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Zia clarifies his timing of declaration of independence

What Mujib Said

Jyoti Basu is dead

Dr.BR Ambedkar

Memories of Another day

Memories of Another day
While my Parents Pulin babu and Basanti Devi were living

Monday, June 22, 2009

Ban on MAOIST

Ban on MAOIST Would ESCALATE TRIBAL SEGREGATION. Redemption of Pak cricket and SWAT Reality.And LALGARH REPRESSION continues!



Troubled galaxy Destroyed dreams, Chapter 265



Palash Biswas

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T20 cricket win brings joy in embattled Pakistan


AFP - ‎Jun 19, 2009‎

As if the isolation was not enough, Pakistan cricket has been regularly hit by controversies over doping, sackings and discipline problems. ...






Stars & disasters


Hindustan Times - Umar Gul - ‎19 hours ago‎

Unpredictable and at times, even unlucky, Pakistan have their proverbial shot at redemption after folding in the last final against India. ...












Sri Lanka and Pakistan to meet in dream final


The Roar - ‎Jun 20, 2009‎

This was redemption for
Sangakarra and this was a victory for humanity. Once again there were
no losers today and the West Indies can take comfort knowing ...






Cricket Vs. The Taliban


Forbes - Tunku Varadarajan - ‎17 hours ago‎

I speak here not of drones or tanks or helicopter gunships, but of the glorious game of cricket. Pakistan's national cricket team has just won the World Cup ...












Please come to Pakistan, pleads Younis


Brisbane Times - Chloe Saltau - ‎11 minutes ago‎

For youngsters it will be not good with no international cricket in Pakistan. I am very proud of my nation, I'm a proud man, and this victory will be very ...












England shocked by Dutch in World Cup opener


The National - Paul Radley - ‎Jun 5, 2009‎

With the Dutch needing two to win from the last ball, Broad was offered the chance of redemption, as the ball was hit straight back to him. ...












Muttiah Muralitharan and Ajantha Mendis give Sri Lanka Twenty20 edge


guardian.co.uk - ‎Jun 3, 2009‎

The greatest sporting rivalries are broad canvases coloured by loss, pain and redemption. Would the 5–1 victory against Germany in Munich in 2001 have meant ...












Playing for more than a paycheck


DAWN.com - ‎May 28, 2009‎

As a Pakistan cricket
fan, I felt this absence. Indeed, I felt something lacking in the
tournament as a whole, something more than a nationalistic wish to ...












QUALITY, QUALITY, QUALITY


Buzzle - ‎Jun 9, 2009‎

You may think that Twenty20 isn't proper cricket. You may wince at reverse-reverse-sweeps and ramps over the keeper's head. You may weep at the sight of ...












Pat Launer on San Diego theater: 'Good Boys,' 'Tiger'


SDNN: San Diego News Network - Pat Launer - ‎Jun 4, 2009‎

And that's just one of the many
themes coursing through this deep, intense contemplation of grief,
parenting, responsibility, retribution and redemption. ...


On the frontlines in Swat valley


BBC News - ‎15 hours ago‎

Earlier this year, the Pakistani government had reached a deal with the Talibs that effectively granted them power in the Swat valley region. ...






On the frontlines in Swat valley


BBC News - ‎6 hours ago‎

It has declared that the offensive in the Swat valley is almost over but many say that is optimistic. Panorama's John Sweeney has been given unprecedented ...












Pakistan says it's wrapping up Swat campaign


The Associated Press - ‎Jun 20, 2009‎

CHUPRIAL, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistan could wrap up the main phase of its anti-Taliban offensive in the Swat Valley within 10 days, a senior commander said ...








Pak forces gain control of key mountain peak in Swat


Hindu - ‎Jun 20, 2009‎

Islamabad (IANS): Pakistani security forces have wrested control of a key mountain peak in the restive Swat Valley following fierce fighting with militants, ...












Khalifa Foundation offers 15 generators to Swat Valley's refugee camps


WAM - Emirates News Agency - ‎6 hours ago‎

WAM Abu Dhabi, 22nd June 2009
(WAM) -- The Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan Charity Foundation has
completed its third phase of assistance to refugees of Swat ...












T20 win revives hopes for cricket in Pakistan


AFP - ‎6 hours ago‎

Now a fierce, almost two-month long military offensive against the Islamist extremists in the northwest's Swat valley has forced about two million people to ...






Al Qaeda says would use Pakistani nuclear weapons


Reuters India - Inal Ersan - ‎17 hours ago‎

Pakistan has been battling al Qaeda's Taliban allies in the Swat Valley since April after their thrust into a district 100 km (60 miles) northwest of the ...






Top Pak Taliban commander Fazlullah surrounded by troops: Malik


Hindustan Times - ‎8 minutes ago‎

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Pak troops capture two major towns in Swat valley


Press Trust of India - ‎Jun 3, 2009‎

Islamabad, Jun 3 (PTI) Pakistani troops today stormed into two more major towns in the restive Swat valley, but six weeks into the offensive top commanders ...






Pakistan Estimates 2 Million People Fled Fighting in Swat Valley


Bloomberg - Khalid Qayum - ‎Jun 8, 2009‎

June 8 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan revised its estimate of refugees who fled fighting in the northwestern Swat Valley after accounting for ...












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Pranab defends despatch of Central forces to Lalgarh


Behrampore (PTI): Union finance
minister Pranab Mukherjee on Monday defended the despatch of forces to
Lalgarh in West Bengal, saying the Centre is committed to make
available security personnel if any state government requests for them.


"If any state government requests for
paramilitary or other Central forces to tackle difficult law and order
situations by following constitutional norms, the Central government
will send them," he told reporters after opening the zonal office of
the Allahabad bank here.


Asked about Trinamool Congress chief
Mamata Banerjee's annoyance over not being consulted before the
decision was taken to move Central forces into Lalgarh, Mukherjee, who
is also the WBPCC president, said he would discuss the matter with her.


He said post-poll violence was not desirable and state administrations should tackle them with an iron hand.








Pranab offers to clear doubts with Mamata
2009-06-22 [13:47:55 hrs]

Union
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today offered to clear
misunderstandings between the UPA government and the Trinamool allies,
if any.
 
He
was referring to Mamata Banerjee's comments on the UPA government not
informing her about sending its forces to Lalgarh to tackle the Maoist
rebellion.



He said that he is ready to sit and discuss the issue with Banerjee and that all doubts should be cleared.
 
Banning Maoists would not help: Left Front Committee
22 Jun, 2009 [04:55 PM]
Though
the centre has banned the Maoists, the Left has speculated that banning
the extremists would not keep them under control. The Left Front
Committee, in....Read More
 

Relief centre at Lalgarh BD office opened; 48 hour bandh is on
22 Jun, 2009 [01:25 PM]
As
the operations to flush out the Maoists reaches the fifth day today,
the administration opened a relief centre at the Lalgarh BD office, for
the....Read More
 

Suspected Maoists in police net
22 Jun, 2009 [01:00 PM]
One person was arrested on suspicions of being a Maoist at Rajnagar in Birbhum on Monday. ....Read More
 

Declare three West Bengal districts as disturbed: Mamata
22 Jun, 2009 [09:55 AM]
Trinamool
Congress chief and Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee Sunday asked the
central government to declare three West Bengal districts of West
Mindapore, Bankura and Purulia as....Read More

http://www.taratv.com/west_bengal.php?task=full&newsid=2358

Communist Party of India (Maoist)



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



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Communist Party of India (Maoist)
LeaderMuppala Lakshmana Rao under nom de guerre "Ganapati"
FoundedSeptember 21, 2004
IdeologyCommunism,

Anti-Revisionist Marxism-Leninism,

Maoism
Website
People's March

The Communist Party of India (Maoist) is an underground Maoist political party in India. It was founded on September 21, 2004, through the merger of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) People's War and the Maoist Communist Centre of India. The merger was announced to the public on October 14
the same year. In the merger a provisional central committee was
constituted, with PW leader Ganapati as General Secretary. The CPI
(Maoist) are often referred to as Naxalites in reference to the Naxalbari insurrection by radical Maoists in West Bengal
in 1967.The Centre on 22nd June 2009 (Monday) banned the CPI (Maoist)
under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, calling it a terrorist
organization.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_Party_of_India_(Maoist)



India labels Maoist party as terrorist group

 
 

DELHI - India's government on Monday banned and formally labelled
Maoist insurgents a terrorist group, hoping it would give security
forces more enforcement powers after the rebels briefly created a
"liberated zone" in eastern India.

The banning of the
Communist Party of India (Maoist) comes only a month after the
Congress-led government won a resounding re-election without the need
of support from communist parties that have opposed any ban.

"The
home ministry has specifically banned the CPI Maoist as a militant
group and has added it to the list of banned groups," said Onkar Kedia,
a home ministry spokesman.

The move will allow authorities to arrest members of the Maoist party even if they have not been involved in rebel violence.

Beleaguered
state police will still be the main agency battling the rebels. There
is little sign of India calling in the army to fight the insurgents,
who have been spreading across eastern, central and southern India.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the Maoists as the biggest internal security challenge since independence.

Hundreds
of Maoists, who are expanding their influence in India had declared the
town of Lalgarh about 170 km (100 miles) from Kolkata, capital of West
Bengal, as a "liberated zone" last week before they fled in face of
heavy police deployment.

India's JSW Steel Ltd., the
country's third largest steel producer, is setting up a $7-billion,
10-million tonne steel plant near Lalgarh, and the growing presence of
Maoists across swathes of rural India has worried many investors.

Some experts said the ban would have little impact in the battle against an estimated 22,000 Maoist combatants.

"There
will be a marginal advantage, if at all," said Ajai Sahni of the
Institute of Conflict Management, a New Delhi-based think-tank.

"More
people can be arrested and they (government) can take action against
frontal organisations, but it is the same police force which will be
taking them on," Sahni said.

The rebels called a two-day
strike in east and central India to protest against police action in
West Bengal. Transport to rural areas was hit in states like Bihar,
Orissa and West Bengal, but life was normal in big towns and cities.


Government preparing roadmap for northeast development

Tuesday, June 23, 2009, 2:43

The roadmap, part of the government’s “North East Vision-2020″
initiative, will focus on speedy implementation of the centrally
sponsored projects and strengthening of the public sector units in the
region, Minister of Development of North Eastern Region B.K. Handique
said.


The North East Vision-2020, an ambitious plan for the overall
development of the region by 2020, was released by Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh last year.


Releasing his ministry’s agenda for the next 100 days, Handique told
reporters that he would take steps for the speedy implementation of the
central projects in close coordination with state governments.


He added that the government would implement the World Bank-funded
North Eastern Rural Livelihood Project and promote public sector units
like the North Eastern Handicrafts and Handlooms Development Corp
(NEHHDC) and North Eastern Regional Agricultural Marketing Corp
(NERAMAC).


These state-run companies would be revamped to generate additional
employment opportunities and other economic opportunities, the minister
said.


“North Eastern Development Finance Corp (NEDH) will work to promote the economy of all northeastern states,” Handique said.

http://www.inditop.com/business/government-preparing-roadmap-for-northeast-development



We know the Realities of the heaven in the Himalayas, Dandakaranya, North East, Kashmir and South India out of the POLITICAL CONTROL ROOM Span!

The road maps NEVER followed!

Flagship Programme prove to be just EYE Washing!

The Landscape and Humanscape ISOLATED from the so called MAINSTREAM have to be PERSECUTED and KILLED ! And it is PREDESTINED!


Thanks to the Political game to capture Power bases intensified in Bengal and EXPOSED POWER GREED of the RESISTANCE Heroine just after UPA Genocide Government of ILLUMINATI to sustain MANUSMRITI Apartheid Zionist Global Rule, ROMPED HOME with Manipulated Caste Hindu Anti Mayawati Anti Indigenous Vote Bank Polarised Mandate!

RED v/s RED is the STRATEGY in which the Marxist Brahmin Capitalists have entrapped themselves after the Nandigram Singur Insurrections!

Political and DEMOCRATIC solution of the Stand OFF CANCELLED!

Indian troops entered a Maoist stronghold in West Bengal state on
Saturday as they tried to end a rebellion by the left-wing activists
who have taken control of hundreds of villages.


Security personnel met little resistance as they moved into the town of Lalgarh, 130 kilometres from Kolkata.

ZERO Tolerance, Military OPTION and Terror Acts have to accomplish and execute the CAPTURE Agenda and kill the Left bases to preempt any Possible RESISTANCE whatsoever!

Nationalities and Identifies have NEVER been recognised or ADDRESSED in FREE BRAHMIN BANIA MANUSMRITI ZIONIST Colonial Fascist Raj Post Modern.

NRI Shining India kills the RURAL Indigenous Aboriginal Minority populated BHARATVARSH!

Brand them TERRORIST! Brand any RESISTANCE as Insurgency! Brand the TRIBALS as MAOIST! This is the sacred VEDIC HYMN in Post Modern ASHWAMEDH YAGYA and SHUDRAYAN called GLOBALISATION!

LalGARH REPRESSION Continues as the PROLONGED Starvation, DISPLACEMENT, Persecution and ETHNIC Cleansing continue in the Valley of Death named Indian Nation
where UNDERPRIVILEGED MASSES without Plastic Money have no right for job, livelihood, home, sustenance or life.

BANNING  Maoist Party only ESCALATES Tribal Segregation!
The Centre on Monday banned
the CPI (Maoist) under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, calling it a
terrorist organization. CPI (Maoist), which is the main Naxal
group in the country, has been bracketed with 34 other organizations including
LeT and SIMI who are in the list of banned outfits.





The Maoist insurgency, which grew out of a peasant uprising in 1967,
has hit 15 of India's 29 states. The rebels say they are fighting for
the rights of neglected tribespeople and landless farmers.


The shutdown the Leftwing radicals called against the joint operation
by the central and state forces saw vehicular traffic go off the roads,
streets deserted and shops and business establishments closed in 18
police station areas in Maoist-affected Bankura, West Midnapore and
Purulia districts in the western part of the state.

In Lalgarh, the security forces also carried relief to villages in the
West Midnapore district that were facing shortage of food and drinking
water. The state authorities opened the block development office in
Lalgarh, a step towards restoring civil rule in the area which Maoists
had declared a “liberated” zone.



48-hr Maoist bandh begins on violent note and
the Centre on Monday banned
the CPI (Maoist) under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, calling it a
terrorist organization.
Home ministry sources said the decision was
taken at a high-level meeting. While West Bengal's ruling Left
Front on Monday said it was against banning the CPI (Maoist) and will counter
such outfits politically, days


after chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee
stated that his government will give a serious thought to proscribing the
Naxals.



"The decision has been taken to ban
CPI (Maoist) under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act as a terrorist
organisation," they said.



CPI (Maoist), which is the main Naxal
group in the country, has been bracketed with 34 other organizations including
LeT and SIMI who are in the list of banned outfits.


In New Delhi, Home Minister P. Chidambaram told reporters: “Today,
what we have done, in order to avoid any ambiguity, we have added the
words CPI-Maoist in the schedule of the (Unlawful Activities
Prevention) Act.

“All ambiguity has been removed,” Chidambaram said of the extension of the ban on the CPI-Maoist.


The outfit is already banned in Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Orissa, where the Maoist rebels have a presence.



On his part, Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) general
secretary Prakash Karat said: “Maoists must be combated politically and
administratively.”



Meanwhile, the security forces intensified their operation to flush
out Maoists from the troubled Lalgarh area as a 48-hour shutdown called
by the rebels Monday disrupted normal life in their strongholds in West
Bengal.



After reclaiming Lalgarh town, security forces continued their
operation against the rebels for the fifth day – setting out for
Ramgarh town, 22 km away, where the Maoists had virtually driven the
civil and police administration away earlier this month.


Home ministry officials said the CPI-Maoist has been banned under
the the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act that is applicable all
over the country. However, individual states have to issue their own
notifications banning the organisation.



The CPI-Maoist, which is the main left extremist group in the
country, has been bracketed with 34 other organizations including
Laskhar-e-Toiba (LeT) and the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI)
who are in the list of banned outfits.




The central government had been pressing the West Bengal government to also ban the outfit.Chidambaram, at a meeting with Bhattacharjee over the weekend, had advised him to ban the organisation.


The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) Monday said it was
against a ban on the Leftwing outfit Communist Party of India-Maoist
and the rebels should be tackled instead through political and
administrative measures.



Reacting to the union home ministry’s declaration of the CPI-Maoist as
a terrorist outfit, CPI-M general secretary Prakash Karat told
reporters here that the “Maoists must be combated politically and
administratively”.


He alleged that the Trinamool Congress, the party’s arch rival in
West Bengal and now a part of the ruling United Progressive Alliance,
was conniving with the Maoists in the state. “It did so in Nandigram
and now in Lalgarh”, Karat claimed referring to the area in West
Midnapore district that is caught in Maoist violence.



Karat said the central government’s move to ban the CPI-Maoist was
no solution, and “we have to isolate them (Maoists) politically. You
cannot do this by police and security measures, but a combination of
these measures is necessary.”



The Marxist leader said he agreed that the rebels indulged in
“terrorist violence” and should be curbed administratively. He said his
party had been able to check the growth of the Maoists in West Bengal
and this was why the rebels were attacking its cadres and supporters in
Lalgarh region.



Karat said his party’s central committee meeting had “adopted a
resolution condemning widespread attacks on our members in West
Bengal…53 of our comrades were killed.”


On the other hand,


The Centre has asked about 1,000 personnel of paramilitary forces to be
on standby to be sent to Lalgarh in West Bengal in case of

"urgent necessity", a
senior home ministry official said on Monday.




