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by Prakash Karat*
Article reproduced from People's Democracy of December 09, 2007
The 123 agreement for civilian nuclear cooperation with the Untied States has finally been discussed in both houses of parliament. As expected, a majority of the members in both houses have opposed the nuclear deal on various grounds. This debate should have taken place in the monsoon session itself and could have been a timely warning to the government not to proceed with the deal.
The opposition to the deal was expressed mainly in three forms. Firstly, the demand that the nuclear deal be not proceeded with to the next stages for operationalisation, given the provenance of the Hyde Act and the failure to get the assurances made by the Prime Minister in August 2006 incorporated in the 123 agreement. Secondly, there was the demand for renegotiation of the deal. Thirdly, some of the parties took the stand that only by clearing all doubts and achieving a consensus should the deal go forward. In this connection some demanded a Joint Parliamentary Committee.
Curiously, the debate in the Lok Sabha was sought to be portrayed as a
"victory" for the government, or, a dilution of the opposition by some
parties. Leading the pack in purveying such a false picture were
newspapers like The Times of India and The Indian Express. The spurious
conclusion was based on the so-called dilution of the stand of the
Samajwadi Party and the alleged failure of the Telugu Desam to
participate in the debate. The Samajwadi Party leader Shri Ram Gopal
Yadav made a comprehensive speech questioning the deal on all grounds -
the Hyde Act, the cost of nuclear energy, the adverse impact on foreign
policy and the damage it would do to our independent nuclear programme.
The questions he posed and the clarifications and assurances he sought
were mischievously interpreted. In the case of the Telugu Desam, its
speaker Shri Audikesavulu did not speak protesting the lack of time
allotted to him. He requested that his speech be laid on the table and
be part of the record. The speech as it appears in the proceedings is a
categorical rejection of the 123 agreement as "the single most
dangerous issue as it impinges on national sovereignty. The UNPA
popularly known as the Third Front has made its opposition to the
Indo-US nuclear deal known ....." Yet, the most fervent mouthpiece for
US interests in India, The Indian Express claimed editorially on
November 30 that "The biggest outcome from the nuclear debate this week
is the falsification of the Karat-Advani thesis that the majority
opinion in the parliament is against the nuclear deal". Perhaps the
editorial writer needs to be taught the basics of arithmetic. The Lok
Sabha debate established that a big majority of the house is against
the deal. The parties, which represent around sixty per cent of the
total membership, spoke out against the nuclear deal. They included the
Left parties, the NDA, the UNPA and parties like the BSP.
If the Lok Sabha debate gave a negative verdict on the nuclear deal,
the discussion in the Rajya Sabha which followed made the isolation of
the UPA government all the more evident. The Rajya Sabha debate
comprehensively demolished all the arguments put up by the government
with regard to the non-applicability of the Hyde Act, the "non-binding"
provisions of this Act; the role of nuclear energy in our energy
security; the costs of nuclear power; and the effects on our indigenous
three-state nuclear programme. Many speakers spoke about the subversion
of an independent foreign policy and the American design to convert
India into a subordinate ally.
At the end of the debate in both houses, after Shri Pranab Mukherjee
replied to the discussion, the leaders of the CPI (M) group in the two
houses, Basudev Acharia and Sitaram Yechury respectively, asked for a
categorical assurance from the government that taking into account the
views expressed by a majority of the house, the government will not
proceed further with the nuclear deal. This is the sense of the House.
Shri Pranab Mukherjee replied that where is the question of taking the
sense of the House until the process is completed. He answered that at
the end of every stage, the government will come to parliament and
discuss.
This is not good enough. Parliament has repeatedly discussed the deal
at different stages beginning from Joint Statement of July 2005, which
announced the nuclear cooperation agreement. At every stage despite the
majority view against the deal, the government has proceeded ahead. The
123 agreement was negotiated and the agreement initialed and the text
frozen. Then the Union Cabinet approved it. After this fait accompli,
in the current parliament session discussion has taken place. The
argument that the sense of the House can be taken only after the
process is completed would mean that parliament has no say whatsoever
except to have an academic debate on the issue. Therefore, it is
imperative that the government take into account the clear verdict of
the parliament against the 123 agreement. Any move to take the next
steps to operationalise the agreement would be showing disrespect for
parliament and the essential tenets of parliamentary democracy.
*Prakash Karat is the Secretary General of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)
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