) മുസ്ലീം (1) മെഡിക്കല്‍കോളജ് (1) മോഹന്‍ ലാല്‍ (1) യു.ഡി.എഫ്. (1) യുഡിഎഫ് (1) രണ്ടാംലോക മഹായുദ്ധം (1) രാംകുമാര്‍ (1) രാജേശ്വരി (1) റെഡ് റെഡ് സ്റ്റാര്‍ (1) റെയില്‍വേ (1) റെവന്യൂ വരുമാനം (1) ലോക്പാല്‍‌ (1) ളാഹ ഗോപാലന്‍ (1) വയലാര്‍ ഗോപകുമാര്‍ (1) വരദാചാരി (1) വി.എം. സുധീരന്‍ (1) വി.ഏ. അരുൺ കുമാർ (1) വി.കെ ബാലി (1) വിജയരാഘവന്‍ (1) വിജു വി. നായർ (1) വിതയത്തില്‍ (1) വിദഗ്ധ സമിതി റിപ്പോർട്ട് (1) വിദ്യാഭ്യാസ ബജറ്റ് വിഹിതം (1) വൈക്കം സത്യാഗ്രഹം (1) വൈദ്യുതിച്ചിലവ് (1) വൈബ്രന്റ് ഗുജറാത്ത് (1) വ്യവസായം (1) വ്യാജവാര്‍ത്ത (1) ശാസ്ത്രപ്രതിഭ (1) ശിശു വികസനം (1) ശ്രീനാരായണ ഗുരു (1) ഷാനവാസ്‌ (1) സംഘപരിവാര്‍ (1) സംസ്ക്കാരം (1) സംസ്ഥാനസിലബസ്സ് (1) സര്‍ക്കാര്‍ (1) സാങ്കേതിക വിദ്യാഭ്യാസം (1) സാന്റിയാഗോ മാര്‍ട്ടിന്‍ (1) സാമൂഹ്യ നീതി (1) സി.ബി.ഐ (1) സിബിഐ (1) സിമി (1) സുഗതന്‍ പി. ബാലന്‍ (1) സുരേഷ്‌ കുമാര്‍ (1) സ്വകാര്യപ്രാക്ടീസ് (1) സർവ്വ ശിക്ഷാ അഭിയാൻ (1) സർവ്വേ (1) ഹനാന്‍ ബിന്‍‌ത് ഹാഷിം (1) ഹിന്ദുത്വ (1) ഹൈക്കോടതി (1) ഹൈഡ് ആക്റ്റ് (1)