Monday, 30 September 2013

AWARENESS & AWAKENING

"Being eternal energy, the soul is neither the intellect nor is it the instinct. It is the amount of spiritual energy retained by a living being. It is the spiritual energy that is seen in a living being's eyes. Just like any other form of energy, spiritual energy changes are propagated through waves. Waves can be thought of as connected local oscillations that take place within a medium. For example, audible sound waves are oscillations of local pressure through air that transfer acoustic energy from its source to our eardrum, making it vibrate. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Albert Einstein, in his theory of relativity proved that mass and energy are interchangeable. Thus, the law of conservation of mass discovered by Antoine Lavoisier, and the law of conservation of energy formulated later by James Prescott Joule, were united. In the context of this modern theory of physics, the philosophical concept of "dualism," which separates soul from matter, cannot exist because the Universe and all of its components are only different manifestations of the Universal energy, which can neither be created or destroyed. It can only be converted from one form to another. The law of conservation of energy, as a whole, gives the soul its immortality feature." - Marian Barasch 

Darwin's Perspective: Although Einstein helped us understand that energy and mass are interchangeable, it is difficult for us to believe this when it comes to our own physical bodies. Not only do our bodies feel solid but as they interact with other objects (i.e. mass) we experience very real physical interactions. Every time we bump our head, we're reminded of the physical nature of our Body. 

But despite this perception, our understanding of physics tells us that energy and mass are interchangeable and thus are simply different forms of the same thing. As such, our physical understanding of life is only providing us with a version of reality. In truth, there are energy waves coming into us and emanating from us all the time. The entire process of interchanging mass for energy is very much a a part of our existence (e.g. eating). 

Accordingly, the life force energy of God that flows through the Universe is no different than the mass that you consider to be "you." Make no mistake, you are the collective consciousness of your Body, Spirit and Mind. That Body of yours is a very real and physical manifestation of divine energy. And if you choose to put your Body into motion without conscious consideration, you will meet with a very physical interaction with your environment. This is not a fluffy call for you to conclude that you are energy and thus reality doesn't matter. Quite the opposite, you are divine energy and employing your current form in harmony with your divine purpose is your calling. 

But so too you are not independent of the energy around you. The sound, light and pressure waves that interact with you are very real. So too your actions cause energy to interact with others is very real too. Your willingness to employ this energy in divine cause is what we call awareness. Being aware of your pivotal role to play in life is the path of your own private awakening. 

And as you are now awakening from this slumber, your ability to remain asleep is no longer available to you. It is time to act. It is time to pursue your purpose. For you are a divinely inspired life with a role to play. 


First published by Deepankar Choudhury on 20th June, 2011


Monday, 16 September 2013

Euthanasia - Briefings

INTRODUCTION. 
One of the principal questions in contemporary medical ethics that bleeds into societal morality is the question of euthanasia. Should modern medicine do all it can to save a patient, or should quality of life issues enter into the question? What is the moral balance between preserving life and preventing a once vital human from remaining comatose, sometimes for years? Should religious beliefs prevent medical professionals from helping to ease the pain and suffering of prolonged treatment in a terminally ill patient? 

1> RECENT DEVELOPMENTS. 
The Supreme Court of India on Monday rejected a petition for mercy killing, but ruled that passive euthanasia was permissible under certain circumstances. The case centered around Aruna Shanbaug, a former nurse who was raped and strangled at work 37 years ago and has been in Mumbai's King Edward Memorial Hospital in a blind and vegetative state ever since. Pinki Virani, a journalist and friend, petitioned the court [Hindustan Times report] to stop hospital staff from force feeding Shanbaug and allow her to die. The court stated that, while there is no statutory provision to support active euthanasia, where an individual dies by lethal injection, passive euthanasia through a withdrawal of life support would be permissible with approval by the high court after receiving requests from the government and close family members of the individual and getting the opinions of three respected doctors. The court determined that Virani was not as close to Shanbaug as hospital staff and rejected her petition. 

