V S Achuthanandan, who turns 94 Friday, was one of the 32 communists who walked out of the national executive of the undivided CPI in 1964 to form the CPM.
The veteran had a bitter-sweet relation with the party he formed, inviting disciplinary actions every now and then.
Achuthanandan never had it easy in life.
He was only four years old when his mother died. His father also left in his childhood.
The youngest of the four children, Achuthanandan joined his brother’s garment store.
The boy later joined a coir factory, where he was spotted by the legendary comrade P Krishna Pillai.
He was sent to work among agricultural laborers and to organize them. A fighter was born.
Achuthanandan was arrested after the Punnapra-Vayalar agitation.
The brutal torture by the policemen only hardened the communist.
Achuthanandan was known as a hardliner in the party.
He had always presided over a faction of the party, until he was effectively sidelined ahead of the 2016 assembly election.
Achuthanandan rose to the top of the party’s Kerala unit but lacked the stature of leaders such as Basava Punnayya, B. Ranadive and P. Sundarayya.
In fact, E. Balanandan was inducted to the politburo from Kerala much before Achuthanandan.
The rise of Balanandan sowed the seeds of factionalism that plagued the party for decades to come. The dominant ‘CITU group’ gained in strength under Balanandan. The faction had the tacit support of E.M.S. Namboodiripad.
When Achuthanandan lost out to E..K. Nayanar for the post of the state secretary by just seven votes, the CPM’s reputation as a monolith took a hit. The pace quickened when Achuthanandan lost the assembly election at Mararikkulam in 1996.
Achuthanandan struck back by systematically eliminating the CITU group.
The plan hatched at the Kollam state conference was completed at Palakkad, where V. B. Cherian, Appukkuttan Vallikkunnu, M. M. Lawrence, O. Bharathan, K. N. Raveendranath and other leaders were rooted out from the party.
Ironically, Achuthanandan’s lieutenants in the attack were younger leaders such as Pinarayi Vijayan, Thomas Isaac and M. A. Baby.
Achuthanandan rewarded Vijayan by ushering him to the post of the state secretary after Chadayan Govindan passed away.
Vijayan and the younger lot gradually turned against their mentor.
At the Malappuram party conference, Achuthanandan knew that he was isolated in the party.
Vijayan was the all-powerful boss, defeating 21 comrades loyal to Achuthanandan.
Achuthanandan was not a spent force though.
Even though the party barred him from contesting the 2006 election, he rode a wave of popular support that spilled on to the streets. The shrewd politician turned the heat n Pinarayi with the SNC-Lavalin bribery case.
Ten years later, Vijayan had consolidated his position within the party.
He was a natural candidate for the chief minister’s post while Achuthanandan had to be contented with the post of the chairman of an Administrative Reforms Commission.
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V. S. Achuthanandan is turning 94 Friday: File photo
