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Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Fwd: Massive Naxal Challenge



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ashok T. Jaisinghani <ashokjai@sancharnet.in>
Date: Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 2:43 AM
Subject: Massive Naxal Challenge
To: Sankar Narayanan <psn.1946@gmail.com>, Sunita Narain <sunita@cseindia.org>
Cc: Prime Minister of India <pmosb@pmo.nic.in>, President of India <presidentofindia@rb.nic.in>, Sonia Gandhi <10janpath@vsnl.net>, "L. K. Advani - Former Deputy PM of India" <advanilk@sansad.nic.in>, "Pioneer (New Delhi)" <pioneerletters@yahoo.co.in>, Palash Biswas <palashbiswaskl@gmail.com>, ORGANISER Weekly <editor@organiserweekly.com>, Sudheendra Kulkarni <sudheenkulkarni@gmail.com>


Can corrupt Indian Leaders deal with the
Massive Naxal Challenge?
 
    We should not get fooled by the bogus offer of resignation made by Home Minister P. Chidambaram after his failure to prevent the Dantewada massacre by Naxalites on April 6, when 76 security personnel, including 75 men of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), were killed.
 
    The Home Minister has accused the Naxalites of fighting a war against the Indian State and of wanting to overthrow the elected Government of the country. The leaders of the UPA had reacted with extreme panic as if hundreds of cops were killed instead of just 76. Is the Government of India hiding the facts about the total number of security personnel killed in the massacre in the Dandewada forest of Chhatisgarh? 
 
    Some leaders have also expressed the fear that the Naxalites are trying to set up bases in towns and cities for creating chaos even in the urban areas of India. 
 
Chidambaram has Acknowledged his Incompetence! 
 
    Why has Prime Minister Manmohan Singh allowed him to continue as the Home Minister in the UPA Government even after P. Chidambaram had accepted full responsibility for his failure to prevent the massacre? How can Manmohan Singh allow him to continue as the Home Minister when Chidambaram has acknowledged his own incompetence in providing security to the people of India?
 
    Chidambaram is known as a master manipulator and big money-maker, who seems only interested in buying more and more arms, ammunition, armored and mine-clearing vehicles at huge cost. As all these items involve massive expenditure of many thousand crore rupees, massive commissions and kickbacks are pocketed by the politicians. When more and more security personnel are employed in the police force, massive bribes are also taken from the new recruits before giving them the jobs.  
 
    Previously, as the Finance Minister, Chidambaram was the biggest patron of share market manipulators, who are responsible for the massive increase in prices of all essential goods including the prices of food-grains. 
 
    The BJP is supporting Chidambaram's continuance as the Home Minister, as the corrupt leaders of both the Congress and the BJP are involved in forcibly grabbing the lands of poor tribal villagers and forest-dwellers. The grabbed lands are being handed over to foreigners and MNCs for mining and for setting up SEZs to get massive kickbacks of billions of dollars, which are kept in secret bank accounts in Switzerland and other foreign countries.  
 
    Why should we feel shocked when the exploited and impoverished tribal villagers and forest-dwellers, who are deprived of their lands and cheated on a massive scale, become Naxalites and Maoists and resort to violent retaliation against the Government?
 
Manmohan Singh should be Forced to Resign
 
    The next time, the Naxalites or terrorists succeed in killing many policemen or other people, Manmohan Singh should himself be forced to resign from the post of Prime Minister because he must be blamed for allowing Chidambaram to continue even after the Home Minister had acknowledged himself to be incompetent.
 
    One coalition party in the UPA Government favors the Maoists and Naxalites, and is taking their help, to end the rule of CPM in West Bengal. We should not be surprised if the present Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee one day becomes the Chief Minister of West Bengal with the help of Maoists and Naxalites.
 
