Naxals/Maoists Watch

Should the Indian government use armed forces against the naxals/maoists?


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Rage

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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/01/world/asia/01maoist.html?_r=1&ref=world



BARSUR, India — At the edge of the Indravati River, hundreds of miles from the nearest international border, India effectively ends. Indian paramilitary officers point machine guns across the water. The dense jungles and mountains on the other side belong to Maoist rebels dedicated to overthrowing the government.

Indigenous women walked to a market in Chattisgarh State, where villagers are caught between the Indian government and Maoist rebels.
“That is their liberated zone,” said P. Bhojak, one of the officers stationed at the river’s edge in this town in the eastern state of Chattisgarh.

ROFL MAO :D (I know, I've exhausted that one eh?)


Ok, let me give you the low down on this. This article is a pile of johnny-walker turd running on a night cap. I've been to Barsur and the "thousands of miles of liberated zone" referred to LMAO :D is nothing more than a small patch of jungle that measures no larger than a few dozen kilometers across.

This is Barsur. As you can see, it is a nondescript location at 19° 06' 09" N latitude and 81° 28' 18" E longitude. It has a population of between 1000-2000 and measures little more than a fifth of the Bastar region also in the Jagdaalpur area:


Map of Barsur, India, Asia - Collins Maps




The problem very nearly boils down to topography: Barsur is a region of low-lying mountains mountains and hills, with jungles on the hills.






Distrct Dantewada Chhattisgarh - Tourism

However, the neighbouring areas are all within the control of the state, with the neighbouring town of Geedam 24 km. to the South being a bustling township.

The notable exception is the mining region of Bastar, which is overrun by Naxals. The primary purpose of any operation in this area would be to free this mineral-rich region, not the nondescript village of Barsur, inhabited by a few dozen guerrilla fighters.
 

Rage

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Maoist violence to be dealt with in 'holistic way': PM

Thursday, October 29, 2009 (13:35:32)


Maoists train in a jungle camp in Chhatisgarh: File- IndiaTv


Srinagar: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said today that Maoist violence would be dealt with "in a holistic way", with a combination of security measures and administrative steps to end the alienation of the tribal people.

"We have to deal with it in a holistic way. Every state has to maintain and enforce law and order. Law and order is a precondition for any sustained social and economic development," the prime minister told reporters at the end of a two-day visit to Jammu and Kashmir.

"Having said that, I do recognise that in certain areas, particularly in areas where the tribal population is in large (numbers), there is alienation," he said.



Army troops prepare to launch an offensive in the jungles in Jharkhand


The prime minister said this could be because development activities may not be reaching the tribals, who are among the poorest of the poor in the country.

"We have to operate on two legs. We have to enforce and law and order. Simultaneously we have to pay attention to economic development."

The prime minister, however, declined to comment on the West Bengal government's decision to release from prison some tribal women in order to secure the freedom of a police officer abducted by Maoists.

Asked to comment on Railway Minister and Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee's reported statement that there were no Maoists, the prime minister said: "The Maoist threat is a reality. The government of India is duty bound to deal with it in an effective manner." (IANS)


Maoist violence to be dealt with in 'holistic way': PM
 

Rage

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India's longtime battle with Maoist rebels heats up



Policemen take position during an encounter
with Maoist rebels at Bhimpur, in west Midnapore, about 95
miles west from Calcutta, India, Friday. Suspected Maoist
rebels killed nine policemen in a land mine attack
in one of the worst attacks in eastern India on Thursday, June 21,
as hundreds of soldiers moved to confront the guerrillas in a
neighboring state. Sucheta Das/AP


The government warned of more attacks Monday after Naxalites called a two-day strike to protest an offensive in Lalgarh, West Bengal.

By Mian Ridge | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
from the June 22, 2009 edition




New Delhi - Eleven police officers were killed in an ambush by Maoist rebels in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh Sunday, as fears grow that the decades-old revolutionary movement is gaining ground in more parts of the country.

Seven rebels were killed in the attack launched by the rebels, also known as Naxalites, after the West Bengal village of Naxalbari where in 1967 poor villagers rose up against their landlords.

Since then, the movement, which claims to fight for India's poorest, has spread across strips of eastern, central, and southern India. Naxalites now operate in at least 11 of the country's 28 states and are thought to boast some 22,000 fighters.

