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Communist Party of India

1946: Communist Party of India (CPI) supported the creation of Pakistan

Communist Party of India leaders campaigned for the Muslim league & supported the Partition of India. In Oct 1945, EMS Namboodiripad said that CPI would wholeheartedly support Muslim league candidates in the 1946 elections. Muslim league won 29/29 seats in Madras presidency in 46. The same man who helped Jinnah in making Pak became d first CM of Kerala after independence. CPI tried to use cadres of All India Kisan sabha to campaign in support of Pakistan. Swami Sahajanand resigned to protest against the CPI move.

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1962: Communist Party of India (CPI) opposed donating blood to Jawans

During China war, comrades cracked down on VS for saying let’s give blood to jawans. VS was expelled from CPI for this. CPI opposed donating blood to jawans fighting China.

The sacking of VS Achuthanandan from the CPM politburo yesterday wasn’t the first time the octogenarian chief minister of Kerala had been punished by his party for indiscipline. Nor was it the first time that the veteran comrade had decided to stand his ground in the face of opposition from the party leadership. In the matter of sticking to his guns, VS had started early — at least as early as 1962.

In that year, he took a line that can today be called “pro-India”, but which the communist leadership then decided was “anti-party” — a crime for which he was demoted in the organisation’s hierarchy.

In 1962, as the Indian army fought Chinese aggression in the Himalayas, the undivided CPI supported China, putting ideology above nation. The government threw several communist leaders in prison. VS, then 39 and a central committee member, was put in Thiruvananthapuram central jail.

To blunt the campaign accusing the comrades of being Chinese agents, VS mooted the idea — in a routine weekly party meeting in jail — of donating blood for the jawans, and contributing money from the sale of prison rations saved by inmates to the defence kitty of the government.

O J Joseph, convener of the party’s jail committee and a latter-day member of the Rajya Sabha, rejected the proposal.

In the next meeting, Achuthanandan tried again. He argued hard and lobbied harder, and the meeting ended in a scuffle among the two groups led by Achuthanandan and Joseph.

One of the comrades, K Anirudhan, who later became a communist MP, informed the jail warden about the scuffle, and the news leaked to the media. Bengal communist Jyoti Basu then got in touch with E M S Namboodiripad, who asked K P R Gopalan, widely known as KPR, to probe the incident. As the row escalated, Achuthanandan dropped the plan to donate blood to the army.

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1971: Communist Party of Marxists and Leninists (CPML) opposed the creation of Bangladesh

CPML labels Bengali freedom fighters as Imperialists conspiring against China

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