The Red Menace

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nawabs
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by nawabs »

Odisha MLA Jhina Hikaka Released by Maoists: Reports

http://news.outlookindia.com/items.aspx?artid=760738
After being held by the Maoists for over a month, Odisha BJD MLA Jhina Hikaka was released this morning.According to TV reports, Jhina Hikaka was released at an undsiclosed loaction.

The decision to free Hikaka was taken at the people's court on Tuesday after he promised to resign from the state assembly and also try and get the Maoists' demands fulfilled.

Hikaka was abducted from Koraput district on March 23.

Maoists from the Andhra Odisha Border Special Zonal Committee had kidnapped Hikaka from his constituency Laxmipur while he was returning home.

The indication of an end to the crisis came on Wednesday morning when a Maoist identifying herself as Aruna called a Koraput lawyer, and spoke of the release terms.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Nihat »

So does the above mean that no additional pigs were let out for the release of the MLA or was there a previous deal in place which I might have missed ?.


OTOH , the Chattisgargh saga coontinues with the terrorists continuing to ask for more and more of their demands to be fulilled.
Chhattisgarh IAS abduction: Three rounds of talks fail

Raipur: Despite three rounds of talks, the mediators and the Naxals have failed to come up with any solution to free Sukma Collector Alex Paul Menon even after almost a week of his abduction.

The Naxals have in fact increased their demands and are now seeking the release of nine more of their jailed leaders, including Kartam Joga and Vijay Sodhi.


The government has already missed one deadline to meet their demands and is yet to respond to the latest request. However, further negotiations are expected to continue on Friday.

Six days since District Collector Alex Paul Menon was abducted from the Koraput district, the government finally started the negotiations on Thursday and would continue further talks.

However, there is still no clarity on either the demands of the Naxals or how much time will it take for the 32-year-old collector.

The nervous wait for the family of the IAS officer continues.

On Thursday, the first round of talks between Naxal representatives and the state government began, without any forward movement despite three rounds of discussions.

Meanwhile, former MLA Manish Kunjam, who had gone to deliver medicines after the collector's health deteriorated, returned with news that Menon's health condition was fine.
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/ias-abductio ... 487-3.html

Obviously Op. Greenhunt has had some impact but clearly not enough to crush the menace once and for all, although the leaders at the central and state levels are being wiped out and casualties of our forces appear to be declining (at least by the news headliines) but these terrorists have found themselves a bit of a gold mine by way of abducting high ranking civil servants, tourists and politicos. As no one in particular seems to care about adhivasi abductions , these higher value targets have surely caught the terrorists eyes in a big way and it will become a pattern in most states unless we can devise some tactics to counter it.

Perhaps high ranking officials should go in with heavier security or not at all until the CRPF have cleared the area for good.
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Re: The Red Menace

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Mediators arrive at a tentative agreement for Collector’s release

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/a ... epage=true
Mediators working to secure the release of kidnapped Sukma Collector, Alex P. Menon, have arrived at a tentative agreement that shall be submitted to the Maoists on Saturday. “Talks have concluded for now, but the final agreement shall have to be approved by the Maoists,” said mediator B.D. Sharma.

Mr. Sharma and Professor Hargopal, who are mediating on behalf of the guerrillas, hope to travel to an interior village in Sukma on Saturday morning to discuss the proposal with cadres of the banned Communist Party of India (Maoist). The rebels kidnapped Mr. Menon on April 21 while he was addressing a gathering of farmers in his district.

While Mr. Sharma refused to comment on the contours of a possible agreement, an analysis of the Maoist demands suggests that the party could be reaching out to those sympathetic to the issues raised by the Maoists, but alienated by tactics like armed struggle and kidnapping.

This gulf between Maoist motivations and methods was highlighted by Supreme Court Advocate and Team Anna activist Prashant Bhushan when he refused to mediate on the Maoist behalf. Mr. Bhushan told The Hindu that he agreed with some of the Maoist demands, but could not condone the use of Mr. Menon’s life as “a bargain chip”.

While the Maoists have demanded that the State government call off anti-Maoist operations in Chhattisgarh and free eight prominent Maoists currently in custody, they have also demanded the release of a number of Communist Party of India workers and unaffiliated tribals, who, the Maoists say, have been falsely implicated in Maoist attacks.

The most prominent of these is Kartam Joga, the lead petitioner in a case filed in the Supreme Court that holds the State police and administration responsible for a plethora of human rights violations during the Salwa Judum, a controversial counterinsurgency campaign. Mr. Joga was arrested in September 2010 and accused of participating in a Maoist ambush in which 76 CRPF troopers were killed in a matter of hours. An investigation by The Hindu revealed that at least 2 of the ten witnesses mentioned in the case-file accused the police of fabricating their testimonies.

The Maoists have also demanded that the police release hundreds of allegedly innocent tribals who have been arrested and imprisoned on trumped up charges. While the rebels have not fixed a number to these arrests, a recent report by the Centre for Social Justice reveals that in 1,758 prisoners and 13 children are currently lodged in Jadgalpur Central Jail, a facility designed for 648 inmates. Of the 1,178 under trial, 605 adults and 7 children have been charged under the Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act of 2005, an act usually used against those suspected of aiding the Maoists.

In a recent press note titled “Why did we kidnap the Collector?” South Bastar Regional Committee member Ganesh Uieke acknowledged that “some prominent intellectuals and sections of the media” have put pressure on the rebels to unconditionally release their hostage on humanitarian grounds as Mr. Menon is an asthma patient, a member of the historically oppressed Dalit community, and an apparently popular official working for the uplift of his district.

Mr. Uieke identifies Mr. Menon as a the senior most official in Sukma district where, Mr. Uieke holds the district police responsible for a series of staged encounters, custodial deaths and the torching of 300 homes in the villages of Tarmetla, Morpalli and Timapuram. “Why is Mr. Menon unable to stop these inhumane and unconstitutional practices?

“Who is this young, Dalit Collector from an impoverished background working on behalf of?” Mr. Ueike asks, before accusing him of running an administration designed to aid the exploitation of Chhattisgarh’s mineral resources by a multinational corporation, an assertion disputed by the State administration.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by krisna »

Will Alex Paul Menon's religion save him from coming to harm at the hands of his Maoist kidnappers?
Alex Paul Menon, the district collector of Sukma in Chhattisgarh, who was abducted by Maoists on Saturday, April 21, is unlikely to be hurt by the outlawed rebels, India's foremost expert on the Maoists and a former director of the Intelligence Bureau told Rediff.com
The Maoists are unlikely to harm Menon because he is a Christian, the intelligence guru felt.
Speaking on condition that he would not be identified by name for this report, the former IB chief claimed, "Maoism is a political movement and the Maoists can be as opportunistic as the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party, the Congress and other political parties."

"In the tribal areas of India," he explained, "lots of young tribals are converting to Christianity for their personal growth and their family's welfare. The Maoists would never like to be unpopular among this core constituency."

"We should not communalise the issue," the former IB director said, but reasoned "that a study of the politics of the Maoists suggests they will treat the collector well."
Young Christians are their primary constituency," he added, "and they bank heavily on them in the jungles."
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by chaanakya »

Nihat wrote:S

Perhaps high ranking officials should go in with heavier security or not at all until the CRPF have cleared the area for good.
In AP such a protocol i implemented in NaxaL infested areas. DMs and above officials don't move without security and advance party for road clearance and with back up support. Even SPs have to follow strict SOPs. The problem is in CG Odisha etc, such a approach is yet to take hold. It speaks volumes of success of AP Greyhounds and other Police Units that Naxals sought shelters in those states and took deep root. Their leadership primarily comprised of leaders from AP. They are top of the class in Maoist ranks. Others are second raters, mostly.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Views from the Left
NOT CLASS WAR

Abductions and kidnappings cannot be part of the “class war”, new CPI General Secretary S. Sudhakar Reddy writes in party weekly New Age, against the backdrop of an increase in such acts by the Maoists. Reddy criticises the insurgents for using such methods but argues that “authoritarian methods and unconstitutional repressive measures” are being used to put down the rebels in different states.

Reddy alleges that “hundreds of bogus encounters... torture of innocent poor, arrest of thousands of innocents over false cases and violations of human rights and civil liberties” have dented the credibility of the state. He argues that the Maosits have no more credibility as they are killing innocents and kidnapping civilian officers. “Abduction and kidnapping... (are) an act of desperation. They may succeed in negotiations, get release of a few prisoners [sic] but later, the state will hunt with more vengeance. Those released have to live in constant fear,” he says. “The Maoist action plan of individual annihilation as part of class war is inhuman and un-Marxist. Killing innocent unarmed people cannot be called class war,” he adds.

He calls for the government to review its green hunt policies. “State terrorism against the Maoists and other insurgent groups is mostly... unconstitutional, illegal and inhuman... Innocent people... (are) targeted by the state in the name of combatting Maoists,” he argues.

He concludes that while the government should rather tackle Maoism by trying to address the socio-economic problems that gave rise to it, the rebels too should change their methods of struggle.