"The home ministry has decided
to keep 1,000 additional forces on standby," the official said adding, they
would be deployed in West Bengal "if there is an urgent necessity".




The official said six
companies (about 600 personnel) of CRPF and four companies (about 400 personnel)
of BSF have been put on standby.




At present, 16 companies of
CRPF and four companies of BSF (about 2000 personnel in both forces) are
deployed to flush out Naxals from Lalgarh area of West Bengal.



Meanwhile, Security forces conducting
the operation to liberate Lalgarh have cleared 22 of 42 villages in the area of
Maoist-backed tribal

agitators and were further consolidating their positions,
officials said on Monday.



The troops comprising CRPF, BSF, IRB,
State Armed Police and the Eastern Frontier Rifles men were in full control of
the national highway connecting the district headquarters with Lalgarh, a senior
police officer said.



"Twenty of the 42 villages under the
jurisdiction of the Lalgarh police station have been cleared off agitators," he
said. The police station, which remained out of bounds since November, was
retaken on June 19.



All vehicles were being searched and people
frisked. Two forested areas on the highway connecting Midnapore and Lalgarh
— Pirakata and Jhitka — were sanitised.



Pickets of
security forces have been set up all along the highway, which was also being
patrolled, he said.

The forces, which had launched the operation against
the Maoists on June 18, were yet to move out of Lalgarh, he said.



West Bengal's
ruling Left Front on Monday said it was against banning the CPI (Maoist) and
will counter such outfits politically, days after chief minister Buddhadeb
Bhattacharjee stated that his government will give a serious thought to
proscribing the Naxals.



"We have decided that such outfits, which
follow misguided politics, cannot be countered by banning them. It is important
to counter the activities of these outfits politically," Left Front chairman
Biman Bose said.


"We have decided that such outfits, which follow misguided
politics, cannot be countered by banning them. It is important to counter the
activities of these outfits politically," Left Front chairman Biman Bose said
here.



He said that the fight of the Leftists against the "misguided
politics" of the Maoists was on. "We are opposing the terrorist activities of
the Maoists and that is why we are attacked," he said in a
statement.



Bose said it was a continuous political process to
"alienate" people from the "dangerous politics" pursued by the Maoists. "This
work has to be carried on," he said.

He, however, said that it was
necessary to take administrative steps to restore normal life of the
people.



Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, after meeting Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh and Union home minister P Chidambaram on Saturday, had stated
that his government was considering banning the CPI (Maoist) after the Centre's
suggestion in this regard following the Naxal violence in Lalgarh.




"Home minister Chidamabarm advised me to ban this organisation. We
have to give it a serious thought," Bhattacharjee had told reporters in New
Delhi. "We have started thinking what to do," he had
said.



Chidambaram had earlier said that the state government should
ban the Maoists. "We think they (Maoists) should be banned in West Bengal as in
other states," he had said.



The CPI and Forward Bloc, two major LF
constituents, also said that the problem would not be solved by banning the
Maoists.



CPI state council secretary Manju Kumar Majumdar said, "We
do not think a ban on them will solve the problem; it has to be solved
politically. There may be a dialogue with the ultras, but before that they have
to eschew the politics of murder and anarchy."



Echoing his views,
Forward Bloc secretary Ashok Ghose said, "We have fundamental differences with
the Maoists, but they are not our class enemies. We are against imposing ban on
them. We want them to follow the democratic path and we are totally against
their politics of terrorism."






Maoists on Monday targeted an anti-landmine vehicle in Jharkhand as a 48-hour
strike called by them began in five states, where

security has been put on high
alert.



The vehicle was on its
way to Ghatshila in East Singhbhum district bordering West Bengal when Maoists
set off a landmine. Police said the vehicle was not damaged and there were no
reports of any casualty.



The
bandh has been called by the Maoists in West Bengal, Bihar, Chhattisgarh,
Jharkhand and Orissa in protest against security forces storming Lalgarh in West
Midnapore district of West Bengal.




In Malkangiri in Orissa, two
Maoists were gunned down in a fierce battle with police, district police chief
Satyabrat Bhoi said.



The gun
battle took place when a team of police and jawans of the elite Special
Operation Group (SOG) were conducting a combing operation in a forest area and
the ultras opened fire from their hide-out, he said.




The operation had been
launched after three Maoists opened fire during a checking by the police here
last night and escaped into the forest. No one was injured in the incident.




In the restive Lalgarh in West
Midnapore district, which was reclaimed by the security forces on Saturday,
CRPF, BSF and West Bengal police personnel intensified their operations.




Reports said normal life was
affected in the Maoist-hit West Midnapore, Purulia and Bankura districts as
shops and business establishments remained closed.




Besides Lalgarh -- the
epicentre of the current trouble -- security was tightened in Binpur, Jhargram
and adjoining areas where state and paramilitary security forces continued their
offensive for the fifth day, officials said. Patrolling by security forces has
been intensified.



In Purulia
district, train services remained suspended on the Purulia-Chandil section since
0200 hrs in view of reports of a landmine being planted on the tracks at Birandi
station.



Police said two
railway gangmen, who noticed a landmine tied to the tracks, were attacked by
suspected Maoists who snatched their mobile phones. Railway authorities
immediately informed the bomb squad department in Kolkata to defuse the
explosive.



In Bihar, life was
normal except in Sherghati sub-division of Naxal-infested Gaya district
bordering Jharkhand. Shops in Sherghati were closed and traffic was thin.




A report from Patna said there
was normalcy in Jahanabad, Jamui, Nawada, Nalanda and Arwal, where Maoists have
a sizeable presence.



On the
eve of the bandh, Orissa witnessed some violence as two Maoists were killed in
an exchange of fire in Malkangiri district. However, there was no report of any
untoward incident during the first few hours of the bandh.




Sources said security has been
beefed up at all important locations and a strict vigil is being kept on the
border areas, particularly on Jharkhand-West Bengal border to prevent Naxals
from escaping after carrying out subversive activities.




The government has asked
security personnel to remain vigilant against IEDs and landmines which have been
often used to target them.




Describing the situation in
Lalgarh area as "sensitive and tense", the Union Home Ministry has warned of
possible "demonstrative acts of violence" by Naxals during the bandh.




In a statement, Union Home
Minister P Chidambaram asked politicians, people and Non-Governmental
Organisations to remain away from conflict area and directed security forces to
carry on with their work without distraction.




Based on intelligence inputs,
the Naxal Division in the Home Ministry has alerted these states that the CPI
(Maoist) may indulge in demonstrative acts of violence by targeting security
forces and economic infrastructure such as trains, buses, railway and bus
stations and other places where people are likely to gather in significant
numbers.



The inputs have been
shared with the states who have been asked to take "precautionary and
pre-emptive measures", according to Additional Secretary (Naxal Management) in
Home Ministry D R S Chaudhary.


Rediff News reports:

Maoists on Monday targeted an anti-landmine
vehicle in Jharkhand as a 48-hour strike called by them began in five
states, where security has been put on high alert.

The vehicle was on its way to Ghatshila in East Singhbhum district bordering West Bengal [Images] when Maoists set off a landmine. Police said the vehicle was not damaged and there were no reports of any casualty.

The
bandh has been called by the Maoists in West Bengal, Bihar,
Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Orissa to protest against security forces
storming Lalgarh in West Midnapore district of West Bengal.

In
Malkangiri in Orissa, two Maoists were gunned down in a fierce battle
with police, district police chief Satyabrat Bhoi said.

The gun
battle took place when a team of police and soldiers of the elite
Special Operation Group were conducting a combing operation in a forest
area and the ultras opened fire from their hide-out, he said.

In
the restive Lalgarh in West Midnapore district, which was reclaimed by
the security forces on Saturday, CRPF, BSF and West Bengal police
personnel intensified their operations.

Reports said normal
life was affected in the Maoist-hit West Midnapore, Purulia and Bankura
districts as shops and business establishments remained closed. Besides
Lalgarh -- the epicentre of the current trouble -- security was
tightened in Binpur, Jhargram and adjoining areas where state and
paramilitary security forces continued their offensive for the fifth
day, officials said.

Patrolling by security forces has been
intensified. In Purulia district, train services remained suspended on
the Purulia-Chandil section since 0200 hrs in view of reports of a
landmine being planted on the tracks at Birandi station.

Police
said two railway gangmen, who noticed a landmine tied to the tracks,
were attacked by suspected Maoists who snatched their mobile phones.
Railway authorities immediately informed the bomb squad department in
Kolkata [Images] to defuse the explosive.

In
Bihar, life was normal except in Sherghati sub-division of
Naxal-infested Gaya district bordering Jharkhand. Shops in Sherghati
were closed and traffic was thin.

A report from Patna said there
was normalcy in Jahanabad, Jamui, Nawada, Nalanda and Arwal, where
Maoists have a sizeable presence.

On the eve of the bandh, Orissa
witnessed some violence as two Maoist were killed in an exchange of
fire in Malkangiri district. However, there was no report of any
untoward incident during the first few hours of the bandh.

Sources
said security has been beefed up at all important locations and a
strict vigil is being kept on the border areas, particularly on
Jharkhand-West Bengal border to prevent Naxals from escaping after
carrying out subversive activities.

The government has asked
security personnel to remain vigilant against IEDs and landmines, which
have been often used to target them.

Describing the situation in
Lalgarh area as "sensitive and tense", the Union Home Ministry has
warned of possible "demonstrative acts of violence" by Naxals during
the bandh.

In a statement, Union Home Minister P Chidambaram [Images]
asked politicians, people and Non-Governmental Organisations to remain
away from conflict area and directed security forces to carry on with
their work without distraction.

Based on intelligence inputs,
the Naxal Division in the Home Ministry has alerted these states that
the CPI (Maoist) may indulge in demonstrative acts of violence by
targeting security forces and economic infrastructure such as trains,
buses, railway and bus stations and other places where people are
likely to gather in significant numbers.

The inputs have been
shared with the states, who have been asked to take 'precautionary and
pre-emptive measures', according to Additional Secretary (Naxal
Management) in Home Ministry D R S Chaudhary.





'Scared' Lalgarh cops using youths as shields


22 Jun 2009, 0232 hrs IST,
Caesar Mandal, TNN


PIRAKATA: The message from
Writers' Buildings to show a human face while dealing with the warring populace
in Lalgarh apparently hasn't reached

the force. Why else would a section of the
state armed police (SAP) — terrified of IED explosions - catch hold of
local youths and force them to poke around for hidden mines and
explosives?



Acts like this will trigger more calls for vengeance and
lead people to doubt the sincerity of the government's attempts to pacify the
tribal villagers. It also exposes the lack of preparedness of the
administration.



There are just two CID bomb disposal experts
stationed at Lalgarh. A second team is kept in reserve in Midnapore town to be
deployed in case of 'VIP movement'. A third is cooling its heels in Kolkata.
There is not a single explosives expert with police forces anywhere else in the
war zone.



Ever since Friday evening's blast at Kuldiha, in which the
Domkal SDPO's vehicle was hit and three policemen were injured, police have been
wary of such attacks. The moment they come across any culvert, many policemen
are scared to cross, fearing that Maoists might have planted an IED.




Four blasts and half a dozen gunbattles have been reported ever
since forces started their march to Lalgarh. Though no policeman has died, the
guerrillas have scored a psychological victory — they have sown the seeds
of fear and anxiety. It's this fear that has led some policemen, who are
themselves not trained to detect explosives, to force local youth to do the
dangerous job for them.



Eighteen-year-old Shambhu Ghosh, Madan
Mahato (20) and Shakti Ghosh (23) from Dhangori village were among the unlucky
locals. They have been on the run since last Thursday when security forces
entered the village searching for Maoists.



On Sunday morning, they
were having breakfast at a roadside eatery, close to the Pirakata camp, when a
team of policemen surrounded them. One of them asked if they were from Dhangori
village.



"When we said yes, they asked us where we had been hiding
for the last three days? We didn't give any answer. One of the policeman grabbed
us by our collars and threatened to arrest us of we didn't work for them,"
Shambhu said.



The two were taken to Pirakata camp and given
three-foot-long S-shaped rods (possibly taken from a construction site). They're
then told to scan for any suspicious object — say, an abandoned bag or a
box — lying on the roadside and use the rod to poke around and see if it
triggers an explosion.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Scared-Lalgarh-cops-using-youths-as-shields/articleshow/4685348.cms




Lalgarh: Thousands flee as Maoist counter-attack looms


22 Jun 2009, 0154 hrs IST,
Jayanta Gupta & Falguni Banerjee, TNN



GOALTORE: The jubilation of
security forces in Lalgarh on Saturday has given way to an eerie silence at
Goaltore in Bankura, 25 km from the

newly 'liberated' strip. On Sunday, police
cooped up in Goaltore police station were a jittery lot, preparing to retreat as
news trickled in of Maoists sneaking into their doorstep. Thousands of locals
have fled.



Coinciding with intelligence agencies' warning that the
Maoists are planning major strikes, it has added an ominous dimension to the
battle for Lalgarh. "A team of 50-60 armed Maoists has reached Gorabari
Pujaripara, barely a km away. If reinforcements don't arrive soon, we will have
to retreat. There is a real threat of getting trapped here, just as police were
besieged in Lalgarh police station for eight long months," a policeman said,
fear writ large over him and his colleagues.



Sensing the need to
pre-empt a sudden attack, Bankura additional SP Humayun Kabir - who was caught
in an ambush in Pingoboni on Saturday - sent a team of 25 EFR and Rapid Action
Force personnel on perimeter vigil to the southern edge of Goaltore around
5pm.



There wasn't much movement in Lalgarh all day, with politics
taking the lead over battle in this war zone. A section of the city
intelligentsia landed in Lalgarh to broker peace between the administration and
Maoists. They met Chhatradhar Mahato, leader of the People's Committee Against
Police Atrocities (PCPA), and urged him to call a ceasefire till the talks with
the state government on July 14.



Chief secretary Asok Mohan
Chakrabarti, however, refused to make a difference between PCPA and Maoists.
There was tension at Salboni, too, where CPM men allegedly mobbed Union
ministers of state Sisir Adhikari and Mukul Roy, who were carrying relief
materials to West Midnapore. A fuming Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee
promptly asked the Centre to declare Lalgarh a "disturbed area".



As
the political shadow boxing continued, Goaltore braced for bombs, bullets and
bloodshed. This town has been largely untouched by the insurgency raging in West
Midnapore's Lalgarh less than an hour's drive away. On Sunday, it suddenly found
itself in the middle of the battlefield, following an aborted attempt by police
to open up an access route to Lalgarh along the Goaltore-Ramgarh axis the
previous afternoon. This force was ambushed at Pingboni and suffered six
casualties. It retreated. The Maoists advanced.



The threat is so
imminent that 60% of the 20,000-odd residents in this bustling town fled towards
Bankura in less than 24 hours. The town wore a deserted look on Sunday evening
as people continued to flee, clinging on to windows of overcrowded
buses.



"This is absolute madness. We were living in peace till the
government began this misadventure. Why couldn't the government surround Lalgarh
with adequate forces rather than extending the war zone? Now, our lives are at
risk," complained a resident.



As the afternoon progressed and scraps
of information on advancing Maoist guerrillas reached the police station, the
tension rose. "We are completely in the dark. There have been practically no
orders since Saturday evening. We will not venture out until central forces
arrive. We won't have any hesitation in retreating because our lives are at
risk," a constable said. "We don't have sufficient forces to move out of
Goaltore. All we can do is keep vigil to ensure that we are not taken by
surprise," an officer said.



With paramilitary personnel, EFR and
State Armed Police upping the ante on Lalgarh from the Pirakata end,
intelligence agencies feel Maoists would go all out to keep the Goaltore front
open for both supply and escape. The Bankura-Purulia-West Midnapore tri-junction
near Jhilimili is 50 km from Goaltore by road and half the distance through
jungle tracks. The Jharkhand border is also close by.



Although the
Maoists had first infiltrated Goaltore block in 1998, when they were just
venturing into West Bengal, Goaltore town had remained virtually undisturbed
during the past decade. This is the first time that people here have felt the
threat from such close quarters and have resorted to mass desertion.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Thousands-flee-as-Maoist-counter-attack-looms/articleshow/4685311.cms

Ops getting nowhere due to lack of strategy: Cops


22 Jun 2009, 0225 hrs IST,
Jayanta Gupta & Falguni Banerjee, TNN





GOALTORE/SARENGA: Security forces out
to take on Maoists through Pirakata may have surprised Maoists and quickly
reached the Lalgarh police

station, but there's complete chaos on the other
fronts: Lower-rung officers leading the other teams through Sarenga and Galtore
are complaining of lack of strategy to hold on to the gains and mount a
counter-offensive.



Officers in Goaltore and Sarenga said they had
received no reports from senior officers stationed elsewhere on how to go about
countering the insurgents. "There are no inputs and no strategy in operations at
places away from Lalgarh," the officers said.



Though they have been
frantically calling senior officers at Lalgarh to find out how they have to act,
they claimed they were being kept in the dark. At Gaoltore, where the police had
been driven out of Pingboni on Saturday evening, there had been no reinforcement
despite repeated SOS on advance of Maoists.



"From our side, the
operations are getting nowhere. We are aware of Maoist movements through this
area. We have not received any orders. Nor do we have adequate strength to move
ahead," an officer at Goaltore said. The officers also complained that they are
leading a band of men not trained in counter-insurgency operations. "There has
been no training or briefing on how to operate in this situation," another
officer said.



The absence of curfew, particularly after dark, is
posing a big hurdle. "Without curfew, one cannot restrict the movement of people
and the force cannot advance as there is always a possibility of the Maoists
outflanking and cutting off the rear. As operations cannot be carried out after
sunset, we require more personnel to hold on to the positions that we gain
during the day. The entire exercise is turning out to be futile," another
officer said.



