Sunday, June 21, 2009

Maoists to surrender, Marxist Government Insists while Bengal intellectuals appeal for peace ‎, VISIT Lalagarh. Tribals Caught in CROSS FIRE!

Maoists to surrender, Marxist Government Insists while Bengal intellectuals appeal for peace ‎, VISIT Lalagarh. Tribals Caught in CROSS FIRE!

Troubled Galaxy Destroyed Dreams, Chapter 264

Palash Biswas

Seven Naxals gunned down in Dantewada

21 Jun 2009, 2102 hrs IST, PTI


RAIPUR: Seven Maoists were gunned down in "retaliatory action" by security forces after Naxals blew up a truck, killing 11 CRPF personnel in

Chattisgarh's Dantewada district, police said on Sunday.

Eleven CRPF personnel died while 11 others, including the truck's driver and cleaner, sustained serious injuries when the vehicle which was bringing them back to Tonagapal, was blown up in a landmine blast at Kokanara village on Saturday, nearly 375 kms from here, Inspector General of Police, Bastar Range, T J Langkumer said.

Security personnel, who were travelling in another truck and jeep ahead of the ill-fated vehicle, retaliated, gunning down seven Naxals.

All the bodies have been recovered, the IG said. After police received information that the Naxals had burnt down a truck involved in road construction work near Kokaner village, a 53-member joint police-CRPF team reached the area yesterday.

They were returning on two trucks and a jeep when the convoy was attacked by the naxals, who blew up one of the trucks and exchanged fire with the personnel, police said

The injured have been admitted to a hospital in Jagdalpur.

Condemning the Naxal attack, Chief Minister Raman Singh said the government had taken serious note of the "cowardly and inhuman" action of the extremists.

"No democratically elected government can tolerate such violence," he said and conveyed his condolences to the bereaved families.

We will spread this fire, says the Maoist from Lalgarh

21 Jun 2009, 0848 hrs IST, Sukumar Mahato, TNN


My name is Manoj. It's not the name my parents gave me, but all my comrades call me 'Manoj'. My father's name is Dhiren Murmu. I am his second
Maoist revolution
Inspired by Mao Zedong, Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal of the CPI (Marxist) develop a "revolutionary opposition" to the party.
son and I am 25. I was born at Bamundanga village in Salboni. I've lived most of my life in this hopeless village.

Our village falls under the Kansijora gram panchayat. The Left Front has been in power here for 30 years. Salboni has always been a CPM stronghold. But, in 30 years, neither the state government, nor the panchayat and Zilla Parishad took any interest at all in developing this area. We might have been living in the Stone Age.

From Naxalbari to Lalgarh: Maoists breed in swamps of hunger and anger | No revolution for old radicals | Blog: Kolkata's missing millionaires and Lalgarh

When it rains here, the dirt tracks turn muddy and we are forced to drag ourselves and our cattle through the muck. We are not able to ride our bicycles or use carts. We don't have clean drinking water. People are forced to drink filthy, yellow water. After sunset, we live in the dark as there is no electricity here. No jobs either. During the paddy season, we work in the fields and then sit idle for the rest of the year. Because we are tribals, no one has bothered to do anything for us.

In 2002, we got tired of being treated like rodents. So, the villagers got together and demanded development in our area. This infuriated the local CPM bosses. The police and Marxists slapped false cases on us, accusing us of working for the People's War Group (PWG). They branded us Maoists. So we began to think we might as well join the Maoists.

Things turned nasty quickly. The former police superintendent of West Midnapore, K C Meena, lodged an FIR against the entire village. Nearly 90% of the men and teenage boys were charged with being Naxalite. We knew what was coming. We had to do something to save ourselves.

I was just 18 at the time. I was in class XII at the local school. But, I too joined in protests against the police. Within days, the police filed a case against me, my father and brother. They accused all of us of working for the PWG. We had nothing to do with the PWG. Our family has always supported the Congress party. In 1998, when Mamata Banerjee formed the Trinamool Congress (TMC), we switched loyalty to her.

One day, police jeeps rolled into our village, picked up people from their houses, bundled everyone into their vehicles and dumped all of us into the Midnapore jail. That was where I first met Maoist leader Sushil Roy. I found the Maoist ideology very appealing. Roy asked me to join the Maoists so that I could help the poor. I liked his ideas. Then I met two PWG leaders in prison. And I realized that neither Congress nor the TMC can stop the CPM's terror. I also realized that under CPM rule, we had lost the right to speak up. It was time to take a stand and speak up.

I joined the Maoists. They gave me a new name, a new identity and a new life. Now, I work for the Lalgarh movement. I joined this great surge of people last year. On November 5, the police arrived here looking for people who had blasted landmines at chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya's convoy at Salboni. In Lalgarh, the police rounded up innocent tribal women and began to molest and torture them. One woman lost an eye. Others were badly injured. After this incident, we decided to join the Lalgarh movement. It was our party's decision. The Maoists always stand with the deprived. We joined them at Nandigram and Singur. Now, we have joined them in Lalgarh.

It's been easy for us to win the people's support. Most of them have been victims of torture by police. The people listened to us and joined the Peoples' Committee against Police Atrocities (PCPA). Opposition party workers have also supported us. Everybody is rebelling against the CPM cadre and police.

We know the government forces want to crush us. But, we plan to expand our area of influence. As soon as we are able to turn Lalgarh and Junglemahal (a forested area spanning three districts - Bankura, Purulia and West Midnapore) into a Maoist-dominated area, we will apply our ideology here. We will undertake development work for the poor. We will raise money through public donations. And nobody will pay tax to the government anymore.

After victory at Lalgarh, we will expand our fight to the tribal communities of Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa and Chattisgarh. Our war has just begun.

Resume of a rebel

Once peaceful forest-dwellers, now they challenge the Indian state. Here's a profile of that little-known species, the typical Indian Maoist

Age - 18 to 30 years
Gender - Both male and female
Ethnic stock - Austro-Asiatic (tribal/indigenous people)
Linguistic group - Austro-Asiatic (tribal) and old Dravidian dialects
Income group - Below poverty line ( Rs 12 per person per day)
Occupation - Small peasant, landless labour, jobless, jungle-dweller
Area of operation - UP, MP, W Bengal, Orissa, Bihar, Jharkhand Chhattisgarh, AP, Maharashtra and Karnataka
political affiliation - CPI (Maoist)
other names - Naxalite, Red ultra, terrorist

Maoists by Numbers
Total number 50,000
Number of armed rebels 20,000
Area under control One-fifth of India's forests
Active in 165 of the country's 604 districts

From Naxalbari to Lalgarh: Such a long journey down the road to revolution

1960s
Inspired by Mao Zedong, Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal of the CPI (Marxist) develop a "revolutionary opposition" to the party. They lead a violent Santhal uprising in West Bengal's Naxalbari village in 1967. Later, they break away from the CPI(M). Uprisings are organized in several parts of the country. In 1969, CPI (Marxist-Leninist) takes birth