On Monday, the central government warned that five states in central and eastern India were under threat of attacks during a two-day strike called by the rebels.

That strike was called to protest against a government offensive in Lalgarh, a Maoist-seized jungle enclave in West Bengal. Last week, after the local police fled, the state government sent 1,000 paramilitary forces to Lalgarh where they are still fighting to commandeer hundreds of villages.


MANY RURAL POOR TO RECRUIT

Here, as in other areas affected by Naxalism, the rebels have set out to attract the poor and alienated – "any group that has a grievance," says Ajay Sahni, a terrorism expert at the Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi.

In India, where hundreds of millions survive on less than a dollar a day and 70 percent of the population lives in rural areas largely bypassed by the country's recent economic boom, there is no shortage of such groups.

Geography also plays its part. The areas of West Bengal into which the Maoists are making inroads are close to the eastern states of Orissa, Jharkland, and Chhattisgarh, where the Maoist presence is heaviest.

There are new concerns, too, that the rebels, who have tended to focus their operations on rural areas, are attacking areas close to cities.

Mr. Sahni says the rebels are also stepping up a campaign to recruit more Indians to their cause. In Delhi, where the Maoists have previously tried to appeal to university students, they are now seeking to attract small retailers who have been displaced by multinational companies and urban planning laws, he says.


'HIGHLY AFFECTED AREAS STILL LIMITED'

Analysts caution against exaggerating the threat, however. Of India's 630 districts, Maoists are today operational in 220, compared to 56 in 2000, says Sahni.

"But it's important to realize that only 55 or 56 districts could be described as highly affected," he says. "We must not deny the risk, but there's a tendency with these sorts of events to suddenly think it's all suddenly falling apart."

India's central government, meanwhile, has said tackling Naxalism is a priority. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the movement as one of the gravest security threats to India. After his Congress-led government was re-elected last month it reiterated that view.

"Terrorism, Naxalite violence, and insurgency in the northeast are the key challenges before the country," Home Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram said. He promised "coordinated and tough" action against the rebels.



India's longtime battle with Maoist rebels heats up | csmonitor.com
 

RAM

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Nepal Maoists admit link with Indian naxals

KATHMANDU: After months of being in denial mode, the Nepalese Maoists have come out openly extending "full support and cooperation" to the naxalites in India, days after Home Minister P Chidambaram mentioned about a possible arms supply from them.

Admitting that exchanges exist between the Maoists and the Indian naxals, a senior Standing Committee member of the UCPN-M CP Gajurel was quoted by Rajdhani daily as saying, "We have extended our full support and cooperation to the Indian Maoists, who are launching armed revolt."

Talking to pro-Maoist journalists in Bara district of southern Nepal on Sunday, Gajurel, however, did not elaborate on what type of support they have extended to the Naxals.

The statement came shortly after Indian Home Minister P Chidambaram mentioned about the possible arms supply from Nepalese Maoists to the Naxals in India.

The same newspaper had earlier carried a report that a Maoist leader had met Indian Maoist leader Kishenji in an undisclosed place in October.

However, when contacted for his comment avoiding direct answer Gajurel said that his party did not oppose the movement being launched by the Indian Maoists.

"They are doing what they think is right," he said. They are launching their movement in Indiaand we are launching ours here, there is no need to oppose the movement launched by the Indian Maoists, he pointed out

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...nk-with-Indian-naxals/articleshow/5192687.cms
 

sob

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For all the talks of the security forces unable to tackle the Naxal menace we will have to go back in recent history to 2005 of the role of our political parties in dealing with the Naxals.

There were reports in the media that in the 2004-05 elections YSR and the congress party had benifitted from the help of the Naxals to win the elections. This favour was returned in full when the elite Greyhound commandos had surrounded the entire top rung of the Naxal leadership in the forests of Orissa.

Fearing for their life the Naxals started frantically calling up their supporters in the NGOs and the political parties tosave their life. The resultant pressure was big enough for the UPA led by Sonis Gandhi to call off the police operation and let these bas****s get away. We can only imagine the frustration and deep sense of betrayl the commandos must have felt on complying with these orders. They risked their lifes to get the entire top rung leadership of the naxals in one swoop and here was some politicians fresh from electoral victory ordering them to withdraw and let the prize catch get away.

Here the blame should also be equally shared by the media and opposition parties who did not take on the ruling govt. on this foolhardy decision. We are now reaping the bitter harvest of such decisions.