Absence of mine sweeping vehicles has slowed the
progress of forces. "We are moving at a snail's pace as the area is fraught with
danger. The order to move is generally after 2pm and that gives us precious
little time to make ground before dusk sets in," the officer said.


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Ops-getting-nowhere-due-to-lack-of-strategy-Cops/articleshow/4685338.cms

Tribals clash with cops on Naxal trail


22 Jun 2009, 0247 hrs IST,
Sukumar Mahato, TNN






BELPAHARI (W MIDNAPORE): More and more
cases of clashes between security forces and tribals — some reportedly
sympathisers of Maoists and the

rest innocents — are emerging as the
battle of Lalgarh enters a crucial phase. On Sunday, when security forces
arrested three rebel suspects — Lubu Tudu, Lodhu Singh and Dadan Hansda
— they faced a hostile crowd baying for their blood.



Scores of
men and women resisted the forces as they caught hold of the three. A woman,
Rajari Tudu, led the village folk and attacked the BSF jawans with household
knives, injuring a jawan.



The security forces are facing another
trouble: at many places shopkeepers simply refuse to give them eatables citing
Maoist boycott. On Sunday afternoon, security personnel from three police camps
— Banspahari, Neguria, Jamtalgora in this part of Jangalmahal — beat
up a shopowner, Gostha Das, in the Chakadoba Market after he refused to sell
food articles to the jawans. The locals said Gostha declined them food because
of a "police boycott". "The jawans then barged into his shop and started beating
him," said Tarani Hansda.



This was not all. Angry jawans raided the
huts. Tarachand Soren, panchayat executive of the Banspahari gram panchayat, was
pulled by his collar and given a thrashing. Block Development Officer (BDO)
Bhaskar Pal had to talk to the additional superintendent of police (operations)
M. Murlidharan following which Soren was released.



All these ignited
the simmering tension in the neighbouring villages. A large number of women came
out of the huts and dared the forces on patrol near Neguria Police Camp. The
police, however, claim that while the locals challenged the forces, the Maoists
from the forests fired on security personnel. "The shots from fired from the
forest, where Maoist run a training camp," said Manoj Verma, superintendent of
police of West Midnapore.



Local leader of the People’s
Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCPA) Jagannath Singh Sardar, however,
rubbished the charge. "It’s an excuse to harass the locals," said Sardar.




He pointed to the plight of the ordinary villagers running for their
lives, leaving their elders behind. "This is a malaria-prone zone. Many people
are suffering from the fever, but there is no transport to take them to the
block health centre, 36 km away. Buses have stopped plying and jeeps demand Rs
400 per patient," Sardar said.



District Congress leader Subrata
Bhattacharya defends Sardar. "I don’t subscribe to the police action. Our
own party activist Kalpana Kalindi of Bardanga is a victim of police torture,"
Bhattacharya said.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Tribals-clash-with-cops-on-Naxal-trail/articleshow/4685386.cms

Politicians, stars reach out to victims; face 'red' wrath


22 Jun 2009, 0227 hrs IST, TNN





KOLKATA: Security forces took a day
off on Sunday, leaving the Lalgarh war zone to politicians trying to take
mileage out of the general

discontent prevailing in the
area.



Trinamool Congress chief and railway minister Mamata Banerjee
is livid with Union home minister P Chidambaram's appeal to all citizens to stay
away from Lalgarh. For, the appeal came on a day when she sent two Union
ministers of state Sisir Adhikary and Mukul Roy to the war zone to provide
shelter to the villagers driven out of their villages along the stretch from
Pirakata to Bhimpur.



Two Union ministers went to West Midnapore on
Sunday and opened a relief camp at the Pirakata Primary School where about 700
villagers took shelter. The villagers were forced to leave their homes on Sunday
morning after the State Armed Forces raided the villages. Adhikary said
Trinamool would open two more relief camps at Goaltore and
Chandrakona.



While the Union ministers were carrying relief, hundreds
of CPM men driven out from Dharampur, Baita, Sijua and other villages, mobbed
them, complaining they didn't come to their rescue when the Maoist-backed PCPA
drove them out of their villages.



There was sound and fury in Kolkata
with CPM hitting the streets against the attack on their cadres and party
offices and the Trinamool chief warning a string of movements, beginning Monday,
across the state against atrocities by CPM and the security forces. She wanted
central forces to move in to Garbeta, Mangalkot, Khanakul and
Keshpur.



Meanwhile, a section of city intelligentsia went to the
trouble-torn areas of West Midnapore to broker peace between the state
administration and the PCPA. They want the Maoists and the government to put
down arms till July 14 when the state administration is slated to discuss the
matter with the PCPA. After crossing the Lalgarh police station — freed
from the Maoists on Saturday by security forces — the convoy in which the
intellectuals were travelling in had to be stopped due to road
blockade.



"We have come here for peace. Innocent villagers are
getting trapped between the Maoists and the security forces. We would like both
sides to drop their arms and come for talks," said film director Aparna Sen. But
the Maoists are in no mood to listen.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Politicians-stars-reach-out-to-victims-face-red-wrath/articleshow/4685343.cms
Naxals and the privatisation of violence
Jug Suraiya 
Monday June 22, 2009


With Naxals taking on the Marxist-led government in West
Midnapore, Bengal is in the grip of what is tantamount to a murderous
civil war. That the Marxists brought this upon their head, through
their brutal methods of land acquisition and other acts of oppression,
is not the main issue. What is at issue is that the sovereignty of not
just Bengal but of the Indian state is being called into question. Not
only in Bengal, but everywhere where private militias and mobs
represent what Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has called the biggest
threat to national security.

In one of the most dangerous
developments facing the country today, a fundamental public sector
undertaking of the nation is being subversively privatised: violence.
The Indian state -- as indeed any other state -- must in order to exist
hold a monopoly over the resort to violence, or the use of physical
force. When the state imposes capital punishment on a criminal it is a
legitimate execution; when a private individual wilfully takes the life
of another citizen it is murder, which the state, and only the state,
has the right to avenge through the death penalty.

Through the
enforcement of its penal code, through its sovereign right to declare
war against another nation, the state zealously protects its monopoly
on violence, on the actual use or the threat of use of physical force.
It must do so if it is to survive as a state and not degenerate into
chaos, with each one's hand against his neighbour's in murderous
conflict without referee or redress. Violence, its use or the threat of
its use, is the foundational PSU without which the state can't exist.
And there are signs that in India, this pivotal PSU is being
privatised, with private citizens -- in the form of mobs or militias --
taking the law into their own hands and challenging the state's
monopoly on violence, be it Kolkata, Guwahati or elsewhere.

What
is the real meaning of mob fury (such as over the Nandigram/Taslima
issue, or over tribals demanding their rights) and what causes the
smallest spark to ignite it? The general answer is that people have
lost faith in the 'system' -- an amorphous amalgam of politicians, the
police, the judiciary, the bureaucracy, etc -- and vent their
frustrations in outbursts of mob frenzy, spurred on by a
sensation-hungry media that highlights such incidents. Mob rule,
however, represents a far graver danger than that of sporadic violence:
it questions the very existence of the state as a whole, and not just
one segment or manifestation of it. In this sense, mob violence is as
subversive of the state as a campaign of terrorism.

A recent
press report revealed that, with lawlessness on the increase the total
number of private security personnel for the first time has outstripped
the aggregate of all our police forces and defence services rolled into
one. The police and the defence forces are traditionally the bulwarks
protecting the state's monopoly on violence. When the private sector,
in terms of sheer numbers, undermines the guarantors of that monopoly,
the very fabric of the state is called into question.

Indeed, by
encouraging the formation of the Salwa Judum 'people's militia' (whose
members are often no more than teenagers) to combat extremists in
Chhattisgarh, the state has implicitly abrogated its sovereign and
exclusive right on the use of violence. Long before this, 'private
armies' like the Ranvir Sena have held sway over large parts of Bihar
and elsewhere. And in the vacuum left behind by an absconding state,
so-called Naxals have almost total control of some 160 districts in the
country.

What instigates the private takeover of the state's
monopoly on violence? It is when that monopoly is seen to be criminally
and flagrantly misused, as happened in Nandigram and in other cases of
forcible dispossession of lands and forests from their traditional and
rightful owners. When any state monopoly fails, private players step in
to fill the gap. And in this case, those private players include
rampaging mobs and armed insurgents. The brick and the bullet and the
flaming torch replace the rule of law and disorder.

http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/jugglebandhi/entry/naxals-and-the-privatisation-of


Maoism



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Jump to: navigation, search






























































Maoism, variably and officially known as Mao Zedong Thought (traditional Chinese: 毛澤東思想; simplified Chinese: 毛泽东思想; pinyin: Máo Zédōng Sīxiǎng), is a totalitarian variant of Marxism derived from the teachings of the late Chinese leader Mao Zedong (Wade-Giles Romanization: "Mao Tse-tung"), widely applied as the political and military guiding ideology in the Communist Party of China (CPC) from Mao's ascendancy to its leadership until the inception of Deng Xiaoping Theory and Chinese economic reforms
in 1978. It is also applied internationally in contemporary times.
Maoist parties and groups exist throughout the world, with notable
groups in Peru, India, and Nepal, where they won the country's first free elections in 2008.[1]


The basic tenets of Maoism include revolutionary struggle of the
vast majority of people against the exploiting classes and their state
structures, termed a People's War. Usually involving peasants, its military strategies have involved guerrilla war
tactics focused on surrounding the cities from the countryside, with a
heavy emphasis on political transformation through the mass involvement
of the basic people of the society. Maoism departs from conventional
European-inspired Marxism in that its focus is on the agrarian
countryside, rather than the industrial urban forces. Notably,
successful Maoist parties in Peru, Nepal and Philippines have adopted
equal stresses on urban and rural areas, depending on the country's
level of development.


In its post-revolutionary period, Mao Zedong Thought is defined in the CPC's Constitution as "Marxism-Leninism applied in a Chinese context", synthesized by Mao Zedong and China's first-generation leaders. It asserts that class struggle continues even if the proletariat has already overthrown the bourgeoisie,
and there are bourgeois restorationist elements within the Communist
Party itself. It provided the CPC's first comprehensive theoretical
guideline with regards to how to continue socialist revolution, the
creation of a socialist society, socialist military construction, and
highlights various contradictions in society to be addressed by what is
termed "socialist construction". The ideology survives in name today on
the Communist Party's Constitution; it is described as the guiding
thought that created "new China" and a revolutionary concept against imperialism and feudalism.[2]


Maoism broke with the state capitalist framework of the Soviet Union under Nikita Khrushchev and dismisses it as modern revisionism,
a traditional pejorative term among communists referring to those who
fight for capitalism in the name of socialism. Some critics claim that
Maoists see Joseph Stalin
as the last true socialist leader of the Soviet Union, although
allowing the Maoist assessments of Stalin vary between the extremely
positive and the more ambivalent.[3] Some political philosophers[who?] have seen in Maoism an attempt to combine Confucianism and Socialism - what one such called 'a third way between communism and capitalism'[4]








Contents


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[edit] Maoism in China
















































People's Republic of China


This article is part of the series:

Politics and government of

the People's Republic of China




Government

Central People's Government
Constitution

Past versions: 1954, 1975, 1978

Guiding Political Ideologies

Mao Zedong: Mao Zedong Thought

Deng Xiaoping: Deng Xiaoping Theory

Jiang Zemin: Three Represents

Hu Jintao: Scientific Development Concept


President: Hu Jintao

National People's Congress

   NPC Standing Committee

NPCSC Chairman: Wu Bangguo

Legislative system
Premier: Wen Jiabao

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Supreme People's Procuratorate

Judicial system
Communist Party of China

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   Secretariat

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   Political Consultative Conference

Minor political parties
Elections (2008)

   Administrative divisions

   Human rights

   Foreign relations / aid
See also

   Politics of Hong Kong

   Politics of Macau



Other countries · Atlas

 Politics portal



Since the death of Mao Zedong in 1976, and the capitalist reforms of Deng Xiaoping starting in 1978, the role of Mao's ideology within the PRC has radically changed.[5] Although Mao Zedong Thought nominally remains the state ideology, Deng's admonition to seek truth from facts
means that state policies are judged on their practical consequences
and the role of ideology in determining policy has been considerably
reduced. Deng also separated Mao from Maoism, making it clear that Mao
was fallible and hence that the truth of Maoism comes from observing
social consequences rather than by using Mao's quotations as holy writ, as was done in Mao's lifetime.


In addition, the party constitution has been rewritten to give the
capitalist ideas of Deng Xiaoping prominence over those of Mao. One
consequence of this is that groups outside China which describe
themselves as Maoist generally regard China as having repudiated Maoism
and restored capitalism,
and there is a wide perception both in and out of China that China has
abandoned Maoism. However, while it is now permissible to question
particular actions of Mao and to talk about excesses taken in the name
of Maoism, there is a prohibition in China on either publicly
questioning the validity of Maoism or questioning whether the current
actions of the CCP are "Maoist."


Although Mao Zedong Thought is still listed as one of the four cardinal principles
of the People's Republic of China, its historical role has been
re-assessed. The Communist Party now says that Maoism was necessary to
break China free from its feudal past, but that the actions of Mao are
seen to have led to excesses during the Cultural Revolution. The official view is that China has now reached an economic and political stage, known as the primary stage of socialism,
in which China faces new and different problems completely unforeseen
by Mao, and as such the solutions that Mao advocated are no longer
relevant to China's current conditions. The official proclamation of
the new CPC stand came in June 1981, when the Sixth Plenum of the
Eleventh National Party Congress Central Committee took place. The
35,000-word "Resolution on Certain Questions in the History of Our
Party Since the Founding of the People's Republic of China" reads:






"Mao Zedong is the Chinese people's savior!", an old slogan painted on the brick wall of a temple



"Chief responsibility for the grave `Left' error of the `cultural
revolution,' an error comprehensive in magnitude and protracted in
duration, does indeed lie with Comrade Mao Zedong . . . . [and] far
from making a correct analysis of many problems, he confused right and
wrong and the people with the enemy. . . . Herein lies his tragedy."[6]


Both Maoist critics outside China and most Western commentators see
this re-working of the definition of Maoism as providing an ideological
justification for what they see as the restoration of the essentials of
capitalism in China by Deng and his successors.


Mao himself is officially regarded by the CCP as a "great
revolutionary leader" for his role in fighting the Japanese and
creating the People's Republic of China, but Maoism as implemented
between 1959 and 1976 is regarded by today's CPC as an economic and
political disaster. In Deng's day, support of radical Maoism was
regarded as a form of "left deviationism" and being based on a cult of personality, although these 'errors' are officially attributed to the Gang of Four
rather than to Mao himself. Thousands of Maoists were arrested in the
Hua Guafeng period after 1976, with prominent Maoists sentenced to
death.


These distinctions were very important in the early 1980s, when the
Chinese government was faced with the dilemma of how to impose
capitalism on a population that wasn't demanding it.



[edit] Debate within China








Many regret the erosion of guaranteed employment, education, health
care, and other gains of the revolution that have been largely lost in
the new profit-driven economy. This is reflected in a strain of Chinese Neo-Leftism in the country that sees China's future in an advance towards socialism under changed conditions.


Some Western Marxist scholars[citation needed]
argue that China's rapid industrialization and relatively quick
recovery from the brutal period of civil wars 1911-1949 was a positive
impact of Maoism, and contrast its development specifically to that of
Southeast Asia, Russia and India.[citation needed]
While others see it as catastrophe for the environment, with Maoism
specifically engaged in a battle to dominate and subdue nature.[7]



[edit] Maoism outside China


From 1962 onwards, the challenge to the Soviet hegemony in the World Communist Movement made by the CPC resulted in various divisions in communist parties around the world. At an early stage, the Albanian Party of Labour sided with the CPC. So did many of the mainstream (non-splinter group) communist parties in South-East Asia, like the Burmese Communist Party, Communist Party of Thailand, and Communist Party of Indonesia. Some Asian parties, like the Workers Party of Vietnam and the Workers Party of Korea attempted to take a middle-ground position.


In the west and south, a plethora of parties and organizations were
formed that upheld links to the CPC. Often they took names such as Communist Party (Marxist-Leninist) or Revolutionary Communist Party
to distinguish themselves from the traditional pro-Soviet communist
parties. The pro-CPC movements were, in many cases, based amongst the
wave of student radicalism that engulfed the world in the 1960s and
1970s.


Only one Western classic communist party sided with CPC, the Communist Party of New Zealand. Under the leadership of CPC and Mao Zedong, a parallel international communist movement emerged to rival that of the Soviets, although it was never as formalized and homogeneous as the pro-Soviet tendency.


In the United States, the Black Panther Party, especially Huey Newton, was profoundly influenced by Maoist thought.


After the death of Mao in 1976 and the resulting power-struggles in
China that followed, the international Maoist movement was divided into
three camps. One group, composed of various ideologically nonaligned
groups, gave weak support to the new Chinese leadership under Deng
Xiaoping. Another camp denounced the new leadership as traitors to the
cause of Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought. The third camp sided with
the Albanians in denouncing the Three Worlds Theory of the CPC (see Sino-Albanian Split.)


The pro-Albanian camp would start to function as an international group,[8] led by Enver Hoxha and the APL, and was able to amalgamate many of the communist groups in Latin America, including the Communist Party of Brazil.


