logo
V.S. Achuthanandan: a mass leader moulded by Alappuzha

V.S. Achuthanandan: a mass leader moulded by Alappuzha

The Hindu21-07-2025
It was a long journey from Punnapra village in Alappuzha district of Kerala to the corridors of power in Thiruvananthapuram, and from Velikkakathu Sankaran Achuthanandan to 'Comrade VS'.
Mr. Achuthanandan, fondly called 'VS' by the masses, lived a full life marked by struggles, victories and a few setbacks. For him, Alappuzha was not merely his birthplace, but the crucible of resistance from where he rose — as a labourer, trade unionist, revolutionary, freedom fighter, and politician. It shaped him into one of the preeminent communist leaders and laid the foundation for his emergence as a values-based mass political leader in Kerala.
Mr. Achuthanandan lost his mother at the age of four and his father by eleven. He dropped out of school in Class VII and joined a tailoring shop run by his elder brother, Gangadharan. A few years later, he became a worker at Aspinwall Coir Factory, meshing coir – an experience that would prove transformative. The young Achuthanandan showed early signs of leadership by organising fellow labourers at the factory.
In 1940, while working at the factory, he joined the Travancore State Congress. That same year, driven by a desire to fight for the rights of workers and peasants, he joined the Communist Party at the age of 17.
Soon after, he was assigned by party leader P. Krishna Pillai to Kuttanad for political activity. There, in a region plagued by a semi-feudal agrarian system and deep caste prejudices, he began organising agricultural labourers. Under the aegis of the Travancore Karshaka Thozhilali Union, founded in the 1940s by the Communist Party of India, workers waged a series of bold struggles for basic rights, better working conditions, and higher wages — often in the face of brutal repression by landlords and the police. His time in Kuttanad cemented his status as a trade union leader.
These labour struggles, along with the land reforms that followed, helped transform adiyans (labourers) into a new political class that would become the backbone of the Communist Party in the later years.
Working-class leader
Alappuzha was also the stage for Mr. Achuthanandan's next significant chapter as a working-class leader in 1946. At the time, dissent was growing against the Maharaja of Travancore and his Diwan C.P. Ramaswamy Iyer, who were toying with the idea of keeping Travancore as an independent State outside the Indian Union, modelled on the American presidential system. The Communist Party strongly opposed the move and Mr. Achuthanandan was tasked with organising resistance.
Drawing on his influence among workers across the region, Mr. Achuthanandan played a key role in rallying labourers for what would become a massive uprising. Armed only with areca nut staves and choppers, they fought courageously against government forces equipped with guns. Hundreds lost their lives between October 23 and 27, 1946 in what would come to be known as the Punnapra-Vayalar uprising — a defining moment in Kerala's communist movement. He was arrested on October 28 and was subjected to severe torture in the lockup at Poonjar. He was sentenced to three years in prison for his role in the uprising.
He had spent a total of five years and eight months in jail and lived underground for four-and-a-half years during the course of his political life.
'Mr. Achuthanandan came from a humble background and his early life was filled with struggle. He spent a good part of his life in Alappuzha as a trade union leader, organiser of coir and agricultural workers, and a leader of the Punnapra-Vayalar uprising. He entered politics by participating in the freedom struggle. It was from Alappuzha that he began his parliamentary politics in 1965. In 1957, he was the district secretary of the Communist Party in Alappuzha — the party had recognised it as a district but the revenue district was formed later that year — when the first-ever elections to the Kerala Assembly was held. VS, who was in-charge of elections for the Communist Party in Alappuzha, was able to get most number of communist representatives elected to the Assembly that year,' says P. Jayanath, a senior journalist and author of a biography on Mr. Achuthanandan.
Mass movements
In 1970's and 1980's, Kerala witnessed the land grab agitation and anti-reclamation stir. Mr. Achuthanandan spearheaded the struggles from Alappuzha by launching the anti-reclamation stir against the conversion of paddy fields. His mettle to organise mass movements anchored from Alappuzha solidified his image as a leader with pan-Kerala appeal.
However, his deep political ties to Alappuzha met an abrupt end when he lost the 1996 Assembly election in the Mararikulam constituency. His defeat in Mararikulam was attributed to infighting in the Communist Party of India (Marxist). 'VS rose from the grassroots, but he was a hardliner too. In the 1996 elections, disillusioned CPI(M) activists voted for me,' P.J. Francis, who defeated him in Mararikulam, had told The Hindu in a 2021 interview.
In the later years, the veteran communist took up a range of social and environmental issues across the State. Yet, it was in Alappuzha that his foundational struggles took place — struggles that not only changed his life but also transformed society around him. They remain forever etched in the annals of Kerala's political history.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iraq's prime minister seeks closer US ties while keeping armed groups at bay
Iraq's prime minister seeks closer US ties while keeping armed groups at bay