1970s
The radical leftists fragment and the CPI (ML) becomes weaker across the country. This causes regional groups such as the Maoist Communist Centre, which evolved out of the Dakshin Desh-group, to strengthen in Bihar and Jharkhand and the People's War Group to assume leadership of the armed rebels in Andhra Pradesh and adjoining states

1980-90s
At least 30 Naxalite groups are thought to be active across the country, with a combined membership of around 30,000 activists. But their differences over their perceived "revolutionary"
roles often result in bloody battles. Many groups, particularly in Bihar and AP, are accused of land-grabbing and extortion

2000s
Groups such as the CPI (ML) give up violence, enter mainstream politics and participate in elections. In 2004, the MCC and People's War join hands to form a new entity, the Communist Party of India (Maoist), which is now the biggest armed group ever to challenge the very existence of the Indian state
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/We-will-spread-this-fire-says-the-Maoist-from-Lalgarh/articleshow/4681986.cms


While the operation to flush out Maoists continued in Lalgarh and adjoining areas, West Bengal's leading intellectuals on Sunday visited the affected region and urged both the police and Maoists to lay down arms for a peaceful settlement. Meanwhile,the West Bengal government on Sunday asked Maoists to surrender and help restore normalcy at Lalgarh and its adjacent areas where a joint operation by the state police and central paramilitary forces entered its fourth day on Sunday. Three days after the West Bengal government finally moved against the Naxalites, security forces marched into Lalgarh on Saturday and

took control of the police station, a symbolic victory in reclaiming a nondescript building from where state cops had fled to escape the fiery onslaught of Naxal cadres.

It reminds me Old days. Past is never Past as no sound loses for ever and it echoes somewhere in the space. It is related to CHIPKO Movement and the Difference between the Sarvodayee and Gandhian leadership with UTTARAKHAND Sngharsh Vahini and the student leaders.

on 28th November, 1978,Police opned fire in Naintal for the first time in Post Independence India as a group of Chipko Activists were arrested protesting the Auction of forests in Kumaun and we students stromed the streets of Nainital in reaction. Our Students and teachers of DSB college were arrested. Shamsher had come down from almora and had been arrested. Shekhar Pathak and Jaswant singh were also arrested.

Srichand was the Forest Minister in SRIPAT Mishra cabinet in Uttar pradesh and DEFORESTAION got unprecedented momentum in Uttarakhan Hills. We Uttarakhanides are Nature Associated People. The forests and valeyes had been the Natural resource of our life. We could save ourselves from Calamities like landslide, floods and earth Quake only if we could protect GREEN. It was the centarl Theme of Chipko movement and we all used to sing GAURDA`s folk song NEE KAR DEE HUMREE NILAMI led by GIRDA with his indigenous musical instrument HURKA used by untouchables only.

Since it was the DEATH and Life question for the Himalayas and the Himalayan People, the students and masses were agitated.

The District Megistrate was plying Cricket all the day in the Flats while Police Lathicharged, teargased and Fired. It agitated us to the LIMIT. It raged FIRE in the ELITE NAINITAL Club.

Bhagirath Lal was the President of our students` association and he won the election promising peaceful SESSION since we had been agitating for years! Bhagirath was RELUCTANT to join the CHIPKO movement. But while the arrest, lathicharge and firing  news spread, Bhagirath led the Students` procession from DSB college.

Our students leaders were arrested including the President and Generalsecretary.

Students all over Uttarakhand stormed on the streets. Police stations were Ransacked and gutted down. Every day we had to witness and face lathicharge and Arrests.

Girl students in Haldwani were lathicharged as well as molested by the Police.

It INFLAMED entire Uttarakhand.

Meanwhile the Sarvoday Supremo Sundar Lal Bahuguna visited nainital and we had a meeting in Nainital samachar office. He pleaded the Gandhian Theory that the means should be RIGHTFUL for the RIGHT cause. The students as well as Uttarakhand Sanghars Vahini should quit the VIOLENT ways of RESISTANCE.

We jointly protested.

Who has given you the right to decide the course of a Mass Resistance. The State Power has got the LICENSE to Kill and our SUSTENANCE in the Himalayas ENDANGERED. The masses lead the MOVEMENT. Only the Masses may decide the ways and means of RESISTANCE, not any Airconditioned INTELLECTUAL, the best Agency of CORPORATES and State Power!

Eminent Critic Rabi Bhushan called me this morning and he asked about the role of the Intellectuals and civil societies.

I had to say that the BHADROLOK Bengali CIVIL Society has a long History to Betray the Mass Movements and INSURRECTIONS. They did not support the first war of Freedom in 1857 and backed EAST INDIA Company. The Renaissance Brigade were against every peasant Insurrection  in Bengal including INDIGO Revolt. some of them even owned INDIGO Centres and used the Aboriginal people for INDIGO harvesting and TEA plantation. since then, the Tribal areas have turned into Open markets for Bonded labour as well as women! The Civil society never supported Snthal, Munda, Bheel, KOl revolts. Intellectual Support to naxal bari is a ROMANTIC Myth created by brahmin writers denying the role of SC, ST and OBC as well as Muslim Rural Folk who sacrificed their lives in thousands.

Since the ENACTMENT of Marichjhanpi Genocide, no civil socety or Intelligentsia ever demanded JUSTICE for the ETHNIC CLEANSING of dalit Refugees from Dandakaranya. The Intelligentsia continued to support the Marxist Brahaminical hegemony until recently.

They even did not speak against BIJON SETU Genocide. They Kept mum on Keshpur, Gadhpeta and Nanur Massacres!

In fact, the Global Hegemony and the CORPORATE World have launched ECONOMIC Reforms and whatsoever RESISTANCE must be WIPED out. Thus, the Marxist became the first target as they have been BLOCKING Economic Reforms and DISINVESTMENT, FDI and FII. They withdrew support on the ISSUE of Nuclear Agreement with USA. They also protest fascist HINDUTVA as well as ZIONISM. They opposed Strategic Realliance in US and ISRAEL lead. Thus, for the first time World bank factor to dominate and decide market affairs came in FRONT to OBLIGE the ILLUMININATI which ultimately MANIPULATED the MANDATE for the CONTINUITY of Genocide culture all over India and further has to implement and execute Mass Destruction agenda. TMC Supremo Mamata Bannerjee has MODIFIED her Election menifesto in TMC agenda in accordance with the HUNDRED days` agenda of the Desi ILLUMINATI, India Incs. being most of them BRAHMINS only, they never supported the Dalit Refugees, Resrvation and quota for the SC, ST and OBC and Empowerment of Minorities as well as women.

Hence, the PROACTIVE role played by the INTELLIGENTSIA and CIVIL Society aided by doubtful NGOs with Global Coverage and INFLATED Brahmin resistance Hegemony raise more than any Single question as they support the CONGRESS TMC Alliance and vote for DR Manmohan singh the Head of the LPG Mafia ruling! Why do the INTELLECTUALS and CIVIC society SKIP subaltern studies, issues of aboriginal and Indigenous and minority communities and fail to pin POINT CONG ENTERPRISE of ZIONIST GENOCIDE suported by the FASCIST Hindutva.