NEOLIBERAL economics

An editorial in CPM’s weekly, People’s Democracy, focuses on the debate over financial liberalisation after the cut in India’s credit rating outlook by Standard and Poor’s and chief economic advisor Kaushik Basu’s remarks that coalition democracy was slowing down reforms and decision-making.

It says that the “cheerleaders of neoliberal economic reforms” have eagerly pounced upon these statements to urge the government to “bite the bullet”. The editorial argues that though the government refuses to publicly acknowledge and give the Left its due, “by now it is universally recognised that India protected itself, relatively, from the devastating impact of the global financial meltdown of 2008 primarily because our financial sector was relatively insulated from international fluctuations and meltdowns.”

“Unwilling to learn from our own experience, these neoliberal pundits are now pushing the government to rush ahead with... reforms, thus making India more vulnerable to international financial fluctuations. This would be disastrous for the Indian economy... This will ruin the livelihood security of crores of common Indians,” it says.

It argues that, against the backdrop of the global economic crisis and recessionary conditions, “India can accelerate its growth only on the basis of vastly enlarging its domestic demand by increasing the purchasing power amongst our people.”

UNDOING LAND REFORM

An article in People’s Democracy says that the Left in West Bengal is gearing up to launch a major campaign against the Mamata Banerjee government for amending the Land Reforms Act of 1955. The amended act states that entrepreneurs or persons interested in setting up industrial hubs can hold land above the land ceiling limit if they get prior written permission from a ministerial committee headed by the chief minister.

“The legislation is a decisive blow to the land reforms carried out by previous Left Front governments since 1978... The move to give concessions to corporate capital by making fundamental changes in the... Act is one of a series of measures that are aimed at setting up the basis for the penetration of corporate capital in the state.”

“It also unmasks the true face of the TMC government and shows that the ‘maa mati manush’ slogan is merely a legitimating device for pushing the interests of corporate capital,” the article says.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Supratik »

abhishek_sharma wrote:
UNDOING LAND REFORM

An article in People’s Democracy says that the Left in West Bengal is gearing up to launch a major campaign against the Mamata Banerjee government for amending the Land Reforms Act of 1955. The amended act states that entrepreneurs or persons interested in setting up industrial hubs can hold land above the land ceiling limit if they get prior written permission from a ministerial committee headed by the chief minister.

“The legislation is a decisive blow to the land reforms carried out by previous Left Front governments since 1978... The move to give concessions to corporate capital by making fundamental changes in the... Act is one of a series of measures that are aimed at setting up the basis for the penetration of corporate capital in the state.”

“It also unmasks the true face of the TMC government and shows that the ‘maa mati manush’ slogan is merely a legitimating device for pushing the interests of corporate capital,” the article says.
[/quote]



This is a very good move by MB. Since the WB Govt. is not going to acquire land for private purpose, this change will allow private
parties to acquire more land for their investment. Should have included real estate as well as development in Bengal unlike some other regions of India is haphazard. Maybe they should next come out with a township policy.
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Re: The Red Menace

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Maoists give in to public opinion, release collector

http://www.hindustantimes.com/India-new ... 49987.aspx
The interlocutors urged the Maoists to close the chapter that began with the demand for freeing 17 Maoists and ended without a single release. Odisha, in contrast, had agreed to release 25 for BJD MLA Jhina Hikaka and already ensured six releases.

In Chhattisgarh, the rebels put up a show of resistance, delaying Menon’s release by a day. They claimed they were “unsure about the fate” of eight jailed rebels. But chief minister Raman Singh said, “As promised, we have constituted a high-power committee to look into the undertrial prisoners.”

Menon refused to divulge details about his captors or his captivity. He said, “I am tired and shattered. I want to go home.” The 32-year-old IAS officer was equally evasive when asked if he would continue in Sukma. “I will work wherever the government sends me.”
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Virupaksha »

The religious angle of it all makes it a grand cocktail.
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Re: The Red Menace

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Anti-Naxal operation: Security forces to deploy variety of UAVs
Security forces engaged in anti-Naxal operations in various states, including Chhattisgarh, have decided to get different variants of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) ranging from small drones to long-range surveillance ones.

Forces deployed in Maoist hotbeds of the country have recently
begun to pick up ground conversation, movement and pictures with the help of these devices and authorities say they are handy in cases where quick information is needed like the abduction of Sukma district collector in Chhattisgarh.

"We are now getting an array...a spectrum of medium to long-range reconnaissance UAVs. While the small ones give the security forces an immediate input of activity happening in the surrounding area, the big UAVs provide you with advanced information about a far away area where a operation is to be launched," a top security official involved in the operations said.

The Union home ministry has already floated quality requirements in this regard and the procurement will be both from foreign and national manufacturers and suppliers of the UAVs, the official said.

The move comes in the backdrop of recent operations conducted in the jungles of Narayanpur district where the CRPF spy drone collected ground conversation and movement of Naxal cadres successfully while a mini-UAV called 'Netra' supplied good information about suspect hideouts in a limited area in Bijapur district.

The UAVs also conducted flights during the abduction of Menon in south Bastar and, according to sources, the battery operated device brought back "good information".

"The UAV was sent and it gathered whatever it could in ts short flight. The secret eye is now functional and very helpful," the official said.

The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), along with other forces and technical experts drawn from the Army and the NSG, has been trying to deploy UAVs for operational planning since April 2010, when 75 CRPF men and a state police personnel were killed in a Naxal ambush in Chhattisgarh's Dantewada area.

The CRPF field units have also begun using modern Android phones to obtain co-ordinates of the difficult terrain in various states.

The UAVs will also help security forces like the BSF and ITBP, along with state police units, to detect mines and IEDs planted by the Maoists
.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Tony Judt on Marxism

Judt, Tony; Snyder, Timothy Thinking the Twentieth Century, Penguin Group.

Questions (bolded) by Tim Snyder
Answers by Tony Judt
It’s the magic of Hegel, though, isn’t it, Tony? Because what Marx is combining, in what you say, is an essentially conservative view, a spiritual view of the past, with the dialectical argument that what is bad for us is actually good for us. Think of Engels writing about the family, for example, but also Marx’s idea about species-nature before it is corrupted by property: here you have descriptions of human integrity and harmony in the prehistorical or nonhistorical past that give pause even today thanks to their sheer intensity. Through Hegelian dialectics, nostalgia is combined with the capacity not merely to accept but to welcome whatever is destroying the beauty of the past. You can embrace the city, and you can embrace the factory: both represent creative destruction. Capitalism may seem to oppress us, and it may seem to alienate us, and it certainly pauperizes us, but nevertheless it has its own beauty and is an objective achievement, which we will later be able to exploit as we return our own nature to ourselves.

Remember, this gives the Marxist a distinct advantage in dialectical confrontations. To liberals and progressives who assert that all is for the best, Marx offers a powerful narrative of suffering and loss, deterioration and destruction. Of conservatives, who would agree with this and augment the assertion by insisting upon the superiority of the past, Marx was of course contemptuous: these changes, however unappealing in the medium term, are the necessary and in any case unavoidable price we pay for a better future. They are what they are, but they are worth it.

...

I wonder if Lenin’s success doesn’t also have to do with a certain audacity about the future. Lenin treated Marx as a determinist, a scientist of history. The more intelligent Marxists of the age—Gramsci, Antonio Labriola, Stanisław Brzozowski and György Lukács—refused to follow suit (though Lukács later changed his mind). But in this respect Lenin’s was the dominant reading, following Engels. Then Lenin decided that “scientists of history” are allowed not just to observe the experiment but to intervene in it, to nudge things along. After all, if we know what the results are in advance, why not get there more quickly, especially if the results are so very much to be desired. But then, believing in the grand idea gives you confidence about the present meaning of otherwise small, trivial and unglamorous facts. This in turn told against the Kantian forms of Marxism, still widespread in those years: attempts to furnish Marxism with its own, self-sufficient ethics. For Lenin, ethics are retroactively instrumental. Little lies, small deceptions, insignificant betrayals and passing dissimulations will all make sense in the light of later results and will be rendered morally acceptable by them. And what is true for small things ends up applying to big ones too.

You don’t even have to be confident about the future. The question is whether in principle you agree to allow the account to be rendered in the name of the future, or whether you believe that accounts should be closed at the end of each day. A further distinction of consequence concerns those making future-dependent calculations on their own behalf or behalf of others, and those making such calculations and feeling at liberty to impose them on others. It is one thing to say that I am willing to suffer now for an unknowable but possibly better future. It is quite another to authorize the suffering of others in the name of that same unverifiable hypothesis. This, in my view, is the intellectual sin of the century: passing judgment on the fate of others in the name of their future as you see it, a future in which you may have no investment, but concerning which you claim exclusive and perfect information.