The new Chinese leadership showed little interest in the various
foreign groups supporting Mao's China. Many of the foreign parties that
were fraternal parties
aligned with the Chinese government before 1975 either disbanded,
abandoned the new Chinese government entirely, or even renounced Marxism-Leninism and developed into non-communist, social democratic
parties. What is today called the "international Maoist movement"
evolved out of the second camp – the parties that opposed Deng and
claimed to uphold the legacy of Mao.


During the 1980s two parallel regrouping efforts emerged, one centered around the Communist Party of the Philippines, which gave birth to the ICMLPO, and one that birthed the Revolutionary Internationalist Movement, which the Shining Path communist guerrilla group and the Revolutionary Communist Party USA played a leading role in forming.


Both the International Conference and the RIM tendencies claimed to
uphold Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought, although RIM was later to
substitute that ideology with what they termed
'Marxism-Leninism-Maoism'.



[edit] Maoism today








Today, Maoist organizations, grouped in RIM, have their greatest influence in South Asia. They have been involved in violent struggles in Bangladesh and, until recently, Nepal.
The Nepalese Maoist militant struggles have ended and the Maoists have
peacefully negotiated to become the majority party in the newly formed
republic. There are also minor groups active in Afghanistan, Peru[9] and Turkey[10][11].


In the Philippines, the Communist Party of the Philippines, which is not part of the RIM, leads an armed struggle through its military wing, the New People's Army.


In Peru, several columns of the Communist Party of Peru/SL are fighting a sporadic war. Since the capture of their leadership, Chairman Gonzalo
and other members of their central committee in 1992, the PCP/SL no
longer has initiative in the fight. Several different political
positions are supported by the leadership of the PCP/SL.


In India, the Communist Party of India (Maoist) have been fighting a protracted war.[12]
Formed by the merger of the People's War Group and the Maoist Communist
Center ("notorious for its macabre killings") originating from the 25
May 1967 peasant uprising.[13],
they have expanded their range of operations to over half of India and
have been listed by the Prime Minister as the "greatest internal
security threat" to the Indian republic since it was founded.[14][15][16]


In Germany, the ICMLPO-affiliated MLPD is the largest unambiguously-Marxist group in the country.


A Nepalese Maoist insurgency fought a drawn out insurgency against the Royal Nepalese Army and other supporters of the Shah Dynasty of Nepal. The Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (CPN (M)), a RIM member, has conditionally halted its armed struggle under a UNMIN. It participated and won the largest number of seats in the 2008 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election[17] and now leads a coalition government under Prime Minister and party chairman Prachanda. The party led the successful effort to arrange for a peaceful dissolution of the monarchy and formation of a republic.



[edit] Military strategy


Mao is widely regarded in China as a brilliant military strategist even among those who oppose his political or economic ideas.[citation needed] His writings on guerrilla warfare, most notably in his groundbreaking primer On Guerrilla Warfare,[18] and the notion of people's war are now generally considered to be essential reading,[citation needed]both for those who wish to conduct irregular revolts and for those who oppose them.[citation needed]


As with his economic and political ideas, Maoist military credo
seems to have more relevance at the start of the 21st century outside
of the People's Republic of China
than within it. There is a consensus both within and outside the PRC
that the military context that the PRC faces in the early 21st century
are very different from the one faced by China in the 1930s. As a
result, within the inner circle of the People's Liberation Army
there has been extensive debate over whether and how to relate Mao's
military doctrines to 21st-century military ideas, especially the idea
of a revolution in military affairs.



[edit] See also




[edit] External links



[edit] General




[edit] Selected organizations



Committee of Marxist-Leninist-Maoist parties from around the world




[edit] Revolutions




[edit] References



  1. ^ http://www.india-defence.com/reports-2361
  2. ^ Xinhua: Constitution of the Communist Party of China
  3. ^ Graham Young On Socialist Development and the Two Roads The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, No. 8 (Jul., 1982), pp. 75-84 doi:10.2307/2158927
  4. ^ Political Philosophy from Plato to Mao, by Martin Cohen, page 206published 2001 by Pluto Press, London and Sterling VA ISBN 0745316034
  5. ^ UC Berkeley Journalism - Faculty - Deng's Revolution
  6. ^ http://www.country-studies.com/china/the-four-modernizations,-1979-82.html
  7. ^ Judith Shapiro: 'Mao's War Against Nature: Politics and the Environment in Revolutionary China, Cambridge University Press, 2001 (ISBN 0521786800).
  8. ^ ROMA OF THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
    Author: Judith Latham DOI: 10.1080/009059999109037. Published in:
    journal Nationalities Papers, Volume 27, Issue 2 June 1999 , pages 205
    - 226
  9. ^ The Shining Path: The Successful Blending of Mao and Mariategui in Peru
  10. ^ RW ONLINE: First Congress of the Maoist Communist Party of Turkey
  11. ^ [09-04-96] FRANZ SCHURMANN, MORE DESTABILIZING THAN SADDAM HUSSEIN - TURKEY'S KURDISH LEADER SPREADS MAOIST INSURGENCY
  12. ^ Reuters AlertNet - Indian Maoist violence
  13. ^ Maoist Communist Centre (MCC) Maoist Coordination Committee (MCC)
  14. ^ Jo Johnson, Leftist Insurgents Kill 50 Indian Policemen. Financial Times, March 15, 2007.
  15. ^ Impasse in India - The New York Review of Books
  16. ^ The biggest threat to Indian elections
  17. ^ Nepal (11/07)
  18. ^ On Guerrilla Warfare











































Left-wing Extremist group














Maoist Communist Centre
(MCC)

1. Formation


The outfit came into existence,
in its earlier version, on October 20, 1969, as Dakshin Desh.
When the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) was formed with
the merger of several Maoist groups in 1969, one left-wing extremist
group, Dakshin Desh, did not join and decided to retain its independent
identity. In 1975, the outfit was renamed as the Maoist Communist Centre
(MCC).


2. Objectives


Like other left wing extremist
groups, the purported objective of the MCC is to establish a ‘people’s
government’ through ‘people’s war’. It traces its ideology to the Chinese
Communist leader Mao Tse Tung’s dictum of organised peasant insurrection.


3. Leadership and
Command Structure


Amulya Sen and Kanhai Chaterjee
were the leaders of the Dakshin Desh. After the death of Kanhai
Chaterjee in 1982, factional differences surfaced within the outfit.
A new leader, Shivenji, entered into a dispute with his deputy Ramadhar
Singh, ostensibly over the issue of individual annihilation. In the
days that followed, the latter broke ranks with the MCC and joined the
CPI-ML. In the second half of the 1980s Pramod Mishra and Sanjay Dusadh
emerged as the most formidable leaders of the MCC.


The MCC consists of an
underground party unit — Krantikari Kisan Committee (KKC), the Red Defense
Corps and the Youth and Women Fronts. The General Secretary is the top
functionary of the organisation. He also heads the Central Committee,
the top decision making body of the outfit. Apart from that, there are
Zonal Committees, Sub-zonal committees, Regional committees and Village
committees. The outfit also has a military wing. It has an estimated
50 squads each consisting of some 20 cadres. The MCC has also formed
several front organisations, including the Naujawan Pratirodh Sangharsh
Manch, Krantikari Budhijivi Sangh, Krantikari Sanskritik Sangh, Krantikari
Chhatra League, Communist Yuva League, Naari Mukti Sangh and Mazdoor
Mukti Sangh.


4. Area of Operation


In its early years, Dakshin
Desh was active mainly in the Jangal Mahal Area of Burdwan district,
West Bengal. Sunderbans, 24 Parganas, Hooghly and Midnapore districts
of West Bengal.


At present the MCC has
a presence in Bihar, Orissa (Sundargarh, Keonjhar) and Jharkhand. In
Bihar, the MCC is primarily active in Gaya, Aurangabad, Camoor (Bhabhua),
Rohtas, Darbhanga, Muzaffarpur, Bettiah and Sitamarhi districts. In
the newly created State of Jharkhand, the group is active in Chatra,
Daltangonj, Hazaribagh, Palamu, Giridih, Dhanbad, Bokaro, Ranchi, Garhwa,
Lohardaga, Gumla, East Singhbhum, West Singhbhum and Latehar districts.


The MCC is also trying
to expand its activities in Burdwan, Nadia, and Howrah and North 24-Pargana
districts of West Bengal. In Uttar Pradesh, the MCC has been making
fervent attempts to gain a foothold in Mirzapur, Chandauli and Sonbhadra
districts.


5. External Linkages


The MCC maintains close
relationship with the Maoist
insurgents
in Nepal. On July 1, 2001, Nine Naxal outfits of India,
Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka joined hands to form an umbrella organisation,
the Coordination Committee of Maoist Parties and Organisations (CCOMPOSA)
with a purpose to unify and coordinate the activities of the Maoist
Parties and organisations in South Asia. It is believed that the MCC
along with the PWG and the Maoist insurgents in Nepal has been instrumental
in the formation of the CCOMPOSA for a greater cooperation and understanding
among the Naxalite groups of India and Nepal. Recently, the MCC, mainly
active in Central Bihar and Jharkhand, has been active in North Bihar
areas bordering Nepal. It is suspected that the MCC has moved to the
North Bihar region to get closer to the Maoists in Nepal and to facilitate
the exchange of men and material.


Also, the MCC has acquired
the technology for manufacturing and implanting landmines from the People’s
War Group (PWG), which had picked up the techniques
from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
of Sri Lanka.


6. Major Incidents


2004



  • July 29: A group of 60 armed cadres
    of the MCC kill a civilian at Kaima village in the Latehar district
    of Jharkhand.



  • July 18: MCC cadres kill a resident
    of Ambatola village in the Hazaribagh district of Jharkhand.



  • July 12: MCC cadres kill Parmeswar Pathak,
    a senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader, at Sarhari village in
    the Sarguja district of Chhattisgarh.



  • July 10: MCC cadres kill two persons
    near Kharira village in the Gaya district of Bihar.



  • June 30: MCC cadres kill two private
    security guards of a stone crushing company at Chahawan village in
    the Mirzapur district of Uttar Pradesh.



  • June 22: Six Jharkhand Armed Police
    personnel, including an Assistant Sub-Inspector, are killed in a landmine
    explosion triggered by suspected MCC Naxalites near Rania in the Ranchi
    district of Jharkhand.

  • April 29: The United States adds Maoist Communist Centre and the
    PWG in its Terrorist Exclusion List.




  • April 26: A group of around 100 MCC Naxalites kill two police personnel
    at Simra police station in the Aurangabad district of Bihar.





  • April 26: MCC cadres kill two police personnel near Jori village
    in the Gumla district of Jharkhand.





  • April 20: Naxalites of the outlawed MCC kill a Patrolling Magistrate,
    identified as Ajay Kumar Sinha, during a landmine blast in the Dhanbad
    district of Jharkhand.





  • April 7: 26 police personnel are killed during a landmine blast
    triggered by the MCC at Saranda forests in the Chaibasa area of
    Jharkhand.



2003




  • December 31: Police arrest six suspected MCC informers during a
    combing operation from the Burmu and Chanho areas in Ranchi district
    of Jharkhand.



  • December 25: Four police personnel are killed and three more sustain
    injuries in an MCC ambush at Pithoria in Jharkhand's Ranchi district.



  • December 5: MCC Naxalites demand Rupees 7crore from the management
    of the SAIL-owned Meghahatuburu mine in Jharkhand's West Singhbhum
    district.



  • November 23: Bihar Government orders a crackdown on all Non Governmental
    Organisations (NGOs) with links to the left-wing extremists outfits-Maoist
    Communist Centre (MCC) and People's War Group (PWG) in the State.



  • November 18: Six MCC cadres, including a 'sub-zonal commander',
    are killed during an encounter with the security forces at Banaru
    forests in the Chatra district of Jharkhand.



  • November 12: Approximately, 300 MCC Naxalites attack a police patrol
    party near Rerha village in West Singhbhum district of Jharkhand.



  • October 14: Naxalites of the MCC kill one person and injure four
    police personnel at Demotar in the Hazaribag district of Jharkhand.



  • October 11: MCC Naxalites kill a police officer and injure four
    others with a powerful landmine near Katajhora in the Purulia district
    on the West Bengal-Jharkhand border while they were on patrol.



  • September 12: Two Naxalites of the MCC, including an 'area commander',
    are killed in an encounter at Sijang under the Palkot police station-limits,
    Gumla district. Another Naxalite is killed in an encounter at Chhotka
    Khantga in the same district.



  • September 13: Jharkhand Police arrests an 'area commander' of the
    MCC near Konar dam in the Giridih district.



  • September 11: Two MCC Naxalites, including an 'area commander',
    are killed in an encounter at Sijang under the Palkot police station-limits
    in the Gumla district of Jharkhand. Another Naxalite is killed in
    an encounter at Chhotka Khantga in the same district.



  • September 8: 11 police personnel and a civilian are killed in a
    landmine blast triggered by the PWG and the MCC, in a joint operation,
    in the dense forests of Kaimur range in the Rohtas district of Bihar.



  • September 4: MCC Naxalites kill two persons in Tundahuli village
    under the Ormanjhi police station-limits in the Ranchi district
    of Jharkhand. Separately, MCC Naxalites abduct and later kill two
    persons in Serak village under the Chandwa police station-limits
    in Latehar district.



  • August 24: Jharkhand Police raids a place under the Bhandari police
    station-limits in Garhwa district and arrests four MCC Naxalites.



  • August 22: An MCC 'area commander' is killed during an encounter
    near Chouki village under the Ramanujganj police station-limits
    in Sarguja revenue district of Chhattisgarh. In Jharkhand, MCC Naxalites
    kill two persons and critically injure one of the same family in
    Kangar village under the Raidih police station-limits in Gumla district.



  • August 21: MCC Naxalites kill two civilians in the Veeru village
    of Simdega district in Jharkhand.



  • August 10: Naxalites of the MCC kill four persons, including a
    police personnel and a village headman, in the Jamui district of
    Bihar.



  • August 6: MCC Naxalites abduct and later kill three persons on
    the borders of Chandauli and Mirzapur districts in Uttar Pradesh.



  • July 27: While a Naxalite of the MCC is killed, the Bhojpur district
    police chief has a narrow escape during an encounter near Gataria
    bridge under the Piro police station limits in Bihar.



  • July 26: Naxalites of the MCC blow up the newly constructed building
    of the Govardhanana Police Station on the Indo-Nepal border in Bihar's
    West Champaran district with dynamites.



  • July 22: A Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel is killed
    when MCC Naxalites ambush a patrol party at Baruhatu hills, Ranchi
    district, on the first day of their 48-hour long Jharkhand bandh
    (general shutdown).



  • July 16: Approximately MCC 200 Naxalites abduct three persons and
    later kill two of them in Pehera village of Giridih district in
    Jharkhand.



  • July 15: Naxalites of the MCC cause large scale damage to railway
    tracks leading to derailment of at least three trains and uprooting
    of signals and points as part of their Tirhut-Mithinanchal (Northern
    Bihar) bandh (general shutdown).



  • July 9: MCC Naxalites abduct 15 engineers of the Larsen and Toubro
    and Hindustan Construction from Kosama village, approximately 100
    kilometres from Ranchi, capital city of Jharkhand. In Gumla district
    of Jharkhand, Naxalites of the MCC kill three persons in Dari village.



  • July 6: Naxalites of the MCC abduct and later kill a person in
    Badani area in Hazaribagh district of Jharkhand.



  • July 5: Naxalites of the MCC take captive the entire staff of Hehegarha
    railway station in Jharkhand's Latehar district, disrupting train
    services for over 10 hours on Garhwa Road-Barkakana Section of East
    Central Railway.



  • July 2: Three police personnel are killed and three others injured
    when Naxalites of the MCC attack the Paraiya police station in Gaya
    district of Bihar.



  • July 1: Naxalites of the MCC kill three persons at Lutidih under
    the Simaria police station-limits, Chatra district in Jharkhand.



  • June 30: Naxalites of the MCC kill six persons in separate incidents
    in Latehar and Gumla districts of Jharkhand.



  • June 20: A couple is lynched for alleged
    involvement in the killing of a three-year-old girl after MCC’s
    ‘People’s Court’ (kangaroo court) awards them death penalty in Barhi
    village, Latehar district of Jharkhand.

    In Bihar, MCC Naxalites kill
    two persons in the Roh police station limits of Nawada district.









  • June 17: An MCC Naxalite is killed during
    a clash with the rival CPI-ML (Liberation) near Pithiaon village,
    Rohtas district of Bihar.



  • June 14: MCC Naxalites blast the newly
    constructed building of Tilothu police station in Rohtas district,
    Bihar.



  • June 11: MCC targets railway property
    at various places on the second day of the Jharkhand bandh
    (strike).



  • June 10: Normal life is affected in
    the State of Jharkhand on the first day of the two-day bandh
    called by the MCC to protest against alleged police atrocities.



  • June 7: Eleven MCC Naxalites surrender
    before the District Magistrate in Darbhanga, Bihar.



  • June 4: Three personnel of the Central
    Industrial Security Force (CISF) and the driver of the vehicle are
    killed when MCC Naxalites trigger a landmine at Karo mines under the
    Bermo sub-division, Bokaro district in Jharkhand.



In Chatra district, Jharkhand
Naxalites kill two persons branding them police informers.





  • June 2: MCC Naxalites attack the office
    of a private company engaged in executing the Sone canal project setting
    ablaze dumpers, vehicles and furniture at Nawadih village in the Rohtas
    district of Bihar.



  • May 30: MCC Naxalites abduct six persons
    in Narayanbeda village, East Singhbhum district of Jharkhand.



  • May 25: Three Government Railway Police
    (GRP) personnel are killed after MCC Naxalites attack Simultalla railway
    station in Bihar’s Jamui district.



