The Red Menace
Re: The Red Menace
but not from the same section of society. hopefully, once done for this round there won't be any more expendable foot soldiers available for megalomaniacs to play god with.
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Re: The Red Menace
Its too early to predict a win for MB over the reds. In fact it is more likely to be a stalemate and there is a small chance of the reds actually winning. It will depend on how much MB is willing to concede to the dynasty and the central coterie. If MB carries on her independent path then the reds will have an edge or will be "given" an edge.
I had suggested that the congress supported MB to weaken the Left and it wants both the Left and MB to weaken each other - so that the congress can pick up the pieces and gain the classic Bengali collaborator of Delhi after a tiring bout of local factional frenzy for some time. The reds fall neatly into this as useful harrier of both MB and the Left. MB knows that congress eventually targets her regime, and is already working towards that end - so that she began to take pre-emptive steps. This is where the reds needed to be activated.
The reds have been around too long not to be infiltrated by the central undercover operations. Their activity patterns coincide with the apparent need in the centre to control regional satraps - potential or those even in overt bootlicking mode but showing signs of strength uncomfortable for the centre.
I had suggested that the congress supported MB to weaken the Left and it wants both the Left and MB to weaken each other - so that the congress can pick up the pieces and gain the classic Bengali collaborator of Delhi after a tiring bout of local factional frenzy for some time. The reds fall neatly into this as useful harrier of both MB and the Left. MB knows that congress eventually targets her regime, and is already working towards that end - so that she began to take pre-emptive steps. This is where the reds needed to be activated.
The reds have been around too long not to be infiltrated by the central undercover operations. Their activity patterns coincide with the apparent need in the centre to control regional satraps - potential or those even in overt bootlicking mode but showing signs of strength uncomfortable for the centre.
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Re: The Red Menace
Centre can use SPOs anywhere except Chhattisgarh
In a major relief to Centre and states, the Supreme Court today clarified that they were free to use the services of Special Police Officers(SPOs) in fighting insurgent groups in the country, except in the State of Chattisgarh.
...
Solicitor General Rohinton Nariman and counsel Siddharth Dave appearing for the Union Government told the bench that the modification was necessary as "otherwise it would cause serious trouble in undertaking the anti-insurgency operations in other parts of the country, particularly, the North-East."
The counsel submitted that the order restraining the Centre from extending any form of support to the SPOs should be confined only to Chattisgarh as the PIL relating to "Salwa Judum", "Koya Commandos" was confined only to that State, and the court had not adverted to the general role of SPOs in the country.
Concurring with the arguments, the bench said it "had no objection to allow the application" of the Centre.
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Re: The Red Menace
RM,Rahul M wrote:but not from the same section of society. hopefully, once done for this round there won't be any more expendable foot soldiers available for megalomaniacs to play god with.
there is a steady supply from the same sections as before. The supply line is in no way disconnected. I am quite positive that each such supply, is followed through by surveillance and somewhere deep in the caverns of the centres of surveillance - those records are collated. The Indian admin setup for this follows through exactly along the colonial tracking system and infiltrates. If the movement has survived and been allowed to revive post 77-80 phase, it has been infiltrated and this has been done to serve a range of unknown but estimable objectives.
Re: The Red Menace
you are talking of the intellectuals. those will always be there in some limited numbers. alone, they are good for little but raising storm in teacups.
but the 'revolution' won't be there without the masses. the section that participated in naxalite movements -- farmers, urban middle/lower middle class etc those are absent from the current movement.
but the 'revolution' won't be there without the masses. the section that participated in naxalite movements -- farmers, urban middle/lower middle class etc those are absent from the current movement.
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Re: The Red Menace
No - there is a steady flow from the "lower" and "middle". In fact the flow has increased after the parliamentary left's fall. True - the urban lower and middle is going more - but the lines are now spread into the rural side too. The entire raahr is active - stretching into the old coal belt.
Re: The Red Menace
Most of the inflow from AP university gangs - Radical student union - dried up for some years. The people who are already IN are still in OU and Kakathiya mainly. Serious blow to Maoiest is the complete destructions of activities in AP. Police in other states shall take some inputs on anti red operations from AP police who for their misfortune has lot of experiance in this area and lot of sucesses.