Let me take a stab at epistemologically separating liberalism from Marxism. Liberalism starts with optimistic assumptions about human nature, but in practice it’s easy to slide down a slope, where one learns that one should be a bit more pessimistic, which requires a bit more intervention, a bit more condescension, a bit more elitism, and so on. And that is, in fact, the history of liberalism, at least to the new liberalism of the early twentieth century with its acceptance of state intervention. Whereas liberalism assumes an optimism about human nature that erodes a bit with experience, Marxism,thanks to its Hegelian heritage, assumes at least one non-contingent fact: our alienation. The Marxist view goes something like this: our nature is rather bad, but it could be rather good. The source of both the condition and the possibility are private property, a contingent variable. In short, change is truly at our disposal, and in a striking form: with revolution comes an end not merely to the regime of property but also and thereby to injustice, loneliness and the badly lived lives. Because such a future is at our disposal, nature itself becomes fungible—or rather, our present unsatisfactory condition becomes unnatural. In the light of such a vision, almost any radical step and authoritarian attitude become imaginable and even desirable—a conclusion a liberal simply cannot entertain.

Look, this epistemological and moral chasm does not separate liberals from Marxists so much as it divides Marxists among themselves. Thus, if we examine the past 130 years or so, we see that the most important line was the one separating Marxists who were attracted to the most extreme version of this story (especially in their youth) but who ultimately did not accept its implications—and thus, in the end, its premises—and those for whom it remained credible to the end, consequences and all. The notion that everything is or else it isn’t—that everything is either one thing or another but cannot be both at the same time, that if something (e.g., torture) is bad then it cannot be dialectically rendered good by virtue of its results: this is and always was an un-Marxist thought and was duly castigated, as you know, as “Revisionism.” Rightly so, because such epistemological empiricism has its roots in liberal political thought and represents—indeed always represented—a clean break with the religious style of reasoning which lies at the core of Marxism’s appeal.

All the same, for much of the past century many social democrats who would have been horrified to think of themselves as anything other than Marxist—much less as “liberal”—were unable to make the ultimate move into retroactive necessitarianism. In most cases, they had the good fortune to avoid the choice. In Scandinavia, accession to power was open to social democrats without any need to overthrow or repress existing authorities. In Germany, those who were not willing to compromise with constitutional or moral constraints took themselves out of the social democratic consensus. In France, the question was irrelevant thanks to the compromises imposed by republican politics and in England it was redundant thanks to the marginality of the radical left. Paradoxically, in all these countries, self-styled Marxists could continue to tell themselves stories: they could persist in the belief that the Marxist historical narrative informed their actions, without facing the implications of taking that claim seriously. But in other places—of which Russia was the first and exemplary instance—access to power was indeed open to Marxists precisely because of their uncompromising claims upon history and other people. And so, following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, there was a sharp and enduring schism between those who would not digest the human consequences of their own theories, and those for whom these same consequences were nasty in just the way they had thought they would be, and all the more convincing for that reason: it’s really hard; we’ve really got to make difficult choices; we have no choice but to do bad things; this is a revolution; if we are in the omelette-making business, this is not the moment to coddle the eggs. In other words, this is a break with the past and with our enemies, justified and explained by an all-embracing logic of human transformation. Marxists for whom all of this suggested mere repression were (not altogether unreasonably) accused of failing to grasp the implications of their own doctrine and condemned to the dustbin of History.

Yes, it’s as though after the Russian Revolution of 1917 the Bolsheviks monopolized the mysticism.Why did faith come so easily to the fellow travelers, to those who identified with the Soviet Union during its bloodiest moments?


The story of the Soviet Union for those who had faith in it, whether as communists or as progressive fellow travelers, was actually not related to what they saw. To ask why people who went there did not see the truth is to miss the point. The majority of people who understood what was taking place in the Soviet Union did not need to go there to see it. Whereas those who went to the Soviet Union as true believers usually came back in the same condition (André Gide was a famous and rare exception). In any event, the kind of truth that a believer was seeking was not testable by reference to contemporary evidence but only to future outcomes. It was always about believing in a future omelet that would justify an infinite number of broken eggs in the present. If you ceased to believe, then you were not simply abandoning a piece of social data which you had apparently misread hitherto; you were abandoning a story that could alone justify any data one wished so long as the future payoff was guaranteed. Communism also offered an intense feeling of community with fellow believers. In the first volume of his memoirs, the French poet Claude Roy recalls his youthful fascism. The book is called Moi. But the second volume, which deals with his communist years, is significantly titled Nous. That is symptomatic. Communist thinkers felt part of a community of like-feeling intellectuals, which gave them the sense that not only were they doing the right thing, but also that they were moving in the direction of history. “We” were doing it, not just “me.” This overcame the idea of the lonely crowd notion and placed the individual communist at the center, not only of a historical project, but of a collective process. And it’s interesting how often the memoirs of the disillusioned are cast in terms of the loss of community, as well as the loss of faith. The hard thing was not opening your eyes to what Stalin was doing, but breaking with all the other people who had believed it along with you. And so this combination of faith and the very considerable attractions of shared allegiance gave communism something that no other political movement could boast. Of course, different groups of thinkers were drawn to communism for different reasons. One generation, born around 1905, people like Arthur Koestler, was attracted to Leninism in its earliest years and disillusioned at the latest by Stalin’s show trials in 1936 or the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in 1939. That generation is thus quite different from those who were seduced by the image of the victorious Red Army in the Second World War, by the resistance heroism of communist parties (real and imagined) and by the sense that if America was the alternative, and America stood for capitalism in its crassest incarnation, then Communism was an easy choice. That later generation tended to encounter disillusionment in 1956, in the form of the Soviet invasion of Hungary. Whereas for the earlier generation of communists it was the failure of social democracy and the apparently inexorable choice between fascism and communism which mattered most, by the 1940s and 1950s, the choices looked quite different—even though Stalin tried hard to present the Cold War as an essentially similar set of options. And so, fellow travelers—sympathetic to communism but not quite committed to joining it—matter more in the later story than in the interwar one, when the salient issue was whether and when people ceased to be communists and became . . . ex-communists.

...

What really mattered to intellectuals was a milieu: people whom you knew—or people who were like the people you knew—and the things that happened to them. Beyond this milieu were the collectivized peasants who lost their land and starved by the millions in the early 1930s and then were shot in the hundreds of thousands later in the decade.

There’s a lovely essay by Koestler in The Trail of the Dinosaur called, “The Little Flirts of Saint-Germain-des-Prés.” He writes about French fellow travelers and communists as peeping toms, peering through a hole in the wall at history, while not having to experience it themselves. The victims of communism could comfortably be re-described (and often were) as the victims not of men but of History. Communism thus passed as Hegel’s spirit doing the work of history, in countries where history had failed to do the work for itself. From such a distance one can make arguments about History’s costs and benefits: but the costs are borne by someone else and the benefits can be anything you wish to imagine. In one sense this is rather like the debates over the Industrial Revolution that we studied in King’s College when I was an undergraduate: it may have had terrible human outcomes in the short run, but it was both necessary and beneficial. The transformation was necessary because without industrialization there would not have been generated the wealth needed to overcome Malthusian impediments in agrarian societies; and it was beneficial because in the long run everyone’s standard of living rose.

The argument thus resembles the case proposed by communism’s Western apologists (on those occasions when they acknowledged the scale of its crimes). The difference of course is that no one was sitting in London in 1833, planning the Industrial Revolution and deciding that—whatever its costs—they were worth imposing on others for the sake of the long run benefits.

This point of view is summed up in Bertolt Brecht’s obnoxious poem, admired by so many people: “Even the hatred of squalor/
Makes the brow grow stern. Even anger against injustice/
Makes the voice grow harsh. Alas, we/
Who wished to lay the foundations of kindness/ Could not ourselves be kind.” In order, in short, to justify present crimes we must keep our eyes firmly focused upon future gains. But we do well to bear in mind that in such accounts, the costs are always assigned to others, and usually to another time and place.

This seems to me an exercise in applied political romanticism. We see it in similar cases elsewhere in the twentieth century. In a world where many people—intellectuals above all—no longer believe in the afterlife, death has to acquire an alternative significance. There must be a reason for it; it must be advancing history: God is dead, long live death.

All of this would have been much harder to imagine in the absence of the First World War and the cult of death and violence to which it gave rise. What communist intellectuals and their fascist counterparts had in common in the years after 1917 was a profound attraction to mortal struggle and its beneficial social or aesthetic outcomes. Fascist intellectuals in particular made death at once the justification and the attraction of war and civil violence: out of such mayhem was to be born a better man and a better world. Before we set about congratulating ourselves on having said “goodbye to all that,” let’s remember that this romantic sensibility is by no means behind us. I well recall the response of Condoleezza Rice, then U.S. Secretary of State under President George W. Bush, to the Second Lebanese War in 2006. Commenting on the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon and the scale of civilian suffering to which it gave rise, she confidently asserted that these were “the birth pangs of a new Middle East.” And I remember thinking at the time, I have heard this before. You know what I mean: once again, other people’s ordeals are being justified as History’s way of delivering a new world, and thereby assigning meaning to events that would be otherwise unforgivable and inexplicable. If a conservative American Secretary of State can resort to such cant in the twenty-first century, why should European intellectuals not have invoked similar justifications half a century before?