Indian Express

time18 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Iraq's prime minister seeks closer US ties while keeping armed groups at bay

The prime minister of Iraq has kept his country on the sidelines as military conflicts raged nearby for almost two years. This required balancing Iraq's relations with two countries vital to his power and enemies with each other: the US and Iran. The feat became especially difficult last month when war broke out between Israel, a US ally, and Iran — and the US struck Iranian nuclear sites. Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said he used a mix of political and military pressure to stop armed groups aligned with Iran from entering the fray. In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press, Al-Sudani explains how he did this, how he plans to keep these groups in check going forward and — as he seeks a second term — why he wants to get closer to the Trump administration, even as he maintains strong ties to Iran-backed political parties that helped propel him to power in 2022. After Israel launched airstrikes on Iran and it responded by firing missiles at Tel Aviv, armed groups in Iraq attempted to launch missiles and drones toward Israel and at bases in Iraq housing U.S. troops, al-Sudani said. But they were thwarted 29 times by Iraqi government 'security operations' that he did not detail. 'We know that the (Israeli) government had a policy — and still does — of expanding the war in the region,' al-Sudani said. 'Therefore, we made sure not to give any justification to any party to target Iraq.' Al-Sudani said his government also reached out to leaders in Iran 'to urge them toward calm and to make room for dialogue and a return to negotiations.' The U.S. and Iraq last year announced an agreement to wrap up the mission of an American-led coalition in Iraq fighting the Islamic State — and in March al-Sudani announced that the head of IS in Iraq and Syria had been killed in a joint Iraqi-U.S. operation. The first phase of the coalition's drawdown was supposed to be completed by September 2025, but there has been little sign of it happening. Al-Sudani said the U.S. and Iraq will meet by the end of the year to 'arrange the bilateral security relationship' between the two countries. He also hopes to secure U.S. economic investment — in oil and gas, and also artificial intelligence — which he said would contribute to regional security and make 'the two countries great together.' A variety of militias sprung up in Iraq in the years after the 2003 U.S. invasion that toppled former autocratic leader Saddam Hussein. And since the war between Israel and Hamas began in October 2023, sparking regionwide conflicts, an array of pro-Iran armed factions have periodically launched strikes on bases housing U.S. troops. Al-Sudani said the presence of the coalition forces had provided a 'justification' for Iraqi groups to arm themselves, but that once the coalition withdrawal is complete, 'there will be no need or no justification for any group to carry weapons outside the scope of the state.' One of the most complicated issues for al-Sudani is how to handle the Popular Mobilization Forces, a coalition of mostly Shiite, Iran-backed militias that formed to fight IS. This coalition was formally placed under the control of the Iraqi military in 2016, although in practice it still operates with significant autonomy. The Iraqi parliament is discussing legislation that would solidify the relationship between the military and the PMF, drawing objections from Washington. The State Department said in a statement last week that the legislation 'would institutionalize Iranian influence and armed terrorist groups undermining Iraq's sovereignty.' Al-Sudani defended the proposed legislation, saying it's part of an effort to ensure that arms are controlled by the state. 'Security agencies must operate under laws and be subject to them and be held accountable,' he said. In recent weeks, a series of drone attacks have targeted oil facilities in northern Iraq's semiautonomous Kurdish region. Kurdish regional authorities accused groups in the PMF of carrying out the attacks. Authorities in Baghdad disputed this, but haven't assigned blame. Al-Sudani called the attacks a 'terrorist act' and said his government is working with Kurdish authorities and coalition forces to identify those responsible and hold them accountable. Just as the drone attacks have called into question Baghdad's control over armed groups, so has the case of Israeli-Russian researcher Elizabeth Tsurkov, who went missing in Iraq in 2023. Her family believes she is being held by the Iraqi militia Kataib Hezbollah, and there have reportedly been U.S.-mediated negotiations to negotiate her release. Al-Sudani did not name the group responsible for Tsurkov's kidnapping, but he pushed back against the idea that his government has not made serious efforts to free her. He said his government has a team dedicated to finding her. 'We do not negotiate with gangs and kidnappers,' he said, but the team has been in discussions with political factions that might be able to help locate her. Relations between Iraq and the new government in Syria have been tenuous since the fall of former President Bashar Assad in December, after a lightning offensive led by Sunni Islamist insurgents. Syria's interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa was formerly known by the nom de guerre Abu Mohammed al-Golani. He once joined the ranks of al-Qaida insurgents battling U.S. forces in Iraq after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Al-Sharaa still faces a warrant for his arrest on terrorism charges in Iraq. Al-Sharaa has since broken with al-Qaida and has fought against the Islamic State. Al-Sudani said his government is coordinating with the new Syrian government, particularly on security matters. 'We and the administration in Syria certainly have a common enemy, ISIS, which is clearly and openly present inside Syria,' he said. Al-Sudani said his government has warned the Syrians against the mistakes that occurred in Iraq after Saddam's fall, when the ensuing security vacuum spawned years of sectarian violence and the rise of armed extremist groups. In recent weeks, sectarian violence in Syria has shaken the country's fragile postwar recovery. Al-Sudani called for Syria's current leadership to pursue a 'comprehensive political process that includes all components and communities.' 'We do not want Syria to be divided,' he said. 'This is unacceptable and we certainly do not want any foreign presence on Syrian soil,' apparently alluding to Israel's incursions into southern Syria.