Naxal Terror Watch: Cops surround Naxal leaders, told to return
 

thakur_ritesh

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There has always been a nexus between the politicians and the outlawed outfits, be it in j&k, the naxal effected belt, north east, the Mumbai under world or in the past in Punjab, and with ltte and veerappan.

But what is shocking is the ease with which naxals have been able to use the media and the worst part, the media is all too keen to adjust to the naxal demands and highlight them very sympathetically, eg: in the recent hijack episode of rajdhani express, one channel was only adamant on showing that these people meant no harm to people and kept highlighting the same and there was hardly any coverage of the ghastly act of hijack, to the extent it sounded as if they were trying to justify the act and well the reasons are not far to see. what could very well be termed as india’s Taliban, I know some will seriously get irritated with the term I used but the fact of the matter is that both have very tactfully been able to use the media, some media savvy chaps these lots are!

The GoI still comes across very confused in its approach when it comes to tackling the naxals and it seems nothing really has been understood from the past. There are times when certain things need to clamped down with a heavy fist but here we are still trying to jostle between talks and action through a gun, a dilemma that will in the end yield us no gains but will lower the moral of the troops at ground zero.

Cant get a sense of when are we going to give up on half hearted measures, its as if, it just keeps going on and on in one big circle, we end up being with the same nonsense every time.
 

sob

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Thakur_ritesh,

India being a big country has a lot of issues that have been simmering for decades and need to be addressed immediately. The task of the Govt. is indeed a very difficult job but with the present political setup, the almost disfunctional official machinery in many parts of the country makes it a task of Herculean proportions.

Our problem has been that our ruling class has never been able to establish certain long term goals and then set up a systematic plan on following it. The five year plans were a step in this direction but they jsut ended up being another bureaucratic tool.

Regarding our media, the less said is the better. They are now taking a very partisan role in the political landscape. They have lost their sense of objectivity and only follow their owners policy. Also with the GOI being the biggest source of revenue ( through advertisments) our media is ready to be manipulated.
 

RAM

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Hardcore Maoist held near Orissa's Keonjhar district

Keonjhar (Orissa): A hardcore Maoist allegedly involved in several criminal cases including murder was arrested in Orissa's Keonjhar district, police said today.

The Maoist, identified as Purna Murmu, was nabbed at Ghasisahi under Ghasipura police station, about 80km from here, yesterday after being spotted by the police at a function for distribution of land "pattas" to tribals, they said.

Murmu was wanted by the police in many Maoist related crimes including murder, arson, loot and extortion in the district.

He is being interrogated.



Hardcore Maoist held near Orissa's Keonjhar district - dnaindia.com
 

Pintu

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http://www.ptinews.com/news/365945_Three-youths-shot-dead-by-Maoists-in-Midnapore

Three youths shot dead by Maoists in Midnapore

STAFF WRITER 11:8 HRS IST

Midnapore (WB), Nov 7 (PTI) Hours before Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee's visit to Midnapore today, three youths were shot dead by Maoists in Kusbani jungle in the district.

Bullet-riddled bodies of three youths - Lakhi Das, Jayram Mandi and Manoranjan - with their hands and legs tied in ropes were found in the road near Kusbani jungle, about 70 km from here, police sources said.

The Maoists had left behind posters near the bodies of the three claiming that the three were spies of the police and were agents of the ruling CPI(M) so they have been punished, they said.



The roads of Jhargram town have also been blocked by felling trees on the road, the sources said.

The Chief Minister is scheduled to arrive at Midnapore town at around 5.
 

bengalraider

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Homemade missiles with maoists



SOURCE: http://www.telegraphindia.com/1091107/jsp/frontpage/story_11711433.jsp

Bankura/Midnapore, Nov. 6: The seizure of two “improvised missiles” and a launcher, apparently capable of hitting targets 200 metres away, has left police stunned hours before Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee visits Maoist-hit West Midnapore tomorrow.

The recovery, made in neighbouring Bankura, changes the ground rules of VIP security in the rebel zone. The forces now sanitise just the roadsides since the Maoists are not expected to hit targets beyond 7-8 metres.

Officers said they had never before heard of the rebel arsenal containing missiles or launchers till two sacks of weapons seized last evening, from motorcycle-borne rebel conduits in a forest, threw up the surprise.