    Ashok  T. Jaisinghani.
        Editor & Publisher:
www.Top-Nut.com    Top Nutritionist
www.Wonder-Cures.com
www.Nutritionist-No-1.com
www.SindhiKalakar.com
  
 
___________________________________________
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: 21 Apr 2010 11:32 AM
Subject: Bullets are not the answer to development-Newsletter [April 21,2010]

====================================
Bullets are not the answer to development
(Editorial by Sunita Narain)

====================================

The massacre of 76 policemen in Dantewada by naxalites is reprehensible. Yet we cannot brush aside the underlying poverty, deprivation and sheer lack of justice that are breeding tension and anger in vast areas of rural, tribal India. We cannot say that these developmental issues are long term—as the Congress spokesperson has reportedly said—while the immediate task is to annihilate the Naxalites. Because, unless we can fix what is broken here, let us be very clear, there is no real solution at hand.

I have written earlier about the devastating irony that vast parts of our country, that are the richest in terms of minerals, forests and water, are also where the poorest people live. Again I ask, again and again: what is wrong with our development model that the poorest people live in the richest lands of the country?

We know naxalites profit from the anger against the collective loot of the resources these lands possess. These are the lands we get minerals from; the electricity that lights our homes is enabled here. But the people who live there have no electricity
. They should own the minerals, or forests; they should profit from development. But they get no benefit from the resources that are simply extracted. By policy and design, their lands are taken away, their forest cut, water polluted, their livelihoods destroyed. Development makes them poorer than they were.

But we want to hear none of this. A few years ago, in Raipur, Chhattisgarh, while releasing our detailed report on mining and environment, I saw how intolerant we have become. The state's governor was to release the report. But even before we arrived, there was a media buzz our critique of mining policies and practices meant we were partners with naxalites. At the release function, the room was "filled" with mining-at-all-cost supporters. They shouted down any voice that spoke of the problems, and poverty, mining had caused in the region. The governor was visibly in a bind. He could not deny our data and analysis. But he was also desperate to brand us as insurgents who raise uncomfortable issues.

The next day, the machinery whirred into action. It openly challenged us. It presented no data on how it had shared revenues of mining with people. It did not explain how it had controlled the enormous and deadly pollution from the sponge iron factories that encircled the region. It did not also explain why it was allowing open manipulation and misuse of laws to dispossess people from their lands, against their will. It only incited violence against us, saying since we had questioned mining policies and were seeking new answers, we were against development. The next step: we were against the state, so we were with naxalites. With us or against us. This is a Bush slogan, but also a war syndrome, which cannot buy us peace at any cost.

We have to rethink the development India has practised so far. Let's just think forests. These are the very lands where India's tree wealth exists. Some 60 per cent of the country's dense and most bio-diverse and economically rich forests are in these tribal districts. Think minerals now. The bulk of what we need for growth—iron ore for steel, bauxite for aluminium and coal for power stations—is located here. These are also the same districts—poor and backward—our beloved tigers roam in. Here's where the country's major watersheds are located.

How can we build a growth model which uses the wealth of the region for local development first? Such a development model would mean listening to people who live on these lands, about what they need and want for their growth. It means seceding to what people want: the right to decide if they want a mine in their backyard, or the forests cut. It means taking democracy very seriously.

If this is accepted, protests will have to be seen in a new light. There are no misguided people, or naxalites, holding up Vedanta in Orissa, or Tata in Chhattisgarh. These many, and there are many, mutinies will have to be carefully heard. This country cannot brush aside people's concerns, in the name of a 'considered' decision taken, in Delhi or somewhere else. Government must stop believing it knows what is best.

Once we accept local veto over development decisions, the tough part begins. For, this means seriously engaging with people to find ways that benefit all. It means sharing revenue from minerals with villagers, not the poisoned peanuts they get now. It means changing priorities: valuing, for instance, a standing forest as protector of water, wildlife, even a low-carbon future. It means paying directly to local communities so that they decide to protect forests, because it benefits them.