Radio silence: Trump's fund cuts gift Kim Jong-un a tighter grip on North Korea's ‘mind apartheid'
Radio silence: Trump's fund cuts gift Kim Jong-un a tighter grip on North Korea's ‘mind apartheid'

First Post

time18 minutes ago

  • First Post

Radio silence: Trump's fund cuts gift Kim Jong-un a tighter grip on North Korea's ‘mind apartheid'

As US-funded broadcasts are slashed, millions of North Koreans are left more isolated than ever cut off from the outside world and solely at the mercy of the regime's propaganda read more In the world's hermit kingdom, the rulers appear anything but hermits — the face allegations of relentlessly hounding their hapless citizens in a, what many describe as, barbaric fashion, crushing human rights as a hippopotamus crushes a watermelon: with brute force and no second thought. While the rest of the world thrives fighting for greater and unrestricted access to information, those in North Korea are understood to live under an apartheid of the mind, cut off from realities of the world, deliberately by a regime that distorts or blocks information to suit its grip on power. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD For many in North Korea, the Voice of America and Radio Free Asia stood as rare lifelines — vital sources of uncensored news for the bold few willing to risk everything to tune in. But that's now a thing of the past. In a Maga move, US President Donald Trump — who once claimed he 'developed a very good relationship' with the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un — pulled the plug from these radio services. A switch in DC, silence in Pyongyang When the US Senate passed a funding cut earlier this month, it effectively ended decades of American support for independent media channels that had managed to pierce North Korea's ironclad information barrier. The decision prompted widespread alarm as it became obvious that this move could plunge North Korea's 26 million citizens into even deeper informational darkness, a report in South China Morning Post said. Broadcasts from the Voice of America and Radio Free Asia — two long-standing American-backed radio channels — had served as vital channels, providing North Koreans with unfiltered insights into global affairs, human rights and life beyond their tightly controlled borders. The radio programmes reportedly saw their broadcasts reduced by as much as 80 per cent after an executive order issued by Trump in March called for the dismantling of their parent agency, the United States Agency for Global Media, the Hing Kong-based newspaper reported. Silence after the signal North Korea experts, including Human Rights Watch's Teppei Kasai, expressed concern that this informational blackout would hinder international awareness of North Korea's worsening human rights situation. According to Martyn Williams, a senior fellow at the Stimson Centre, the timing could not have been better for Pyongyang's censors. In his analysis for 38 North, he observed that North Korean propagandists had been battling the flow of foreign broadcasts for decades. Suddenly, with no effort on their part, the playing field had tilted decisively in their favour, the South China Morning Post reported. From unity to discord The blow to North Korea-focussed media and human rights efforts didn't occur in a vacuum. For nearly two decades, the North Korean Human Rights Act had anchored America's engagement with the country on a bipartisan basis. Passed in 2004 and renewed in subsequent years, the legislation ensured funding for radio broadcasts, satellite analysis and human rights documentation. These efforts informed everything from US sanctions policy to United Nations reports on crimes against humanity. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD However, that act quietly expired in 2022. Though funding had temporarily continued through the State Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour (DRL), recent cuts proposed by the Trump administration aim to all but eliminate DRL's global funding. Human rights advocates have warned that this move will not only gut existing projects but destroy the infrastructure and institutional expertise necessary to rebuild them later, senior Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch Lina Yoon wrote in Foreign Policy in Focus. Real-world consequences The stakes go far beyond theoretical policy losses. Civil society organisations once supported by the act are now struggling to survive. Groups like the Citizens' Alliance for North Korean Human Rights, which had previously traced illicit financial networks tied to North Korea's cyber theft operations, are at risk