Re: The Red Menace
Didnt see this posted here
A report called "India's Silent War" from Al Jazeera
Keep chai and biskoot handy. Also includes interviews with Binayak Sen and Kishanji.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EW06kd_up8
Best part for me was 26:50 onwards CRPF guy with micro Tavor (and a mean looking CRPF guy at that in a T shirt and pyjama). Anybody know since when have the CRPF started using Tavors ?
Edit: Link replaced with Al Jazeera youtube channel link thanks to Upendra.
A report called "India's Silent War" from Al Jazeera
Keep chai and biskoot handy. Also includes interviews with Binayak Sen and Kishanji.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EW06kd_up8
Best part for me was 26:50 onwards CRPF guy with micro Tavor (and a mean looking CRPF guy at that in a T shirt and pyjama). Anybody know since when have the CRPF started using Tavors ?
Edit: Link replaced with Al Jazeera youtube channel link thanks to Upendra.
Last edited by hulaku on 19 Nov 2011 18:11, edited 1 time in total.
Re: The Red Menace
Dont click on the above youtube link which links to inbred porki channel
Here is the original link from Al Jazeera channel to those interested in watching it
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EW06kd_up8
Here is the original link from Al Jazeera channel to those interested in watching it
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EW06kd_up8
Re: The Red Menace
It is amusing to see Al Jazeera doing investigative journalism in India. The interviewer was pointing his index finger while asking questions, not a very polite way, as if the officer owed him the answer. I wonder if Al Jazeera interviewers have the same tone in Goraland interviews.
<RANT>Overall, the terrain terrain looks certainly underdeveloped and unforgiving. All these JNU Jholwala pseudo-socialist policies of last 6+decades have left many people out of the loop, and these bugger maoists are trying hard to keep it that way. The villages/people in the documentary look in far worse condition than the ones I have seen even in Dang. (which has forest-dwelling population) </RANT>
<RANT>Overall, the terrain terrain looks certainly underdeveloped and unforgiving. All these JNU Jholwala pseudo-socialist policies of last 6+decades have left many people out of the loop, and these bugger maoists are trying hard to keep it that way. The villages/people in the documentary look in far worse condition than the ones I have seen even in Dang. (which has forest-dwelling population) </RANT>
Re: The Red Menace
b'ji, I don't agree, let's leave it at that. 

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Re: The Red Menace
RM, just wait until spring next year. Things should become more evident.
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Re: The Red Menace
Views from the left
Talk under pressure
The CPI argues the “verbal duel” between India and Pakistan over resumption of dialogue shows that the rulers of both the countries are increasingly depending on the US even for an improvement in bilateral relations, which “is a bad omen for the entire region.” The editorial in New Age says that, till some time ago, sections within the Indian government had adopted a tough posture vis-a-vis Pakistan, claiming Islamabad is not serious about prosecuting the perpetrators of 26/11. “But the chorus was diluted when the FBI arrested someone who happens to be a US citizen of Pakistani origin as the mastermind of the Mumbai attack. Though our intelligence agencies have not been allowed access to the arrested American, despite a visit to the USA, we are now in two minds: whether to depend on our own investigations or rely on what the Americans are giving out,” it claims.
The editorial claims this confusion was reflected when New Delhi all of a sudden proposed the resumption of dialogue. It goes on to attack the US’s motives: “We must realise that American imperialists have their own agenda for this region. The growing difficulties in Afghanistan for the occupying forces have forced the Obama administration to drag in new allies... The USA needs both India and Pakistan. That should explain American interest in a resumption of dialogue,” it argues.
It, however, adds that for peace and political stability and to fight terrorism and religious fundamentalism, “a sustainable peace process between India and Pakistan is inevitable.” It calls for de-linking dialogue with prosecution of the “presumed culprits” of 26/11.
Pushing for pensions
The editorial in the CPM’s People’s Democracy says the government’s decision to allow 26 per cent FDI in the pension sector was made under pressure from capital. “If approved by Parliament, this will give international finance capital access to roughly $12 billion of assets today...” The article claims that even the “ineffective measures” undertaken by the government to tame inflation — like increasing interest rates — have come under attack from India Inc: “They seek cheaper and more ready access to funds... to maximise their profits through speculation rather than allow such funds to be spent through public investments to build our much-needed infrastructure and generate jobs in the economy, enlarging the purchasing power of the people.”