“This is the first such recovery in the Maoist-infested areas,” Bankura police chief Vishal Garg said, adding that the two missiles and launcher had been sent to a forensic laboratory “to find out what these are”. The missiles look like pipes, each 3.5ft long, 3 inches in diameter and weighing 8.5kg, the police said.

“It’s basically like a Diwali rocket. Its launch end has to be placed in the holder (launcher), where an explosive goes off and fires the pipe towards a target up to 200 metres away,” an officer said.

“At the other end is the warhead, which also has explosives that go off on impact and the missile showers splinters, pellets, nuts, bolts, nails and other kinds of shrapnel. It can be fired from rooftops, windowsills and even trees.”

The farthest the rebels could strike till now was five to seven metres with their “directional mines” — those with their mouths positioned to channel the impact of the blast in one particular direction.

“These missiles appear more dangerous: the range is longer, they can be better directed and the damage is greater,” an officer said.

The Maoists, though, had not used missiles to target Bhattacharjee’s convoy on November 2 last year, but the police missed the 1,200m wire snaking through roadside fields.

Yesterday’s seizure was made in Karbhanga forest in Bankura’s Sarenga, just 3km from the West Midnapore border and 70km from Midnapore town, part of Bhattacharjee’s itinerary on his two-day trip.

A police patrol had spotted the headlight of an approaching motorcycle a little after 7.30pm, an officer said. “When the motorcyclist spotted us, he stopped. There were two persons on the bike. They dropped the motorcycle and two sacks and ran away in the darkness.”

The blue TVS Star City bike has a genuine West Midnapore registration and the visor showed two names: Animesh and Avishek, a source said. “We have identified the owner but cannot reveal the details.”

The sacks also contained two loaded single-shot pistols, about 16kg of a white powder in plastic bags, and another bag with about 2.5kg of a yellowish powder that could be RDX, the police said. A search of the area this morning yielded an automatic Chinese pistol.

About 1,700 police and paramilitary have been deployed for Bhattacharjee’s motorcade along two alternative routes from Debra to Midnapore town, 40km away, since 5pm today. They are searching the roadsides with tractors and power tillers.

The last time Bhattacharjee visited the district, on August 11, about 1,200 security personnel were deployed.
 

RAM

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Maoists getting arms from China: India

NEW DELHI: The government for the first time on Sunday said that the Maoists are getting arms from China, which is a "big supplier" of small weapons.

"Chinese are big smugglers... suppliers of small arms. I am sure that the Maoists also get them," home secretary G K Pillai said when asked if the Naxals were having links with China.

The home secretary said the government has no information that the Maoists have any links with China except getting arms. "I do not think so, except getting arms," he told reporters on the sidelines of a function here.

Pillai, however, did not elaborate whether the Maoists were getting arms from Chinese arms smugglers or official agencies.

Home minister P Chidambaram had said in an interview last month that the Maoists are acquiring weapons through Bangladesh, Myanmar and possibly Nepal.

"We know now that the weapons are coming through Bangladesh and Myanmar and possibly Nepal. The border is very porous. The Indo-Nepal border is a very porous border." he had said.

Maoists getting arms from China: India - India - The Times of India
 

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http://www.ptinews.com/news/367916_Maoists-kill-four-EFR-jawans-in-W-Midnapore-district

Maoists kill four EFR jawans in W Midnapore district


STAFF WRITER 20:56 HRS IST

Gidhni (WB), Nov 8 (PTI) Four EFR jawans were killed in a surprise assault by Maoists while they were patrolling near Gidhni Bazaar in the Jhargram sub-division of West Midnapore district today, barely hours after West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee left after a two-day visit to the violence-scarred district.

IG (Western Range) Kuldip Singh said the EFR jawans were patrolling near a police camp close to a school in the area under Jamboni police station.

IGP (Law and Order) Surajit Kar Purakayastha said there were seven jawans when the ultras opened fire. Four died on the spot while three others managed to escape. They returned soon and retaliated.

As the exchange of fire was on, some more jawans from the nearby camp joined, forcing the ultras to flee into the jungles. The ultras looted the arms of the four slain jawans.
 

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Huge cache of ammunition seized in Patna

http://www.timesnow.tv/Huge-cache-of-ammunition-seized-in-Patna/articleshow/4331639.cms
8 Nov 2009, 1713 hrs IST
Police recovered 600 kg of explosives, 10 carbines and 10,000 cartridges from a housing colony in Patna, Bihar. Gelatine, detonators and other kinds of explosives were also recovered.