  • May 24: MCC Naxalites ambush two tractor-trailer
    loads of villagers near Banwari Champapur village in Bihar’s West
    Champaran’s killing two persons and injuring three others.



  • May 15: Unidentified assailants kill
    two MCC Naxalites, including an ‘area commander’, in the Umarakoling
    area of Gumla district in Jharkhand.



  • May 12: Jharkhand police launches ‘Operation
    Hilltop’ in Jhumra hills, Bokaro district, to flush out MCC from the
    area.



  • May 10: Police arrest an MCC ‘area commander’
    in the Patrahi village of Aurangabad district in Bihar.




  • May 6: Normal life is affected in several
    parts of Jharkhand during the bandh (strike) called by the
    PWG and MCC against alleged police atrocities.


  • May 5: MCC calls for a strike in six
    districts of Jharkhand to protest against alleged police atrocities.



  • May 4: Two MCC Naxalites are arrested
    in the Saranda forest near Digha, Sundergarh district, Orissa.




  • May 2: Naxalites of the MCC abduct
    and later kill an activist of the Jharkhand Sangharsh Jan Mukti
    Morcha (JSJMM) in Anjan village, Gumla district.





A ‘sub-zonal commander’
of the MCC is killed in an encounter in Goriyadih village under the
Ghaghra police station-limits in Gumla district, Jharkhand.





  • April 30: Two MCC Naxalites, including
    a ‘sub-zonal commander’, are killed in an encounter at Nava Jaipur
    in the Daltonganj district of Jharkhand.





  • April 27: Seven MCC Naxalites are arrested
    after an encounter in Nawadih village, Saranda forest areas, West
    Singhbhum district, Jharkhand.





  • April 25: An MCC Naxalite, allegedly
    involved in the killing of the erstwhile king of Vijaygarh near
    Rampur village, Sonebhadra district, Uttar Pradesh on February 25,
    2003, is arrested from Kusumha village, under Robertsganj police
    station limits, in the same district.





  • April 16: MCC Naxalites escape into
    the Saranda forests in West Singhbum district, Jharkhand, after
    looting an unspecified quantity of explosives from Roxy, Kevland
    police station-limits, Sundergarh district in Orissa.

    Jharkhand Chief Minister Arjun
    Munda offers to hold talks with the MCC.





  • April 15: MCC Naxalites kill eight
    police personnel and injure three more by setting off a landmine
    blast and also loot six Self Loading Rifles, two other rifles, a
    revolver and several rounds of ammunition from them before fleeing
    from the spot in the forests of Cherki valley, Nawada district in
    Bihar.





  • April 14: Naxalites of the MCC attack
    a police outpost at Chandrapura railway station, Bokaro district
    in Jharkhand and loot 23 rifles and several hundred cartridges.





  • April 7: Naxalites of the MCC set ablaze
    a house of the Forest department at a village in the Sundargarh
    district of Orissa.





  • April 8: A MCC training camp is unearthed
    and three cadres are arrested in Balubhang village, Latehar district
    in Jharkhand.





  • April 6: Naxalites of the MCC kill
    three alleged criminals in Hazaribagh district, Jharkhand.




In Orissa, Naxalites
of the MCC set ablaze a house and a truck of a forest guard in San
Ramloi village, Birsa police station limits, Sundergarh district.




  • April 1: Naxalites of the MCC kill
    one person and injure another in Tamad near Ranchi on the first
    day of the 48-hour bandh (strike) called by them and the
    PWG to protest the US-led attack on Iraq and alleged police high-handedness
    in the State of Bihar and Jharkhand





  • March 30: MCC Naxalites kill three
    persons near Lavalong, Chatra district in Jharkhand.





  • March 28: Two Naxalites of the MCC and a personnel of Bihar Military
    Police (BMP) are killed and as many injured when in a Naxal attack
    on the Bednagarh picket of Chenari police station, Rohtas district
    in Bihar.

    In Jharkhand, the MCC Naxalites kill a former colleague in Kasiyat
    village, Chatra district.



  • March 18: Naxalites of the MCC injure three police
    personnel and loot 15 rifles and 1000 bullets in an attack on a
    police post in Lodipur village, Gaya district in Bihar.



  • March
    5: Naxalites of the MCC kill a farmer in Laxmipur village, Palamu
    district in Jharkhand.



  • February
    25: Naxalites of the MCC kill the erstwhile king of Vijaygarh and
    a member of his escort team in the jungles near Rampur village,
    Manchi police station-limits, Sonebhadra district, Uttar Pradesh.


    In a joint operation, Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and
    Special Task Force (STF) personnel of Bihar Police unearth the nerve
    center of the MCC and arrest three MCC Naxalites and five Nepalese
    Maoist insurgents in Patrakar Nagar locality, Patna, Bihar.



  • February
    16: Naxalites of the MCC attack the motorcade of Janata Dal (United)
    [JD-U] Jharkhand State unit chief Gautam Sagar Rana near the forests
    of Marhara, Hazaribagh district.



  • February
    13: Naxalites of the MCC attack several villages and loot guns and
    cartridges in Jamui district, Bihar.



  • February
    10: Six security force personnel and four Naxalites of the MCC are
    killed near Chiro village, Latehar district during the 48-hour bandh
    (general strike) called by the MCC in Jharkhand.



  • February
    8: Naxalites of the MCC abduct five persons from Dumaria police
    station-limits, West Singhbhum district in Jharkhand. While three
    of them are killed, the Naxalites chop off a hand of each of the
    remaining two before setting them free.



  • February
    7: Two persons are beaten to death by Naxalites of the MCC at Pipra
    village, Gaya district in Bihar.



  • February
    3: Naxalites of the MCC attack the crusher unit of the Golden Quadrilateral
    Highway project in Aurangabad district in Bihar.



  • January
    28: A self-styled sub-zonal area commander of the MCC is arrested
    in a raid at a hideout in Simaria police station area, Chatra district
    in Jharkhand.



  • January
    26: Three Naxalites of the MCC are arrested in Burmu near Ranchi
    in Jharkhand.



  • January
    13: Naxalites of the MCC abduct four businessmen from Hussainabad
    block, Palamu district in Jharkhand.



  • January
    8: In Jharkhand, a police driver is killed and five security force
    personnel injured in a landmine blast set-off by the MCC, near Kasmar
    village, Palamu district. In Bihar, five Naxalites of the MCC are
    arrested for the January 4-killing of three persons in Tilai village,
    under Sanjhauli police station-limits, in Rohtas district.



  • January
    4: Naxalites of the MCC kill three members of a family in Tilai
    village, under Sanjhauli police station-limits, Rohtas district
    in Bihar.



2002



  • December
    31: Suspected Naxalites of the MCC kill Democratic Youth Federation
    of India (DYFI)--the youth wing of the ruling Communist Party of
    India (Marxist) CPI-M--local-level leader Lakshmi Bag, in Jangipara,
    Hooghly district, West Bengal.



  • December
    23: In a release issued in Gaya, Bihar, the Bihar-Jharkhand-Bengal
    Special Area Committee of the MCC claims responsibility for the
    December 20-Saranda forest ambush and warns of similar 'operations',
    if security agencies did not stop torturing innocent farmers and
    labourers on the pretext of curbing extremism.

    In Jharkhand, police arrest 10 suspected MCC cadres in Manoharpur
    police station-limits, West Singhbhum district.



  • December
    20: Naxalites of the MCC lay an ambush on a convoy of police personnel,
    in Jharkahnd, killing 18 police and injuring 20 more in Saranda
    forests, at Bitkilsoya, Manoharpur police station-limits, West Singhbhum
    district, bordering Orissa. They also loot an unspecified number
    of arms and ammunition and set ablaze 11 vehicles in the convoy.



  • December
    19: Naxalites of the MCC kill a village headman in Manoharpur village,
    West Singhbhum district in Jharkhand.



  • December
    16: Approximately 60 Naxalites of the MCC and PWG lodged at Midnapore
    Central Jail, West Bengal, begin an indefinite hunger strike to
    press for their unconditional release.



  • December
    13: A Naxalite of the MCC is arrested and booked under POTA in Srijan
    village, West Singhbhum district, Jharkhand.



  • December
    2: Naxalites of the MCC kill two persons in separate incidents in
    Latehar district.




  • November
    20: Naxalites of the MCC attack the Central Coalfields Limited’s
    (CCL), Piparwar office, in Jharkhand’s Chatra district, and snatch
    away three guns from private security guards.




  • November
    18: Jharkhand police arrest 19 Naxalites of the MCC in Ranchi.




  • November
    17: Jharkhand police arrest four MCC Naxalites and recover explosives
    in Gumla district.




  • November
    15: The MCC and PWG issue a call to boycott the celebrations
    to mark the second anniversary of the formation of Jharkhand State.




  • November
    10: Naxalites of the MCC attack Harsidpur village, in Bihar’s Nawada
    district, and kill two persons.




  • November
    7: 37 Naxalites of the MCC surrender with weapons to Chief Minister
    Babulal Marandi, in Bokaro district.




  • October
    26: An estimated 550 supporters and sympathizers of the MCC are
    detained in Jharkhand and West Bengal States while on their way
    to participate in a convention organized by the Struggling Forum
    for People’s Resistance (SFPR), a front organization of the MCC,
    in Kolkata, starting on the day.



  • October 18:
    Three activists of the Struggling Forum of People's Resistance,
    a front organization of the MCC, are arrested from Bandagaon, West
    Singhbhum district, and been booked under the Prevention of Terrorism
    Act (POTA).



  • October 12:
    Two Naxalites, including a 'sub-zonal commander' of the MCC, are
    arrested in Madanpur village, Aurangabad district, Bihar.



  • October 9: Suspected
    Naxalites of the MCC make an abortive bid to loot firearms in an
    attack on a police picket in the Kashichak police station area,
    Nawada district, Bihar.



  • October 7: Four
    Naxalites of the MCC are arrested from Bokaro district, Jharkhand.
    A huge quantity of arms and ammunition is recovered from their possession.



  • October 5: Naxalites
    of the MCC kill a local leader of the ruling Bhartiya Janata Party
    (BJP) in Bokaro district, Jharkhand.



  • September 24:
    Nine Naxalites of the MCC are arrested and a huge cache of arms
    is seized in Prasangan village, Latehar district, Jharkhand.



  • September 22:
    A huge quantity of arms and ammunition is recovered in a village
    in Muzaffarpur district in Bihar, after an encounter with Naxalites
    of the MCC.



  • September 13:
    West Bengal police arrest five Naxalites of the MCC from Singhahore
    village, Bankura district.



  • September 9:
    Police arrest an 'area commander' of the MCC and two of his associates
    on the outskirts of Ranchi, capital of Jharkhand.



  • August 16: Two
    persons are killed and six others injured in an attack by Naxalites
    of the MCC in at bazaar in Bagha, West Champaran district, Bihar.



  • July 15 A suspected
    Naxalite of the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC) is arrested from Dakshin
    Kashilya village, Birbhum district, West Bengal.

    During the 24-hour bandh (general shutdown) called by MCC in Jharkhand,
    Naxalites attack a goods train with heavy gunfire between Hehegada
    and Chhipadohar stations, Dhanbad division, and kill a security
    force personnel, besides injuring five others.



  • June 12: Four
    Naxalites of the MCC arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism
    Act (POTA). One among them reportedly played a key role in the October
    31, 2001-massacre in Topchanchi, Dhanbad, in which 13 police personnel
    were killed by the MCC.



  • July 10: Police
    arrest an 'area commander' of the MCC in Omkaleshwar, Varanasi district,
    Uttar Pradesh.



  • July 9: Three
    MCC Naxalites killed in separate encounters in Chandauli and Sonebhadra
    districts, Uttar Pradesh.



  • July 1: 14 Naxalites
    of the MCC surrender at a 'Janata Darbar' (People's Court) in Chiata
    village, East Champaran district. Bihar.



  • May 20: Bharatiya
    Jananta Party (BJP) local-level leader killed, elder brother Injured
    in an MCC attack at Chanlaso village, Jharkhand.



  • May 7: On the
    second day of the two-day economic blockade of Jharkhand, an estimated
    15 police personnel and a Naxalite of the MCC are killed in a landmine
    blast at Mthadih, Koderma district.



  • May 6: On the
    first day of the two-day economic blockade called jointly by the
    MCC and the People's War Group (PWG), MCC Naxalites attack a police
    patrol party near Kamundi, Latehar district in Jharkhand.



  • April 27: Supreme
    Court approves death sentence to four Naxalites of the MCC, who
    killed 35 persons in Bara village, Gaya district in Bihar in 1992.



  • April 13: The Jharkhand police submit chargesheet
    against eight MCC Naxalites, accused of killing 13 personnel of
    the Jharkhand Armed Police at Topchanchi, Dhanbad district on October
    31.



  • April 10: One CRPF personnel and one MCC Naxalite
    killed in an encounter in Vishrampur Saraiya village, Aurangabad
    district in Bihar. Separately, the Special Task Force (STF) demolish
    an MCC bunker and arrest two of its Naxalites in Koriari village,
    Kaimur district.



  • April 2: A police personnel killed and four others
    injured when the MCC Naxalites ambushed a vehicle of the State Bank
    of India near Lara village, Hazaribagh district in Jharkhand.



  • March 5: A police personnel killed when the MCC
    Naxalites attacked a police station in Arwal district in Bihar



  • February 26: 24 Naxalites of the MCC surrender
    in East Champaran district of Bihar.



  • February 20: The MCC Naxalites killed four persons
    during the 2—hour general strike called by the MCC and the PWG in
    Jharkhand.



  • February 16: 12 Naxalites of the MCC including
    their ‘zonal commander’ surrender in Darbhanga



  • February 15: The Divisional Forest Officer (DFO)
    of the Shahabad forest division in Bihar was abducted and later
    killed by the MCC Naxalites in Rohtas district.



  • February 4:
    Naxalites of the MCC attack a police party and killed 9 police personnel
    at Jorighat, Chatra district in Jharkhand



  • January 6-7: Seven Naxalites of the MCC killed
    in different encounters in Rohtas district in Bihar



2001



  • December 31: Five MCC Naxalites arrested after
    an encounter in the Palkot police station area, Gumla district in
    Jharkhand.



  • December 21: Two personnel of the Central Reserve
    Police Force (CRPF) killed and four others injured in a landmine
    blast triggered by Naxalites of the MCC, in the forests, 3 km away
    from the Chinia police post, Garhwa district in Jharkhand.



  • December 10: MCC holds a Jan Adalat (Kangaroo Court)
    in Bhagwanpur village, Sarguja district in Chhattisgarh. They execute
    three persons after four hours of ‘public trial’ on charges of misusing
    the outfit for monetary gains.



  • December 5: Union government bans MCC under Prevention
    of Terrorism Ordinance (POTO).



  • November 12: The MCC Naxalites kill two local-level
    leaders of the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) in Latehar district in
    Jharkhand.



  • October
    31: The MCC killed 13 police personnel near at Topchanchi near Dhanbad
    in Jharkhand.



  • October
    4: Four police personnel, including a Deputy Superintendent of Police
    (DSP), were killed and four others seriously injured in a landmine
    blast triggered by the MCC Bargarh, Garhwa district in Jharkhand.



  • September
    29: Naxalites of the MCC burnt alive a police personnel in Kodarma
    district in Jharkhand.



  • September
    24: MCC Naxalites attacked the Giridih district police chief when
    he was returning to Giridih from Hazaribagh after attending the
    meeting of police chiefs of Naxal-affected districts.



  • September
    23: 12 CRPF personnel were killed by a landmine blast triggered
    by the MCC at Abroj forest area in the Hazaribagh district in Jharkhand.



  • September
    6: Five persons including two police personnel were killed by the
    MCC at Pathki Latehar distirct, Jharkhand



  • August
    6: MCC Naxaltie ambushed police patrol party at Chilgo forest near
    Bokaro in Jharkhand. One guard-cum-jeep driver was killed and one
    police personnel seriously injured in encounter.



  • June
    24: The MCC Naxalites attacked a police picket at Dhekuli, Sheohar
    district in Bihar and looted six rifles and a large quantity of
    ammunition. Three police personnel were also injured in the incident.



  • June
    7: Approximately, 100 MCC Naxalites attack a passenger train at
    Haurbera station near Jamshedpur in Jharkhand and looted arms and
    ammunition. Six Government Railway Police (GRP) personnel injured
    in the incident.



  • May
    27: One police personnel was killed and five others seriously injured
    when more than 100 MCC Naxalites attack Mali police station, Aurangabad
    district in Bihar.



  • May
    21: The MCC Naxalites attack a police team and loot four rifles
    from them in Hembrom Bazar, Ranchi in Jharkhand. Four police personnel
    injure in the attack.



  • April
    14: Fourteen persons were massacred by the MCC at Belpu village,
    Hazaribagh district in Jharkhand. Those killed belonged to the Gram
    Suraksha Dal (Village Protection Force) which the villagers had
    raised three years ago to guard against MCC attacks.



  • April
    5: Eight police personnel were injured in an attack by the Naxalites
    of the MCC in Ranja Gahti, Gumla district in Jharkhad.



2000



  • December
    18: The MCC looted six self-loading rifles and two carbines from
    the police in Muzaffarpur district in Bihar.



  • November
    12: In Jharkhand, the MCC killed the wife of the Hazaribagh Deputy
    Commissioner.



  • October
    5: In the State of Jharkhand, the MCC killed the Lohardaga district
    Superintendent of Police, Ajay Kumar.



  • February
    12: The MCC killed 22 persons including 19 police personnel in a
    landmine blast in Palamu, Jharkhand during the first phase of State
    Legislative Elections.



