Lesson from the simultaneous Naxal attacks in India |
|
In the recent report on tabloids - it states that the government charged the Maoists group as terrorists - a divisive plot to change the course of issue rather than facing the truth behind the issue of Lalgarh - definitely it is the issue of LAND.
Banning the Maoist and labeling them as terrorist will not solve the problem, it will only aggravate to higher level of political upheavals because the main issue is the unjust political jurisprudence and politically motivated ethnic malpractice in distribution of lands and grabbing of lands from the tribals.
May the government re-think a hundred times before making such hedonistic policies for their own self fame and gratification. More people are dying and more people are losing their own lands which they till since time immemorial. Just as I disagree also for war... may the peace in the land reign!
Ludhu
Here, http://express.jharkhand.org.in/2009/06/lalgarh-my-life-made-me-naxalite.html Whether 'Manoj' realy exists or not, that's not an issue at all. The content of the mail is true or not that is the issue. Through 'the path of peace and harmony' 'your country, my country and our country' after the 62 years of independance is so developped that seventy percent of its population earn less than Rs. 20 a day. What a development!!
Dr. Ashish Sarkar Associate Professor School of Petroleum Technology Pandit Deendayal Petroleum University Raison, Gandhinagar 382 009 Gujarat In India, the criminal justice delivery system adopts all the tactics till the last to acquit the accused and to harass to the core the complainant.
For criminal justice system, documentary evidence is call stretch of imagination of the complainant, oral evidence is doubtful evidence, live evidence ( that is to go back to time - which is impossible ) is some evidence, to punish the accused. In India, except for the lawful owner , every one including the government is the owner and possessor of vacant land. In India , Decree of Permanent Injunction is the Decree of Permanent Impotency In India, if it is legal it make no sense, if it is illegal it makes no difference.Management makes sense and difference.. Atul Agarwal
I am getting surprised to see the write up. This fake rumor is being spreaded out by those who are keeping low knowledge about Maoists. You may differ with the tactics adopted by Maoists but their sacrifices and devotions for the cause of downtrodden and beloved Nation is incomparable. I am also of the opinion that the available democratic space in India should also be nurtured for the taking forward the people's movement. Though, it has become very difficult task after the increasing intervention of imperialist forces in India. Even then we have to explore the possibilities. Each & every party and its workers now armed with weapons and full of with muscles man terrorizing the people and having millions of black money too, are protected by the system. Do we prepare to identify them as a terrorist? Unfortunately, these people are ruling us and its followers are grabbing all opportunities/livelihood resources available for the poorest of this country. They all are organized under the garb of democracy. Can democracy be safe in the hands of these rulers? We need a genuine democracy with participatory manner where a dialogue could be held with Maoists too. Ambarish Rai Think of the colonel who lost his life yesterday.... Think of the SP who lost his life along with another 36 of our country men. How much of extortion is going on in few States in our Country in the name of extremists. Such acts of secret cell, even if they exist are not avoidable. Instead you can take a dig at the print and electronic media which shamelessy indulges in crippling the systems by not bringing out constructive criticism. It is not possible to defend our mother land from perpetrators of crime without using force, sometimes brutal though. Please do not justify all actions just because you get publicity. How many of us do not see people jumping signal when it clear red: People have become so selfish and hence one needs to spread these kind of news with utmost care. Please spread good things and do good things; god will give everyone in this country better quality of life. Arun Rajaram I would strongly suggest the Central as well as State Govts. of the naxal affected states to come together and adopt the Srilanka model wherein the Govt. goes after these miscreants and would declare the end of the war after eliminating the last naxal from the Indian soil. It is a do-able proposition if politics is shunned for a while and coordinated action is ensured. This is the only way out of the menace. Either we live or they!! Amit Basu Development Facilitator GoI-UN Convergence Programme UNICEF, New Delhi The big problem is that in India every conflict is treated only as a law an order issue and the focus is on the militant groups. The people are ignored so is the situation that leads to the conflicts. The people in these regions where displacement in the name of development is high, and most villages that are vacated in the name of security (for example in Chhattisgarh) coincide with those which the industrialists want for mines and industries. I think it is important concentrate more on the people than on the militants. That will help us to look at these conflicts as social and economic and find a political solution to it. Thank you for circulating it. Dr Walter Fernandes Director North Eastern Social Research Centre 110 Kharghuli Road (1st floor) Guwahati 781004 Assam, India
�Force alone cannot be a solution,� the former Union Home Minister, Shivraj Patil, said in the wake of the killing of 24 police personnel in the Elampatti-Regadgatta forests of Dantewada district of Bastar division in Chhattisgarh on July 9, 2007. Mr. Patil�s remarks were not intended as a critique of the Communist Party of India (Maoist) violence. They were directed, instead, at critics who were calling for massive investments in improving police counter-insurgency capabilities.