Police have also detained two people. Just yesterday, police recovered 300 kg of ammonium nitrate, copper sulphate, potassium nitrate and several bottles of acids from Patna's Bhootnath road on a tip off from IB. It is believed that these explosives were to be supplied to naxals in Jharkhand.

And when TIMES NOW spoke to DSP Pankaj Kumar of the Bihar Police, he said two men had been detained in connection with the raid. He said, "After searching the area we found 10 drums of liquid explosives, atleast 5000 bullets and we found several detonators. Two people have been detained for questioning."
 

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Vasectomies, violence inside India's Maoist camps

By Rupam Jain Nair (AFP) – 10 hours ago

JAGDALPUR, India — A quick exchange of guns and a pledge to undertake a vasectomy is customary for India's Maoist "comrades" when they wed in their isolated forest hideouts.

Some 10,000-20,000 heavily armed rebels are believed to be hiding out in India's forests following a revolutionary communist ideology that paints the state and landowners as the enemies of the people.

"This is how I got married," says 36-year-old Ramesh Podiyani, a surrendered Maoist commander who fought for more than two decades in Chhattisgarh, a central state at the heart of India's "Red Corridor."

The vasectomy, he explained, was because children could weaken a fighter emotionally, distracting him from the cause of waging class war and destroying capitalism.

"Comrades" undergo the surgery in private clinics or with sympathetic doctors, avoiding government hospitals where they might be detected.

Podiyani, who now works for a private company, grew up in a Maoist training camp from the age seven where, instead of going to school, he was trained with bows and arrows, then with guns and landmines.

"I killed several people, but I'm not sorry. It was my duty to kill as a comrade," he told AFP, sitting inside a police conference room in the town of Jagdalpur, 400 kilometres (250 miles) from Chhattisgarh state capital Raipur.

Podiyani and his wife served two years in prison after they surrendered to police and are now waiting for a promised government job and a house.

Most of the recruits who end up as Maoist fighters are from India's marginalised tribal groups. Some are forcibly enlisted, others join by choice, attracted by the fight for the poor and justice.

"I was excited when I joined the Maoists. They gifted me a uniform and leather boots," Podiyani says, adding that he was enlisted after his parents fled the village when the recruitment drive began.

Ratha Werna, a former Maoist soldier now training in a special police camp in Jagdalpur, is also prepared to speak openly about life in an organisation that is challenging the authority of the government in 20 of India's 29 states.

The strength of the decades-long insurgency has finally prompted the government to launch a major offensive, with thousands of police and paramilitary forces set to surge into the rebel strongholds.

"We thought the Maoists were the government and they are good because they were working for us," says Werna, who was expelled by the Maoists after he failed to rob a bank in Raipur and is now a police de-miner.

Robbing banks, killing landlords, attacking police stations and holding up trains are regular activities for the guerrillas, who work in a highly structured organisation topped by former teacher Mupalla Laxman Rao, better known as Ganapathi.

Inside the Maoist camps, there are strict rules forbidding corruption, lies and adultery and leaders keep a close eye on the conduct of every cadre, four former rebels told AFP in a series of interviews.

All disputes between the camp members are decided within 24 hours by the camp leader, with punishments ranging from demotion, detention to physical labour.

Religion and superstition is also forbidden.

"I was not allowed to worship the trees and the birds in the camp," said 32-year-old Dhuna, a former rebel and tribal villager from a Maoist-dominated area of the densely forested, impoverished state.

"From humble forest dwellers we were forced to become brutal soldiers."

Women generally cook, collect wood and act as soldiers. Some have been known to abandon their children on state highways in order to better serve the cause, Kathihar Ras, a worker in a local orphanage, told AFP.

Men's tasks include patrolling, organising propaganda exercises and collecting protection money from wealthy business leaders to guarantee their safety.

The Maoist propaganda machine -- an essential part of the movement that the government is countering with its own communications efforts -- uses printing presses, hired translators and professional writers.

"India is nothing but a semi-colonial and semi-feudal state under neo-colonial form of indirect rule, exploitation and control," is one idea contained in a strategy manual obtained by AFP.

Podiyani remembers some of the songs used during the regular workshops in which fellow fighters were taught about strategy and tactics for a revolution to topple the democratic government by 2060.