Sudden EMERGENCE of Intelligentsia and CIVIL society amidst  MONOPOLISTIC Agression and being BRANDED with TMC and CONG, discarding ideology, is not out of doubt.

While the CIVIL Society and Intelligentsia , failed to stand with the ABORIGINAL Indiegenous Black untouchables` FIGHT  for their right as Indian citizen to ensure EQUALITY and JUSTICE, HOW COULD they dare to dictate the means and ways of a Mass RESISTNCE, specilly the Manusmriti ZIONIST Hegemony virtually have not to face whatsoevr RESISTANCE from any social or productive forces.

Why do we dare to deprive the Suffering, straving People to LODGE a STRONG and UNITED Protest? We know that Shaheede aazam bhatasingh and his companions were branded as TERRORISTS. Netaji was called TRAITER.

The MEDIA flashed LALGARH in MAOIST Control from few days back before the OPERATION. The STATE Power has got every right for BLOOD BATH and VIOLENCE with ULTIMATE STRIKE POWER and License to KILL.

Democracy fail to INCLUDE the starving tribals into Main stream. They feel that LAW and ORDER is a machinery for REPRESSION. The lose home, land, forest, water, livelihod and life. NO HEARING whatsoever! If they have chosen the TRADITIONAL option of INSURRECTION as an attemopt to live afresh, what right have we to disassude?

Have all the TRIBAL people all over the TWO thousand odd vilages joined maoist Party?

If it is true , then DEMOCRACY, Intelligentsia , civil society and Governace have no RELEVANCE in LALGARH!

How many MAOISTS do reside in Lalgarh, let the people know!

If the TRIBAL population is EN BLOCK  in no means MAOIST, why the STATE Power has DECIDED to KILL them in CROSS FIRE?

Why no INTERACTION Is possible?

The Governments Pleads TALKS and the MAOIST also want TALKS? Who BLOCKS the MEETING?


A day after reclaiming the Lalgarh block headquarters, security forces started combing the surrounding villages in this

West Bengal area on Sunday to search for hiding Maoist rebels, weapons and leaders of a tribal group that have declared the zone "liberated".Meanwhile, the visiting intellectuals has complained that women and children were being tortured.

On the fourth day of the operation launched by the state government to flush out Maoists from this troubled zone in West Midnapore district, senior officials were holding a high level meeting in Kolkata to take stock of the progress made by the joint forces of the centre and the state and chart out a roadmap for the future.

The situation in West Bengal's Lalgarh area, where security forces are fighting to clear a Maoist siege, is "sensitive" and "tense",

home minister P Chidambaram said on Sunday while asking political leaders to avoid going to the conflict zones. Meanwhile,Left parties on Sunday sought Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's intervention to ensure that anti-Maoist operations in Lalgarh were not "adversely complicated" by statements and actions of some union ministers belonging to Trinamool Congress.

Without naming Mamata Banerjee-led party, 16 Left MPs wrote to the Prime Minister maintaining that some members of the Union Council of Ministers were reportedly proceeding to the affected areas and making public comments "which are adversely complicating the operations against the Maoists".


The letter by the MPs belonging to CPI (M), CPI, RSP and Forward Bloc came following some reported statements on by certain ministers and TC leaders against joint operations by state police and central paramilitary forces.

The Left MPs said Singh had he described Maoist activities as one of the gravest threats to internal security and dispatched central security forces following the state government's request to launch joint operations.


"In this situation, we seek your personal intervention to ensure that the joint operations against the Maoists are not adversely complicated by utterances and actions of some members of the Union Council of Ministers as reported by the media," they said.


The signatories to the letter include Sitaram Yechury, Brinda Karat, Basudeb Acharia, Shyamal Chakraborty and Mohd Amin (all CPI-M), D Raja (CPI), Abani Roy (RSP), Barun Mukherjee (AIFB).




"The situation in Lalgarh is sensitive and continues to be tense," Chidambaram  said while also making a reference to a call for a two-day bandh from Monday given by the CPI-Maoist in five naxal-affected states of Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Orissa and West Bengal..

"I appeal to all citizens especially political leaders, NGOs and others not to go to the conflict areas," he said in a statement here.

The home minister said the security forces must carry out their work without "distraction".

The security forces, which have reclaimed control of key Lalgarh police station area, were on Sunday pushing deeper into the region to break the Maoist siege of 17 villages considered to be strongholds of the ultras and tribals backed by them.

Meanwhile, in view of the two-day bandh call given by the CPI-Maoist, the Centre has asked five Naxal-hit states to remain alert against possible "demonstrative acts of violence" by left-wing extremists.

The alert was issued by the Union Home Ministry on the basis of intelligence inputs.

After reclaiming control of key Lalgarh police station area, security forces on Sunday pushed deeper to break the Maoist siege of 17 villages considered strongholds of the ultras and tribals backed by them.


Security sources said the troops consisting of CRPF, BSF and West Bengal police started moving from Lalgarh to Ramgarh in an operation aimed at sanitising the main road and other connecting routes and wresting control of the 17 villages. But the 19-km journey from Lalgarh, which the troops reclaimed on Saturday, is likely to be one of the toughest as the road has been mined and the area heavily forested.


The strategy of the forces will focus on wresting control of Barapelia, Chotopelia and Dalilpurchak in West Midnapore district where top Maoist leaders were reportedly holed up, senior police officers engaged in the operation said. Barapelia is the home of Maoist-backed People's Committee against Police Atrocity (PCPA) convener Chatradhar Mahato and the PCPA headquarters.


The West Bengal government will give "serious thought" to imposing a ban on the Maoists, chief minister Mr Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said yesterday.


The chief minister, who met the Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, and the home minister, Mr P Chidambaram, told reporters here that 18 of the state's 241 blocks were affected by Maoist violence. He said the home minister had asked the state government to ban the Maoists and, "we will have to give it a serious thought". Mr Bhattacharjee said he had informed the Central leaders about the police operation against the Maoists in the Lalgarh area. The joint operation, he said, would take some time to rid the area of the Maoists.


On the Maoists' political links, Mr Bhattacharjee said he knew the Trinamul Congress had "strong links" with the Police Santras Birodhi Public Committee, that is supported by Leftist ultras, and its leader Chatradhara Mahato was part of the Trinamul Congress. Mr Bhattacharjee however gave a clean chit to the Congress party.



On the other hand,
Softening their stand, People's Committee against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) chief Chatradhar Mahato, who met the intellectuals, today appealed to the government and the Maoists alike to come to the negotiation table and resolve the Lalgarh conflict.
 
"We are caught in the crossfire between the two sides. We have no association with the Maoists but our villagers are leaving their homes in fear of police atrocities and bullets," Mahato said.