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Re: The Red Menace

Post by shyamd »

I wonder how much of th 300Cr will reach the people
Rs 300 cr for Sukma, Malkangiri: Jairam
Union Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh on Saturday said that a Rs 300 crore special area development plan for contiguous districts of Malkangiri in Orissa and Sukma in Chhattisgarh would be taken up soon on the lines of a similar scheme taken up in Saranda and Latehar areas of Jharkhand.

Ramesh, who arrived in Orissa on a two-day tour to review MNREGS and PMGSY works, told reporters that the two districts would be developed over the next two years under the scheme.

The Maoist problem is the most intense in these areas where there is a tri-junction, where more than two state territories overlap. As Malkangiri and Sukma sit on a trijunction of Andhra-Orissa-Chhatisgarh, it provides the Maoists a perfect environment.

Last year, the Maoist rebels had abducted Malkangiri collector Vineel Krishna while this year the rebels abducted Sukma collector Alex Paul Menon. With the Maoists calling the shots in these two districts, development measures have taken suffered.

Ramesh said basic infrastructure facilities like roads and bridges would be constructed in the Maoist belt to spur development and involve locals in the process. He said he has spoken to Chhattisgarh CM Raman Singh in this regard and would soon talk to Orissa CM.

Ramesh said it is the mineral-rich areas that are worst hit by Maoist menace. “Wherever there are mines we face Maoist activities.... We need to change our mindset about mining operations and work for tribal-oriented development,” he said.

He said security measures alone are not enough to curb Maoist violence. Citing the example of Junglemahal in West Bengal, he said steps should be taken for political mobilisation in Maoist-hit areas and strengthening basic infrastructure in the backward regions.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by sum »

Interesting article ( other than the obvious left bias of the author):
Kidnaps could be a failed experiment for Maoists
Prolonged captivity of hostages & perceived helplessness of government have adverse impact on psyche of society

Maoists may be patting themselves on their back for forcing the Chhattisgarh and Odisha governments to give into their demands in exchange for those abducted by them, but kidnap as a tool of revolutionary warfare could prove to be counter-productive to them.

The prolonged captivity of hostages and the perceived helplessness of the government, which fears for the safety of the hostages, have an adverse impact on the psyche of society.

Typical is the societal response to the hostage crisis recently witnessed in Chhattisgarh and Odisha.

Barring a vociferous intelligentsia, civil rights activists and select representatives of political and bureaucratic circles of the States concerned, the other sections of society have not reacted to the evolving crisis.


‘Silent sanction'

The Andhra Pradesh experience, however, shows this silence often metamorphoses into a ‘silent sanction' being accorded to the State for all the extra-judicial acts it commits while trying to toughen its stand against the hostage-takers subsequently.

It is this ‘silent sanction' that emboldens the security forces to resort to actions beyond what they are expected to do. And they get away with it too.

The case of Andhra Pradesh would perhaps be the best example of how kidnap as a strategy is a failed experiment for Naxalites. The State witnessed many abductions in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The demands made after such rampant abductions could broadly be categorised into: release of arrested or convicted cadres; production of missing cadres (believed to have been killed or arrested by police); permission for public meetings and construction of demolished ‘stupams' (monuments).

First kidnap in A.P.

The first kidnap in Andhra Pradesh was reported on September 6, 1984, when Naxals took away a senior revenue official at Addateegala of East Godavari district and demanded the release of Perumalla Devudu, a central organiser.

A panicked government conceded the demand and the official was set free the next day. Then came the historic kidnap of seven IAS officers in Gurtedu of the same district on December 27, 1987.

Immense pressure

The abduction of senior bureaucrats led to immense pressure on the government, which was forced to concede the demand of releasing of jailed Naxalites, including Wadkapur Chandramouli, then a division committee secretary, who later rose to be a member of polit bureau. (He was later killed in 2006).

With civil liberties leader K.G. Kannabiran holding negotiations, the hostages were released only after the jailed Naxal leaders were handed over to them.

So intense was the pressure on the government that it had not allowed the NSG commandos despatched by the Centre to take any action to free the hostages.

In 1989

Though there was a lull for the next two years, abductions began in 1989 again, due to an unstable political scenario as the NTR government was to face elections.

In June 1989, a mandal parishad president Malhar Rao was abducted and shot dead when the government failed to produce two missing Naxalites — Gopagani Ilaiah and Burra Ramulu.

Then came the liberal period during the chief ministership of M. Channa Reddy and kidnaps continued. The most notable was that of legislator P. Sudhir Kumar after a daring raid on his house in the centre of Hyderabad.

A stunned government had no other go but to release senior most leader Nemaluri Bhaskara Rao and two others in exchange for Sudhir Kumar.

In 1993, tribal legislator P. Balarau and IAS officer Srinivasulu were abducted in the Visakhapatnam agency area and a Naxal leader Kranti Ranadeo was released in exchange. The Naxal leadership indeed revelled in the successes and even justified the ‘kidnap' tactic and termed it a form of struggle.

As kidnaps continued, society had more or less viewed it as a problem concerning the ruling party, the police and Naxalites, but never intervened. Vexed with the soft attitude of the governments, the police did act on their own in August 1989.

When two policemen were abducted in Karimnagar, the police responded by organising the counter-kidnap of civil rights activist Balagopal by a supposedly civil vigilante group — ‘Praja Bandhu.' Naxalites released the constables and Balagopal too was let off.


Dangerous fallout

The most dangerous fallout of the overuse of this tactic was to be felt after the Congress government proscribed the People's War Group on May 20, 1992.

The police forces let loose a reign of terror and there was not even a murmur of protest from people even when those arrested were shot dead in full public view in what came to be known as ‘encounters.'

Peculiar was the societal response to the police behaviour. While there was no protest against any ‘encounter killings' of people believed to be Naxalites, people turned up in thousands and even attacked police stations whenever there were custodial deaths in which innocent people were tortured to death
.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Views from the Left
PRIVATE PROFITEERING

Arguing that the creation of new avenues for profit maximisation was one of the features of contemporary imperialism, the latest issue of the CPM weekly People’s Democracy claims that the public-private partnership (PPP) model is being used as a tool to facilitate private profit maximisation.

“Attracting private capital with opportunities for adequate profit to build public assets and infrastructure is necessary for India’s economic development. But to place public assets for private profit maximisation is an entirely different concept. By doing this, the Planning Commission itself is planning the demise of economic planning in India,” it says.

The article alleges that PPP projects in the infrastructure and social services sectors have resulted in the “jacking up” of user charges. It also claims that governments at the Centre and state are willing to pay private educational institutions huge sums to admit students from weaker sections of society, rather than spending a fraction of that amount to start schools and colleges. Citing the Right to Education Act as an example, it says that “while the elite schools may be unhappy, the budget private schools would make a windfall profit... universal Right to Education, international experience shows, can never be achieved without (a) wide network of state-run neighbourhood schools.”

AIRPORT LOOT

In the same issue, CPM Rajya Sabha MP K.N. Balagopal criticises the 345 per cent hike in airport charges at the Delhi airport approved by the Airports Economic Regulatory Authority. Balagopal calls it “loot” and argues that the “primitive accumulation of capital is happening with the strong support of the government.”

He says that the AERC permitted increase in the user development fee despite the fact that the Airports Authority of India (Major Airport Development Fee) Rules, 2011 was pending scrutiny of Parliament. “Actually, the rules were framed because the Supreme Court, in a judgment, banned collection of this fee without proper rules and regulations,” he says.

“Unfortunately, the Supreme Court only examined the technicalities of rule-making and the administrative competence of the government to collect the fee, rather than going into whether there was any genuine necessity of charging development fee or whether the contractual obligations and undertakings of the airport developer permitted such collection,” he says.

Balagopal argues that there was no provision to collect a development fee or a commitment to facilitate its collection. “The permission to collect development fee is an illegal administrative decision on the part of the government and this was upheld by the Supreme Court... these rules have been framed to overcome the ‘technicality’ and allow private firms to reap huge sums of money,” he adds.

WATER POLICY

An article in the CPI weekly New Age argues that while there are “some positive clauses” in the draft national water policy, the purpose of the policy announced by the Centre was to “exploit water resources to get financial profits by the multinational and corporate sector.”

It says that the policy has several clauses that treat water resources as a financial resource and clarifies that the Left would oppose the policy in its present form. Demanding changes in the policy, the article says that the utilisation of water resources and the irrigation system should be in the public sector and that the “private sector should not be introduced”.

It claims that ever since India started to liberalise the economy, efforts were made to utilise national resources as financial assets. It says that such initiatives marginalised the public sector. “(The) public sector is being reduced and the major share is given to the private sector. In practice, liberalisation means reduction of the importance of the public sector... in the present context, it means to exploit the people and farmers in India by weakening the self-reliance of the country”, it says.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Nihat »

Maoists trying to set up bases in Assam: Union Home Secy
The Centre on Wednesday said Maoists were trying to set up bases in Assam and termed the killing of four hardcore rebels in an encounter in the state as a big blow to them.