1999



  • November
    18: The MCC killed 12 persons Latu village, Palamu in Jharkhand.



  • March
    18: The MCC massacred over 34 upper caste Bhumihars in Senari village,
    Jehanabad in Bihar.



1992



  • February
    12: The MCC
    massacred 37 members of
    the landowing upper caste Bhumihar community at Bara village, Gaya
    district in Bihar.



1987



  • May
    29: The MCC
    massacred 42 persons belonging
    to an upper caste Rajput family at Dalelchak-Baghaura village in
    Aurangabad district, Bihar.



1986



  • October
    7: The MCC killed 11 persons belonging to the upper caste Rajput
    community in Darmia village Aurangabad district in Bihar.




Chronology of Massacres
in Central Bihar (1977-2001)


RELATED LINKS



<embed src="/satporgtp/related_links/naxal.htm" width="600"
height="100" pluginspage="/satporgtp/related_links/naxal.htm"
border="0"> </embed>

http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/india/terroristoutfits/MCC.htm

Reuters Blogs








India: A billion aspirations


Perspectives on South Asian politics










June 22nd, 2009

Does India need its army to tackle the Maoists?





Posted by: Bappa Majumdar

Tags: India: A billion aspirations, , , , , , ,



I
have been noticing a debate in newspapers and television channels about
the need to call in the army to tackle the Maoists and wonder whether
it is indeed time to turn towards them before the movement spirals out
of control.


Last
week, hundreds of Maoists, who are expanding their influence in India,
chased away police from a tribal area based around the town of Lalgarh
about 170 km (100 miles) from Kolkata, capital of West Bengal state.


By attacking Lalgarh and then keeping the police at bay for four
days, the Maoists demonstrated their growing influence over poor
villagers and their capability to strike close to a big city like
Kolkata.


Thousands of villagers caught in the crossfire have left their homes
in panic and have been put up in makeshift government camps. They are
clearly shaken by the siege and the subsequent police campaign to
sanitise Lalgarh.


Indian states have time and again asked the central government that
it might need the army to fight the Maoist movement, which is rapidly
spreading in the country.


But for the moment, India is banking on the police to tackle the
Maoists and equipping its forces with modern weapons and training to
fight the Maoists in their own den.


Experts say it is clear that the strategy of the rebels with their
22,000 plus combatants is to encircle bigger towns and cities and could
hit industry.


Maybe Indian authorities should also rework their strategy as the
police with their limited prowess have always been soft targets in
rural areas and have failed to gain confidence of poor villagers.


Will India look to deploy the army at some stage?


(Reuters photo of a paramilitary soldier keeping watch from a tree in Jhitka near Lalgarh June 21, 2009)














8 comments so far













































“Will India look to deploy the army at some stage?”


–No. firstly because para-military forces are well-equiped &
competent to take on this mao nuisance, they’re limited & most
probably remain so to the poorest belt, tribal & forest areas -
thus not provoking any urban or semi-urban public outcry, mainly
because at the end of the day - they’re but Indians & their
‘revolution’ (irrespective of other perceptions)is indegenious.


- Posted by anup






If
the maoists effected areas need any para milltary force to be employed
then why cant we think of the same when people are brought down to dead
corpses in many parts of the country,where maoism does not find its
mention.Their revolution is not a foreign invasion against the
country.Its home grown.Why cant it be sorted out through discussions as
there have been a proposition in the past?Isnt the employing of para
millitary for their suppression giving fuel to their revolution?


- Posted by Moumita






If
the army is deployed to fight Maoists(who are basically Indians)who
will fight the foriegn elements looking to attack us from across the
borders?


The solution is to listen to them and achieve a solution. Either
give them what they want or stop this non sense once and for all.


We keep talking about Terrorism and yet these people are killing
police and paramilitary forces. The government needs to act fast.


- Posted by Somnath






Yes
they are killing police and the para millitary forces.But just to add
innocent people are also being killed in the name of maoist
operation.So it needs to be sorted out.If they are for any revolution,
they must have some points to speak on.Why cant we listen to them and
come to a conclusion?


- Posted by Moumita






The
issue of Maoist movement in India or elsewhere (Nepal, Philippines,
Peru, Turkey etc ) is not a law and order issue. It’s a socio-economic
issue. Unless and until the main socio-economic issues that led to this
movement are not addressed, no matter in what way it is suppressed -
using paramilitary forces or the Army - it is going to come up again.
Sending Army to crush their movement is not the solution.


- Posted by Paul






We don’t need the army to adress the naxalite issue. What we need is the political will to tackle it.

Mamta Banerjee was in cohoots with naxalites in Nandigram (she was not
in power) now when she is in power, naxals have become untouchables.

Communism much like communalism is inherently violent. Real development should take place to overcome this.

The naxalite hit areas are one of the most backward areas in India. The
cities that are being atlked about is nothing more than a small town by
today’s standards. Kolkata for all its glory hasn’t been able to grow
in the last 20-30 years.

The naxalite movement can be solved by proper policing (give them
better weapons), police action (using the para-military forces) and
political action on development and creating job opportunities for the
youth.


- Posted by Aman






I
agree with Paul.This is not a budding issue.Its been decades
old.Everytime it is crushed,its comes up and it will continue doing so
bcoz the root cause is never addressed.Army and suppression with power
is not the key to conclusion.If the Socio-Economic structure cannot be
changed(as its really difficult and close to impossible),at least it
can be alligned after the discusion with them.But key point Para
millitary force is not going to help.In doing so lots of lives will be
lost.To keep in mind the maoist kill people but the innocent
villagers.If a so called “social terror” can think of the innocent
people,why cant we do the same and talk over the matter?


- Posted by Moumita






I
am not sure but the government may have to deploy army. Indian internal
security is a mess. Infact, every Indian will agree that it is a
torture to go through India’s judicial system wherein overwhelming
majority of implementers, right from beat constable to Chief Justice of
India cannot be trusted and are rotten and corrupt to the core. Rise of
Naxalism in such conditions cannot be attributed to outside forces but
to needs of people which are being fulfilled by them.


If one dacoit in Chitrakoot can hold some 400 odd uniformed dacoits
at bay for more than 48 hours and eliminate 4 of them then I guess >
20 K Naxals should wipe out entire police force of West Bengal easily.


- Posted by Rohit
http://blogs.reuters.com/india/2009/06/22/does-india-need-its-army-to-tackle-the-maoists/

Communist Party of India (Maoist)



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Jump to: navigation, search


























Communist Party of India (Maoist)
LeaderMuppala Lakshmana Rao under nom de guerre "Ganapati"
FoundedSeptember 21, 2004
IdeologyCommunism,

Anti-Revisionist Marxism-Leninism,

Maoism
Website
People's March

The Communist Party of India (Maoist) is an underground Maoist political party in India. It was founded on September 21, 2004, through the merger of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) People's War and the Maoist Communist Centre of India. The merger was announced to the public on October 14
the same year. In the merger a provisional central committee was
constituted, with PW leader Ganapati as General Secretary. The CPI
(Maoist) are often referred to as Naxalites in reference to the Naxalbari insurrection by radical Maoists in West Bengal
in 1967.The Centre on 22nd June 2009 (Monday) banned the CPI (Maoist)
under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, calling it a terrorist
organization.








Contents


[hide]





[edit] Ideology


The Communist Party of India (Maoist) is conducting 'people's war', a strategical line developed by Mao Zedong during the phase of guerrilla warfare of the Communist Party of China. Currently it has effective presence in some regions of Jharkhand and Andhra Pradesh as well as presence in Bihar and the tribal-dominated areas in the borderlands of Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, West Bengal and Orissa. The CPI(Maoist) aims to consolidate its power in this area and establish a Compact Revolutionary Zone from which to advance the people's war in other parts of India.



[edit] Organization


The military wings of the respective organisations, People's
Liberation Guerrilla Army (military wing of MCCI) and People's
Guerrilla Army (military wing of PW), were also merged. The name of the
unified military organisation is People's Liberation Guerrilla Army.
P.V. Ramana, of the Observer Research Foundation in Delhi estimates the Naxilities' current strength at 9,000 -10,000 armed fighters, with access to about 6,500 firearms.[1]
Other estimates by Indian intelligence officials and Maoist leaders
suggest that the rebel ranks in India have swelled to 20,000, though
the number is impossible to verify.[2]



[edit] Status






























Communism in India




Communist Party of India

AITUC - AIKS - AIYF

AISF - NFIW - BKMU



Communist Party of India (Marxist)

CITU - AIKS - DYFI

SFI - AIDWA - GMP



Naxalbari uprising

Communist Party of India (M-L)

Liberation - New Democracy

Janashakti - PCC - 2nd CC

Red Flag - Class Struggle

Communist Party of India (Maoist)



Socialist Unity Centre of India

AIUTUC - AIMSS

AIDYO - AIDSO



A. K. Gopalan

E. M. S. Namboodiripad

B. T. Ranadive

Charu Majumdar

Jyoti Basu

S. A. Dange

Shibdas Ghosh

T. Nagi Reddy



Tebhaga movement

CCOMPOSA



Communism

World Communist Movement


Communism Portal

The party was banned on 22nd June 2009 by the central home ministry keeping in mind the growing unlawful activities by the group[3] The party is regarded by some as a "left-wing extremist entity" and a terrorist outfit and several of their members have been arrested by the Indian Government under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA)[4][5]. The group is officially banned by the State Governments of Orissa[6], Chattisgarh and Andhra Pradesh, among others. The party has protested these bans.[7]
They are regarded as a serious security threat and the Indian
government is taking countermeasures, pulling the affected states
together to coordinate their response. It says it will combine improved
policing with socio-economic measures to defuse grievances that fuel
the Maoist cause.[5]
In many states, private armies and vigilante groups, often
government-sponsored, have sprung up to counter the Maoists. It is
alleged that these private armies have also forcibly recruited
villagers against the Maoists.[6]
Special insurance provisions have been made by the Indian government
for paramilitary forces stationed in regions affected by the militant
Maoists.[7]

































Organizations listed as terrorist groups by India
Northeastern India
National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Isak-Muivah (NSCN-IM)

Naga National Council-Federal (NNCF)

National Council of Nagaland-Khaplang

United Liberation Front of Asom

People's Liberation Army

Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL)

Zomi Revolutionary Front
Kashmir
Lashkar-e-Toiba

Jaish-e-Mohammed

Hizbul Mujahideen

Harkat-ul-Mujahideen

Farzandan-e-Milat

United Jihad Council

Al-Qaeda

Students Islamic Movement of India
North India
Babbar Khalsa

Bhindranwala Tigers Force of Khalistan

Communist Party of India (Maoist)

Dashmesh Regiment

International Sikh Youth Federation (ISYF)

Kamagata Maru Dal of Khalistan

Khalistan Armed Force

Khalistan Liberation Force

Khalistan Commando Force

Khalistan Liberation Army

Khalistan Liberation Front

Khalistan Liberation Organisation

Khalistan National Army

Khalistan Guerilla Force

Khalistan Security Force

Khalistan Zindabad Force

Shaheed Khalsa Force
Central India
People's war group

Balbir militias

Naxals

Ranvir Sena
 v  d  e 


[edit] Front Organisations


The PWG also has a string of front organisations of students, youth,
industrial workers, miners, farm hands, women, poets, writers and
cultural artists. Some among these are listed below:


Andhra Pradesh


Rythu Coolie Sangham (Agricultural labourers association)


Singareni Karmika Samakhya (Singareni collieries workers federation)


Viplava Karmika Samakhya (Revolutionary workers federation)


Radical Students Union


Radical Youth League


All India Revolutionary Students Federation


Bihar


Lok Sangram Morcha (People’s Struggle Front)


Mazddor Kisam Mukti Morcha (Workers-Peasants Liberation Front)


Jan Mukti Parishad (People’s Liberation Council)


Mazdoor Kisan Ekta Morcha (Workers-Peasants Unity Front)


Bharat Navjawan Sabha (Indian Youth Association)


Mazdoor Kisan Sangrami Parishad (Workers-Peasants Struggle Council)


Shramik Sangram Manch (Workers Struggle Platform)


Nari Mukti Sangharsh Samiti (Women’s Liberation Struggle Association)


Sangharsha Jana Mukti Morcha (People’s Liberation Struggle Front)


Democratic Students Union


All India People’s Resistance Forum


Madhya Pradesh


Adivasi Kisan Mazdoor Sangh (Tribal Peasants-Workers Association)


Krantikari Kisan Mazdoor Sangh (Revolutionary Peasants-Workers Association)


Krantikari Balak Sangh (Revolutionary Children’s Association)


Gram Raksha Dal (Village Defence Force)


Gram Rajya Samiti (Village governance council)



[edit] Recent activities




  • July 16, 2008: A landmine hit a police van in Malkangiri district, killing 21 policemen.[11]

  • June 29, 2008: CPI forces attacked a boat
    on the Chitrakonda reservoir in Orissa carrying members of an
    anti-Naxalite police force. The boat sunk, killing 33 policemen, while
    28 survived.[12][13]

  • In November 2007 reports emerged that the anti-SEZ movement in Nandigram in West Bengal had been infiltrated by Naxalites since February; the reports quoted unnamed intelligence sources.[14] Recently, police found weapons belonging to Maoists near Nandigram.

  • On March 15, 2007 an attack happened in the rebel stronghold area of Dantewada,
    in Chhattisgarh state. Fifty-four persons, including 15 personnel of
    the Chhattishgarh Armed Force, were killed in an offensive by 300 to
    350 CPI (Maoist) cadres on a police base camp in the Bastar region in
    the early hours of Thursday. The remaining victims were tribal youths
    of Salwa Judum,
    designated as Special Police Officers (SPOs) and roped in to combat the
    Maoists. Eleven person were injured. The attack, which lasted nearly
    two-and-a-half hours, was spearheaded by the "State Military Commission
    (Maoist)", consisting of about 100 armed naxalites.[15]

  • On March 6, 2007
    the CPI (Maoist) reportedly claimed responsibility for the Mahato
    assassination, but JMM members of the Jharkhand state cabinet,
    including the Chief Minister, subsequently announced that a state
    police investigation is under way into the authenticity of this claim.
    Police reportedly believe that political rivals of Mahato, including
    organized criminal groups, may have been behind the assassination.[16]

  • On March 5, 2007
    Maoist shot dead a local Congress leader (Prakash, a member of the
    local Mandal Praja Parishad (MPP)) in Andhra Pradesh while he was
    inspecting a road construction project in Mahabubnagar district.[17]


  • On December 2, 2006
    the BBC reported that at least 14 Indian policemen had been killed by
    Maoists in a landmine ambush near the town of Bokaro, 80 miles from
    Ranchi, the capital of the State of Jharkhand.[19]

  • On October 18, 2006 women belonging to the Maoist guerrilla forces blasted four government buildings in the Bastar region of Chhattisgarh.
    On the day before, over a dozen armed cadres of the group, with support
    from male colleagues, blocked traffic on the Antagarh-Koylibera Road in
    the Kanker district, near the city of Raipur. They also detonated explosives inside four buildings, including two schools, in Kanker[8]. This incident occurred two days after a major leader of the party's operations in Orissa and Andhra Pradesh, Kone Kedandam, surrendered to authorities in the town of Srikakulam.[20]

  • On July 16, 2006 the Maoists attacked a relief camp in the Dantewada district where several villagers were kidnapped. The death toll was 29.[21]

  • On February 28, 2006 the Maoists attacked several anti-Maoist protesters in Erraboru village in Chhattisgarh using landmines, killing 25 people.[22]

  • On 13 November 2005 CPI (Maoist) fighters stunned authorities by attacking Jehanabad in Bihar,
    freeing 250 captured comrades and taking twenty imprisoned right wing
    paramilitaries captive, executing their leader. They also detonated
    several bombs in the town.[23] A prison guard was also reported killed.

  • In August 2005 Maoists kidnapped from the Dantewada district of the state of Chhattisgarh.This
    fiollows violent incidents in 2004 in the same region when 50 policemen
    and about 300 villagers were killed in the Dantewada district and over
    50,000 villagers were staying in relief camps out of fear from Maoists.[24]

  • In February 2005 the CPI (Maoist) killed 7 policemen, a civilian
    and injured many more during a mass attack on a school building in
    Venkatammanahalli village, Pavgada, Tumkur, Karnataka.[25][26] On August 17, 2005, the government of Andhra Pradesh
    outlawed the Communist Party of India (Maoist) and various mass
    organizations close to it, and began to arrest suspected members and
    sympathizers days afterwards. The arrested included former emissaries
    at the peace talks of 2004.