"The Maoists have no right to kill people, terrorise them and burn their homes creating a reign of terror in the entire area," State Chief Secretary Asok Mohan Chakraborty said here.


Mr. Chakraborty warned that anyone committing punishable offence under IPC would have to face consequences.


Intellectuals of Bengal, under the umbrella of Swajan, visited Lalgarh and spoke to the villagers and Peoples' Committee against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) members as police operation entered its fourth day today.
 
"We request both the government and the Maoists to put down arms. The innocent villagers are suffering as they are caught in the crossfire between the two sides," said filmmaker Aparna Sen in Lalgarh.


The team includes noted playwrights Saoli Mitra and Kaushik Sen among others. "We came across women who were stripped and beaten up and villagers said their drinking water sources were dirtied with human excreta and urine by the forces," Sen said.
 
Sen and her colleagues urged Mahato not to resort to armed movement so that they could dissociate them from the Maoists.

Briefing reporters after a high-level review meeting convened by Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee at the state secretariat, Mr. Chakraborty said the situation at Lalgarh was still very critical and the joint forces hardly made any move from Saturday's position.


"Central paramilitary forces, who have already reached Lalgarh, Pirakata, Bhimpur and Sarenga, are trying to sanitise the entire area and instill confidence among villagers," he said.


He said the Central forces were attacked at one of these villages by the Maoists, but the attack was repulsed.


Mr. Chakraborty said statements by Maoist leaders and those of the People's Committee against Police Atrocity (PCPA) show that "they have a close nexus".


No decision had yet been taken on banning the CPI-Maoist in the state, Mr. Chakraborty said.


Earlier, state Home Secretary Ardhendu Sen said the ban on the Maoists was a political decision.


He claimed that the villagers were now helping the security forces and they even arranged for bath of women police personnel.


He said two policemen were injured when Maoists hurled bombs and fired a few rounds yesterday at Kadasol, adding a CRPF jawan had died in heat stroke.


Mr. Chakraborty appealed to intellectuals, Union and State Ministers, VVIPs and journalists to refrain from visiting Lalgarh. He referred to a delegation of intellectuals from Kolkata, including film personality Aparna Sen, which visited the area on Sunday morning.


Adequate security cover to VVIPs and journalists might not be possible at this point, he said.


He pleaded ignorance about top Maoist leader Kishenji's present whereabouts, saying he did not know whether any top Maoist leaders have left the place or are still camping there.


He also said the state government has taken adequate steps to tackle the situation in the wake of the 48-hour bandh called by the CPI-Maoists from Monday.


Responding to allegations of police atrocities on villagers of Lalgarh and adjoining areas, West Bengal Chief Secretary Ashok Mohan Chakraborty said the government would ensure that the villagers did not suffer in police operation.

He urged the Maoists and the PCAPA to give up armed protests.  "We urge them to lay down arms. Police is in our control but those resorting to politics of violence are not in our control. It is not safe for anyone - either the intellectuals, NGOs or the mediapersons- to venture in that area."

Police and paramilitary forces on Saturday entered Lalgarh town and regained its control.

The forces marched for miles behind an anti-landmine vehicle and  negotiated forested terrains to take back the town of Lalgarh, about 170 km from Kolkata.

The area was overrun by Maoists who killed at least 10 ruling CPI-M members in the past weeks.


Led by CRPF crack jawans and backed by anti-insurgency commandos, Bengal police officers reached the once-besieged town around noon, crossing the 6 km stretch of Jhitka forest - the prime site of several IED explosions and Maoist strikes. There was no battle casualty but a CRPF jawan died because of the excessive heat that the forces had to endure in a march that lasted nine hours -- from 3am to noon.

Another contingent, approaching Lalgarh from Goaltore, diagonally opposite to the Jhitka route, suffered a setback when Maoists trigerred an IED explosion injuring five policemen while forces were crossing the Pingbani forests. The security forces had planned a pincer movement to establish control on Lalgarh and clear the roads in the area before fanning out into the Maoist-dominated villages of Lalgarh in the next phase of the operation.

"Reaching Lalgarh was crucial for us. But this is only the only the beginning. More surprises are awaiting the Maoists," DIG (Midnapore Range) Praveen Kumar said. However, the IED explosion near Pirakata Police Camp on Friday, was a cause for concern. "We will now try to revive our old police camps, set up new ones within a gap of two kilometres to improve our surveillance on roads leading to Lalgarh for better force deployment," Kumar said.

State home secretary Ardhendu Sen went to the Kalikunda air base on Saturday in Midnapore from where he made an aerial reccee of the trouble-torn villages in the Lalgarh block and adjoining areas. Director General (Operations) Bhupinder Singh accompanied the home secretary.

Preparations to enter Lalgarh along the Jhitka route began before dawn. Central forces fanned out to the Jhitka village within one kilometre radius from the forest cover at around 3 am and cordoned off the village. CRPF jawans detained six local youths and tried to get information about the Maoist gameplan from within the forest. They suspected the Maoists might trigger blasts and lay ambushes. A little later, two units of COBRA spread into the forests from Bhimpur in a diamond shape only to meet in the backyard of the Lalgarh Police Station.

As many as 90 COBRA jawans maintained surveillance in the forest, as the force started moving from 7am. Senior police officers namely DIG (Midnapore Range) Praveen Kumar, SP West Midnapore Manoj Verma, CRPF commanding officer Dipak Tushar Banerjee led the force with anti-mine vehicles.

There has been little resistance from the Naxalites and few battle casualties, thanks mostly to the slow and methodical pace of the march. The security forces took a total 45 hours to travel the distance from Midnapore to Lalgarh which is otherwise a two-and-a-half hour drive. 


Security reinforcements comprising several companies of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and Border Security Force (BSF), as also state armed police started off from district headquarters Midnapore for the Bhimpur camp, about five km from this town.

Small teams of the security forces have started scouring nearby villages for Maoist rebels, as also leaders of the People's Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) tribal body that launched a seven-month-long agitation that made the area a virtual free zone.

The forces were searching cars at Pirakulli village, where the Maoists had engaged the security personnel in heavy firing Friday.

Meanwhile, Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee has instructed two union ministers of state Mukul Roy and Sisir Adhikari to proced to Midnapore town and stay put there for the next few days, party sources said.

A section of intellectuals who arrived here Saturday comprise those who have of late been bitter critics of the state's Left Front government. "We have visited some interior villages and spoken to the people. We also spoke to Chhatradhar Mahato. People are living in danger. They are very afraid that police may beat them up," claimed theatre personality Saonli Mitra.

She said some of the villages were empty, while children and women were being beaten up. "We have been told that women are being molested, and water has been contaminated in some villages. People are living without food and water," she alleged.

She however said the intellectuals were opposed to the violent politics of killing indulged in by the Maoists, and appealed to both the rebels and the administration not to use arms.

Filmmaker Aparna Sen said: "We are seeing police everywhere. I have never seen so many police in one area."