2> COMA 

Coma is a prolonged period of unconsciousness. Unconsciousness is the lack of appreciation of (or reaction to) a stimulus. Coma differs from sleep in that one cannot be aroused from a coma. 

Coma involves two different concepts: 

1.) Reactivity: Reactivity refers to the innate (or inborn) functions of the brain, i.e., the telereceptors (eyes and ears), the nociceptors (responses to pain), the arousal reaction (wakefulness) and the orienting response (turning one's head toward the source of sound or movement). We could also refer to these as reflexive movements. 

2.) Perceptivity: Perceptivity refers to the responses of the nervous system to stimuli, which have been learned or acquired, i.e., language, communication skills, individual methods of movement such as gestures, etc. Perceptivity also refers to less complex learned or acquired reactions such as flinching when threatened. We can also think of these as conscious movements. 

A person in a coma does not exhibit reactivity or perceptivity. He/she can not be aroused by calling his/her name or in response to pain. 
_____________________________________________________________________________________________

New Evidence That Coma Patients Feel Pain 

Their is increasing research which shows that individuals in a comatose state who were previously thought to be incapable of feeling pain, are in fact aware of pain and require pain medication. 

Coma is a poor term to describe the various states of unconsciousness. Better terms have been developed which classify patients in three stages, Coma, Vegetative State and the Minimally Conscious State. However, it is important to know that their are frequent errors made in the diagnosis of a patient's particular stage of consciousness and studies have shown that upwards of 41 percent of patients diagnosed as being in a vegetative state are actually in a minimally conscious state. 

A new study evaluating brain scans of patients in various stages of coma has found that many of these individuals in both the vegetative state and the minimally conscious state are able to perceive and react to pain. This study is strong evidence that these individuals previously thought to be "brain dead" are capable of awareness and require pain medication. 

The full study is in the October issue of the Lancet Neurology journal.

3> MEDICAL ETHICS & EUTHANASIA 

One popular account of medical ethics, makes appeal to "the four principles": 
1. non-maleficence (to avoid harm) 
2. beneficence (to do good) 
3. autonomy (the right to act freely) and 
4. justice (acting fairly towards the patient). 

Leaving aside the obvious shortcomings of such an abbreviated approach to medical ethics, we can nevertheless see how euthanasia by neglect violates all four principles: 

1. Euthanasia by neglect is maleficent: it causes harm by killing a patient through a very long drawn out process of starvation and dehydration, a process which is uncomfortable and painful for the patient. 

2. Euthanasia by neglect cannot be beneficent: A doctor is ethically and legally obliged to act in a patient's best interests. Intentionally killing the patient by neglect of reasonable care can never be in the patient's best interests. 

3. Euthanasia by neglect extinguishes the autonomy of patients and diminishes the autonomy of doctors. Autonomy is not an absolute the exercise of which trumps all other considerations.. The patient must exercise his or her right to autonomy in a responsible and ethically sound manner. Both ethics and the law say that, just as we cannot sell ourselves into slavery, we cannot consent to be murdered. This is because the right to life, like the right to liberty, is inalienable. The obligation to respect the right to life extends to respecting one's own life. It is unethical to intentionally deprive oneself of life. Making euthanasia by neglect available to patients would lead to pressure on doctors and nurses to assist suicide and intentionally kill their patients by neglect. The effect of this is to significantly diminish their autonomy to practice their professional arts ethically, and according to their consciences and the Hippocratic Oath. Legalizing assisted suicide and intentional killing by neglect of reasonable care turns a class of private citizens into public killers. It changes doctors and nurses from being healers and carers into poisoners and killers. 