[edit] Opposition to the Maoist


In 2005, an anti-Maoist village defense movement was born, calling itself the Salwa Judum,
or Peace Mission. The group has coaxed or hounded thousands of people
out of their forest hamlets and into the squalid tent camps, where
suspected Maoist sympathizers are detained. The camps are guarded by
police officers, paramilitary forces and squads of local armed youths
empowered with the title "special police officer." The Delhi-based
Asian Center for Human Rights, in a report in March 2006, found
children in the ranks of the Salwa Judum. The center also accuses the
Maoists of recruiting child soldiers. It calls the conflict "the most
serious challenge to human rights advocacy in India."[2]



[edit] International connections




























The CPI (Maoist) maintains dialogue with the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) who control most of Nepal in the Coordination Committee of Maoist Parties and Organizations of South Asia and also has control in australia (CCOMPOSA).[citation needed]



[edit] References



  1. ^ A spectre haunting India, the Economist Volume 380 Number 8491 August 19th-25th 2006
  2. ^ a b In India, Maoist Guerrillas Widen 'People's War'
  3. ^ "Centre bans CPI (Maoist), declares it a terror organisation". Zee News. 2009-06-22. http://www.zeenews.com/news541260.html. Retrieved on 2009-06-22. 
  4. ^ CPI_M,South Asia Terrorism Portal
  5. ^ Article on CPI_M,MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base
  6. ^ Eastern Indian state bans communist rebel group,The China Post
  7. ^ Maoists plan stir,The Hindu
  8. ^ Troops die in India Maoist attack, BBC News Online, April 13, 2009
  9. ^ Maoist kills contractor, sets fire in police post at Govindpalli of Malkangiri, Orissa Diary, February 23, 2009
  10. ^ Contractor Prasanna Kumar Swain hacked to death, The Hindu, February 23, 2009
  11. ^ 21 Orissa policemen feared killed by Maoists, Express India, July 16, 2008
  12. ^ MHA spokesperson on Wednesday's Naxal incident in Orissa, The Cheers news agecny, July 17, 2008
  13. ^ Naxal movement entering mobile warfare phase, Merinews, July 3, 2008
  14. ^ "Reports see Maoist Hand in Nandigram", Monideepa Bannerjie, New Delhi Television, November 8, 2007.
  15. ^ Naxalites massacre policemen in Chhattisgarh, The Hindu, March 16, 2007
  16. ^ Jharkhand ministers suspect non-Maoist hand in MP's killing, RxPG News, May 17, 2007
  17. ^ [1][dead link]
  18. ^ [2][dead link]
  19. ^ 'Maoists' kill 14 Indian police',BBC, December 2, 2006
  20. ^ [3], New Kerala.com, October 18, 2006
  21. ^ 29 killed, 250 missing in Chattisgarh naxal attack[dead link],Hindustan Times
  22. ^ 25 killed in Maoist attack ,The Hindu, March 1, 2006
  23. ^ Naxalites lay siege to Jehanabad 25 killed in Maoist attack, The Hindu, November 14, 2005
  24. ^ [4][dead link],Hindustan Times
  25. ^ 6 cops killed in Naxal attack,Deccan Herald
  26. ^ Naxal attack Another cop succumbs,Deccan Herald
  27. ^ Guerilla zone, Frontline, 22(21), Oct. 08 - 21, 2005 DIONNE BUNSHA in Gadchiroli









Communist Party of India (Maoist)

Central Committee

March 15, 2007


Let
us wage a united militant struggle to throw out the Social-Fascist
Government in West Bengal led by Bengal Dyer Buddhadeb!


Let us turn every SEZ into a Battle Zone like

Nandigram!!


The
massacre of at least 16 peasants (which could actually be higher than
50) and causing injuries to over a hundred people in Nandigram by
Buddhadeb's Hitlerite police force-CPI(M)'s social-fascist armed goons
on March 14 brings into one's mind the ghastly massacre in
Jallianwalabagh by the bloodthirsty general Dyer during the British
colonial rule. Social-Fascist Buddhadeb has taken the mantle of butcher
Dyer by sending over 5000-strong police force and hundreds of armed
goons of his Party to pounce upon the peaceful protestors in the
proposed SEZ of Nandigram in East Midnapore in order to pave the way
for transforming West Bengal into a safe haven for the imperialist
MNCs, big Corporate houses, and unscrupulous land mafia. The fleeing
people, including women, were chased and killed by these neo-fascist
armed gangsters in a way similar to the acts carried out by Hindu
chauvinist gangs in Gujarat.


'Operation Bloodbath'
at Nandigram is a meticulously planned conspiracy hatched by
Buddhadeb's CPI(M) and Sonia's UPA government at the Centre in
consultation with the big industrial sharks and their imperialist
mentors. The worst part of this heart-chilling episode is that
Buddhadeb and Prakash Karat had repeatedly assured the people that the
proposed SEZ in Nandigram would be shelved and shifted elsewhere if the
people did not want it. They had assured that notification for the
acquisition of 14,000 acres of land was being withdrawn. Now it has
become clear that these double-dealers, like Goebbels, had only used
this as a ruse to buy time, and had never any intention to shift the
SEZ. Nine peasants were killed in the past few weeks prior to the March
14 massacre In order to serve the MNCs and the industrial houses the
so-called Left Front government had decided to seize the multi-crop
land of the peasants and build SEZs over the grave-yards of the
protesting people. The blood of women and children that flowed in the
fields of Nandigram thoroughly exposes the "Left" rhetoric and
round-the-clock demagogy by political brokers like Sitaram Yechuri,
Brinda Karat, Raghavulu and so on. They organize protests for building
their vote bank where they are in opposition but kill the protesting
people where they are in power.


Nandigram
has proved even to a layman that the rhetoric of these social-fascists
is no different from that of National Socialism of Adolf Hitler.
Yechuri's shameless defence of the gory massacre by placing the blame
for the violence on the Trinamool and the Maoists is an eye-opener to
all those who still believe in the socialist rhetoric of these traitors
and goons in the guise of so-called Left. This social-fascist and the
most trusted political broker for the imperialists and the Indian Big
Business claimed that his "Left" Front government in West Bengal is
trying to resolve the issue politically but "outsiders" such as Maoists
were trying to incite the people of Nandigram and that the helpless
policemen had to fire in self-defence. This hypocrite cannot fool the
people by trying to hush up the stark fact that his Party goons and
thousands of policemen were sent deliberately to massacre the peaceful
protesters, that all those murdered through this state-sponsored
terrorism were local peasants including several women, and that this
most despicable and bizarre act was carried out to resolve a political
movement through the most brutal means. This Indian offspring of
Goebbels cannot fool the people through such lies and falsehood to
justify the unprovoked firing on the people. The bloodbath of March 14
reveals in naked colours the cruelty and inhumanity of the so-called
reforms with a human face peddled by Yechuris, Karats and the like and
their fake opposition to the neoliberal policies of
privatization-liberalisation-globalisation. No wonder, Ambanis, Tatas,
Mittals, Essar Ruias and the imperialist MNCs and the World Bank are
itching to bring these social-fascists to power at the Centre as they
have proved themselves to be the most loyal servants and their social
base can serve to enact social-fascism to suppress people's struggles.


Today
the reactionary ruling classes of the country are bent upon
transforming vast tracts of fertile agricultural land into neo-colonial
enclaves even if it means enacting blood-baths all over the country.
Thousands of crores of rupees have already flown from the big business
and imperialist MNCs into the coffers of the Congress, CPI(M) and other
political parties. It is clear that the battle-lines are drawn for an
uncompromising war between the haves and have-nots, between those who
want to turn our mother-land into a haven for the international
capital, the Indian big business and the handful of filthy rich on the
one hand and the vast majority of the destitute, poverty-stricken
masses, particularly the peasantry, on the other. There is no middle
ground: either one is with the vast masses or with the filthy rich. 237
SEZs have already been approved and lakhs of acres of fertile
agricultural land are being forcibly acquired by the various state and
central governments. In Orissa, Jharkhand, Chattisgrah, AP,
Maharashtra, Haryana, and several other states, lakhs of people are
rendered homeless due to anti-people projects.


The
CPI(Maoist) calls upon the oppressed masses, particularly the
peasantry, to transform every SEZ into a battle-zone, to create Kalinga
Nagars and Nandigrams everywhere, and to kick out the real
outsiders—the rapacious MNCs, comprador big business houses, their
dalals and the land mafia—who are snatching away their lands and all
means of livelihood and colonizing the country. The CC, CPI(Maoist),
vows to extend all support to the struggling masses, to intensify the
struggle against all SEZs, and to avenge the massacre in Nandigram. The
masses have the right to rebel against injustice, and how ever much
Yechuris and Buddhadebs yelp about Maoist incitement, we openly declare
to the world that we shall unite the vast masses and lead, participate
and extend all support to the people and organizations of our country
to unite and fight the imperialist onslaught through the SEZs that is
being carried out through their Indian dalals in the Congress, BJP,
CPI(M), Samajwadi Party, TDP, DMK, AIDMK and other political parties
who are selling away our motherland. CPI(Maoist) calls
upon the people of West Bengal to make the state bandh on March 16 a
big success and continue the heroic struggle until the SEZs are
withdrawn.

Azad,

Spokesperson,

Central Committee,

CPI(Maoist)



uesday, July 31, 2007





Maoist Information Bullettin




Maoist Information bulletin [Published by International
Department , Central Committee,
Communist Party Of Nepal (Maoist)] extracts below.
Complete Information bulletin can be found at http://krishnasenonline.org/Bulletin/editorial.html


The Worker
Organ of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)
11th Issue Coming soon !
Contact lal_rpg@yahoo.co.uk to place your order.
EDITORIAL
After
a gap of many months we are able to bring this issue in your hand; we
must apologize to our readers for this delay. It was further more
important for us to provide with the latest information regarding rapid
political developments especially in Nepal, which we could not be done
because of this delay.


After the outstanding development of People's War for ten years, new
situation arrived at in Nepal for the joint mass movement in order to
overthrow the 239 years old autocratic monarchy and establish
`republic'. As a result of ten years of PW and unprecedented 19 days
joint mass movement based on the achievement of the PW, a new political
situation has been emerged in Nepal. The agenda of election of
constituent assembly which was the agenda of only CPN(Maoist) before
six years is now major political agenda of the nation. The heroic
people of Nepal have already established republic in the street during
the Mass Movement-II and it is the responsibility of the eight parties
to institutionalize the same through the process of election of the
constituent assembly, which it seems far from being achieved. Under a
grand design of the foreign and domestic reactionaries, namely, the US
imperialists, Hindu fundamentalists of India and monarchists, to
sabotage the election of constituent assembly, it was not held in the
stipulated time of `mid-June' and it has been rescheduled for November
22, 2007.

Some
districts of Terai, plain land of southern part of Nepal adjoing to
India, have now become the play ground for all the reactionary elements
and use their stooges to fulfill their reactionary ambitions. The
immediate aim of this design is to sabotage the process of election of
constituent assembly and wipe out the influence of our party from Terai
and its long term aim is to separate and split Terai or Madhesh from
Nepal and incorporate in Bihar of India. Leadership of the seven
parties who are engaged in the politics of appeasement and the interim
government which is victim of inaction, there is every possibility that
the reactionary conspiracy may succeed to disrupt the process of
election of constituent assembly. Only a bold and daring decision of
declaring `republic' from the legislature-parliament and go to the
election, which only can ensure the election to be held in stipulated
date. But pro-US, pro-king and pro-Indian Hindu fundamentalist elements
within the leadership of `Seven parties' are causing obstacles in it.
Thus we feel that another popular mass movement needs to be launched so
that the government and the seven parties will be compelled to agree in
declaring `republic' from the legislature which can pave the way for
the election of constituent assembly and form a `New Nepal'

Our
Party, the CPN(Maoist) thinks that it is going through a new experiment
of continuing and developing the revolution through peaceful way in a
situation created by the ten years of PW and the successful historic
April mass movement. It is quite natural that revolutionaries and
oppressed people of the world have their eyes on the political
development of Nepal. Definitely Nepal is in the cross road. There are
definitely big challenges and big opportunities. Necessity of the hour
is to face the challenges and achieve the opportunities.

Revolution
in Nepal is the part of the world revolution. Therefore it should serve
the world revolution and also deserves support from world
revolutionaries. While developing the PW during the last ten years it
was felt that the international support was not enough that was
required to achieve the nationwide victory of the revolution. It is
necessary to fulfill this task during this time of peaceful development
of the revolution. Every body can easily see how our party is working
hard for the enhancement of our international relations. It will not be
any exaggeration to say that we have made a significant achievement in
this regard during the last six to ten months.

To
enhance the international relation is not only necessary for the
nationwide victory but it is essential for sustaining the new state as
well. In the event of the US imperialist working day and night to
isolate our party, further enhancement of international relation is
inevitable both for the victory of the revolution and sustenance of the
new state. Who is real friend of our country and the people of Nepal
and who is not, can be determined by the role played by them in
relation to the development of revolution and its sustenance.

NATIONAL
Madhes at Crossroads
- Sanjay Kumar
Monarchy
in Nepal has repressed the Madeshi, a large indigenous population in
the plains for ages. The deliberate process of isolating them
psychologically and politically began with the myth of misquoted
unification by Prthivi Narayan Shah. During Rana, Panchayat and Post
1990 regimes, the autocratic state tried to wash off her moral duties
by giving a handful reactionary and feudal Madhesis representation in
the state organs. The undemocratic steps of the state hurt the
sentiments of the proletarian Madhesis. They got disillusioned and
alienated further from the mainstream, thereby generating hatred and
anger among the Madhesi people against the state and privileged class.

However,
the Madhesis took their plight as destiny and sealed their lips against
exploitation, humiliation and discrimination in any form. They could
not express their grievances and exchange ideas due to their inability
to communicate in the state imposed monolithic Nepali language. The
linguistic barrier and incompetence crippled the Madhesi people and
caused them to suffer from inferiority complex and helplessness. They
looked up Khas speaking hill people as their superior and ruler. Being
victimized by the state, they narrowed themselves down to the inferior
and ruled. The author still recollects the exploitations and tortures
inflicted upon the humble Muslim community in his village in the
district of Morang during Panchayat regime. They were often falsely
accused and unjustly persecuted for the robberies and crimes committed
by the Indian criminals across the border.

A
ten-year Glorious People's War led by Nepal Communist Party (Maoist)
has shaken the very foundation of the monarchy by polarizing all the
marginalized sections across the nation. Nepal has shifted from the
homogenized singularity to the heterogenized plurality. The Madhesis
have equally taken a leading role in the Maoist's insurgency. They have
fully internalized Prachanda Path- blended with the trinity of Marxism,
Leninism and Maoism-as the only way to liberate them. Fully armed with
Prachanda Path, the present transformed and trained proletarian
Madhesis are on the path of making an inclusive federal republic Nepal
with right to autonomy and self- determination. Consequently, February
Madhesi Movement emerged and forced the reactionary and bourgeoisie
political parties like Nepali Congress and UML to move along the
republican path.
The
royalist, imperialist and other reactionary forces are actively
involved with all their muscle and money powers to obstruct the
republic-bound nation and hurl it back to the state of violence, chaos
and lawlessness. They succeeded in aborting April Uprising to mere 19
days and barred it from turning into a decisive mass revolution by
exploiting Congress's and UML' Hamletian dilemmas, pro-Indian and
palace policy. In lie of safeguarding and learning lessons from the
historic set back, both Congress and UML continue to indulge in
derailing the republic track on the pretext of various lame excuses.
The Indian extreme Hindu fundamentalists, American imperialists and
reactionaries from both inside and outside are resorting to sabotage
the upcoming Constituent Assembly poll. They have made Madhes a soft
target. In their initiation, coverage and financial assistance, several
secessionist and criminal groups are mushrooming in Madhes. They are
desperately trying to jeopardize the racial harmony and brother hood
existing between hill and Madhes peoples. They are under the false
illusion that they will succeed in befooling and blackmailing the
Madhesis as usual.
The
Madhesis have clearly comprehended that the gory carnage of Gaur was
the evil design of the reactionaries. Madhes and Madhises are an
integral part of Nepal and no sectarian force can secede it. Class
demarcation and feudalism have been deep rooted among Madhesis for
ages. Social crimes like casteism, dowry and witchcraft have been
imported to the holy land of Madhes from across the Indian Territory
due to cultural tieings and open border. The Madhesis have to take a
resolution to uproot such social crimes and combat a decisive war under
the leadership of the proletarians on the path of Prachand doctrine for
their emancipation in particular and all margins in general. The united
fight of all proletarians will certainly defeat the bourgeois feudals
for once and all If every Nepali takes to their heart the great Madhesi
spiritual, "say with pride that we are Madhesis, the sons of the soil,
not foreign immigrants", Nepal will truly reflect "Unity in Diversity"
with her multi-ethnic, multi-linguistic and heterogeneous rhetoric
identities.

INTERNATIONAL
Foreign relation of CPN(Maoist) on the rise
-- Com. Gaurav
It
is big news in Nepal these days that Maoist Party is striving very hard
to develop its foreign relations. They also make their assessments that
it has achieved tremendous success in this regard. The visits made by
some of the leaders of our Party to foreign countries and our bilateral
talks with the official delegations of various countries including our
immediate neighbor and a tested long time friend of our country, China
is being cited as the examples. This short article relates to the same
subject.

Yes
it is true that we are striving very hard to develop and strengthen our
foreign relation. During the period of People's War the regime had
declared our party a terrorist organization and had approached most of
the governments of the world. Based on their relation with the regime
some of the governments had listed our party as terrorist organization
and some though did not listed but treated us as terrorists. In such
circumstances it was not possible for us to develop any king of
relation and ties with us. When we negotiated with parliamentary
parties to launch a joint mass movement against the autocratic monarchy
with the aim of establishing democratic republic and made a series of
negotiations including the interim legislature and interim government
in which we have significant representation in both. A new political
situation has emerged due to this new change in political scenario.

Therefore,
our party's international relation was confined to the relation with
the fraternal and friendly revolutionary parties and organizations of
different parts of the world. Because of the change in the political
situation that has given rise to a new possibility of developing
revolution with peaceful form of struggle we are obliged to develop
state to state relations with various governments which are friendly to
our nation and the process that we have decided to adopt to resolve the
political crisis and way out for forward development.

We
have already brought out our views in open through different mediums.
Now we have two aspects of our foreign relationship: fraternal and
friendly relations with Maoist and other revolutionary communist
parties and organizations and side by side relation with other
political forces and the governments of various countries which are
friendly to our country and the people of Nepal and supporting the
ongoing political process. Therefore the success of out foreign
relation can be gauged through both the perspectives.