The intellectuals arrived here a day after top Maoist leader K Koteshwar Rao alias Kishanjee appealed to them to come to Lalgarh and take the initiative for finding a solution to the problems of the tribal people through a dialogue between the rebels and the administration.

On Saturday, the security forces claimed to have gunned down four Maoists. The forces marched through a forest to establish their control over Lalgarh Saturday. However, the rebels hit back, injuring six policemen in a landmine blast.

Two policemen were injured in a landmine blast on Friday.

A paramilitary trooper, participating in the operation, died of heat stroke Saturday, Inspector General of state police (Law and Order) Raj Kanojia told IANS in Kolkata.

This is the first death among security forces after they started the march.

Lalgarh has been on the boil since last November when a landmine exploded on the route of the convoy of Chief Minister Bhattacharjee and then central ministers Ram Vilas Paswan and Jitin Prasada.

Complaining of police atrocities after the blast, angry tribals launched an agitation virtually cutting off the area from the rest of the district.

During the last few days, the agitators have torched CPI-M offices, driven away the ruling party's supporters and forced the police to leave, thereby establishing a virtual free zone.

Maoists are active in three western districts of the state - West Midnapore, Bankura and Purulia. They also backed the Trinamool Congress-sponsored movement against the state government's bid to establish a chemical hub at Nandigram in East Midnapore district.


Even as the state government struggles with Maoists in Lalgarh, CPI parliamentarian Gurudas Dasgupta blamed the CPM-led government for the crisis, saying that lack of development is the root cause of the tribal discontentment.


"The situation could have been defused by taking economic and administrative measures to keep the tribals from going over to the Maoists. Action should also have been taken to stop the Maoists from building up strength," Dasgupta said.


He was speaking at the opening ceremony of the 24th state committee meeting of All India Trade Union Congress on Saturday.


"Why was nothing done to resolve the Lalgarh situation in all these months? Why did they allow matters to reach this stage?" Dasgupta said.


He shot down the contention that the government delayed in taking steps to control the crisis as it was haunted by the Nandigram fiasco.


"Fearing a repeat of Nandigram is no excuse. Lalgarh cannot be compared to Nandigram as that issue was less significant compared with what is going on in Lalgarh," he added.


Mamata fumes over Centre's cold shoulder on Lalgarh

21 Jun 2009, 0411 hrs IST, TNN

KOLKATA: Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee is cut up with the Centre for not consulting her party, a UPA partner, before kickstarting the


Lalgarh operation. "We will tell the Centre about the real nature of the problem in Lalgarh if we are asked. We won't speak on our own and will hold our heads high," she said in Kolkata on Saturday.

According to Mamata, the Lalgarh operation was stage-managed by chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee following the defeat of CPM in the Lok Sabha election. According to her, CPM had an understanding with the Maoists. To support her claim, she pointed to CPM's victories in the panchayat and Assembly elections in the Maoist-dominated areas. It was for the same reason that People's Committee against Police Atrocities had called a poll boycott that helped CPM win the Jhargram Lok Sabha seat, she said. She also raised the question of the state government failing to ban CPI (Maoist) in Bengal.

Accusing some prominent CPM leaders, including a minister, of remote-controlling the Lalgarh operation, she said they had helped the Maoists escape right at the beginning of the operation. The ransacking of the house of a prominent CPM leader in the Lalgarh area was also a "drama", she said, alleging that it was staged not by Maoists, but by a group of dissident CPM supporters in the presence of select mediamen to give the incident wide publicity.

"CPM had taken the help of the same Maoists to capture Keshpur, Garbeta and Khanakul." According to her, the Maoists in Andhra Pradesh and those in West Bengal were not the same. "Here, they are creations of CPM." Even Maoist leader Kishanji could be a creation of CPM, she said.

She said that if the districts of Midnapore West, Purulia and Bankura were really affected by Maoist activity, they should be declared disturbed and anti-insurgency operations handed over to the Centre. The current operation was being conducted by the state government, which has asked for the Centre's help. She demanded a similar operation in Keshpur and Garbeta to seize illegal arms.

Denying any link between Trinamool and Maoists, Mamata said she had no objection to Maoists being arrested. But, if the police harassed and tortured common people, Trinamool would protest. These people were not Maoists, but were being used as shields, she felt. "Chhatradhar Mahato was a Trinamool member two years ago but when we learnt that he had Maoist links we expelled him from the party," Mamata said. She claimed that CPM was trying to capture lost territory, using the operation as a screen.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Kolkata-/Mamata-fumes-over-Centres-cold-shoulder-on-Lalgarh/articleshow/4681905.cms

CPM central committee backs govt's Lalgarh steps

NEW DELHI, 20 JUNE: The CPI-M central committee today backed the West Bengal government's efforts to use "both political and administrative measures" to free Lalgarh from Maoist gangs, and to ensure the rule of law.
On the first day of its two-day meeting, the central committee took note of the Maoist violence in the state and said in Lalgarh, Maoist gangs with the direct and indirect backing of the Trinamul Congress had "created a zone of terror against all CPI-M members and supporters." The Maoist leaders in the area had spoken about their contacts and help to the Trinamul Congress led alliance in all the developments in Nandigram, it said. The committee said that since March this year 53 party cadres were "mercilessly butchered." In Lalgarh of West Midnapore district eight CPI-M members and workers were killed.
"Utilising the electoral setback of the CPI-M, armed gangs led, in the main, by the Trinamul Congress have burnt and vandalised houses of party comrades and party offices and like in Khejuri and other parts of East Midnapore, forcibly driven out hundreds of sympathisers and members," the central committee said.
The party said this attack against the CPI-M and its workers and sympathisers is a part of a wider game plan by powerful vested interests. The West Bengal Left Front chairman, Mr Biman Bose, told reporters that the proposal to ban the Maoists in the state would be discussed in the state Left Front.
Party studies poll reverses
The CPI-M's central committee today began examining the party governments' "mistakes" in West Bengal and Kerala, that caused reverses in the Lok Sabha poll, but the party is unlikely to give up the goal of a "third alternative". The committee is considering a report submitted by the general secretary, Mr Prakash Karat, on the poll performance that admits that the party could not "read" the voters' mind to decide a proper strategy. sns


40 minutes of living on the edge...

sabyasachi roy

KOLKATA 20 JUNE: For 40 minutes, I stared death in the face. There was no shadow of fear when I had started from Lalgarh. But when I reached Kulidaha at 4.30 p.m. after travelling through Jhitka jungle, Bhimpur and Koima, the sight of three gun-toting youths with their faces covered greeted me at a distance of 50 feet. I asked my driver to pull over. Six rounds of bullets fired in the air stopped me in my tracks. When the youths found me standing rooted to the spot even after two minutes, they fired again. We were sent on our way back to Lalgarh.
After travelling some 500m, we were stopped by some 300 PSBPC supporters near Koima. The teenage guerrillas, 30 brandishing guns and the rest bows and arrows and axes felled trees and blocked our way. With inscrutable faces they watched me try to contact police in vain. Staring down the barrel of a gun, I requested directions to Midnapore only to be waved towards Kulidaha. But not before I had satisfied the group's queries about the strength of security forces deployed in Lalgarh.
5.10. p.m. I was back in Kulidaha and facing another road block. "I just want to go to Midnapore," I told the gun-toting youth after telling them that their Koima cadres had left it to them to lead me out. A face softened. I was asked to take the rutted lane that would eventually take me to the main road at Neemtala. Suddenly brave, I sought an escort. Darkness was descending when the PSBC activists brought us there.

http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=2&theme=&usrsess=1&id=258551


"CPI(M) using 'Lalgarh formula' to wrest control" Special Correspondent



Mamata Banerjee

KOLKATA: The CPI(M)-led West Bengal government is keeping Central forces in the forefront to perpetrate atrocities on the people of Lalgarh with an eye on establishing its control over the area, Trinamool Congress chief and Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee alleged here on Saturday.