Early this month, the new Home Minister, P Chidambaram laid out a very different road map for action. In a July 7 speech to the Lok Sabha, he said �clearing out� Maoist-held areas was a precondition for initiating development work � a sharp break with conventional wisdom on the subject.
Mr. Chidambaram�s speech came just days before the slaughter of 36 police personnel at Rajnandgaon in Chhattisgarh. Preceded by the large-scale assault on West Medinipur district in West Bengal and the killings of 16 police personnel in Gadchiroli in February, the Rajnandgaon killings exposed the appallingly deficient capabilities of police personnel in Maoist-hit areas.
Fatalities in the Maoist insurgency, Union Home Ministry data shows, now exceed those claimed by Islamist violence in Jammu and Kashmir. Figures compiled by the Ministry show a steady escalation in fatalities in the grinding Maoist insurgency in central India, from 482 in 2002 to 837 in 2007, the last year for which figures have been published. Estimates by the independent South Asia Terrorism Portal, based on media reports on Maoist violence, show that fatalities by the end of June 2009 already exceeded two-thirds of all killings in 2008.
Policing in crisis - Part of the problem is well known: like most States, Chhattisgarh just doesn�t have enough police personnel even to administer routine law-and-order tasks, let alone fight an insurgency.
United Nations estimates suggest that countries ought to have a minimum of 222 police personnel for every 1,00,000 residents; many advanced countries maintain twice this level. India, figures published by the South Asia Terrorism Portal show, has a police-population ratio of 122:1,00,000. Chhattisgarh has a sanctioned strength of just 103 per 1,00,000.
Matters are made worse by large-scale vacancies, particularly at cutting-edge, mid-level officer posts. National Crime Records Bureau data shows that Chhattisgarh has in service only two-thirds of the 318 Deputy Superintendents of Police and SPs who should be on its rolls; the State had only 1,392 sub-inspectors and assistant sub-inspectors instead of the 2,194 who ought be in service. In 2006, as the Maoist insurgency in Chhattisgarh was gathering momentum, the Bastar division was assigned just 8 of 38 sub-inspectors who are sanctioned to guard the area. Even now, Bastar is chronically short-staffed But hiring more policemen won�t solve the problem. There is a larger, unaddressed problem: police forces are not being trained or equipped to cope with the challenge.
In Rajnandgaon, the Maoists used time-tested tactics that a well-trained and led police force ought to have defeated. Early in the morning, the Maoists executed two policemen at Madanwada, who had been compelled to leave their outpost � an outpost that was fortified but lacked toilets. Knowing reinforcements would be called in, they then waited in ambush.
SP Vinod Kumar Choubey and 30 other police personnel were killed driving towards Madanwada. Dozens of police personnel have died in similar ambushes � for example, the July 2007 attack, which claimed the lives of 17 policemen near Motu, in Orissa, or last August�s attack in Jharkhand which killed 12. Police have been instructed to travel on foot or motorcycle � but prudence is not always possible in the face of the need for a rapid response to crisis.
Poor training was also responsible for the February killings of Maharashtra police personnel in Gadchiroli, just across the State border from Rajnandgaon. Hundreds of Maoist militia members surrounded a police patrol which had been despatched to Markegaon. Maoist guerrillas fired at the police from a distance � reportedly drawing over 1,000 rounds of ineffective and un-aimed fire in return. When the police ran out of ammunition, the Maoist militia swarmed the police positions, hacking off the limbs and gouging out the eyes of their adversaries.
None of these, is, of course, exceptional to Maoist-hit States. Just how poor the training of India�s police personnel was graphically illustrated in June, when dacoit Ghanshyam Kewat engaged over 400 policemen for nearly 50 hours � killing four and securing his escape before finally dying in chance engagement with a separate police patrol.
Chhattisgarh has sought to compensate for these weaknesses with two sets of measures, elements of which other States are seeking to emulate, perhaps unwisely.
First, Chhattisgarh has set up elite counter-insurgency units modelled on the Andhra Pradesh Police�s Greyhounds, who are trained at a combat school run along the lines of the Indian Army�s famed School of Jungle Warfare in Vairangte. Despite this, police fatalities have risen year on year since 2005. The Greyhounds succeeded in the context of the development of overall police infrastructure and training. Chhattisgarh has, by contrast, done little to improve the training, equipment and infrastructure of its force as a whole.
Second, the State has relied on New Delhi to pump in central forces to hold the ground, as well as the controversial Salwa Judum militia � a quasi-volunteer force set up against the advice of expert counter-insurgency practitioners like the former Punjab Director-General of Police K.P.S. Gill. Neither undisciplined and untrained irregulars nor the injection of outside forces unfamiliar with the terrain helped stem the Maoist tide.
