Members of the Political Bureau :
1. Vinod Mishra, General Secretary
2. Raghu, Chairman, Central Control Commission
3. Nagbhushan Pattnaik, President of IPF
4. Ramnaresh Ram, in-charge, peasant front
5. Sankar Mitra, central spokesperson
6. Arindam
In view of the facts that the CPI(ML)-Liberation is the only CPI(ML) group
(a) which has maintained its continuity and unity since its reorganisation in 1974;
(b) which has got an all-lndia
THE party has maintained close fraternal relations with the Communist Party of Nepal (Marxist-Leninist) from the mid-70s onward. These relations have been based upon the spirit of mutual respect and
To take up the challenge of defending Marxism-Leninism in the face of the continuing deep crisis of socialism and renewed bourgeois offensive, the party in its July 1990 Special Conference
IT may be useful here to reiterate the basic differences between the CPI(M) and our party. The opportunist course in the Indian communist movement is identified first by its characterisation
THE Fourth Party Congress was held in January 1988 in a village in Hazaribagh district of Bihar. In keeping with the changing situation and its own enhanced understanding, the party
MEANWHILE, the party had started feeling a desperate need for asserting its presence in the national political scene. In the wake of the failure of the first non-Congress experiment at
IN 1978, the party launched a rectification movement. It had all begun with the limited purpose of correcting just the style of work, but the spirit of rectification did
In the middle of 1972 the party had suffered almost a total paralysis. The entire central leadership was virtually decimated. The remaining party forces were all lying scattered and
IN the course of a protracted struggle between its opportunist and revolutionary wings, the Communist Party of India underwent its first split in 1964 and a new party was formed