Thiruvananthapuram: While new state Congress chief K Sudhakaran has opened up against his old foe, Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan now faces an outburst from former CPI-M leader from his home, Pinarayi village in Kannur district, Pandayala Shaji, who calls him a "gangster". Shaji is the son of Pandya Gopalan, the volunteer 'captain' of the undivided Communist Party in the state which was formed at Parappuram in Pinarayi village in 1939 in presence of legends such as E.M.S. Namboodiripad, A.K. Gopalan, N.E. Balram and P. Krishna Pillai.
Vijayan was the most trusted disciple of Pandyala Gopalan Master but Shaji had differences of opinion with Vijayan and he left the party to join the Communist Marxist Party. In an interview with IANS, he sought to show how Vijayan had long displayed "dictatorial tendencies" and why he left the party. A leader of the Student Federation of India (SFI) and one of the party's foremost orators, Shaji left after he was assaulted by alleged CPI-M goons when his father was presiding over a public meeting at Thalassery in which the main speaker was Vijayan.
Following are excerpts of the interview
Your father, late Pandiyala Gopalan Master, was a founder leader of the Communist party in the country and one of the towering leaders of the Communist Party of India- Marxist (CPI-M) after it was formed in 1964. Why then you are against the party?
I cannot tolerate the dictatorship politics in the CPI-M practised by Pinarayi Vijayan and I became an eyesore to him after I led a public programme in Thalassery town in which I shouted slogans against Vijayan owing to differences of opinion related to the job of certain private college teachers. I was with the teachers who were to lose their jobs when the institution where they were teaching was being taken over by an educational cooperative society in Pinarayi town.
Vijayan was for expelling the teachers and taking over the institution and starting it afresh. This led to a difference of opinion and it reached the streets wherein I led a procession and shouted slogans against Vijayan. This was one issue Vijayan could not forget as he is a person who will never tolerate criticisms even from the son of his mentor and political leader, Pandiyala Gopalan Master.
Read: KPCC president K Sudhakaran responds to CM Vijayan's allegations
You were attacked when your father was presiding over a public programme of the CPI-M in Thalassery. What was the reason for the attack?
I was almost killed and am still living with multiple injuries. My hand was broken in four places and my leg was smashed with iron rods and pipes. I left the CPI-M when the party split and the dynamic political leader and another Guru of Pinarayi Vijayan, the late M.V. Raghavan (MVR) formed the Communist Marxist Party (CMP). I joined MVR and his fledgling political outfit, CMP, and we faced violent opposition throughout Kerala with special emphasis in my home district Kannur.