There
is no such significant shift in the development of fraternal and
friendly relations with the Communist forces. It is also true that we
have come in touch and extended relations with new such forces. As
because there is no upsurge of the revolutionary movements led by
communists in the world today, this relation will have no such a
magnitude to determine or influence the ongoing political developments.
But it never means that it does not bear any significance. Unity of the
communist revolutionaries has its own significance and deserves to be
maintained and developed.

It
is true that there is a significant shift in developing relation with
various governments which are friendly to our country and supporting
the ongoing political process in Nepal and providing help to enhance
this process. Frankly speaking we have good relation with all countries
of the world except the Bush administration. During the 52 minutes long
discussion with the leadership of our Party, the visiting former US
president Jimmy Carter opined that it was unjust not to remove the
terrorist tag from our party in the given situation that we have a
strong presence in the interim legislature and also in the interim
government. The relation with the European countries is good enough. We
have easy access with them. The recent visits of our leadership
including our Chairman have enhanced this relation to further higher
level. The heightened relationship of our party with the European
countries will definitely create diplomatic pressure to Washington. The
Bush administration is thus isolated from the world and from even
within US for its flawed policy regarding its relation with our party.

Our
relation with China, the immediate neighbor and long tested friend of
the Nepalese people has developed enormously within short span of time.
The strong statement made by the Chinese Ambassador explaining the
policy of his country that `China would never tolerate any foreign
intervention in Nepal' at a time when we are facing a threat against
the integrity of our beloved motherland is really of paramount
importance, which paves the way thus demonstrating that there is ample
scope in advancing our relationship at the higher level. The
relationship with our other immediate neighbor India is fairly good.
The support the separatist elements are enjoying from India, especially
from Bihar has definitely caused some problem in Nepal. But the
government of India seems not to have any role into it. Our only
concern is that the government of India should use its good office to
help control the bad situation in Nepal by preventing such elements
from getting any support from the Indian soil.
Therefore
it will be no exaggeration to say that the foreign relation of our
party has been enhanced and it is developing fairly well.

REPORT
Report from Nepal
- C.P.N (Maoist)
"To
deal with the question of 'completion' of the bourgeois revolution in
the old way is to sacrifice living Marxism to the dead letter"
- Lenin (collected works Vol-24)

The real importance of this precious teaching of the great Lenin was
seriously felt in the practical sense in the communist movement in
Nepal as the People's War led by the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)
CPN{M} entered into the stage of strategic equilibrium from the stage
of strategic defense. Though there are plenty of instances of changes
of tacks in the history of our party nevertheless, it had not become
imperative for the major tactical shift until the people's war reached
the stage of strategic offense. By then we have chalked out a new way
and have trying to advance revolutionary practice through this
labyrinth. Still it is the concrete features peculiar to this
historical situation in Nepal that led to this tactical shift. It is
doubtless that this situation is borne as the natural consequence of
these ten years of heroic armed struggle led by our party.

On
several occasions we have brought out our assessment that the domestic
situation in Nepal is favorable and ripe to capture central state power
in the near future but as all the genuine communist parties engaged in
revolutionary practice know that the international situation is quite
unfavorable to accomplish new democratic revolution and sustain it, it
is obvious that we should try to mobilize justice loving people all
over the world in general and the peoples of south Asia in particular
to garner support in favor of revolution, improving on the domestic
situation in the same spirit. For this we should dare to abandon the
course once selected and have the courage to climb the unexplored
mountain.

Lenin often quotes a letter written by Engels to
F.A.Sorge where the founder of scientific socialism says "Our theory is
not a dogma but a guide to action". This we believe validates to any
situation and any individual communist party. It is easy to cling to
dogmas and memorizing some revolutionary phrases without being engaged
in the revolutionary practice. But a genuine communist party should
never forget that Marxism teaches us to become critical towards Marxism
itself, and only revolutionary practice is a laboratory to know that
whether one is upholding Marxism or something else. In the dazzling
light of this Marxist principle the C.P.N (Maoist) has been applying
Marxism to the concrete situation of Nepal which we believe will
further develop this science.

The historic Chunbang meeting of
the central committee of C.P.N (Maoist) held in Sept/Oct 2005 has put
an indelible mark in the history of the party itself. Before this
meeting internecine strife representing two lines was at its peak and
it was made public too. The revolutionary masses were quite depressed
fearing that it might threaten the very existence of the party's and
the reactionary forces were thrilled with ecstasy. But the central
committee under the leadership of Com. Prachanda devised the ways and
means of turning intra party struggle into a motive force that
propelled the party forward. The meeting resolved the intra-party
struggle and achieved a new unity applying the method of unity,
struggle and transformation and maintaining the dialectical debate. One
of the most important decisions taken in this meeting was that the
party should forge an alliance with the agitating parliamentary parties
despite their unstable and vacillating character in order to isolate
and abolish the monarchy.

The question of the abolition of the
monarchy comprises a different meaning in the context of Nepal. It is
the only reactionary institution which is deep rooted and well
organized with more than a one hundred thousand strong army. Because of
this reality external and internal forces of reaction have joined hands
to prop up the crumbling monarchy and have been trying to convince the
vacillating parliamentary forces that once the monarchy is gone there
will be no able force remaining to halt the ever growing march of the
Maoist force. So the parliamentary forces should break its ties with
the Maoist and try to save the monarchy with some change in its form.
It's the awareness of the Nepalese people and the tactical movement of
our party against the monarchy that forces like the Nepali congress and
United Marxist Leninist were forced to maintain conditional ties (even
if temporary) with the C.P.N (M).

The C.P.N (M), for one and a
half years has taken this compromise. If we seriously study and analyze
the concrete condition and character of this compromise it becomes self
evident that our policy is neither all alliance and no struggle nor all
struggle and no alliance, but combines both. Grasping the teaching of
Lenin we have avoided "give money and fire arms to share the loot"
instead we have given the bandits money and firearms in order to lessen
the damage they can do and facilitate their capture and execution. With
this sole intention we had a twelve point understanding against the
autocratic monarchy on 22nd of November 2005. As expected this
understanding proved as a catalyst to boost the moral of the struggling
people all over the country. The big uprising unique in the
contemporary world forced the otherwise reluctant king to invite the
seven party alliances to choose a prime minister and form a government.
The government of the India, U.S and U.K lost no time to welcome this
move. This bid to douse the fire was failed as the agitation
uninterruptedly moved forward with the clear goal of abolishing the
monarchy. Our strong presence and participation was a matter of anxiety
for the self claimed messiah of democracy. Finally the government of
India, U.S and their lackeys in Nepal hatched a conspiracy and made the
king to make another proclamation where he for the first time accepted
that the sovereignty of Nepal lies to the Nepalese people. It was clear
then only that these interventionists had a tacit understanding with
the king and he was assured that they will secure his position and the
institution of monarchy will remain in the future dispensation once the
resentment of the people will climb down.
After the royal
proclamation of 24th April 2006 we tried to advance the movement
denouncing the proclamation and exposing the ill design behind it. But
there was already a division in the movement since the seven party
alliances took it as a victory and formed the government without any
delay. In its first meeting itself it passed a resolution that there
will be an election of an assembly for a new constitution and called
the C.P.N (M) for parleys. That multiplied the illusion and a large
section of people expected that the monarchy will be out in the near
future.

The political scuffle with the reactionary forces has
been intensified during this period. A Political offensive has taken
the place of the military strike. The old parliament that was
reestablished by royal proclamation was dissolved and a new interim
legislature is in existence where 83 members are ours. An interim
constitution and the interim government have been formed with our
participation. If we look at these happenings superficially it seems
that the C.P.N (M) has deviated from the revolutionary path. But if we
look back at the history of C.P.N (M) and seriously study the under
current it will lead to another conclusion.

Before initiation of
people's war a small number of comrades were sent to the then
parliament and some of our revolutionary comrades from fraternal
parties vehemently criticized for this. Not only that we were expelled
from the "Revolutionary International movement". Subsequent development
in our part proved that we could initiate the war by protecting
revolution from the revolutionary phrases that we used to memorize in
the early period. Now we see every possibility to combine protracted
people's war with insurrection. The 2nd historic conference of our
party adopted a line that there should be a union of protracted
people's war and insurrection to accomplish the revolution. We see the
present development is leading the Nepalese society to prove the
correctness of our ideas that we developed.
From the very beginning
we were aware of the road map charted by the domestic and external
enemies especially U.S and India. They intended to bring fabricated
change in the monarchy, to tame the C.P.N (M) in parliamentary politics
and enable a parliamentary party like Nepali Congress become as a
dominant force in the country. By hook or by crook they have been
trying to achieve this goal. But their every effort has the boomeranged
because of the stand taken by the C.P.N (M). Instead of being a
parliamentary puppet the people's revolutionary aspirations are being
centered in the C.P.N (M). Hundreds of thousands of masses of people
are being mobilized and the party influence among the masses is
increasing everyday. The desperate activities of slandering the Maoist
through various Medias secretly funded by the C.I.A and Raw
and the murdering of our cadres by their vigilante forces amply prove that they are failing in their mission.

The
enemy who is attacking our party especially its youth wing the 'Young
Communist League' with whatever they find in their hands, has generated
mass resentment against the enemies. And our mass line, discipline of
our PLA and political line has gathered momentum to prepare the ground
for the final insurrection. We are utilizing this transitional phase to
spread our mass base and consolidate it, to get rid of our own short
comings and bring disintegration in the enemy's camp so that we can
give a final blow and usher into the country a new democracy.
Note:
This report was presented by the delegation of CPN (Maoist) at the
meeting of CCOMPOSA, which was held in last week of June ]

IT'S THE RIGHT TIME TO INCREASE SUPPORT FOR THE DEMOCRATIC REVOLUTION IN NEPAL
- Johan Peter Andresen, Leader of the Health Team for Nepal project.
The
Health Team for Nepal was formed in 2006. The aim of the Health Team
project is to help the poor people in the rural areas of Nepal. The
Health Team for Nepal cooperates with the medical department of the
People's Liberation Army in order to attain this goal. The health team
for Nepal consists of two parts: the medical specialists and the
support group
SOLIDARITY
Solidarity With Nepalese Revolution
--Com. Basant
Development
of people's revolution in Nepal, which is at the doorstep of seizing
central power, has strongly drawn attention of the whole world. On the
one hand, the reactionaries of all hues, mainly the US imperialism and
the Hindu fundamentalists in India, are doing all they can to sabotage
this process before it gives birth to a New Nepal, free from feudalism
and imperialism. And, on the other, it has drawn up the working class
and the oppressed masses the world over closer than ever before to the
struggling Nepalese people, who are desperately waiting to see it
happen soon. Furthermore, their deep concern and awareness on how they
can play a role to defend Nepalese revolution from external threats is
very much inspiring.
Within
a few months in the past, there have been various interactive programs,
indoor and outdoor, in different parts of the world. Of them, given the
geo-political location of Nepal the programs that were organised in
India, on the challenges and possibilities facing the Nepalese
revolution, do have far-reaching significance. Be it outdoor programs
organised in different 17 cities and participated by party activists,
and revolutionary and just-loving masses or be it 27 indoor programs
held in presence of party leaders from various revolutionary, left and
democratic parties and intellectuals all over India has, in deed,
revealed how serious and resolute they are on their internationalist
duty to defend the revolution in Nepal.
Although
it was not possible to get in touch with all of the like-minded parties
and intellectuals, what has revealed from these programs is that a good
majority of left force in India is very much inspired from the
development of revolution in Nepal and is thirsty of its success. They
have a deep realisation that given the reactionary Nehru Doctrine,
which considers Nepal under its protectorate, and India-locked
geographic condition of Nepal it is largely the Indian people who can
extend an important helping hand for the success, sustenance and
development of Democratic Revolution in Nepal, till the same has been
accomplished in India.
Whoever
was met with had basically a firm common opinion that the future of
revolution in Nepal is basically dependent on how strongly and
thoroughly the revolutionary and democratic forces in India develop
solidarity movement with it. And their untiring effort to materialise
it is really enthusiastic. It is a very good thing for Nepalese
revolution. Truly, it has further encouraged the Nepalese people,
struggling in their mission to build a new Nepal in the beginning of
the twenty-first century.








3
comments:




Monitor LCD
said...

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March 17, 2008 3:08 PM









Karthik Soundarajan
said...

This post has been removed by the author.



June 20, 2009 5:10 PM









Karthik Soundarajan
said...

what do Maoist want? what are their demands? No one understands what you want.!





J
http://indianmaoist.blogspot.com/2007/07/maoist-information-bullettin.htmlune 21, 2009 10:10 AM



Coordination Committee of Maoist Parties and Organisation of South Asia




 

PRESS RELEASE
 
CCOMPOSA CALLS ON PEOPLE'S OF SOUTH ASIA TO OPPOSE INDIAN RULERS GROWING INTERVENTION IN NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES
 
The
Indian rulers seek total domination of the countries of South Asia
acting as the gendarme of the US in this region. At the recently held
SAARC Summit it went so far as to propose a South Asia Parliament
seeking to undermine even the existing limited sovereign of the South
Asian countries. Earlier they had proposed a common currency for the
region to further consolidate its economic hegemony in the region. At
the SAARC Summit it continued to push its SAFTA {South Asian Free Trade
Association, n order to dominate the markets of the region and allow
the unhindered free flow of goods made in India {mostly by the big
comprador houses and the TNCs} to all countries of South Asia.
CCOMPOSA
CALLS for the disbanding of SAARC and the setting up genuine forums of
people to people relations between the countries of South Asia.
Lately
the Indian rulers have been even more crudely intervening in the
internal affairs of neighboring countries and even more crudely
crushing the national aspirations for self-determination of the
Kashmiri, Naga, Manipuri, Assamese, etc people.
In Nepal they have
been playing an active role to diffuse the democratic aspirations of
the Nepalese people and prop up the reactionary elements after
isolating the Maoists. They have been instigating the Madheshi people
of the Terrai against the Maoists in league with the Nepalese monarchy.
Hindu fundamentalists have been particularly active in setting up
vigilante gangs to murder activists as happened in Gaur where 28
Maoists were killed. Recently these gangs murdered a Central Committee
member of YCL {Young Communist League} in the terrain region together
with another comrade. The Indian ambassador has, of late, pro-active
roaming in the interiors of Nepal offering large sums of money for
schools, hospitals, roads, etc in order to wean away the masses from
the influence of the Maoists. In addition the Indian Para-military have
fired on and killed the Nepalese of Bhutani origin from returning to
their motherland and have been fully involved the US conspiracy to
transport 60,000 refugees to the West as some modern day form of slave
labour. The US imperialists and Indian rulers have been working to prop
up the reactionaries and neutralize the Maoists. CCOMPOSA strongly
condemns the role of the Indian rulers in Nepal and demands that they
stop meddling in the affairs of Nepal and the India people bring to
justice the murderous gangs operating across the Nepalese border.
In
Bangladesh the Indian rulers have not only openly backed their stooge
Sheikh Hasina but have utilsed the present army-backed caretaker
government to push through massive deals for Indian big comprador
houses. They have sought help the Tatas to make massive investments
there and lately the Mittals have signed a gigantic deal in the energy
sector of Bangladesh. The Indian ambassador has been actively acting in
the country together with the US ambassador in the dealings between the
various political parties and the caretaker government. CCOMPOSA
demands that the large natural wealth of poverty stricken Bangladesh be
utilized for the development of their own country and not robbed by
Indian compradors and the US imperialists.
In Sri Lanka they openly
threatened the government when it sought arms from China and Pakistan.
The Indian rulers have already imposed humiliating free-trade
agreements on Sri Lanka. They have also surreptitiously been assisting
the Sri Lanka government to crush the just aspirations of the Tamil
people for a Tamil Elam. CCOMPOSA demands the scrapping all these
unequal agreements and supports the just struggle of the Tamil people
for their self-determination from the jack-boots of the Indian ruling
classes.
In addition the Indian rulers continue to maintain and
tighten their vice-like grip over the small countries of the region
like Bhutan, Sikkim, Malldives, etc and continue their attempts to
bully Pakistan utilizing the Kashmir card. Particularly they continue
to forcibly maintain the oppressed nationalities within Indian
hegemony. Not only does the Indian army of occupation crush their just
demands with utmost brutality, they have been pitting one section of
the people against the other to drown their just struggles in oceans of
blood. This is to be seen in Nagaland, Manipur, Assam, Kashmir and
elsewhere. CCOMPOSA demands that the people people of these oppressed
nationalites be allowed to determine their own future and the immediate
and total withdrawal of Indian army and para-military forces from all
these regions.
South Asia has become a burning cauldron of
revolutionary, democratic and nationality movements. CCOMPOSA supports
all these just movements and calls on the peoples of South Asia to
unite against their common enemy and not fall prey to the divisive
policies of the rulers and their US imperialist backers in the region.
1) Proletarian Party of Purba Bangla-CC; PBSP (CC) [Bangladesh]
 2) Communist Party of East Bengal(ML)(Red Flag); CPEB (ML)(Red Flag) [Bangladesh] 3) Bangladesher Samyobadi Dal(Marxist-Leninist) BSD(ML) [Bangladesh]
4) Communist Party of Bhutan (Marxist-Leninist-Maoist)  CPB(MLM)
5) Comminist Party of India (Maoist) ; CPI(Maoist)
 6) Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Naxalbari  CPI-ML (Naxalbari) [India]
7) Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist-Maoist)     CPI(MLM)[India]
8) Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist); CPN(Maoist) [Nepal]













http://indianmaoist.blogspot.com/2007/07/coordination-committee-of-maoist.html

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