"The Maoists are trying to set up bases in Assam. This encounter would certainly halt their operations and hamper their activities in a big way," Union Home Secretary RK Singh told reporters here.

Singh was reacting to the reports of killing of four Naxals in their first-ever encounter with Assam police in the state's Tinsukia district today.

"This is a good job done by the Assam Police," he said.

Addressing the Chief Ministers' conference on internal security on April 16, Home Minister P Chidambaram had said Assam emerged as the new theatre of Maoist activity and there were also inputs about links of CPI (Maoist) with insurgent groups in Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh.
Naxals are gaining ground in North east and relieving pressure built up via Green hunt by shifting bases, if they continue to move in that direction then the Chinese would be more than delighted (already they are involved) with not only having an armed rebellion in India propagating a twisted ideology of communism but also spies who can provide valuable information about troop movement, logistics and SOP of the armed forces in the area.






P.S. - how disturbing is it that while we can debate the finer points and intricacies of Pakistani tribes and cast system at an alarmingly fast rate but the biggest mess in our own states is ignored on the forum.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Nihat »

Cop shot dead by Maoists in Nuapada
BHUBANESWAR: Continuing their killing spree, Maoists on Tuesday made a police assistant sub-inspector in Nuapada district their latest victim. They kidnapped him a little before noon, tied his hands and legs and shot him dead under a tree.

On a related note


Odisha only state where Maoists spreading activities alarmingly: Centre
NEW DELHI: The Centre has singled out Odisha for an "alarming" rise in the activities of Maoists and accused the Naveen Patnaik government of failing to take any counter measure.

"It is pertinent to mention that Odisha is the only state of India where activities of CPI(Maoists) are spreading to new areas at an alarming rate without requisite counter-measures by the state government," the home ministry said in a message sent to DGP and principal secretary (Home) of Odisha government.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Agnimitra »

Very troubling.

India's Maoists are no rag-tag rebels
Recent interrogations of top-level Maoist leaders in India have revealed that the insurgency now boasts a well-equipped force of some 46,000 combatants organized into companies, platoons and special action teams. Despite the group's swelling numbers and influence, however, it still views guerrilla warfare and high-profile abductions as the best tactics to exploit Delhi's failure to coordinate an anti-insurgent policy.
- Neeta Lal
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Anindya »

brihaspati
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by brihaspati »

Carl wrote:Very troubling.

India's Maoists are no rag-tag rebels
Recent interrogations of top-level Maoist leaders in India have revealed that the insurgency now boasts a well-equipped force of some 46,000 combatants organized into companies, platoons and special action teams. Despite the group's swelling numbers and influence, however, it still views guerrilla warfare and high-profile abductions as the best tactics to exploit Delhi's failure to coordinate an anti-insurgent policy.
- Neeta Lal
The number is a bit exaggerated. It is counting all the fronts as combatants. The actual numbers of experienced fighters would be closer to 1/5th of the number. Perhaps even less. But they have strategic depth now - all around to the east, Nepal, China, BD, and even Myanmar. This is where their strength has extended. Their international connections and support base has also matured and become more sophisticated in using the same imperialist sources for support that they formally condemn. Note that they never touch Christian or Muslims, and "western" persons - violently. Something they rather casually do on the non-Muslim, non-Christian and non-European Indian - be it commoner, or elite or admin and coercive wings. Somehow they also usually do not touch the judiciary with their violent hands. Targeting congrez or allied forces have almost vanished while targeting non-congrez elements have remained at usual levels.

The Maoist core leadership has become - out of necessity, and because of the long period for which they have survived without achieving supreme state power - they have been penetrated well by the evangelist and jihadi transnational forces, been forced to compromise with transnational arms smugglers, and behind it all therefore the international imperialist networks. We can identify who runs them by looking at the profile of their targets, and whom they avoid hitting.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Sachin »

brihaspati wrote:There was and remains a similar virtual ban within the Leftist movement about marriage. There used to be severe criticism for fraternizing in public with "enemies" of the party, including congrez and trinamool.
Looks like the Trinamool folks are copying every nasty game from the books of commies :). And commies are pretty upset because they are at the receiving end. In Socialist Republic of Kerala, there is a district Kannur. The commies have had a strong presence there, and the whole place is messed up. Villages are demarcated as "party villages", and marriages etc. happen based on party's consent. People who go against the writ of the commie goons can be socially boycotted. Murdering people because they switched political parties is very very common. Many people who moved over to BJP/RSS have been killed by the commies.

The recent killings are of one Fazal (CPI(M) to NDF) and that of T.P Chandrashekharan (CPI(M)-> Revolutionary Party, an out fit he raised himself). I can for sure say that any violent scheme now popular in Kerala, have been piloted by the commies. And they start to whine when others use the same tactic, or people all across the state start to raise their concerns. Russia had to face only one Joseph Stalin, in Kerala you have many more Joseph Stalin-clones.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Jarita »

Maoists are now ready for final assault to overawe India

http://www.firstpost.com/breaking%20vie ... 97483.html
One of the Italians, Paolo Bosusco, had visited the area several times before and enjoyed the hospitality of the Maoists. His being taken hostage was a staged drama to humble the Indian state. Paolo is a member of an Italy based Ultra-Leftist organisation, Party of Committees to Support Resistance for Communism (CARC).
Didn't SG invite this guy over
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by brihaspati »

Jarita wrote:Maoists are now ready for final assault to overawe India

http://www.firstpost.com/breaking%20vie ... 97483.html
One of the Italians, Paolo Bosusco, had visited the area several times before and enjoyed the hospitality of the Maoists. His being taken hostage was a staged drama to humble the Indian state. Paolo is a member of an Italy based Ultra-Leftist organisation, Party of Committees to Support Resistance for Communism (CARC).
Didn't SG invite this guy over
Dont be fooled by the so-called Italian centre of heavenly power's role in supposed overthrow of communist USSR. Just as the Brits, there are possible underlying handshakes too with communism. Each keeps a hedge on the other - for mutual intel and any potential future need. Almost like what evolves in India between mainstream, even left-of-centre groups and Maoists.

What is unfortunate and a bit saddening is that many Indian followers of respective streams are still fooled by the respective hierarchies. But it is not time yet to take the two on together formally, hence I am reluctant to discuss this too much.

The lesson to be learned from the ME desert strategy is to isolate one from the hostiles and keep the others at least neutral while you finish the isolated one. Step by step.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by brihaspati »

On second thoughts, explore cardinals Casaroli and Mindzenti, together with the second Vatican council. The 62-67 period is crucial. While at it look at Albanian change of heart and China leaning during the period and the activities of Hungarian and Albanian catholics. This is the period Mao is asserting his personal power by kicking USSR and turning towards USA under cover of cultural rev and attack on India. By 1978 election of Papa - the supposed architect of soviet demise - things are not as they are represented overtly. Casaroli was made the right hand to deal with the "east".

Unscrambling of USSR was a mutually agreed on staged scaling down - effectively. Communist leaders are prone to find solace in the church - especially if it helps continued power in altered robes. It is all about imperialist dominance underneath - hence the forms are effectively interchangeable, and as brutally and coldly ruthless where dominance is concerned. Chinese communists will be no exception just as Indian ones are not.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Rudradev »

Important Article in the Hindu:

http://www.samachar.com/News-Analysis-M ... cfbid.html
Maoists' efforts at garnering international backing pay off
K. Srinivas Reddy

Maoists efforts' at garnering international support for their movement in India seems to have fructified with ideologically similar outfits in different countries extending them support.

Maoists began such attempts in 1995 and Marxist-Leninist-Maoist groups in the Philippines, Turkey, Germany, France, Holland and Italy have started extending, at least ideological backing, to them.

Officially, the Government of India has maintained a studied silence, but the cloak of secrecy was lifted through an innocuous written reply (to question no. 240) given by the Ministry of Home Affairs in the Rajya Sabha in March last. Minister of State for Home Affairs Jitendra Singh candidly confirmed Maoists' international links, disclosing that the CPI (Maoist) has "close links with foreign Maoist organisations in the Philippines and Turkey," and the `so-called' (protracted) people's war being waged by Maoists had also "drawn support form several organisations located in Germany, France, Holland, Turkey and Italy."

This carefully worded answer may not appear significant, but it lays bare the Maoist strategy of giving an added advantage to the "revolution" that has spread to 182 districts (according to the answer to question no. 217 in the Rajya Sabha in December 2011). Maoist ideologues believe that international support is vital to advancing their revolution to a higher level.

For any revolutionary movement, international support is a crucial factor in sustaining itself. The Maoist movement witnessed a spectacular spatial spread in the last one decade; taking it a step forward at this stage will depend on its ability to remain a political movement working for the benefit of the people, than being branded as a movement relying excessively on violence.

Anticipating that governments could effectively use the techniques of public perception management and project the Maoist movement as a terror outfit, Maoist ideologues have begun serious efforts at portraying the armed struggle as a people's movement. They are aware that they cannot afford to get their movement equated with terrorist outfits, especially in the backdrop of the determination shown by the international community in war against terror. In other words, the ideologues are trying to explain their political goal and make sure that the international community will desist from attacking it.