Ultimately, listening to dissenters means reinventing development. Accept we cannot mine all the coal, bauxite, iron ore—whatever—that lies below forests people live in, and depend on. It will make us get careful about how to use less minerals for more growth? Can India do more with less? There's a lesson India's poor teach: walk lightly on the earth you have. Let us not riddle them with bullets.
 

Comment: http://cseindia.org/content/bullets-are-not-answer-development
Read this online: http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=1



CSE is an independent, public interest organization that was established in 1982 by Anil Agarwal, a pioneer of India's environmental movement.
CSE's mandate is to research, communicate and promote sustainable development with equity, participation and democracy.



 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: psn.1946
Sent: 21 Apr 2010 7:41 PM
Subject: Letters to the Editor

Dear Sir,
 
Tribal land chhodo

  

This refers to the article 'India's gravest threat'.  The writer will get all the choicest abuses from the 'informed' sections. The threat became graver when Dr.Manmohan Singh introduced the New Economic Policy of 1991 to save the affluent urban India from bankruptcy. Balance of payment crisis was averted.

 

All the 'Feel Good' achievements of the 'Shining India' were at the cost of rural Hindustan.  Facelees and voiceless farmers, small traders, fisher folk, weavers, tribals and other artisans were ruined by the Manmohanomics.

 

Billionaires started mushrooming. SEZs were sorely needed by the neta-babu-bania troika to achieve faster growth. Mineral rich tribal lands became their favourite hunting grounds. Any one coming in their way automatically became the enemy of this nation. Draconian anti-people laws, Salwa Judum, SPOs, CRPF and Operation Green Hunt became absolute musts to protect Mittal, Posco, Vedanta, Tata, Salim etc from the ruined tribals. Maoism is only the effect. The cause is the Himalayan greed of neta-babu-bania JVC.

 
The writer says when Maoists held talks with AP government five years ago, two of their main demands were: (a) implementation of land reforms and (b) laws meant to protect tribals and their rights over land. If these two very genuine demands are met, there is no necessity for the all the costly security paraphernalia. Maoism, Arundhati Roy and CRPF will become redundant.
 
A senior police officer asked the writer: "What else do you think will happen when thousands of acres are given away to companies and lakhs of tribals are displaced? They are bound to fight back." The police officer also remarked that as long as Manmohanomics prevails, Maoism will survive, irrespective of how many forces you deploy and how many Naxalites you kill.
 
The writer poses the correct question to us: "Which is the gravest internal security threat-Manmohanomics or Maoism?" Why don't our netas, babus and banias let the tribals live on their lands?
 
Yours truly,
Sankaranarayanan,
Bhubaneswar.

 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: psn.1946
To: IHRO
Sent: 21 Apr 2010 1:48 PM
Subject: Which is India's gravest threat?

Unquote:
 
On Dantewada massacre and Maoism:
 
1. "What else do you think will happen when thousands of acres are given away to companies and lakhs of tribals are displaced? They are bound to fight back."
 
"As long as Manmohanomics prevails, Maoism will survive, irrespective of how many forces you deploy and how many Naxalites you kill".
 
2. The above views are from a senior police officer with considerable experience in handling Naxalite issue. Not from Kishenji or Kondapalli Seetharamaiya.
 
3. "The time has come for the Indian intelligentsia to debate whether Manmohanomics or Maoism is the gravest internal security threat".
 
This is from G S Vasu the resident editor of The New Indian Express, Andhra Pradesh and not from Arundhai Roy's Outlook article.
 
Sankara Narayanan
 
 
QUOTE:
 

India's gravest threat

 

http://expressbuzz.com/opinion/op-ed/india's-gravest-threat/166894.html

 

G S Vasu, 21 Apr

 

 

 

----- Original Message -----
From: psn.1946
Cc: IHRO ; group
Sent: 09 Apr 2010 11:32 AM
Subject: Re: Ranjan's Rhetoric vs Reality at the site vs Missing actions

Please cite one line in my posting where I supported terror.
 
MKG: "To kill for freedom will legitimise killing after freedom".
 
State terror is not known to people like you because your kith and kin are safely away from the sites of activity.
 