4. Euthanasia by neglect violates justice, the requirement to treat all patients impartially and to be fair when allocating health care resources. The possibility of euthanasia by neglect would lead to pressure (real or perceived) on the elderly and the chronically ill to cease being a burden on society, on the health service, and on their relatives. Legalizing euthanasia by neglect reduces the patient from being an individual to whom the doctor has a professional obligation, into a utile, a unit in a utilitarian system of healthcare rationing, with an implied duty to die if they became too difficult or time-consuming or expensive to treat.

4> IN USA. 

The Mental Capacity Bill - legalising euthanasia by neglect 


The Mental Capacity Bill, introduced into Parliament by the Government on 18 June, will legalise euthanasia by neglect 

Patients with conditions like dementia, stroke or brain injury are most at risk. They may be killed by withholding their basic medical care or even food and fluids, if the Bill goes through. Euthanasia by neglect means deliberately killing patients by withholding or withdrawing reasonable medical treatment or basic care (such as food and fluids given by tube). The worldwide euthanasia movement has declared that the legalisation of euthanasia by neglect is one of its key goals in its campaign to legalise euthanasia by lethal injection. 

Any alleged benefits of the Bill pale in comparison with the evils it legalises. The Government claims that the Bill gives people a greater say in how they will be treated if they have a disease or accident that prevents them from making decisions about their lives. In reality, the Bill: 
will mean thousands of patients dying for want of ordinary treatment. 'Treatment' under the Bill is defined as "includ[ing] a diagnostic or other procedure" (section 60). This would include tube-feeding, giving sedatives or pain-killers, and possibly spoon-feeding and turning patients to prevent bedsores. (Food and fluids delivered by tube is not "life-support" or "medical treatment" but basic care.) 
creates government-appointed "independent consultees" who will have power to tell NHS doctors not to give life-saving treatment to incapacitated patients (sections 34-39). 
would make advance decisions ("living wills") legally binding, including those with a suicidal intent (sections 24-29) - a long-standing objective of the Voluntary Euthanasia Society and the worldwide euthanasia movement. 
undermines doctors' common-law duty to protect the life and health of patients - doctors who insist on treating patients properly could be charged with criminal offences (explanatory notes to section 26). 
undermine patient's clinical best interests - i.e. health - by prioritising subjective, non-clinical considerations such as "wishes and feelings" (section 4) 

The present government says it is against euthanasia. But it makes a qualification. While it claims to oppose the idea of active euthanasia - such as lethal injections - it supports changing the law to allow euthanasia 'by neglect'. 

5> Medical Capacity Bill -Contd 

Four key facts about the Mental Capacity Bill 

1. Leading experts oppose the Bill because it means legalised killing 

Leading human rights lawyer Richard Gordon QC has concluded that the draft Bill was incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights. "The obvious scope for treating vulnerable persons contrary to their best interests in [the Bill] and in a way which deprives them of life is considerable." Dr. Jacqueline Laing, D.Phil (Oxon.), senior lecturer in law at London Metropolitan University has concluded that the revised Bill "entrenches involuntary 'slow euthanasia' - a sanitised form of homicide - in hospitals".

Dr. Philip Howard, a senior lecturer in medicine in London and consultant physician, has predicted that conscientious doctors and nurses will be criminalised or forced to leave their profession if they continue present practices that save the lives of suicidal patients. 

Dr John Fleming, director of the Southern Cross Bioethics Institute and a foundation member of UNESCO's International Bioethics Committee, has predicted that a demand for euthanasia by lethal injection would be created by the horror of the long, drawn-out deaths by dehydration permitted under the Bill. 
2. The euthanasia lobby supports the Bill 

The Voluntary Euthanasia Society (VES) welcomed the draft Bill, so it is not only opponents of euthanasia who believe that it promotes euthanasia. It is no coincidence that "living wills" - a key part of the Bill called "advance decisions" - were invented by the euthanasia movement in the late 1960s; the VES is the UK's leading promoter of "living wills". The Bill would make advance decisions legally-binding, including suicidal ones. The worldwide euthanasia movement has declared that the legalisation of euthanasia by neglect is one of its key goals in its campaign to legalise euthanasia by lethal injection: "If we can get people to accept the removal of all treatment and care--especially the removal of food and fluids--they will see what a painful way this is to die and then, in the patient's best interests, they will accept the lethal injection" (Dr Helgha Kuhse, then president of the World Federation of Right-to-Die Societies, 1984) 

The joint parliamentary committee which endorsed the draft Bill last year also endorsed the notion of a "right to die". The committee was stacked with the government supporters as well as members with close ties or official links with organisations supporting the Bill. 