These efforts, Maoist documents reveal, began in 1996 when Vernon Gonsalves alias Pradeep, a central committee member of the erstwhile CPI-ML People's War (PW) attended the May Day seminar organised in Brussels by the Workers' Party of Belgium (WPB) in 1996. At that meeting, he submitted a paper on the armed struggle in India. Impressed with his talk, WPB chief Bert de Belder visited Nizamabad district, part of a north Telangana guerrilla zone, to study the armed struggle.

The Brussels seminar gave Maoists the much-needed international exposure. Two years on, they came in contact with the Philippines Communist Party at another seminar, also held in Brussels.

In 1998, the Maoist ideologue attended a meeting of Marxistisch Leninistische Partei Deutschlands (MLPD), the Marxist-Leninist party of Germany. In the same year, the party sent a representative to a meeting of the International Association of People's Lawyers (IAPL) in the Netherlands; and by 2001, the PW became a member of the Coordination Committee of Maoist Parties of South Asia (CCOMPOSA), which comprises Marxist-Leninist-Maoist factions and parties in India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka.


After the PW and the MCPI merged to form the CPI (Maoist) in 2004, Kobad Ghandy provided the fillip to these efforts. The Central Committee member is known to have visited Canada and the United Kingdom. Contacts were also made with the Proletarian Party of East Bengal, the Revolutionary Communist Party of the United States, and the Worker's Party of Iran.

As per the documents of the CPI (Maoist), the party has established relations with ideologically similar outfits in 21 countries. These are New Zealand, Peru, Turkey, Afghanistan, Bhutan, Iran, Nepal, the Philippines, the U.S., Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Italy, Tunisia, Colombia, the Netherlands, Brazil, Norway, Canada, the U.K. and Germany. The Maoists have only fraternal relations with the outfits in most of these countries, they got military training from the former LTTE militants from Sri Lanka (stated by the then Home Minister, M.V. Mysoora Reddy, in the Andhra Pradesh Assembly on August 20, 1991).

Two trainers from the Communist Party of the Philippines were believed to have spent a month on the Bihar-Jharkhand borders in 2005 and trained 35 Maoists in combat skills and sharp-shooting. The RPF/PLA of Manipur is believed to be supplying Maoists with arms.
There was never any doubt that the Indian Maoists (45,000 strong with sophisticated weapons and training) had outside support. What is being revealed here is the extent of that support.

The report mentions Indian Maoists having links with Maoist groups in "21 different countries"... but the question to ask is, in which of these 21 countries do the Maoists actually constitute any kind of serious internal security threat or power nexus, other than India, Peru and Nepal?

What about the other 18 countries? Apparently the Maoist groups exist there, and they are free and well-funded enough to become involved with supporting the terrorist activities of Indian Maoists. Is this because they do not cause trouble internally, and in fact have the support of governmental and/or religious institutions in those countries?

Note also that I have repeatedly emphasized the Philippines. Of all the international Maoist groups, the one from the Philippines seems to have been most directly and actively involved in supporting the Maoists of India. They actually sent military experts to train Indian Maoists in sniping and combat techniques last year.

The question to ask here is: what is ONE characteristic that makes the Philippines almost completely unique among all Asian countries (Papua New Guinea and Lebanon may fall in the same category, but are nowhere near as representative of it as the Philippines?)

Also, note that Italy has been mentioned a couple of times. It makes you wonder again what exactly Paolo Bosusco was doing in Odisha when the Maoists "kidnapped" him and ransomed his release against 27 jailed terrorists.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by brihaspati »

rudradev ji,
we know which are the forces that support Maoists - internally and externally. The externals - religious orgs in particular would not be able to do anything if the regime in power and the rashtryia infrastructure were not sympathetic/bound to those religious institutions.

But at the moment, it is perhaps better to pretend that we are blind to what one of them is up to.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Rudradev »

Brihaspati ji,

We are certainly aware of who the Maoist backers are. And you may well be right about the need to pretend otherwise.

However, what intrigued me about the article I posted
http://www.samachar.com/News-Analysis-M ... cfbid.html

was that it appeared, of all places, in The Hindu.

The Hindu, of course, is famously partisan towards the mainstream political left-of-centre. As long as the interests of various Maoist backers... mainstream Indian political left, foreign religious/governmental organizations, mainstream Indian Opportunist Rajya and Maoists themselves were more or less aligned and in sync, can you imagine the Hindu publicizing the vast extent of international support for India's Maoists? It would have been as likely as the Hindustan Times admitting to Sonia Gandhi's direct involvement in the 2G scam.

It seems, therefore, that something has now changed.

There are essentially four categories of power centres backing the Red Menace in India, and each wants to use it for their own purposes. These are:
1) Indian mainstream political left.
2) Indian Opportunist Rajya of the Kangrez variety, plus their allied satraps in various states.
3) International "Maoist" organizations, many of them in European countries.
4) Foreign governments and religious institutions operating through the above three categories plus other "NGOs".

When the current Red Menace was given its first major dose of sustained, driven support, during the NDA regime and for some time after... all these categories had goals that were more or less in sync with each other. All coordinated their efforts.

Today that may not be the case. Today, each of these centres is trying to control and use the Maoists for its own specific ends. Conflict will invariably build up (is already building?) between those diverse ends. As that happens, schisms will arise in the fabric of the Maoist support structure where bheda can be judiciously applied.

I think the Hindu article may signal the public emergence of one of these schisms. Recall if you will, how the mainstream Indian left got drubbed in WB, and the increasingly violent rifts between their cadres and the Maoists. More may be happening behind the scenes. People like Sabyasachi Panda may represent a phenomenon whereby the internationals, particularly of the religious variety, have achieved such deep and extensive penetration of the armed movement that the original doctrine has effectively been usurped and re-written; and hence, the original political masters have been marginalized. Maybe this has given them cause to complain publicly, through The Hindu, about the dangerous "internationalization of support for Indian Maoists" (as if they weren't aware of it, and welcoming of it, up to this point.)

More curiously, there are increased instances of direct interaction between foreign and Indian power centres, both of whom have used the Maoists to fulfill their purposes in the past. Whom did Hillary Clinton visit just recently, in an attempt to give her international prominence as a regional satrap within India? What had her relationship been to the Maoists before and after her electoral victory? Was it a coincidence that Clinton's visit happened just weeks after Narendra Modi appeared on the cover of Time Magazine, and urgently needed to be denied "legitimacy" as a national leader (by reiterating the refusal of a US visa?) Was it a coincidence that, the last time a Clinton singled out the CM of an Indian State to visit... that State soon became a focus of both increased Maoist activity and increased EJ influence at the level of State Government?

Much is afoot here. Ultimately my fear is that our brothers and sisters in the hinterland, wrapped up in lal jhanda, will become proxy foot-soldiers... bearing the brunt of a bloody, miserable conflict between the four categories of power centres that exploit them for diverse ends.

A related question for you B-ji: you estimated that 1/5 of the "45,000" Maoists reported to be active, are actually combat personnel. Could you further estimate how many of these are of the leadership cadre (and ideologically prostituting themselves to the power centres) vs. how many are salvageable.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by brihaspati »

Rudradev ji,
(1) the original core has already been marginalized
(2) the idealistic portion of the late 70's early 80's induction has been sidelined
(3) the remnant are the "pragmatic" bunch
(4) within the pragmatic branch at least 5 [indicates more] factions exist
(5) the remaining active centre is well penetrated by the groups we have mentioned
(6) at the moment the transnational crime groups have the greatest connection [arms and ammunition]
(7) among externals EJ strongest [the Greens have retreated a bit from interfacing]
(8) within the combat group there is high dissent but they cannot back off [most will be liquidated by a combined info exchange network of their leaders and rashtra if they step out]
(9) we have to wait for the appropriate time. The fractures are increasing but well hidden. Srihari was eliminated through a (8)-procedure. Also, we dont have the appropriate overground setup from the "other" side where the dissent could be absorbed. existing right may have moles too.

Your Philippines example is very pertinent. It is a training and experimental centre for both Green and white insurgencies - with a solid white connection. There is another such training ground close - in northern Myanmar. This is EJ hotspot.
RoyG
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by RoyG »

How exactly are hindus supposed to mobilize against the combined onslaught of the EJ/left/islamic forces? And to add to that we have the chinese, pakistanis, and americans to deal with. Seems like only temporary cracks are forming in the naxal movement and the international backers will make sure that it stays alive.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by nawabs »

Govt plans to ban visit of 'Naxal supporter' author

http://www.hindustantimes.com/India-new ... 58544.aspx
Jan Myrdal, son of the celebrated Nobel laureate couple--Gunnar and Alva Myrdal--is banned from visiting India because the government believes he is a Maoist supporter.

The government of India is contemplating a ban on the future visits of 85-year-old Jan Myrdal, whose parents were close friends of former Prime Ministers Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi, for his alleged backing of pro-Maoist ideology.

