In Kerala, politicians usually go against their oppositions. CPI(M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury stated on Saturday that 'Secularism cannot be protected unless there is a strict separation of religion from politics and government.' Yechury was speaking while inaugurating the state-wide recognition of the CPI(M) marking the 100th year of the founding of the Communist Party in India, through video conference. Yechury stated that organizations like the RSS want to "take India into the darkness of the past" by changing the country's history, culture, education policy “to give a monolithic Hindu identity to India” instead of its syncretic cultural identity. Know the recent developments in the Assembly Ruckus case of Kerala October 17 of this year is termed as a historic day for the Communist party as it marks the hundred years of the formation of the first unit of the Communist Party of India in Tashkent in the then Soviet Union. "Secularism means the separation of religion from politics and from the state. Every individual has the right to choose his own faith and it will be the duty of the state, law to protect that right which is inviolable and the Communists will always stand up to protect it," Yechury said. Kerala High Court lashes out at media and cops for this reason CPI(M) General Secretary said, "However, secularism in our Constitution was interpreted as equality of all religions. The moment you say equality of all religions, it's only natural that the religion to which the majority of the population subscribe to has a greater advantage over the others. And that has inherent dangers, which is what we are witnessing today. And unless there is a strict separation of religion from politics and government, secularism cannot be protected, defended or put into operation in a proper sense." The govt of Kerala spends this whopping amount for the development of hospitals