Among the Bill's supporters, many support a "right to die", in particular Patient Concern, led by senior Voluntary Euthanasia Society veteran activist Roger Goss. 
3. The "safeguards"in the Bill will be ineffective 

The Bill as presented is substantially more dangerous than the draft version. Promised so-called "safeguards" made to the Bill will be ineffective: "[The draft bill] not only lacks sufficient safeguards to prevent harm or abuse to patients, it is difficult to see what safeguards might be of any use" (Dr John Fleming). They will be flouted, just as the "safeguards" in the Abortion Act which are routinely flouted, allowing abortion on demand. 
4. Disability rights groups oppose the Bill 

Several organisations representing people with learning disabilities opposed the draft Bill: 
"Values into Action believes that the draft Mental Incapacity Bill...far from protecting vulnerable people actually substantially increases their vulnerability..."; 
"Changing Perspectives have concerns that the Mental Incapacity Bill will violate the fundamental rights of people without perceived capacity" 
"People First do not like this Bill because it will take away our independence and break our human rights.... If the draft Mental Incapacity Bill becomes law it will be a very big step backwards for people with learning difficulties' rights." 

First published by Deepankar Choudhury on  Mar 10, 2011

Saturday, 14 September 2013

Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King:

THERE CANNOT BE A BETTER WAY TO CELEBRATE BLACK HISTORY MONTH THAN BY COMPARING TWO OF WORLD'S GREATEST ADVOCATES OF PEACE & NON-VIOLENCE. 

A comparison of goals and programs advocated by Gandhi and King:* 

Gandhi 

- Self-purification as a condition for achieving political independence 
(e.g. fasts) 
- Development of village industries and sanitation 
- Adult education and health programs 
- Elimination of liquor 
- Use of spinning wheel in every home 
- Organization of Labor satyagrahas (e.g. Ahmedabad in 1918) 


King 

- Federal grants for housing, employment, and education 
- 1963 Bill of rights for the disadvantaged 
- Government-guaranteed income 
- Development of black co-ops 
- Breadbasket programs 
- Organization of unions 


* From 
‘The Influence of Gandhi on Martin Luther King Jr.’ by Thomas Kilgore Jr., page 241 


First published by Deepankar Choudhury on Feb 27, 2011

FRANK SINATRA (Top-20 Favorites)

Here is my list of Top-20 of Frankie 

- sound of my soul 
01>All the way. 
02>Strangers in the night. 
03>Softly as I leave you. 
04>The coffee song. 
05>Love & marriage 
06>Learning the blues. 
07>I fall in love too easily 
08>Just one of those things. 
09>Deep in a dream 
10>Newyork Newyork 
11>Give me 5 minutes 
12>Something 
13>I get a kick out of you. 
14>How deep is the ocean 
15>Young at heart 
16>That's life 
17>Come fly with me 
18>Fly me to the moon 
19>One for my baby & one for the road 
20>Come rain or come shine 

not necessarily in this order.

The list may change with mood. 