Although the article says the Left would oppose the pension bill in Parliament, it fears that “the UPA 2 government may well get the pension funds legislation passed through Parliament with the able and vocal support of the BJP.”
CITU on OWS
Another article in People’s Democracy talks about a possible all-India general strike. The central trade unions are to meet this week, and the article asks all state units of CITU — the CPM’s union arm — to start preparations at once to make it a resounding success.
CITU feels the Occupy Wall Street movement can find an echo in India. The article quotes its president, A.K. Padmanabhan, as saying that there was a need for the working class to be made aware of the true character of capitalism and prepare it to change the exploitative system.
“Capitalism is seeking to come out of the present crisis by intensifying the onslaught on workers’ and peoples’ livelihood. At the same time, the struggles of the working class against this onslaught were also intensifying. Europe and the US witnessed a greater frequency of strikes and protests by the organised working class supported by the mass of the people. People were raising their voice against the rising inequalities under the neo-liberal economic order and also against capitalism,” it says. Within India, UPA 2’s credibility is at rock bottom, it argues, but in the absence of any credible alternative the government is is pushing through a similar agenda of neo-liberal globalisation.
Re: The Red Menace
NDTV Reporting
Kishanji shot dead in an encounter.
Good work.
Kishanji shot dead in an encounter.
Good work.
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Re: The Red Menace
They went after Bikash yesterday and ended up with Kishen the rat. Wonderful.
Re: The Red Menace
@ANI_news: Kishenji was killed in Burishol, Purulia: unconfirmed sources
Re: The Red Menace
finally...kudos to security forces!
Re: The Red Menace
Top Bengal Maoist Kishenji killed in gunbattle with forces.
West Bengal's top Maoist leader Koteshwar Rao alias Kishenji has been killed in a gunbattle with security forces in Burishol in Lalgarh, West Midnapore, sources in the state police have said.
A woman aide with him, Suchitra, is also believed to be dead. Another three to four Maoists are also dead, though there is no official confirmation of these deaths.
Foxing the joint forces for a second time in two years in Junglemhal yesterday, Kishenji and Suchitra escaped from West Midnapore district in West Bengal into Jharkhand.
...
Kishenji and his group had foxed the joint forces for a second time in two years yesterday, while they were heading towards Jhargram.
“We had strong information that Kishenji and Suchitra, the wife of a slain state committee member, were hiding in the jungles of Nalbani, Lalbani and Kushboni in Jhargram area of West Midnapore district,” a top counter-insurgency force officer told PTI yesterday.
The joint forces were alerted by the arrest of five Maoist 'village defence squad' members, who comprised the outermost ring of four rings usually assigned to protect a top leader such as Kishenji.
“When we broke the outermost ring, Kishenji and Suchitra fled to Jharkhand before we could seal the area completely,” the officer said.
“According to our information, Kishenji had been staying with Suchitra ever since her husband and state committee member Shashadhar Mahato died in March 2011," a senior CRPF officer told PTI.
This was the second time that Kishenji had escaped after March 2010 when he was reportedly injured in a gunbattle with the joint forces at Lakhanpur jungle in the district.
Following his escape last year, his frequent calls to the media and television channels stopped and it was rumoured that he had been killed, but the police later said he was alive.
The five arrested Maoists of the 'village defence squad' included Prosenjit and Kanai -- involved in the attack on the Silda EFR camp where 24 personnel were gunned down by Maoists on February 15 last year.
The forces also recovered arms in several raids in the area yesterday.
Re: The Red Menace
Home Secy R K Singh has confirmed this news.
So Mamta Di is new Hero and Security forces have done great job.
So Mamta Di is new Hero and Security forces have done great job.
Re: The Red Menace
According to ToI, the search for Suchitra Mahato is still on.
Re: The Red Menace
Congratulations to the forces.
The interesting question is when his overt followers launch a campaign to go after the forces who got him.
The interesting question is when his overt followers launch a campaign to go after the forces who got him.
Re: The Red Menace
like the time when azad got killed.Pratyush wrote:Congratulations to the forces.
The interesting question is when his overt followers launch a campaign to go after the forces who got him.