If the CPI(M) did not withdraw within 48 hours its allegation that the Trinamool had links with the Maoists, her party would take to the streets and launch an agitation demanding that the State government be sacked.

Ms. Banerjee criticised what she described as the CPI(M)'s attempts at "capturing" different places employing "the Lalgarh formula." On the Lalgarh offensive, she wondered why the government had not taken "this step all these days."

"They [the CPI-M] are torturing innocent people in the name of action against Maoists. This we condemn. We are against terrorism; we want peace," Ms. Banerjee said, demanding that the Centre declare the districts of Bankura, Purulia and West Medinipur disturbed under the Disturbed Area Act.

Reacting strongly to Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee's comment in New Delhi earlier in the day that Chhatradhar Mahato, convener of the Maoist-backed Police Santrash Birodhi Janashadharaner Committee, was a member of the Trinamool, Ms. Banerjee said: "We have driven out Chhatradhar [from the party] a long time ago."

The Chief Minister "should withdraw" his remark "or be sacked," she demanded.

Asked about Maoist leader Koteshwar Rao alias Kishenji's remark to a local television channel questioning Ms. Banerjee's silence on Lalagrh developments when it was the Maoists who supported her party during the agitation in Nandigram, Ms Banerjee said: "There were no Maoists in Singur, Nandigram. It is the CPI(M) workers who are the Maoists."

As regards the Maoist leader's utterances, she said, "I do not know who these people are. … It is their [CPI-M] drama".

On reports from New Delhi quoting the Chief Minister as saying that his government would consider banning the Maoists, she said: "Impression, expression, confusion and contradiction are all related in such a package. What is the net result? We want net results."

Related stories:
Security forces exchange fire with Maoists Letters to the Editor on Lalgarh crisis Centre backs appeal for talks with Maoists "Charge against Trinamool proved" No link with Maoists: Trinamool Help resolve Lalgarh crisis-Editorial Trouble in Lalgarh - in pics Problem at Lalgarh spreading: official "PSBJC will accept democratic forces' support" Tribals hold rally in Lalgarh

http://www.hindu.com/2009/06/21/stories/2009062160470800.htm



After ambush, rattled cops insist on Central 'protection'

21 Jun 2009, 0525 hrs IST, Jayanta Gupta & Falguni Banerjee, TNN

PINGBONI (BANKURA): What will happen when paramilitary forces leave Lalgarh? TOI had a glimpse of this on Saturday when a police contingent —

heavily armed but without the protection of central forces — was ambushed at Pingboni, 16 km from Lalgarh. Rattled by the attack, many constables have reportedly refused to carry out any operation without Central forces accompanying them.

In the two-hour-long encounter, police struggled to see the attackers, some 500-700 yards away, because the 500-strong force did not have a singe binocular. They borrowed the TOI photographer's camera to use the tele-lens to check on the attackers' weapons and movements. What's worse, when six of them were hit and lay injured, police did not have any vehicle to take them to hospital. They borrowed the TOI car.

The battle spot is located 2km from Goaltore on the way to Ramgarh via Kantashole. It marks the beginning of the Maoist stronghold in Bankura and extends to West Midnapore, where the battle for Lalgarh is underway.

A contingent of state police and Eastern Frontier Rifles (EFR) jawans - led by Burdwan additional SP Humayun Kabir - stopped at the nearly deserted Pingboni village at 3.45 pm after spotting movement behind some embankments on the fields. The same unit had passed by this very spot on Friday. But instead of setting up base and engaging with villagers, they left after roughing up some youths and smashing a few shops. The withdrawal gave Maoists ample time to regroup and take position for Saturday's ambush.

As the policemen waited, assessing the threat, they saw mobs charging towards them from either side of the road at 4 pm. Some policemen rushed forward with lathis, only to scatter as arrows were shot at them. Suddenly, a deafening explosion ripped through. One of the policemen had apparently tripped a booby trap - an IED rigged to a tree. That was the signal for the Maoists to open fire. It was 4.15 pm. Dazed from the blast, the policemen now faced a hail of bullets and arrows.

A sub-inspector and three constables lay injured in the blast. The attack took the force completely by surprise. Policemen scrambled behind trees and started returning fire with INSAS and AK-47s. TOI was the only media team present during the encounter.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/After-ambush-rattled-cops-insist-on-Central-protection/articleshow/4682472.cms

Maoists breed in swamps of hunger and anger

21 Jun 2009, 0145 hrs IST, Aditya Nigam

Media commentary on Lalgarh seems to miss out one crucial fact: Till less than a month ago, it was not a Maoist fortress but a place where a

fascinating experiment with a new kind of politics was being done. Maoists were there but they had to go along with the mood inside Lalgarh, which was certainly not one of forming 'dalams' or roving guerrilla squads. In fact, as People's Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCPA) leader Chhatradhar Mahato told The Times of India this week, "if the state government had done even 10% of what we have done, the situation would have been very different."

From Naxalbari to Lalgarh: We will spread this fire, says the Maoist from Lalgarh | No revolution for old radicals | Blog: Kolkata's missing millionaires and Lalgarh

For more than five months, the PCPA, with popular participation, built reservoirs, dug tube-wells and built roads in the area. The Lalgarh Sanhati Mancha, based in Kolkata, collected money and helped set up a health centre. A committee with five men and five women would take decisions. Compare this with any other place where Maoists are active and the difference is immediately apparent. The Maoists, known for their impatience with any kind of developmental work, put up with this.

In fact, Koteswara Rao, a senior leader in charge of Maoist operations, even told some journalists that "the CPI(M) government is not implementing any Central government projects". The reference was clearly to the non-implementation of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA). It also showed the extent to which Lalgarh's issues are different from the ones the Maoists usually like to take up.

All this will be in the past, a few days from now. Already, marauding Maoist gangs have taken over and emerged in their preferred mode. The model of Chhattisgarh or Andhra Maoist-dominated areas will be replicated and soon, there will only be armed Maoist gangs and the armed forces of the state. All the possibilities offered by democratic politics and developmental activities, including through the NREGA, will become impossible. One can even wager that the Maoists will decree the NREGA "unlawful". For, along with the NREGA and development, comes the state.

