New govt will not last long: Namboodiripad
D Jose in Thiruvananthapuram
Communist Party of India-Marxist patriarch E M S Namboodiripad does not see any future for the just sworn-in United Front government.
The new government, headed by Inder Kumar Gujral, will suffer the same fate as the 10-month-old H D Deve Gowda rule, Namboodiripad warned in a talk on the Asianet television channel.
"There is no guarantee
the Congress will not adopt the same tricks it employed
to bring down Deve Gowda," the Politburo
member, who did not take part in the recent New
Delhi parleys owing to ill health, said.
The basic weakness of the new government was its dependence
on the Congress. The CPI-M leader, however, agreed the Congress support was unavoidable under present circumstances, and called for an effective mechanism to settle
disputes between that party and the UF.
Namboodiripad
expressed doubts about the effectiveness of the 10-member coordination
committee under the chairmanship of the prime minister.
The Congress, he feels, might misuse the forum to control
the government -- and if that happens, it will be the end of the Gujral ministry.
The UF, made up of parties with different
ideologies, cannot associate with a decadent party like the Congress, he said. After Independence, the Congress
lost its glory and image and the party used its power for furthering corruption.
"Mahatma
Gandhi called for the Congress dissolution foreseeing
this prospect. But leaders like (Jawaharlal) Nehru and others rejected his
calls, resulting in the destruction of an organisation that fought
for a noble cause," Namboodiripad said.
"Congressmen
are prepared to do anything for power. A coalition
like the UF cannot ally with such a party. Some of the
other constituents may think otherwise, but the Left parties cannot agree," the veteran leader said.
Namboodiripad said though the Left parties have serious differences
with the UF economic policy, they
will continue to support the government. He cautioned the leadership to solve the problems which might
crop up through direct dialogues with the Congress. This, he said, was the only possible way to ensure the stability of the government.
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