Let's have yours 

REALITY SHOWS

India's not so real reality shows have a long history of imitating the western shows and are now marked by crass street language and violence. The fight for viewership has gone to such a level that the Indian television channels are ready to air any form of shows even at the cost of the culture and values of the nation. 
1>'Kaun Banega Crorepati' inspired by 'Who wants To Be a Millionaire', 
2>'Indian Idol' inspired by American Idol. 
3>Big Boss inspired by Big Brother 
4>'Iss Jungle Se Mujhe Bachao' inspired by 'I'm a Celebrity..Get Me out of Here! 
5>'Pati, Patni Aur Who inspired by 'Baby Borrowers' 
6>'Sach Ka Saamna',inspired by 'The Moment of Truth' 
7>'Zor Ka Jhatka: inspired by 'Wipeout' 

May be many more are waiting. 
Can't We Be Originals 
Calling all Javed Akhters & Gulshan Nandas. 



P.S.:- I do not claim to have viewed all these serials. The above article is for general discussion only.

International Mother Language Day

Amar Bhai er Rokte Rangano Ekushe February 
Ami Ki Bhulite Pari 
Chhelehara Shoto Mayer Ashru, Gorra e February 
Ami Ki Bhulite Pari. 

Stained with the Blood Of My Brother 
O 21st February 
Can I ever Forget! 

In 1952 the Language Movement served as a platform for Bengali Nationalism. Students sacrificed their lives for their Mother Language,BANGLA. For the first time in world history a country defined itself by its language & culture. 

Language Heroes: Rafiq, Salam, Barkat, Jabbar, Shafiur Rahman, Ahi Ullah, Abdul Awal, An unidentified boy... 
Bangla Language Day, popularly known as Ekushe (21) February, is one of the most significant days, not in Bangladesh only, but in human history because on that day the valiant Bangalee boys gave their lives to defend their sweet mother tongue, Bangla language. Over the centuries people gave their lives for love, faith, freedom, nation and the state. But on 21 February 1952, ever in history, a bunch of young Bangalee students gave their lives in a protest rally at the Dhaka university campus against the Pakistani authority's attempt to impose Urdu (as the state language of Pakistan) over the 70 million Bangalees of East Bangla (then East Pakistan). 

International Mother Language Day is an observance held annually on 21 February worldwide to promote awareness of linguistic and cultural diversity and multilingualism. It was first announced by UNESCO on 17 November 1999. Its observance was also formally recognized by the United Nations General Assembly in its resolution establishing 2008 as the International Year of Languages. 
International Mother Language Day originated as the international recognition of Language Movement Day, which has been commemorated in Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan) since 1952, when a number of University of Dhaka students were killed by the Pakistani police and army in Dhaka during Bengali Language Movement protests. 

P.S:-1> BANGALEES WORLD WIDE ARE PROUD OF BANGLADESH WHERE BANGLA IS NATIONAL LANGUAGE 
2> I pay my Homage to all those brave hearts who made the Supreme Sacrifice in favor of the Language of more than 150 million populace World wide.


First published by Deepankar Choudhury on Feb 19, 2011

Thursday, 12 September 2013

INDIA OF MY DREAMS.

RIGHT TO LIVE--> 


1. No foeticide 


2. No infanticide 


3. Primary compulsory education. 


4. No monetary pursuing s up to age of 16 incl TV shows. 


5.Right to food 


6.Affordable healthcare 


7.Affordable housing 


8.Right to work 


9.Right to retirement from work 


10.Right to dignity in old age 



CAN I HAVE INDIA OF MY 
DREAMS.?????????????????