True to their style, the Maoist cadres who roamed freely thus far will come out only under cover of darkness, leaving Lalgarh's hapless inhabitants to face the brutality of the security forces. This has already begun. Ordinary people will be arrested and tortured, while the guerrillas move to safer havens.

The CPI(M) is fond of narcissistically flaunting its world record of 32 years in power in West Bengal as "proof" of its performance. But in the past two decades, a new kind of virtually totalitarian power has been put in place. The local panchayat, MLA, district administration, police and the ubiquitous 'party' act in tandem. There is no avenue forum for redress, no way to appeal against corruption, non-implementation of schemes and the absence of simple developmental activity such as water and electricity. There have been starvation deaths in neighbouring areas and in the tea gardens in the north but there is no way of even making the CPI(M) acknowledge this. No other state has such a closed situation, where power speaks only to itself.

Classically, in such situations, piecemeal correction is impossible. Discontent slowly builds into anger, waiting for the opportune moment to strike. That moment began with Nandigram, which showed the arrogance of the party bosses in dealing with peasants who had long supported them. Successive elections since then have shown that the dam has broken. Mass anger was waiting to burst forth and the Maoists were waiting in the wings, ready to take over. They have taken over. In Lalgarh, we are in for the long haul.

But the lesson here is not just for the CPI(M). It is for the Congress as well and for the UPA and everyone else. The poorest of the poor cannot be left to fend for themselves while the elites party. The NREGA, RTI and Forest Act are a good beginning but they need to be followed through and their implementation monitored.

Aditya Nigam is a Fellow at Delhi's Centre for the Study of Developing Societies. His new book, 'After Utopia: Modernity and Socialism in the Postcolony', is soon to be published

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Special-Report/Maoists-breed-in-swamps-of-hunger-and-anger/articleshow/4681983.cms

No revolution for old radicals

21 Jun 2009, 0135 hrs IST, Avijit Ghosh


Gautam Sen lived dangerously in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He was part of a group who took a police sub-inspector hostage in order to get
Troops move into Maoist-held territory
Troops move into Maoist-held territory on Saturday.
fellow college students released from the lock-up. He occasionally drank tea at a stall in front of a police station even when he was one of the most wanted men in the area. And like many naxalites of the '70s, he travelled the West Bengal hinterland by night, trying to build a guerrilla force to annihilate class enemies. "I was lucky to have failed," he now says.

From Naxalbari to Lalgarh: We will spread this fire, says the Maoist from Lalgarh | Maoists breed in swamps of hunger and anger | Blog: Kolkata's missing millionaires and Lalgarh

Sen, who has given up guerrilla warfare but remains involved with people's movements, finds it hard to comprehend the Maoists' strategy in Lalgarh. "After their armed action, the Maoists called it a 'liberated zone'. It was a huge tactical mistake. By saying so, they allowed the state to claim the moral high ground and proclaim, 'we are going against militants'. On the contrary, Nandigram became a legitimate people's movement cutting across party loyalties because it spoke of land and livelihood. As a consequence, the state tries to earn credibility to suppress the legitimate resistance of the poor and the oppressed," he says, with the wisdom of a 62-year-old who has seen it all.

His story is fascinating. He belongs to a middle-class Calcutta home and was radicalized as a student leader in Durgapur's Regional Engineering College. By the time he was in his fourth year of college, the Naxalbari movement had begun. Elsewhere in the world, the Vietnam war and Chinese Cultural Revolution were happening. Student activism was at its peak. Sen's life-changing moment occurred on June 1, 1969. A minor traffic accident led students to battle police near campus. The angry young people ransacked a police station. When a sub-inspector arrived on campus, he was taken hostage. The next day, 150 policemen stormed the campus. Every one was beaten up. One student was killed in the firing. "Till then we had a few naxalites. But the firing converted at least 30 of us who became full-timers. At least 600-700 students became naxal sympathizers," says Sen.

He went underground and became an organizer in Burdwan district. By day, he stayed in the homes of landless labourers; by night, he travelled around trying to raise a guerrilla army. Often his only meal would be a bit of puffed rice. He was allegedly on the police 'hit list'. "On one occasion, I was asked to leave a shelter at 4 am because it was no longer safe for me," he says. By 1973, Sen was disillusioned. "I could see there was no revolutionary condition as envisaged by our leaders."

He went back to college to get his electrical engineering degree, but never took a job. Instead, he formed a Marxist study circle and wrote extensively about the class character of the Indian bourgeoisie and state.

He believes the future is bleak for the radical left movement in West Bengal. "Today one part of the extreme Left has been Trinamoolized, another has got NGOized. Some have become Maoists and the rest have formed splinter groups," he says.

But he says there is space aplenty for those who reject parliamentary politics as well as Maoist-style guerrilla struggle. "Singur, Nandigram and Lalgarh indicate the potential of people's initiatives from below. Unfortunately, there is no leadership or control from below."

But the former rebel is enthused that in places like Argentina and Mexico, people are coming out with innovative ways of protest. "In Argentina, workers are taking over factories abandoned by the owners and managing them. In a small town in Mexico, people set up an alternative form of governance over a town for several months. Even in Lalgarh, initially the gram committee of the protestors had equal number of men and women," says Sen. "I am an optimist by nature. The human race will always find new ways to struggle."

FARC (Colombia)
Formed in the 1960s, it still has 6,000-10,000 members. The cadre belongs to indigenous tribes. It claims to be fighting a class war but its critics say Farc is running the cocaine trade

Zapatista (Mexico)
Led by the pipe-smoking masked Subcomandante Marcos, the Zapatista Army of National Liberation have been in a declared war "against the Mexican state" since 1994. Their social base is mostly indigenous

Shining Path (Peru)
Made up of indigenous peasants, the guerrilla group has influenced rebels across the world. After the 1992 capture of its leader Abimael Guzmán, the group has been almost inactive
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Special-Report/No-revolution-for-old-radicals/articleshow/4681964.cms
MJ Akbar

West Bengal: Next time, the volcano

21 Jun 2009, 0047 hrs IST, M J Akbar

The Left may have lost the plot in Bengal, but has anyone found it? The Congress lost the plot between 1962 and 1967, and it was a while before

anyone found another narrative.

In 1962, the Communists were on the wrong side of nationalism, since they refused to condemn China as the aggressor in the traumatic October war. The venerable Jyoti Basu spent a few months in jail along with his comrades. The party corrected this error internally; the pro-China extremists moved away, developing their own tactics for revolution. The Naxalites (named after Naxalbari, a small village in North Bengal) proclaimed Mao Zedong as their chairman, although it was never made clear whether Mao himself was enthused by the honour.

