Tamils - a Trans State Nation..

"To us all towns are one, all men our kin.
Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill
Man's pains and pains' relief are from within.
Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !."
-
Tamil Poem in Purananuru, circa 500 B.C 

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Home  > International Relations in the Age of Empire > India - an Empire in Denial  > India in new anti-Maoist tactic

CONTENTS OF
THIS SECTION

India's Counter Insurgency: A Civil War, 8 October 2009
'Calling Maoists mad Islamists is not going to help', 3 October 2009
India is 'losing Maoist battle' says Indian Prime Minister. Maoists have a presence in almost 200 Indian districts, 15 September 2009
Indian Maoists in fierce battle,18 September 2009
Maoist guerrilla commanders providing basic military training to local youths in West Bengal, 22 September 2009
Old Habits Die Very Hard: India's Ugly Underbelly - Badri Raina, 19 September 2009, "Never a day goes by when some senior member of the cabinet does not lambast "internal challenges to the state." Invariably they have left-wing extremism in mind... Matter of time, as dominance carries within it the seeds of its own destruction. Those that everyday swear by democracy while wishing to contain it cannot succeed."
India Bans  Communist Party of India -Maoist (CPI-M) , 22 June 2009
Maoist Naxalite attacks in Central India,  16 March 2007

India: an Empire in Denial

 "No word ever dies. What we are saying today may not be accepted by the people at this moment. But our propaganda is not in vain. Our words remain embedded among the people... One who doesn't dream and can't make others dream, can never become a revolutionary." Ideologue of Maoist  movement, Charu Mazumdar quoted in  Sumanta Banerjee - India's Simmering Revolution: The Naxalite Uprising, 1984

India in new anti-Maoist tactic

BBC, 9 October 2009


Maoists have a presence in more than 200 districts of India

The Indian government has agreed on a new tactic to fight Maoists who are operating in several states.Officials said state police were to take the lead and coordinate operations against the Maoists, while central forces were only to lend assistance.

The decision came hours after at least 17 policemen were killed in a battle with Maoist insurgents in the western state of Maharashtra. India says the Maoists pose its biggest security threat. They operate in many states and say they are fighting for the rights of the poor and landless.

In the latest attack on Thursday evening, a group of Maoists attacked a police station in Gadchiroli district in Maharashtra. At least 17 policemen, including a top commander, were killed in the battle. It was not clear whether the rebels suffered any casualties. The rebels killed 16 police personnel in a gun battle in Gadchiroli district in May. Fifteen officers were killed in the same district in February.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told police chiefs last month that a campaign against the rebels had failed to produce results.  Thousands of people have died in the insurgency the Maoists launched in the 1960s.

On Wednesday Home Minister P Chidambaram warned the rebels to abandon violence or face a major assault by security forces following the beheading of the police officer. In September Kobad Ghandy, one of the Maoists' most senior leaders, was arrested in Delhi. A court in Delhi has remanded him in custody for another week.
 

 

 

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