United States and state terrorism-Briefings

1>The 1965-66 anti-Communist purge in Indonesia which was carried out by the Indonesian Army, was assisted by the United States government. The common estimate of the death toll of the anti-Communist purge is 500,000, although higher, more unreliable estimates put the death toll at or above 1,000,000 
As for the numbers killed, Howard Federspiel, the Indonesia expert at the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research in 1965, said 'No one cared, as long as they were communists, that they were being butchered. No one was getting very worked up about it 
International policy researcher Ruth Blakely states that the governments of the United States and Britain were aware of the "campaign of state terror" in Indonesia, and that they supported the regime with military aid in spite of this knowledge, and "actively encouraged" the repression of the PKI and its supporters 
In 1975, the Ford administration, including President Ford himself and Henry Kissinger, authorized and supported Indonesia's invasion and occupation of East Timor 
Subsequent US administrations continued support of Indonesia while the Indonesian army systematically destroyed East Timor; throughout the 24 year period, the army forcibly sterilized women, carried out massacres, engaged in systematic rape, torture, and food deprivation, destroyed whole villages and forced hundreds of thousands into virtual concentration camps. By 1980 the occupation had left more than 100,000 dead with some estimates running as high as 230,000. 

To be contd........ 

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

DEATH PENALTY -HUMANIST'S VIEW (Briefings)

R.A. JAHAGIRDAR 

I have already written on death sentence. My said article has been published in Radical Humanist. I have shown, in that article, how all over the world, public opinion is veering against death sentence. Humanists, by their philosophy, are against death sentence. 

Amnesty International is, from the beginning, against it. Human rights activists are against death sentence. The U.N. General Assembly has asked for a moratorium on death sentence. India is one of the countries that still retains death sentence. Statistics show that 138 nations have so far abolished death sentence. Our own neighbours, Nepal and Bhutan, have joined the abolitionist camp. Philippines and South Korea have also joined abolitionist camp. Japan, which at one time was zealous about death sentence, has recently abolished it. 

A report called “Lethal Lottery: the Death penalty in India” compiled jointly by Amnesty International and People’s Union of Civil Liberties” (Tamilnadu and Puducherry) has, apart from other points, mentioned lack of uniformity and consistency in awarding death sentence. 

To repeat, the Law Commission of India has opined that death sentence deserves to be retained. In the year 2005, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, who apparently is against death sentence, called a public debate on the subject. 

In 1980 the Indian Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of death sentence. Firstly the Constitution itself mentions death sentence. Secondly, law in fact lays down life sentence first and then death sentence. It laid down that death sentence should be given in the rarest of rare case, a feature not uniformly followed by all. In a recent judgment, the Supreme Court has clarified that if the accused is not of criminal mind and could be rehabilitated; his life should not be eliminated. 

[Justice R.A. Jahagirdar (Retd.), former President of Indian Radical Humanist Association and former Editor of ‘The Radical Humanist’ is now one of the members of the Contributing Editorial Board of The Radical Humanist. 

UNEMPLOYMENT & FOOD INFLATION

THE Indian government has spent quite some money advertising the fifth anniversary of REGA (now MGNREGA). On the very same day, 19 youth had died returning from Bareilly. The reason for their death is, they were part of the 1,50,000 who had applied for four hundred and sixteen jobs, offered by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP). Yes, 4-1-6 jobs! For which 1,50,000 had applied, from only 11 states in which they were advertised. Gosh! What would this number be, had it been advertised throughout the entire country? 

Recently, an official survey puts unemployment in our country at 9.4 per cent, which, in fact is a mighty conservative estimate. Unemployment does not just mean a lack of job; it means lack of means to live their life. This deprives them of resources even to buy their food – not to eat their fill, but to gulp something to fill their stomachs. Forget about other luxuries, many a day buying food itself is a luxury for them. In this scenario, rising food prices - food inflation - is a double whammy for them. 

The FAO repeatedly states it is not the vagaries of supply and demand that are determining the food prices today, but it is the speculative futures trading on food commodities that are essentially responsible for these high food prices. To substantiate their point, they have statistically shown how despite the increase in the supply of food, hunger and starvation are growing. The reason being that the poor are unable to buy even those basic food items, as the prices are deliberately kept out of their reach.