This target date is mentioned in dozens of training manuals seized by the police in raids over the last seven years.

One song, he recalls, went as follows:

"These villages and land are ours.

Why are the rich here?

Let us all kill them, stab them and burn them."

Human rights activist Durge Rao says his research shows that the Maoists depend on young boys for the bulk of their recruits.

"The tribal boys are the fodder. They are enrolled and brainwashed, age being no barrier to the start of a revolutionary life," she said.

A recent arrest in New Delhi, however, shows that the movement might also draw support from unlikely quarters.

In September, police arrested Kobad Ghandy, whom they allege is a top Maoist leader despite his upper-class background and elite education in India's top-class Doon school and then in London where he studied accountancy.

"Many rich, educated people in India are committed to the Maoist movement. It is difficult to pluck them (single them out)," said Chhattisgarh's top police officer Vishwa Ranjan.


For Podiyani and his wife, the brutality of the camps eventually turned them away from the movement. But they are clearly having trouble adapting to life without the direction given by the daily struggle against the state and capitalism.

"We still think like Maoists. It has been a challenge for us to settle in a city and abide by the government's rules," he says.
 

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Buddha warns Maoists of 'all-out police action'

Bhattacharjee Posted: Monday , Nov 09, 2009 at 1127 hrs Midnapore:

Without naming anyone, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said that the Maoists were getting support from mainstream political parties.


Agreeing with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s contention that Maoists were the greatest danger to the nation, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Sunday said the state government was soon going to launch an “all-out police operation” to free West Bengal of Maoists.
 

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Women Maoists led attack on EFR jawans
Caesar Mandal & Sukumar Mahato, TNN 10 November 2009, 06:55am IST
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GIDHNI (WEST MIDNAPORE): The attack on paramilitary jawans at Gidhni on Sunday evening was led by two women — just like the assault on Sankrail
police station. Police say one of them could be Tara, a Lalgarh native and Maoist leader Bikash’s fiancée. The EFR jawans did not suspect the women, disguised as villagers, which allowed the attackers to get to point-blank range.
 

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Maoists blow up bridge in Orissa


STAFF WRITER 12:20 HRS IST

Malkangiri (Orissa), Nov 10 (PTI) Maoists blew up a bridge over a rivulet in Orissa's Malkangiri district today, in an apparent bid to disrupt movement of security forces ahead of the proposed anti-naxal operation.

The newly-constructed bridge which was yet to be fully operational was blown up by ultras with the help of landmine in MV-77 village under Kalimela police station area, Superintendent of Police Satyabrata Bhoi said.
 

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CPI(M) leader shot at by suspected Maoists
Raktima Bose

A day after four jawans of the Eastern Frontier Rifles (EFR) were shot dead by a group of Maoists in the Lalgarh region of West Bengal’s Paschim Medinipur district, violence involving the extremists continued unabated on Monday.

Jagannath Mahato, a local Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader and the former pradhan of the Garmal gram panchayat, was shot at by suspected Maoists while he was on his way home in the Salboni area. His condition was reported to be “critical,” District Superintendent of Police Manoj Kumar Verma said.

Gunbattles raged between militants and security forces at three other places, besides Salboni. Gidhni, where the four EFR jawans were killed, remained tensed. The shops remained closed and the roads deserted.
 

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Maoists blow up bridge in Orissa


STAFF WRITER 12:20 HRS IST

Malkangiri (Orissa), Nov 10 (PTI) Maoists blew up a bridge over a rivulet in Orissa's Malkangiri district today, in an apparent bid to disrupt movement of security forces ahead of the proposed anti-naxal operation.

The newly-constructed bridge which was yet to be fully operational was blown up by ultras with the help of landmine in MV-77 village under Kalimela police station area, Superintendent of Police Satyabrata Bhoi said.
They blow-up bridges, dig roads, blast off schools/hospitals/railway stations, and then they complain about lack of development, how funny is that?
 

RAM

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Talks on lips, Govt builds forces

Talks on lips, Govt builds forces

New Delhi, Nov. 9: There appears to be a meditated strategy to the Centre’s consistent doublespeak on the security offensive against Maoist guerrillas — keep the fig-leaf of talks prominently dangled, keep building forces along pressure points in preparation for major strikes.Tactically, it’s a smart perch between political compulsions which require the Centre to establish it gave dialogue more than a chance, and security imperatives that are inevitably pushing it towards confronting armed Maoists.