Will you suggest Operation Green Hunt or Air Force attacks on Maoists if your family and relatives are living in an interior Dantewada village?
 
Why you people are so heartless and mindless about the collateral damages inflicted on the tribals in the war between the state and Maoists?
 
In the Maoist vs state war, only poor people are killed on all sides.
 
People who clamour for all out war against Maoists, by and large, are not serving in police forces.
 
Neither they will allow their children to join the security forces.
 
So much for their patriotism.
 
Do you know Dantewada is the poorest place in India?
 
Do you know people from Dantewada are forced to run away from their hamlets (100 km)and live in neighbouring state [khammam in AP] as refugees?
 
No ration cards, no education to their children, no social security etc.
 
Are they not citizens of this land?
 
Their sins: They are tribals and their hamlets are mineral rich.
 
 

If Dantewada and Koraput are not mineral  rich, neither Chidambaram nor Manmohan Singh would have cared to know/visit these places.

 
Their hearts bleed because their Bania friends in India and abroad need safe mining.
 
 
We need minerals, business, jobs and comfortable lifestyle.
 
Let the tribals go to hell.
 
 
Sankara Narayanan
 
 
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 10:40 AM, M.L.RAJA <mlr_arasu@yahoo.co.in> wrote:
Mr.PSN,
What is this ? you come to say good about this terrorist?
MLR

--- On Thu, 8/4/10, psn.1946 <psn.1946@gmail.com> wrote:

From: psn.1946 <psn.1946@gmail.com>
Subject: Ranjan's Rhetoric vs Reality at the site vs Missing actions
To: "IHRO" <IHRO@yahoogroups.com>, "group" <Chennai@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Thursday, 8 April, 2010, 9:08 PM


Situation at site
 
Naxal attack: Jawans scared to enter forest

 

http://expressbuzz.com/searchresult/ians

 

IANS

First Published : 07 Apr 2010 12:51:20 PM IST
 

RAIPUR: A day after 76 troopers were massacred in the worst ever Maoist attack, hundreds of para-military men and state police personnel assigned to track down the killers are scared to enter the jungles of Chhattisgarh Wednesday fearing a repeat of the 'bloody Tuesday' incident.

 

The shell-shocked police incumbent here have ordered nearly 40,000 policemen deployed in the restive Bastar region to retaliate.

 

But officials posted in the interiors of the region say: "The Tuesday attack has rattled the entire police force engaged in the anti-Maoist operation and they are now reluctant to enter the landmine protected jungle terrain".

 

"It's easy for everyone to dictate to us from New Delhi and Raipur sitting in air-conditioned chambers, but here the situation is completely hostile because Maoists rule the roost in jungles. The forces in Bastar now need urgent motivation," a police officer based in Dantewada told IANS on phone.

 

Police officers posted in the sprawling 40,000 sq km Bastar terrain made up of five districts -- Bijapur, Narayanpur, Bastar, Kanker and Dantewada where the Maoists staged a bloodbath in the Chintalnar hilly area say -- "policemen are suffering high casualties because of an absolute lack of co-ordination between state forces and para-military men who are put in difficult terrains in Chhattisgarh".

 

"Despite all efforts at the police headquarters and at the state government level, the CRPF is not taking local police and special police officers (SPOs) along while entering the Maoists' den and are thus getting killed without a fight," noted a senior official here.

 

He remarked that CRPF men are all outsiders and know nothing about the difficult jungle terrain. They were reminded several times by officers at the police headquarters to take along at least the SPOs who are locals but the CRPF men neither followed this suggestion nor did they stick to the 48-point guerrilla warfare manuals.