The home ministry has found that the Sweden-based author had attended pro-Naxal conventions in Kolkata, Hyderabad, Ludhiana and Delhi early this year and allegedly expressed support to the CPI(Maoist) ideology of armed struggle against the state.

"Mr Jan Myrdal during his stay in India advised CPI (Maoist) to garner support from the middle-class in India by focusing on propaganda against security forces and highlighting human rights issues,"
Minister of State for Home Jitendra Singh told the Rajya Sabha on Wednesday.

Top home ministry officials told PTI that they cannot remain a silent spectator to anyone roaming freely and supporting the Maoists, who want to overthrow Indian democratic system and the government through armed rebellion.

"We are planning to put a complete ban on his future visits to India," a top official said.

Asked to specify the proposed action against the writer, home ministry spokesperson Ira Joshi refused to say anything. "We do not comment on such security issues," she said.

Myrdal has authored several books that include 'Report from a Chinese village', 'China: The Revolution Continued', 'Confessions of a Disloyal European' and 'India Waits', a book in which he mentioned that India awaits a Marxian-inspired peoples' movement, emanating from rural India, parallel to the Chinese Communist revolution.

Two years ago, Myrdal travelled in the Naxal hot-bed Bastar and personally interacted with the tribal people and the leadership of CPI (Maoist), including Mupalla Laxman Rao alias Ganapathy.

Myrdal' parents -- father Gunnar and mother Alva were nobel laureates. His father was Minister for Trade and mother was Minister for Disarmament and of Church in Sweden. Alva was Swedish Ambassador to India between 1955-61. In 1981, the Indian government had awarded the couple jointly the Jawaharlal Nehru Award for International Understanding.

As Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi very often used to quote the books written by Gunnar Myrdal, specially his famous observations on corruption in India.

Asked about the relations between the Myrdal family and the Nehru-Gandhi family, Jan Myrdal said the "relations are well known" and both his father and mother were close to Jawaharlal Nehru. "I, of course, met and talked to him," Jan said.

"As to Indira who was a friend of my mother, we had some contact. After I published "India Waits" she asked the Indian Ambassador to Sweden to invite me back to India to discuss with her. Unfortunately she was killed before I could accept her invitation," he said.

When contacted by email, Skinnskatteberg (Sweden) based Myrdal said he was not as stupid to give political "advice" to Indian friends and asked authorities to "back-track" this "very stupid and anti-Indian" move.

Myrdal said he had travelled to India in January/February, 2012 on a one month conference visa to launch his book "Red Star Over India. Impressions, Reflexions and Discussions when the Wretched of the Earth are Rising".

"According to the agreement with the authorities, when I arrived they were continuously informed about where I stayed and where I made public speeches," he told PTI.

Myrdal said the book itself - which he had sent to the Home Minister personally - has now reached its second English language edition in India and is being published in Bengali, Hindi, Punjabi, Tamil and Telugu. In Europe it has been translated to German, Italian, Norwegian and Swedish. Internationally it is available as an e-book and on the net.

"I discussed in India with many different organisations. Everything I said in India is either printed or available on the net. I have of course not done anything as stupid as giving political "advice" to Indian friends...

"I expect that more intelligent officials - more interested in India and the world - will act and speedily back-track on this very stupid and anti-Indian decision," he said.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Views from the Left
TACKLING LOW GROWTH

CPM weekly People’s Democracy discusses the PMO’s reported proposal to set up a special purpose vehicle (SPV) to accelerate investment in the infrastructure, mineral resources and oil and natural gas exploration sectors.

The editorial says that the UPA government, carrying forward its neoliberal economic reform trajectory, is creating newer avenues for profit maximisation, hoping that it will attract greater foreign investment which, in turn, will propel the growth rate. It argues the SPV — which will also be responsible for securing all clearances before a project is put up for bidding — is a higher stage in the process of private profit maximisation than the PPP.

“Promoting PPP is the classic argument of those... seeking vacation of space by the government for private profit-making. The government, we are told, needs to move out of areas like hotels etc (even while making profits) and concentrate on education and health. Then we are told since adequate resources are not available, both education and health need to be privatised... And so goes on the story where the government of the day has no space left to pursue socially required projects or even express the popular will of the people,” it argues.

It concludes that there is a fundamental flaw in the government’s diagnosis that it is the slow pace of investment that is the cause for lower growth rate. “The basic problem... is to reverse the current slackening of domestic demand. Unless this is done, no amount of increase in investment will lead to a higher growth rate because what is produced... needs to be sold in the market. This requires adequate purchasing power in the hands of the people. It is precisely this purchasing power that is constantly being eroded by the relentless rise in the prices of all essential commodities,” it says.

CONSPIRACY THEORIES

Two reports — one from West Bengal and another from Kerala — in People’s Democracy are noteworthy. The report from Bengal claims that ever since the Trinamool Congress came to power, “as many as 65 Left Front leaders, activists and supporters have been brutally killed by the TMC goons.” It adds that there is a “massive attack” on the political opponents of the TMC and over 600 offices of the CPM have been ransacked and captured.

The report from Kerala reproduces a statement issued by the Kerala state unit on the killing of a prominent CPM rebel, for which the party is under suspicion. Some of its cadres and local-level functionaries have been arrested in connection with the case. The statement says that “venomous, erroneous campaigns” unleashed against the party are part of a conspiracy against the CPM, which asserts that it had no connection with the murder as “propagated by the enemies of the party”.

NO TO AUSTERITY

An editorial in the CPI magazine New Age claims that Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is leading India to adopt the same economic prescription proposed by the IMF and European Central Bank (ECB) that plunged most eurozone countries into a deep crisis and has pushed the European Union itself to the verge of collapse. It calls Mukherjee “confused” and says that the FM “thinks that the crisis in Greece has deepened because electors have rejected a particular party. The popular verdict in Greece is not just against a political party, but it is the rejection of the austerity-based economic bailout proposed by IMF and ECB”.

The article claims that India is facing a crisis due to the “policies of economic neoliberalism” to which most “bourgeois political parties” are committed. It argues that any cut in public spending may further aggravate the crisis. “Mukherjee in the last budget had targeted Rs 40,000 crore through (the) sale of PSUs. This year too he has fixed the target at Rs 30,000 crore. It is like selling the house silver (to keep) the kitchen alive. All these are bad omens for the country,” it says.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Suppiah »

Maoist sympathiser Mahasweta Devi who was 'too busy' and 'forgot' to condemn Maoist attrocities while remembering to protest every time there is a rights 'violation', has now quit the Bangla academy. At 88 years, it must be a major sacrifice to make.

Any bongs here know what is this academy? Is it another cesspool where Marxist ideologues park themselves and get pay+perks at exchequer's cost even as they side with those that wage war on India? Tried googling, but info is all about the BD one..no website..
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Sachin »

abhishek_sharma wrote:CONSPIRACY THEORIES
......... The report from Kerala reproduces a statement issued by the Kerala state unit on the killing of a prominent CPM rebel, for which the party is under suspicion. Some of its cadres and local-level functionaries have been arrested in connection with the case. The statement says that “venomous, erroneous campaigns” unleashed against the party are part of a conspiracy against the CPM, which asserts that it had no connection with the murder as “propagated by the enemies of the party”.
x-posted from Police Investigation thread..
Latest on T.P Chandrasekharan murder case..

CPI(M) in Kerala is all the more on the defensive as the party cadre's involvement in this gruesome murder is now pretty much obvious. The party which earlier claimed that it has nothing to hide and is in no way connected with the murder has now landed with egg on its face.

Commies holding Area Committee and Local Committee level positions have been identified as the brains behind the murder. Two of them have already been arrested and now in police custody. The police have arrested one person who was actually involved in the murder. This fellow was picked up from Mysore with due help from the Intelligence wing of Karnataka Police. It was the arrest of this person which revealed more grue some details.

The police had found out the vehicle which was used by the murderers. In it was blood stains. They confirmed that it was not the victim's blood stains. This gave them a clue that one of the murderers had also got injured and have lost some blood. They checked up with near by hospitals and found that one chap had been brought in (by two CPI(M) leaders) as a "motor accident case". The commie cadre who had transported two of the gang members to a party office in Koothuparamba also confirmed that one of them had a bandaged hand.

The fellow picked up from Mysore is such a die-hard commie that he even had the "Sickle, Hammer and Star" tattooed to his fore-arm.

With the investigation getting more agressive, the leader of the gang who is in hiding have started sending signals that he is willing to surrender provided that the police assure him that he would not be beaten up :P ;). Police men now watch court premises so that he can be picked up if he tries to surrender there.

In another case being investigated by CBI, two CPI(M) leaders are facing charges of criminal conspiracy. They had got killed a Mr. Fasal who moved from CPI(M) to NDF. In this case the very same leaders now got arrested had blamed RSS for the murder :eek:.

The commies have now switched over to the standard tactic of rabble rousing and holding of protest marches against the investigation and arrests of the leaders.