Re: The Red Menace
Good news to read.. especially at the end of an otherwise tiring day. Good to see the agencies trailing these fellows like rats into their rat holes and finishing them off.Kashi wrote:Top Bengal Maoist Kishenji killed in gunbattle with forces.
Re: The Red Menace
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-15874784
Police in the Indian state of West Bengal are investigating reports that senior Maoist military leader Koteshwar Rao has been killed.
They say that they are "99% sure" that Mr Rao, otherwise known as Kishenji, had been killed in a clash with paramilitary forces.
Police are awaiting formal identification of the body before officially pronouncing him dead.
The BBC's Amitabha Bhattasali in Calcutta says that photographs of the body have been sent to Maoist prisoners in jail in the city so that they can formally identify him.
Television channels said that he was reportedly killed in forests near the Jhargram municipality during an anti-Maoist operation by the security forces.
They said that his body had been found with an AK-47 lying beside him.
Three other accomplices of Mr Rao were also been killed in the gun battle, the reports added.
A big operation is now underway in Jhargram, with the police reportedly looking for Mr Rao's aide, Suchitra Mahato.
Re: The Red Menace
Its funny
the Ammas and Mamtas pander to these chars when it suits them. But when they turn on them - these women can suddenly get very focussed
the Ammas and Mamtas pander to these chars when it suits them. But when they turn on them - these women can suddenly get very focussed

Re: The Red Menace
Top maoist Koteshwar Rao alias "Kishenji" eliminated in west midnapore. 

Re: The Red Menace
Great news. Stick (read death) to the top leadership and carrot (read development) to the bottom strata will go a long way in containing the Red menace.Narad wrote:Top maoist Koteshwar Rao alias "Kishenji" eliminated in west midnapore.
Re: The Red Menace
May he enjoy is 72 lal hoors.. lal musharraf...
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Re: The Red Menace
Comrade Koteshwar Rao "Lal Salam"....Unfortunately you fought the right battle for a wrong cause....anyway you are making way for the right battle and right cause to come forward.....
Re: The Red Menace
just a couple of days back I was listening to his interview to al jazeera "we want to break up India". well, so long moron, this death is way too good for you.
Re: The Red Menace
Varavara Rao was on TV looking so desolate and perhaps angry that he said maoist's link with PLA, arms training etc are all true as it is our aim and they have same ideology.
Will see link and post it later. He should be put in jail for sedition and war against India.
Will see link and post it later. He should be put in jail for sedition and war against India.
Re: The Red Menace
This Varavara Rao used to be in jail but these days he is on TV as expert. What a plight.
Re: The Red Menace
Traitors like Varavara Rao are big hypocrites. When the barbaric Maoists slit the throat of people then these people remain mum! When the Maoists kill innocent people by sabotaging the Railway track then they don't utter a single word! But when a jar headed man like Kishan Ji is killed, then they start thumping their chest!
Anyway, the latest report says that it was the Cobras who nailed Kishan ji.
Anyway, the latest report says that it was the Cobras who nailed Kishan ji.
Re: The Red Menace
Koteshwar Rao is a "Telugu" name. is the guy from AP? I've seen Varavara Rao walking on Shivam Road in Hyderabad quite a few times. My grandfather used to know him from olden days in academia.
Re: The Red Menace
majority of top maoist leaders are from AP. kishenji is from osmania.
Re: The Red Menace
Kishen ji killing a serious blow to Maoists
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/a ... iewImage=1
This is full of nuggets, pls allow me to paste in full

perhaps the only image of rat (surrounded by jholawalas)

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/a ... iewImage=1
This is full of nuggets, pls allow me to paste in full
Maoist movement in the country has suffered a massive blow with the killing of Mallojula Koteshwara Rao, popularly known as Kishenji, in West Bengal.
The biggest credit for this 57-year-old Maoist leader is the building of Lalgarh movement in West Bengal, which is now billed as the second Naxalbari in India. One of the first generation founding leaders of erstwhile CPI-ML People's War (PW) in Andhra Pradesh, Kishenji left an indelible imprint in building the revolutionary movement not just in West Bengal, but also in Andhra Pradesh and Dandakaranya (part of which is Chhattisgarh).