 

 

 Empty Rhetoric

 

We will continue to hit the Maoist heart: DGP

 

http://expressbuzz.com/nation/we-will-continue-to-hit-the-maoist-heart-dgp/163695.html

 

IANS

First Published : 08 Apr 2010 01:40:42 PM IST

Last Updated : 08 Apr 2010 01:44:38 PM IST

 

NEW DELHI: Ruling out a change in the central and state forces' strategy in the anti-Maoist operation, Chhattisgarh Director General of Police (DGP) Viswas Ranjan Thursday said the security forces would "continue to hit the Naxal (Maoist) heart" and the rebels will have to pay for Tuesday's massacre.

 

"We will continue to hit the Maoist in the deep. We will continue to hit the Naxal heart," said Ranjan in an interview to NDTV.

 

Asked if there would be any change in the anti-Maoist operation's strategy, he said: "I don't think so. We will have to learn from this experience. We have to be more vigilant."

 

Maoist guerrillas ambushed and killed 76 security personnel - 75 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) troopers and one policeman - in the dense forests of Chhattisgarh in the worst such attack.

 

Multiple blasts rocked the convoy and tossed their armoured vehicles into the air as simultaneously over 700 Maoist fighters opened indiscriminate fire from a hilltop in Dantewada district.

 

Ranjan said the Maoists would have to pay for what they had done.

 

He said the CRPF-state police co-ordination in the area was fine and all operations were conducted jointly. "Joint operation basically means meeting of the minds."

 

The top cop said the CRPF team failed to spot the ambush points.

 

They were "not able to anticipate the ambush point. The whole company walked into the trap. They were completely boxed in...couldn't escape from any side," he said.

 

Ranjan said many of the answers "so desperately needed" lie with a group of injured troopers, now being treated in hospital for serious injuries.

 

He stated that "once these jawans (troopers) recover from their trauma, their information will be used to reconstruct the ambush to figure out basics like how long the attack lasted."

 

He said their burn injuries suggest "molotov cocktails (petrol bombs) were used".
 
 
Missing actions:
 
1. Dantewada is the poorest district of the nation.
 
2..

 

http://expressbuzz.com/searchresult/The-New-Indian-Express

 

Fight Naxalites on all fronts

 

The New Indian Express

First Published : 08 Apr 2010 10:55:00 PM IST

Last Updated : 08 Apr 2010 12:29:17 AM IST

 

Never underestimate your enemy, says a military maxim. The CRPF jawans deployed in Dantewada district in Chhattisgarh seem to have overlooked this cautionary saying when they virtually walked into the death trap laid by the Naxalites. Union home minister P Chidambaram's claim that there was no intelligence failure is like claiming that the operation is successful, though the patient is dead. Who knows, his recent boastful claim that the Naxalite menace would be finished in three years might have provoked them to strike.

 

Whether it is the failure of the CRPF commanders or the lack of appropriate intelligence input, the fact is a large number of CRPF personnel have been killed and their immediate families have lost their sole breadwinners. The report that the security personnel are scared of going into the jungles in hot pursuit is proof that the Naxalite strategy has, alas, succeeded. Chidambaram should remember that loud-mouthed empty rhetoric is not a substitute for action and if he persists with it, his continuance in office may even become untenable. While the nation's whole-hearted sympathies are for the bereaved families, it is time the anti-Naxalite strategy is revisited to make it more effective.

 

What the massacre highlights is that the CRPF is ill-equipped to deal with the problem. Drawn as its personnel are from various parts of the country, it is not surprising that they do not know the topography of the area unlike the Naxalites who know it like the lines on their palms. That the reinforcement sent to the area after the first attack also came under heavy fire reveals the CRPF's operational bankruptcy.

 

There is now a growing demand that the army should be deployed. Fortunately, Chidambaram has ruled out such an option. The IAF chief has also spoken against dragging the force into the operation. They are combat forces and internal security is not their cup of tea. Operations like the Green Hunt in which poor tribals are killed in retaliation only strengthen the hands of the Naxalites. The strategy should be to win the confidence of the people so that intelligence necessary to isolate and finish the Naxalites is obtained. This has to be combined with an onslaught against the backwardness of the area and the poverty of the people from which the Naxalites draw their primary sustenance




--
Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/

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