“Talks are a political decision,” an officer involved with anti-Maoist operations told The Telegraph. “Our job is to meet violation of the law as and where. If there is a challenge today, it will have to be met today, and that is happening. It can’t be any other way.” On the face of it, the Union home ministry has discernibly tempered its threat rhetoric over the past fortnight. From handing out an unequivocal ultimatum to the Maoists, home minister P. Chidambaram has twice revised his appeal to them — first, an offer for talks if they abjured violence, and then, a repeated proposal if they only halted bloodshed.

Insiders maintain, though, that both positions were calibrated, made in the anticipation that the Maoists would reject them and clear the way for the exercise of hard options. In short, the sabre-rattling has stopped, but the sabres are still out.“It’s clear that the Maoists are not buying the dialogue offer,” a top official said. “What the government does in the coming days and weeks will be with a clean sense that we exhausted the dialogue option, and had no choice but to use force.”



He admitted, though, that following the home ministry’s “virtual declaration of war” on the Maoists a few weeks back, “some political and civil society pressure was built” in order to find middle ground. Although he did not mention specifics, he was probably referring to urgent appeals by rights groups such as the Citizens’ Initiative for Peace and to a statement by Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi that lack of governance had fed the Maoist upsurge. Sections within the Congress had also lobbied the party leadership to prevent the Centre from rushing into an armed conflict, warning that the consequences could be counterproductive and could further alienate the “aam aadmi” constituency.

Former Chhattisgarh chief minister Ajit Jogi was among those who wrote to party boss Sonia Gandhi cautioning against a rash resort to violence.
However, unabated Maoist violence — and their refusal to talk unless the government withdraws forces from their areas of dominance — is consistently strengthening the pro-action sections of the government. And preparations on the ground are proceeding in earnest. Green Hunt, which is specific to Chhattisgarh — and not to be confused with the joint cross-state operations being coordinated by New Delhi — has been under way for quite a while now in the jungles of South Bastar.



Raipur was also the staging post last week of the first “induction” sessions of central paramilitary units into the effort. A joint command centre has been created in Raipur, and new formations — the BSF and ITBP in Bastar’s case — are under deployment to key sectors. Their officers have had fairly detailed briefings on Maoist warfare training and tactics and have been asked to keep their forces in readiness. As one senior Chhattisgarh police officer said: “We cannot wait in a limbo for the Naxalites to decide whether they want to talk with the government or not, our job is to be ready. In fact, at the state level we have operationalised Green Hunt, the central forces will only expand the assault on the Naxalites.”On the ground, in fact, security forces are feeling upgraded Maoist heat. Enough, for instance, for Orissa, a key Maoist base, to complain that it hasn’t been given enough attention and assistance by New Delhi.

“There are reports of a substantial build-up of Maoists, particularly in our southern districts adjoining Dantewada, but because of the lack of adequate forces we have not been able to do much,” Prakash Mishra, DG (intelligence and operations) of Orissa said today. “Our chief minister has been asking for 7-8 more battalions of central paramilitary forces for quite a while, but nothing has happened.” Mishra denied reports that Orissa had temporarily withdrawn from anti-Maoist operations for lack of boots on the ground, but said: “We do need additional forces. Without them, we are quite handicapped.” He argued that Orissa was virtually “land-locked” by Maoist-affected states — Jharkhand and West Bengal to the north, Chhattisgarh and Andhra Pradesh to the south — and said that recent pressure created by security forces in Lalgarh and Dantewada had led to a “lot of Maoists moving base into our jungle regions”.

Like the Greyhounds of Andhra, Orissa has a Special Operations Group (SOG) to keep a check on Maoist guerrillas, but the state police has expressed its inability to take “effective enough action” in the absence of backup forces. “We are doing what we can, and have had a measure of success, but without additional paramilitary, we just do not have enough biting power,” an Orissa police officer said. He too made light of suggestions emanating from New Delhi that there wasn’t a security offensive against Maoists in the works. “That could be part of some propaganda offensive, but really, there is no way out but to conduct security operations against them,” the office said, “Operations may have this name or that, but it all means the same thing — there is a battle on


The Telegraph - Calcutta (Kolkata) | Nation | Talks on lips, govt builds forces
 

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