While most of the leaders of the ultra left movement in India were either strong on an ideological plane or had only had sound military capabilities, Kishenji belonged to the rare class of being an able ideologue and also the best in military field craft. Perhaps, it was this rare capability that help the Lalgarh movement reach new scales on the revolutionary arena.
Intelligence officers who keep track of the Left Wing Extremist (LWE) movement concede that Kishenji's understanding of guerrilla tactics and strategies was phenomenal. For example, when the Lalgarh resistance movement was in its nascent stage, Kishenji's idea of digging huge trenches across the roads to halt movement of security forces was a huge hit. Kishenji, counter insurgency experts concede, had effectively replicated (Ho Chi Minh trails – digging trenches on roads) a tactic employed by Vietnamese guerrillas.
Kishenji, a Brahmin by caste, was born in Peddapalli town of Karimnagar district, about 200 km from Hyderabad and was a graduate by the time CPI (ML) People's War was formed. Known for his straightforward approach, unlike his comrade-in-arms Muppala Laxmana Rao alias Ganapathi (now Maoist Chief), Kishenji landed himself in troubles within his party often. He was the leader of a Dalam (squad) in which Ganapathi was a member in 1980. He became the secretary of the People's War for Andhra Pradesh and was shifted to Dandakaranya by 1985 after his colleagues accused him of suffering from severe deviations.
In Dandakaranya too, he proved his mettle by enhancing the military capabilities of the Maoist cadres and then he shifted to West Bengal by 1995. Very significantly, that was the time, the PW had only a couple of mass organisations working in West Bengal and Bihar/Jharkhand or in other North Indian States. By 2004 he built a perfect underground squad structure and after PW merged with MCCI to form CPI Maoist, the revolutionary movement got further strengthened. His role in unification of the revolutionary forces is also significant and he is stated to have played a crucial role in merger talks between MCCI and PW.
Kishenji, was once arrested in Karimnagar district in 1977 when villagers of Marigadda grew suspicious of him and handed him over to police. In 1985, police came close to arresting him along with Nalla Adi Reddy (killed later by police in 2000), in Dilsukhnagar area of Hyderabad when he opened fire on the police team and escaped.
The slain leader was a member of the Central Committee, Central Military Commission and the Polit Bureau of the CPI Maoist, and carried a reward of Rs. 12 lakh announced by the Andhra Pradesh government. His brother Mallojula Venugopal is also another Central Committee member, who is known to have been appointed as the spokesman of the CPI (Maoist) with a nom de guerre of Abhay.
Kishenji's death comes at a time, when the Centre has begun claiming that the Maoist violence and activity has declined in all the LWE affected States, except Bihar and Maharashtra.
According to a written reply given to Rajya Sabha on Wednesday by Union Minister of State for Home Jitendra Singh, there were 1,468 violent incidents up to November 2011 in nine States, while the figure stood at 1,925 for the corresponding period in 2010. Maoists killed 49 persons this year, while 207 were killed in 2010.

perhaps the only image of rat (surrounded by jholawalas)

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Re: The Red Menace
Its NOT Kishen"Ji" but Kishen. First newspaper to get that right so far...
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1111125/j ... 797415.jsp
This Kishen will be replaced with another Kishen alias Prasanta Bose, the only Bengali Politburo member left now. If Nambala Keshav Rao and Ganapathi go, thats like awesome news. Both are in CTG, not Bengal.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1111125/j ... 797415.jsp
This Kishen will be replaced with another Kishen alias Prasanta Bose, the only Bengali Politburo member left now. If Nambala Keshav Rao and Ganapathi go, thats like awesome news. Both are in CTG, not Bengal.
Re: The Red Menace
Probably 90% of Naxal leaders (both top rung and mid rung) are from AP. After AP raised multiple police forces these guys moved to places where the law and order is weak. Hence you see them in Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, orissa and WB. Orissa and Chattisgarh are improving though the hit ratio is less in Chattisgarh. West Bengal is so far shit but we have to give Mamta some time. Now she is enemy for these folks and it is a shift from her earlier stand. It will be a different world for WB going forward.devesh wrote:Koteshwar Rao is a "Telugu" name. is the guy from AP? I've seen Varavara Rao walking on Shivam Road in Hyderabad quite a few times. My grandfather used to know him from olden days in academia.