of shuttering. The DailyNK, a Seoul-based newsroom that reports using sources inside North Korea, may soon fall silent. Similarly, the Transitional Justice Working Group, known for its geocoding of execution and burial sites using scapee testimony and satellite imagery, may no longer be able to continue its work, Lina wrote. She feared that cutting off these data sources would severely compromise the US government's ability to make informed policy decisions. A regional reversal Compounding the problem, the recently elected South Korean administration under President Lee Jae-myung has reportedly taken a softer stance toward Pyongyang. In addition to ending government-led broadcasts into the North, Seoul has banned activists from launching balloons containing leaflets, rice, medicine and cash across the demilitarised zone. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Human rights observers noted that while this strategy may aim for diplomatic rapprochement, it simultaneously weakens the already scarce flow of outside information into North Korea. Williams from the Stimson Centre told South China Morning Post that the reduced broadcasts would leave North Koreans even more cut off from both local and global events. In a deteriorating security climate, such isolation could come at a high price, not only for North Koreans but for neighbouring countries and allies relying on accurate, timely intelligence. Why the world should pay attention The broader message from policy analysts and human rights organisations is clear: supporting independent media in North Korea is not charity — it's strategy, said Lina. And yet, the Trump administration's broad-stroke cuts threaten to erase years of painstaking progress. Organisations holding DRL grants, including the Unification Media Group and the Database Center for North Korean Human Rights, may soon have no funds left to continue. Radio Free Asia has already ceased its Korean-language broadcasts, a move that could embolden Pyongyang's censors and silence dissident voices before they ever reach the airwaves. A future in the dark? Unless the US Congress takes urgent action to renew the North Korean Human Rights Act and protect funding for programmes that monitor and expose the regime's abuses, the world could lose its last windows into the country. As one expert put it, North Korea thrives in the dark. And with Washington now dimming the light, the shadows are growing longer.

Stephen Curry gets real about his ‘surreal' friendship with the Obamas
Stephen Curry gets real about his ‘surreal' friendship with the Obamas

Hindustan Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Stephen Curry gets real about his ‘surreal' friendship with the Obamas

NBA and American politics haven't always been the most interconnected of worlds, but when they do meet, they have proven to deliver beautiful friendships in return. One such example would be the close bond Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry shares with former President Barack Obama and his family. Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry opened up on his bond with the Obama family.(AP) Stephen Curry opens up on close bond with the Obama family During a recent appearance on 360 With Speedy, Curry opened up on his bond with the Obama family while discussing the launch of Plezi: a flavored drink company run by him in collaboration with former First Lady Michelle Obama. When asked if he shares a close relationship with them, Curry replied, 'As you can imagine, there are uh there are levels to what it means to be a part of the Obama family. But they're accessible. Let's put it that way." 'The friendship is there. The mentorship is there. President Obama's been an unbelievable voice for me in terms of certain things. I can just call him, ask him a question. He's always hyping me up on the court and to have now something that we get to do with Michelle, something that she's passionate about for a while. It has taken her time to develop a product, and she stands behind it.' It's still surreal to even talk like that, but those are good people to be partners with. For sure. They are amazing people, and it's been cool to get to know them over the years,' he added. Barack Obama's association with basketball During his time in office, President Obama was a huge fan of the sport himself. He would frequently host private games at the White House featuring some of the best players in the league. He was an ardent supporter who encouraged the sport and shared a close relationship with many players, Curry being one of them. By Stuti Gupta

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store