First published by Deepankar Choudhury on Feb 6, 2011

20 Years After GULF WAR.

TWENTY YEARS AFTER THE GULF WAR 

The Importance of the Struggle for Peace, 
Against Imperialist Exploitation & Oppression 


The following is the joint-statement issued by more than 34 Communist and Workers' parties on the twentieth year of the Gulf war. The Communist Party of India (Marxist) is one of the signatories to this statement 

TWENTY years have elapsed since the beginning of the Gulf War. On January 17, 1991, the armed forces of the USA, NATO and its allies unleashed -with the ratification of the Security Council of the United Nations -their first large-scale war in the Middle East, despite widespread anti war opposition in several countries Being inseparable from the profound and negative changes associated with the liquidation of socialism in the Soviet Union and in Eastern Europe, that war was a prelude to 20 years of large-scale aggressions, invasions and imperialist interferences. 

From the Gulf to Yugoslavia, from Afghanistan to Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine, imperialism has tried to impose its domination in each country and over the globe, seeking to impose the direct control of the world's main energy resources, to annihilate the peoples’ sovereign rights and to submit the entire planet to the exploitation and interests of the big capital. This militarist and war-mongering offensive has been developed hand in hand with the attacks against the workers’ and peoples' social, economic and political rights – even in the centers of imperialism -and contributed to sharpen the contradictions among imperialist powers. 

Thanks to the peoples' resistance and struggle – first and foremost, that of the peoples who were the victims of aggression – imperialism's offensive has faced obstacles and suffered important setbacks. But the dangers for peace and the peoples have not disappeared. On the contrary, capitalism's profound economic crisis, and the ruling classes' powerlessness to overcome it, is leading – as in the past – to an attempt to ensure their power through violence, authoritarianism, war and brutal offensives against the workers’ and peoples' rights and living standards. 

The threats of war and aggression are evident in the attacks against workers’ and peoples’ movements that struggle against imperialism, labeling it as an “internal enemy”; in the recent NATO Summit and the new strategic concept of this militaristic and aggressive imperialist organisation– which the Lisbon Treaty considers its armed wing thus deepening the process of affirming the European Union as an imperialist economic, political and military block ; in the constant imperialist threats of war, provocations and interferences in numerous parts of the globe; in the increasing expenditure on military and security apparatuses. 

The signatory Parties call upon the workers and peoples of the world to strengthen the struggle for peace and against imperialism's plans of war and aggression, to strengthen the struggle against capitalist exploitation and in defense of sovereignty and of the rights of all peoples of the world. They stress that the struggle for peace, cooperation and progress is an inseparable element of the struggle for the overthrow of capitalism and the construction of socialism. 

They express their solidarity with the peoples and to the national-liberation, revolutionary and progressive anti-imperialist forces who are struggling against the imperialism's aggressions, interferences and threats. In particular, they express their solidarity with the communists and other anti-imperialist forces of the Middle East and especially with the Palestinian people in their struggle for the right to establish an independent State of Palestine in the pre-1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital 

The Parties: 
Algerian Party for Democracy and Socialism, Communist Party of Bangladesh, Communist Party of Brazil, Worker's Party of Belgium, New Communist Party of Britain, Communist Party of Canada, AKEL, Cyprus, Communist Party in Denmark, Communist Party of Finland, Communist Party of Greece, New Communist Party of the Netherlands, Hungarian Communist Workers Party, Communist Party of India (Marxist), Communist Party of Ireland, Workers' Party of Ireland, Party of the Italian Communists, Workers' Party of Korea, Lebanese Communist Party, Communist Party of Luxembourg, Communist Party of Mexico, Communist Party of Norway, Palestinian Peoples Party, Peruan Communist Party, Philippine Communist Party PKP-1930, Portuguese Communist Party, South African Communist Party, Communist Party of the Russian Federation, Communist Workers Party of Russia - Party of Communists of Russia (RKRP-RPC), Communist Party of Spain, Party of the Communists Catalonia, Spain, Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain, Communist Party of Turkey, Communist Party of Venezuela, New Communist Party of Yugoslavia 



First published by Deepankar Choudhury on Feb 5, 2011