Paid salaries on a par with unskilled labour, recruited on the basis of minimal educational qualifications, obliged to work without overtime for 18 hours a day or longer and provided no regular on-job training, the police forces in States like Chhattisgarh are reaching breaking point.
Last year, during Supreme Court hearings, Solicitor-General Gopal Subramaniam candidly admitted that the Chhattisgarh government was finding it difficult to find recruits to the police. �Policemen�, he said, �are not ready to step into the forests.� Fifteen people, including a Central Reserve Police Force officer, were arrested in November for having faked elections from the Gogunda booth in the Konta Assembly constituency for fear of entering the Dantewada forests.
Working to a plan - Unlike the Indian state, the Maoists have worked to a long-term plan. Back in December 1999, the People�s War Group � which in September, 2004 merged with the Maoist Communist Centre to form the CPI(Maoist) � decided to create a core operational zone out of reach of the state forces.
Key party functionaries and resources were relocated in what the CPI(Maoist) calls the Dandarakanya Special Zone, centred around the dense, un-surveyed forests of Abujhmadh in the Bastar division. Abujhmadh was later declared the Maoists� Central Guerrilla Base Area; the party�s central committee and significant leaders like Muppala Laxmana Rao also began functioning out of the forests. Chhattisgarh police officials estimate that the CPI(Maoist) built an armed force of over 5,000, equipped with assault rifles, mortar, and a range of improvised explosive devices. In addition, there are an estimated 20,000 volunteers, equipped with everything from rifles to bolt-action rifles.
In 2002, according to figures published by the Union Home Ministry, Chhattisgarh recorded 55 fatalities related to Maoist violence, compared to 117 in Bihar and 157 in Jharkhand. By 2007, the last year for which the Ministry has published data, the killings increased almost nine-fold. Chhattisgarh that year recorded 435 insurgency-related fatalities. Of these, 198 were of security force personnel and 171 of civilians. Jharkhand, which suffered 170 fatalities and Bihar, with 69, registered levels of violence not dissimilar to those seen five years earlier.
Earlier this month, Shivdhar Reddy, a highly respected counter-insurgency expert who serves as Deputy Inspector-General of Police at the Andhra Pradesh Police�s Special Intelligence Bureau, provided a bleak assessment of what could lie ahead.
�The intensified Maoist activity in Koraput and Malkangiri districts in Orissa,� Mr. Reddy noted, �indicates that they are going beyond the control of the administration. The situation is the same in Chhattisgarh�s Dantewada, which is a hotbed of Maoists.� He said it would take at least two years of concerted action to stem the tide. Mr. Chidambaram�s speech suggests that New Delhi is at last listening to voices like these. It now needs to frame a long-term programme for action. Funds for police modernisation � better weapons, better communications and better mobility � are part of the answer. But India desperately needs a national weapons and tactics institution to produce the instructors who can train state forces to use these assets intelligently.
Praveen Swami Thursday, Jul 16, 2009 / The Hindu epaper
__._,_.___
Note: To post your messages, articles, write-up, issues for public discussions and documentary video at Jharkhand Forum websites, simply send it to Jharkhand@yahoogroups.com. No sign-up required. Jharkhand Forum broadcast your postings on thirty websites like - http://forum.jharkhand.us | http://forum.jharkhand.org.uk | http://forum.jharkhand.org.in Posting Policy - http://forum.jharkhand.org.in/2009/06/posting-policy-of-jharkhand-forum.html Some Useful Links -: 01. Jobs Post -> http://jobs.jharkhand.org.in | 02. CV / Resume / Bio-data -> http://resume.jharkhandi.com | 03. Marriage -> http://shaadi.jharkhandi.com | 04. Love Story -> http://love.jharkhandi.com | 05. Join Social Network -> http://network.jharkhandi.com | 06. Watch Short Film / Documentary -> http://documentary.jharkhand.us | 07. Post Petition -> http://petition.jharkhand.org.in | 08. Districts' Website -> http://jharkhandi.com/district.aspx | 09. Funding Appeal -> http://funding.jharkhand.us | 10. The Naxal -> http://naxal.jharkhand.org.uk | 11. Adivasi Alert -> http://adivasi.jharkhand.org.uk | 12. Mines Blog -> http://mines.jharkhand.org.in | 13. Get a FREE Email A/c -> http://jharkhandi.com/email.aspx Apply online at http://jharkhandi.com/representative.aspx to be representative of The Global Organization of Jharkhandi People (www.jharkhandi.org)
__,_._,___ |
|
|