News reports..
Fasal murder case. Anticipatory bail please postponed
The judge notes that CBI has every right to arrest the duo, if they feel so.
TP murder: Some of the accused flee Kerala
Party villages may be raided
This has started. Men from Armed Police battalions (from other districts) have been brought in.
Look-out notice issued for CPM activist
Karat blames media campaign
What else is expected..?
Will not allow CBI to arrest the accused in Fasal case: Jayarajan (Mathrubhumi:Malayalam)
Leaders in Police Custody for 14 days (Mathrubhumi: Malayalam)
People not satisfied with police investigation should approach the court: VS
What should be noted here is Comrade VS is from CPI(M) and the "people not satisfied with police investigation" are his own party men from Kannur district, Kerala ;).
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Suppiah »

Rapist goons' propaganda yellow daily reports it quietly without any comments. - its yellows become tongue-tied when it comes to covering their handers or their paymasters in Beijing..

Rapist goon chief says they never engage in violence against opponents that must be the lie of the century..
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Suppiah »

Nandigram rapist goon's lie gets nailed...

http://www.mathrubhumi.com/english/story.php?id=124142
Those to be killed will be killed again, Mani said. The party eradicated Balan who had killed party worker Ayyappa Das at Peerumedu. We killed those who rebelled against the party at Shanthan Para in Idukki as well. And, that will be done in future too,' Mani said
One can safely expect that
  • Rapist goon propaganda yellow daily will not write 10 editorials and fill up the first 3 pages for the next 4 weeks
    Sahmat would not be launching protests
    Eminnent historians, prominent intellectuals and civil rights groups would not issue strong statements
    Barka Dutt would not be screaming and celebrating, NDTV and IBN showing this for the next 380 days continuously
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Anindya »

Maoists have stocked over 6,000 rocket launchers
NEW DELHI: The Maoists are believed to be churning out low cost rocket launchers from makeshift workshops, with parts sourced from industrial tool manufacturing units in Kolkata and the National Investigation Agency (NIA) reckons the ultras may have stockpiled 6,000 of these in the jungles of Chhattisgarh. The NIA believes the operation was being overseen by Sadanala Ramakrishna, who was recently arrested from Kolkata and was said to be slain Maoist leader Kishenji's successor.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by Sachin »

x-posted from Police Investigation thread..
More on the communist violence in Kerala.

After the murder of a communist party worker who moved out of CPI(M), the commies had planned to call for small meetings explaining the party's stand on dealing with people who have moved out of the party etc. etc. This cause another big embarassment for the party as M.M Mani a party office-bearer from the Munnar area made a statement in a public rally which was also covered by the media. In a fiery speach M.M Mani openly stated that the party maintains a kind of hit-list. And in the past (1980-1990) the party had silenced three Congress workers, 1 by shooting him down, 2 by beating a person to death; and 3 stabbing the person. He stated that after these activities the Congress workers had to literally request the commies to even wear Khadar/Khadi clothes (a kind of pre-requisite for every Congress man in Kerala).

The state government first got a legal opinion that whether old cases can be open up again after Mani's recent statement. After getting a positive response the police is now drawing up all the old case files and begin all over again with a new FIR.

News reports:-
CPM central leadership seeks explanation over Mani's statement (Mathrubhumi:English)
New case filed against M.M Mani (Mathrubhumi: Malayalam)
Police using third degree methods, alleges CPM (Mathrubhumi:English) (This is related to the investigation on the T.P Chandrasekharan murder)
TP murder: Area commitee member too under arrest (Mathrubhumi:English)
Police conduct raids in party villages: Explosive powders seized (Mathrubhumi:English)
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by RoyG »

Anindya wrote:Maoists have stocked over 6,000 rocket launchers
NEW DELHI: The Maoists are believed to be churning out low cost rocket launchers from makeshift workshops, with parts sourced from industrial tool manufacturing units in Kolkata and the National Investigation Agency (NIA) reckons the ultras may have stockpiled 6,000 of these in the jungles of Chhattisgarh. The NIA believes the operation was being overseen by Sadanala Ramakrishna, who was recently arrested from Kolkata and was said to be slain Maoist leader Kishenji's successor.
Image

Wow...Judging by the picture, they've been able to achieve a fairly high degree of sophistication wrt to the actual rocket projectiles themselves. Can't help but admire how they've been able to mobilize resources and take on the Indian state with guerrilla tactics. We need to destroy this movement ASAP otherwise they will start attacking targets in towns and cities.
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by brihaspati »

^^^^No problem actually. The Maoists will not hit key congrez leadership (unless that leader is from the provincial coterie, not belonging to the inner central circle around the dynasty, and has shown signs of not kowtowing fully to the dynaty), will not hit any theologian or leader with strong Muslim or Christian identity-tag (unless a deemed thorn in dynasty sides), will not hit activist judiciary.

As long as Maoists follow these rules, they can do anything they want. They might even be as useful as islamist terrorists to the mercantiles - who may see in them an useful third party to eliminate thorns without drawing fingers to themselves, and who can of course be bought off to do mercantile bidding.

But the Maoists who scan this forum should think carefully - the equation at the central level is tricky now within the theological spectrum. They should be careful in first sussing out the particular sect of their victim - as at the moment one sect is favoured more than others in each of the two theologies. If they are misled into hitting the wrong sect then they might be in trouble. But I hope the rashtryia handlers among their core leadership will guide them properly. If onlee YSR switched to the holy city in time! Well, but that is just a passing flavour of the season. Who knows what the mercantiles hold dear the next season!
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by devesh »

http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Hyd ... 423162.ece

Maoists make a determined bid to re-enter Andhra Pradesh

Andhra Pradesh is now witnessing a peculiar situation. While its intelligence operatives continue to focus on tracking the top Maoist leadership and succeed many a time by arresting or killing them, their uniformed counterparts on the field appear to have lulled themselves into complacency.

So much so that groups of armed rebels have been quickly darting across the border from Orissa, Maharashtra and Chhattisgarh to conduct meetings or resort to some violent actions.

The attitude of the field level officials, who perfunctorily dismissed these incursions earlier as Maoist attempts to make their presence felt, is slowly changing into anxiety, as the rebels began attacking police.

Armed naxalites shot dead a constable of Special Intelligence Branch (SIB) in Vizag agency area on April 26 and made an abortive attempt on a SI in Khammam district last night.

If the police officials are anxious about the movement of naxals in good numbers, panic has already set in among people living in villages on State borders, more so among the grass root level politicians after the rebels held a kangaroo court in Mukunoor village of Karimnagar district last week. They thrashed two local leaders of ruling party and opened fire on one of them, when they attempted to flee.

These incidents might appear to be sporadic and isolated, but there is a method in this madness. It's a time-tested strategy the rebels are employing now.

Their primary aim is to choke the information flow to the police. This could be achieved by killing those who are suspected to be spies or branding those killed as ‘police informants'.

Simultaneously, the targeted killings or thrashing of grass root level politicians is to create a political vacuum at village level.

The demonstrative violence, as seen in the severe torture of two politicians in Mukunoor praja court is significant as it is meant to terrorise and force the low-level politicians to withdraw from political arena. The warnings issued at praja court that ruling party leaders must resign from the party is to be understood in this angle. Once the politicians at village level are neutralised, the Maoist nominated committees would take over the village level administration.

That would be the first part of setting base for the rebels.

The disturbing similarity in recent incidents reported from Mukunoor or from Khammam border areas, is the presence of a large number of armed Maoist cadres. Though the authorities sought to dismiss the reports as exaggerated, official sources concede in private that, at least 20 Maoists were present in Mukunoor, while nearly 200 were present in Khammam incidents where they blasted a guest house and later attacked a police team led by a sub-inspector. During the peak of naxalite movement in Telangana also Maoist squads never used to camp in a village for a night. “But in Mukunoor, they spent almost the entire night. That shows their confidence levels to take on any police teams”, a senior officer who dealt with Maoist movement in Telangana recalls.

In a way, the success of controlling the Maoist movement and continued accolades being heaped on the police force seemed to have had an adverse impact on the battle-preparedness of the police force.

The unbridled political intervention in posting of police officers, the unchecked corrupt practises in the police department have gradually led to a situation where officers and men who fought the battle with the Maoists with devotion being sidelined.

In addition, most of the officers who were in the forefront of the do-or-die battle waged with the Maoists, are now promoted to higher ranks and moved out of the districts. Courtesy their efforts, these districts have now become ‘comfort zones' for a different set of officers who got recruited into the police force after the Maoists have been driven out.

“Most of the officers would not even know the definition of protracted people's war, leave alone studying the Maoist tactics and strategies”, officials admit candidly.

Though the situation is not as bad as a decade ago, Karimnagar, Warangal, and agency areas of Visakhapatnam and East Godavari are the vulnerable areas as the rebels continue to enjoy the relative safety across the borders in Chhattisgarh or Odisha.

there are a couple of other articles doing rounds about Maoists regaining foothold in Telangana. and what's with the beating up of INC local leader?
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Re: The Red Menace

Post by brihaspati »

^^^ The states congrez has become unreliable for the centre. An existential threat would divert attention from resisting centre and dynasty and local feuding to consolidate and look with doe eyes again at the royal family.
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