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Monday, November 26, 2012

Jan Sansad Speaker Quotes


We have collected short quotes from various speakers at the Jan Sansad today. The speakers at the Jan Sansad today include: Baba Adhav, Ashok Chowdhury, Kamla Bhasin, Vrinda Grover, Praveen Jha, Harsh Mander, Medha Patkar, Annie Raja, PV Rajagopal, Aruna Roy, Shantha Sinha, Binayak Sen, Bezwada Wilson

Baba Adhav       
The country has conveniently forgotten the constitutional promise that India is a secular, socialist republic. The Government is so obsessed with increasing the GDP that it overlooks the fact that all the wealth is going into the coffers of less than a hundred wealthy families while 37% of the population lives below the poverty line.

Ashok Chowdhury
Peoples' movements are presently passing through a very important and critical period. While people are demanding constitutional& civil rights to ensure livelihood & labour rights, the state is continuously denying these demands & thus undermining the very basis of our national struggle for independence from colonial raj. This is a multi-dimensional crisis situation: political, social & cultural. So, one-dimensional issue based strategy will not be effective in resolving this crisis. Holistic approach is necessary for the movements to face this challenge. This critical issue of Rights also came up very strongly during our freedom struggle which were raised by Shaheed Bhagat Singh & Dr Ambedkar

Kamla Bhasin
Desh me aurat agar beaabroo nashaad hai
Dil pe rakh kar haath kahiye desh kya  azaad hai”

Even after 63 years of the Indian Constitution, the country does not seem to FREE or Equal for women and girls. There is 800 plus percentage increase in rape cases, sex ratio for the under six continues to decline, number of women in the Parliament is below 10%. From a gender perspective a lot of CLAIMING and RECLAIMING of the constitution has to be done.

Vrinda Grover
Every time the Indian State or any of its functionaries, orders lathi charge on unarmed protestors; commits a caste atrocity; tortures; in the name of national security kills people in so called encounters in Kashmir, Manipur and almost in every other part of India; sells land and rivers inhabited by adivasis; allows for mass crimes against Muslims, Christians; fails to protect women from sexual assault; refuses to pay minimum wage to toiling workers, the Indian State is guilty of contempt of the Constitution. Each time a citizen protests, demands her rights, challenges abuse of state power, she breathes fresh life into the Constitution.


Article 21, the right to Life is a human right that we all have. It was not granted to us by the Constitution. No government or state can deprive us of our right to life. Any law or policy that diminishes the right to life, is unconstitutional and illegal. It must be challenged and defied.

Praveen Jha
The 'social compact' that the post-Independence Indian State had with its citizens with respect to public provisioning of 'primary goods' for a decent existence was unfortunately never taken seriously. Nonetheless, the compact itself was based on the philosophical position enshrined in our Constitution. What we are witnessing at the current juncture is an attack on such a position and by inference on the compact itself, which must be  challenge and resisted

Harsh Mander
The idea of India is contained in the Indian Constitution. Today it stands deeply threatened by the retreat of the state from its responsibilities to ensure a better life for disadvantaged populations, by growing concentration of wealth in a few hands, and by the resurgence globally of religious prejudice. A regime of legally enforceable socio-economic rights must establish a floor of human dignity below which no one would be allowed to fall, and public officials should be held criminally accountable for permitting targeted mass violence.

Medha Patkar
This is high time that all people's movements raise various issues in the framework of both human and constitutional rights. This is because the state which is corporatized and privatized is throwing the framework of equity and justice and socialism in the dustbin. They must rise up and fight to save the constitution and get the development planned in the same framework without which no welfarism should be acceptable to Dalits, adivasis, farmers, fish workers and toiling masses. If not now, when?

Annie Raja
Despite patriarchy and neoliberal economic policy, denying women the constitutional right to equality and life with dignity, women will always remain united to carry on their struggle to attain economic independence, political empowerment and social emancipation

Aruna Roy
Every nation begins with hope. The preamble, the chapter on fundamental rights and the Directive principles of state policy of the Indian Constitution read together, is a statement of faith. But the nation that became free and dreamt of a country without fear, hunger, want, illiteracy, with equality, equity and justice has often faced a hostile State. Despite these travails, the spirit and structure of democracy still inspire faith in the most neglected group in India, the poor and marginalized. We are here together to re assert that faith and pledge our support to strengthen and re-build the architecture which will have to work to make that nascent hope a reality.

Binayak Sen
The Indian Constitution does provide an ideological infrastructure for a decorative polity, with its commitment to democratic rights and the directives to social and economic equality. Much of this promise remains unrealised, however, and it will take all our collective, creative energies to bring about the changes that will enable us as a people to face the challenges of the future

Shantha Sinha
'Ensuring justice and equity for all children in the country and protecting their rights to education, survival and dignity is indispensable for India’s democracy and development. This obligation remains unfulfilled. It is urged that children are at the centre-stage of a national consciousness energising  the State to act in consonance with constitutional values.'

Bezwada Wilson
We the people are the first words of the Constitution. However the privileged deny that others are people too. Article 17, 14 and 21 are the most important articles of the constitution yet they are violated daily. An example is the continued prevalence of manual scavenging.