KCP 'committee' shares thought on 45th Raising Day
Source: Chronicle News Service
Imphal, April 13 2025:
Ahead of the 45th Raising Day celebration on Monday (April 14), the central committee of the proscribed Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) shared party's annual statement with revolutionary organisations of Kangleipak (Manipur) and WESEA region as well as to women organisations, CSOs, intellectuals, public leaders, media, medical professionals, artistes, students, players and farmers.
Apart from remembering revolutionaries who made the sacrifice during the course of revolutionary struggle of Kangleipak (Manipur), the Party also extended revolutionary salute to all the martyrs and those disabled during the struggle and languishing in jails.
Placing its annual statement for the people to deliberate, KCP's central committee said that today's India or Bharat was never a united country before the colonisation by the British rulers but existed as princely states.
In another word, the present Bharat can be referred as a gift of the British, who conquered all the princely states or kingdoms of Bharat one after another and later kept as their Protectorate states.
The dream of forming the present united Bharat began during the freedom movement against the colonial British and later integrated all the kingdoms willingly or through coercion.
The turning point for the formation of a united Bharat began during the Haripura Session of the Congress in 1938 wherein a declaration was made for integration of all princely states.
Accordingly, steps for integrating the princely states to the Indian Union using any means started with Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel entrusted the responsibility for integration.
Sardar Patel's subsequent actions put Jammu & Kashmir, Cooch Bihar, Manipur, Tripura, Travancore, Jodhpur, Bhopal, Hyderabad, Junagadh and other princely states into the united Bharat or Indian Union, willingly or unwillingly.
Before leaving Bharat, the British had serious doubt on existence of 562 princely states under one nation.
Despite the doubt, the British handed over freedom to Bharat on August 15, 1947 .
The then Prime Minister of United Kingdom Winston Churchill even said that 'if Independence is granted to India, power will go to the hands of rascals, rogues, freebooters; all Indian leaders will be of low calibre and men of straw.
They will have sweet tongues and silly hearts.
They will fight amongst themselves for power and India will be lost in political squabbles.
A day would come when even air and water would be taxed in India'.
Winston Churchill's controversial quote and prediction for Indi is turning out to be true in view of present Indian leaders' deceitful acts and incapability to convert their works/promises into action, the annual statement of KCP said and questioned legitimacy and capability of Indian leaderships post-independence.
The annual statement also raised deep concern over cultural imposition and alleged racial discrimination by Hindi speaking Aryan majority over the Mongoloid and Dravidian peoples of the North East and Southern India.
Criticising Centre's response to the ongoing conflict in Manipur since May 3, 2023, the annual statement alleged Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP led administration of political negligence and using identity politics to divide and destroy Manipur.
It said that deployment of more than 60,000 Indian troops would not resolve the conflict but rather fuel the conflict and prolong it for geopolitical gains.
The organisation also held government responsible for the large-scale displacement and suffering of more than 60,000 people currently languishing in relief camps due to the ongoing conflict.
The annual statement also said that the growing Chinese influence in the region and strategic interest of China in Bangladesh could potentially shift regional power dynamics.