The Communists had already split formally. The breakaway CPI(M) found the correct balance. It was sufficiently radical for the first post-Independence generation that had begun to filter into Kolkata's College Street, and non-violent enough for the parents who had jobs that the Naxalites seemed determined to destroy. The classic Indian formula for conflict resolution, after all, has been to stop on this side of conflict.

The Congress was not immune from turmoil. Pranab Mukherjee should remember that age well. He was the principal lieutenant of the man who broke the Bengal Congress, Ajoy Mukherjee, and went on, as head of the Bangla Congress, to become chief minister of the United Front that was sworn in after the 1967 elections. Jyoti Basu was home minister, and for the first time the street lamps of Kolkata were covered in red paper to celebrate the rising of a red sun.

The alliance was unsustainable, because ideology was still alive in the 1960s. The chronic instability of coalition politics brought the Congress back to power in 1971; Pranab Mukherjee moved, deftly, to the centre when Mrs Indira Gandhi split the organization in 1969.

The great game-changer of that decade was the Kolkata riot of 1964, a consequence of violence in East Pakistan and some wildly inflammatory reporting in the Kolkata media. It is often forgotten that Bengal is a Partition province. The CPI(M) won the confidence of Muslims when its cadre mobilized to protect the community in 1964. Biman Bose, now CPI(M) state secretary, was one of the young men who stood at the corner of a Moulali street, daring arsonists and killers to cross the Marxist line. A relationship of over four decades was finally broken when Muslims deserted the CPI(M) in 2009.

The Left emerged out of the chaos and violence that fractured Bengal; as it dissipates, will the vacuum be filled by violence? It is tempting to see the immediate future as a mirror image, with variations, of the 1960s. The Maoists are back, without Mao graffiti on the walls or urban terrorism, but better organized. The images of men and women armed with bows and arrows in Midnapore are eerily reminiscent of the 1960s and early 1970s. They also prove that many parts of our country still live in the bow-and-arrow era.

The battle for Lalgarh (Red Fortress) is both literal and metaphorical. Although they never admitted as much, the CPI(M) and Congress cooperated in the first war against Naxalites, between 1967 and 1973. They are being forced to do so again.

But their political strategies were different. The Congress used state force against Naxalites and thought it had done its job; the CPI(M) finessed the Naxalites politically, through land reform. It is a pity no one remembers Harekrishna Konar and Promode Dasgupta, its architects. They gave food security to the peasant, while Jyoti Basu, as home minister and chief minister, ensured life security. Nandigram is a powerful symbol of departure, because a Left government snatched the peasant's land and then attacked those who protested.

Nature, and political nature, abhors a vacuum. The space vacated by the CPI(M) retreat is being visibly occupied: those who vote are with Mamata Banerjee; those who don't vote in rural Bengal are gravitating around the Maoists. The first category has larger numbers, but fluctuations are a matter of opportunity. Courage and consistency could take Mamata Banerjee to Writers Building, but this alone will not keep her there.

Radical is as radical does, not just as it says it will do. The peasantry, once nourished by Konar, wants the next level of prosperity. This will need phenomenal growth in the agricultural-industrial economy to meet the extraordinary upsurge in aspirations that accompanies generational change. Mamata Banerjee has about a year to prepare for a radical government that will be more than a patchwork of prematurely tired faces. It would also be unwise to forget the game-changer of the 1960s, the riots. Violence is an infectious plague, and demographic tensions always have a fuse in the tail. Bengalis believe that they are not communal. No one is communal, except in that brief moment of madness when the civilized mind crumbles.

The drama of Bengal is full of actors making powerful speeches. We need a plot, very quickly.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Special-Report/West-Bengal-Next-time-the-volcano/articleshow/4681879.cms

After PC jibe, Buddha mulls ban on Maoists

21 Jun 2009, 0402 hrs IST, TNN

NEW DELHI: West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Saturday made an indirect distinction between Trinamool and Congress by stating
Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and P Chidambaram
Union home minister P Chidambaram (L)meets West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee in New Delhi. (PTI Photo)
that TMC has strong links with the so-called people's committee in Lalgarh.

"The leader of the group, Chhatradhar Mahato, is very much a member of Trinamool Congress," he said. But, he told reporters here that in case of Congress, there is no such evidence.

CPM state secretary Biman Bose too reiterated Trinamool's relationship with Maoists.

Their remarks were seen as an attempt to drive a wedge between the Trinamool and Congress as CPM feels that the alliance between the two parties contributed to the Left defeat in West Bengal.

Not in a mood to take too many questions, Bhattacharjee's 10-minute press conference was mostly about his meeting with the Prime Minister, finance minister and home minister, and praise them for the help given to the state in dealing with situation in Lalgarh and cyclone Aila.

Even his statement about banning Maoist organization came in reply to a question. "Home minister advised me to ban this organization. We have to give it a serious thought," he said, adding that the operation in Lalgarh would take some time. The state police and the other security forces are working in tandem against the Maoists, he said. "The first column of central paramilitary forces has already reached there," he said adding that the area police station was never taken over by the Maoists. "Already, about a column of 100 policemen is stationed there," he said.

Later, Biman Bose said his party would have to consult other Left partners before taking a decision on banning the outfit.

When Bhattacharjee was asked if Maoists are running a parallel government in some parts of the state, he said, "I have no answer on this."

Speaking about his meeting with Chidambaram, Bhattacharjee said the home minister assured him that if the state government required more forces, he would be ready to send them. The government has already deployed about 1,300 personnel of CRPF and 600 BSF men.

Maintaining that out of 241 blocks in the state, 18 were "fully or partially disturbed", Bhattacharjee accused the Maoists of killing innocent citizens and engaging in extortion and many other crimes with the locals suffering heavily.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Columnists/MJ-Akbar/The-Siege-Within/West-Bengal-CM-meets-PM-Chidambaram/articleshow/4679905.cms

Our Hindutva is inclusive not narrow: BJP

21 Jun 2009, 2042 hrs IST, IANS

NEW DELHI: The BJP on Sunday reaffirmed its commitment to Hindutva - but an inclusive one, "not narrowly confined only to religious practices or

expressed in extreme forms".

In a resolution the party unanimously adopted on the second and concluding day of its national executive meeting here, the BJP said the Hindutva which it believed in was related to the "culture and ethos" of the people of the country.

"Hinduism or Hindutva is not to be understood or construed narrowly confined only to religious practices or expressed in extreme forms," the resolution said.

"It is, therefore, inclusive representing the finest imprints of our cultural and civilisational ideas. This profound concept is the real inspiration for a resurgent India with which the BJP is proud to be associated," it said.

BBC correspondent ordered to leave Iran

21 Jun 2009, 1825 hrs IST, AFP

LONDON: The BBC confirmed on Sunday that its correspondent in Iran has been asked to leave the country by the Iranian authorities amid

accusations he was helping to support post-election violence.

"With regret, Jon Leyne, the BBC's permananent correspondent in Tehran, has been asked to leave by the Iranian authorities. The BBC office remains open," a statement from the broadcaster said.

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