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Arundhati says Cong is double-faced on Maoists

Maybe Indian members are over reacting( emotional ) owing to death of Paramilitary forces and train accident. But I would rather you not resort to name calling! Being an admin and all these..
Please learn the meaning of name calling, I'm directly and factually stating that the people who have used phrases like "Bit<h", "I'll marry her to my dog" and various other wonderful adjectives should either go to an Indian fish market for their debates or crawl back into the hole they stepped out of.

We have worked hard for the quality of this forum and can do without such pathetic posters.
 
Long time I have not got any books of her to read, so she was busy with these propaganda's....
 
It&#8217;s war against the poorest: Arundhati


Accusing the Centre of waging war against the &#8220;poorest people,&#8221; under the pretext of fighting Maoists in the mining belt, with the purpose of creating a &#8220;good investment climate,&#8221; author and social rights activist Arundhati Roy on Wednesday said creation of an atmosphere conductive to negotiations between the government and left-wing extremists was the only way out of the ongoing violence in the red corridor of India.

Addressing a press conference here, Ms. Roy said: &#8220;Let the State governments make public the terms of the hundreds of memorandums of understanding signed with corporate houses, rehabilitate the thousands of people displaced by the violence perpetrated by the security forces and the Salwa Judum [state-backed vigilantes in Chhattisgarh] and also restore a sense of confidence among the tribal population about their positive intentions. That is the only way out.&#8221;

&#8220;A cynical industry&#8221;

Reacting angrily to questions why she did not condemn Maoists for the April 6 massacre of 76 CRPF jawans in Dantewada in Chhattisgarh, she said the &#8220;condemnation industry is a hollow and cynical industry where people do not care about the people killed.&#8221;

Claiming that most people were living under an &#8220;undeclared emergency,&#8221; Ms. Roy said: &#8220;I feel that every single death, whether that of a police or Maoist or an Adivasi, is a terrible tragedy. The system of violence imposed on us in the structural process is increasingly becoming a war between the rich and the poor. I condemn the system of militarisation of people that sets the poor against the poor.&#8221;

Though she admitted that several Maoist crimes could not be justified and deprivation did not validate violence, Ms. Roy said &#8216;violence of resistance' could not be condemned when hundreds of Central forces cordon off tribal villages &#8212; killing and raping people with impunity.

Saying she did not have the skills for mediating between the Centre and the rebels, Ms. Roy added that her message to the Maoists was they should not dominate the cause of the tribal population for motives of their own in the future.

That 99.9 per cent of the Maoists were tribal people was &#8220;a coincidence of political aims,&#8221; she said.

The practice of both the tribal population and Maoist ideologues using each other had its roots in their loss of faith in institutional democracy.

Asked whether the blowing up of schools by the Maoists, on the pretext that the security forces could use them as camps, could be justified, Ms. Roy said: &#8220;Wherever there is a guerrilla warfare going on, schools are used as barracks. Those schools were not functioning anyway as teachers did not attend. The Maoists, however, welcome the teachers.&#8221;

Journalist Goutam Navlakha said the ban on the Maoists should be lifted and their organisation given political legitimacy before a dialogue was initiated.

The Hindu : News / National : It&rsquo;s war against the poorest: Arundhati
 
Those who says Maosit/Naxalites are fighting for a cause. They are quite correct. The cause is "POWER"...

(1) Someone pointed out there are tribals all over India. Maoism/Naxalism is not.

(2) Why don't they contest election. This way they would achieve their share of power for which they are killing people. With power they can make policies which is pro-poor/anti-corporates and what not. Who is stoping them. This is perfectly fine as long as it is under constitutional limit.

(3) What forces them to blow up school, telecom tower, roads, hospitals etc. Govt is guilty no doubt of less development. But because there are lesser development means we should destroy what is there as well?

(4) What is the logic behind kangaroo courts, threatening and killing peoples etc. This is not part for people's fight. Irony is, most the the things they do in name is people is actually anti-people.

(5) I was disturbed by a member's comment stating that "did we learn art of debate from BJP school". I am still struggling what prompted him to say this. BJP is rightist party everyone knows. But they are still better than these so called intellectuals. They are not killing anyone. Everyone who is not not leftist, does not mean he is of no good.
 
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India's costly war against Naxals

 
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@ek indian,

Friend you have hit the nail on its head.

Violence is not the right way because in a system justice is a state subject and not the mob verdict.


If state fails to provide justice change it through vote.
 
Most of the points you have raised have already been answered. They do not fight elections because they do not believe in elections. They want to overthrow democracy, not join it. Also they attack schools because these are schools only in name, most of them are CRPF camps.

(5) I was disturbed a member's comment stating that "did we learn art of debate from BJP school". I am still struggling what perompted him to say this.

Because no one from the BJP school of thought in India can debate properly.

BJP is rightist party everyone knows.

More like a fascist party.

But they are still better than these so called intellectuals.

Nope.

They are not killing anyone.

Yeah right.

Everyone who is not not leftist, does not mean he is of no good.

I did not say so. I have no problem with conservatives or centrists. The BJP and their cronies, the fundamentalists of Christianity and Islam are the exception .
 
India | 18.05.2010
India reviews anti-Maoist strategy after new attack

ndia is reviewing its anti-Maoist strategy after rebels killed 35 people travelling in a bus in the central state of Chhattisgarh in a landmine attack on Monday.


The attack, killing 24 civilians and 11 special police officers, is the fifth major strike by the armed guerillas in the country this year. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has personally presided over a high-security meeting where air support in Maoist-affected states was discussed.

Until today, New Delhi has opposed using the army against Maoist insurgents and the deployment of air support in the affected states. But the wave of unrelenting violence and high-profile attacks against troops and civilians in the last few months has prompted calls for a larger military operation.

In the wake of Monday's attack in the central state of Chhattisgarh, the same region where Maoists slaughtered 76 security personnel over a month ago, there has been a rethink.

Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram is considering the use of the air force against the rebels: Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram is considering aerial attacks

Home Minister P. Chidambaram, who has been in the eye of the storm as the mastermind of a national offensive, codenamed Operation Green Hunt, that involves 56,000 paramilitary forces in six states in addition to local police, acknowledged that changes were needed and said he would request wider powers.

"We will go back to the cabinet committee to revisit that mandate in the light of the revised strategy the Communist Party of India Maoist is following, of which we have enough evidence and intelligence."

State governments call for air strikes

Some of the worst affected states in the country including Jharkhand, Orissa and Bihar have been reportedly pressing for air support to carry out operations to help them zero in on rebel strongholds that are no-go areas for the security forces.

The inhospitable terrain and thick forests they inhabit have given the Maoists a virtual run of these regions. Some analysts also blame a lack of coordination between the central government and state officials for allowing the Maoists to move about there virtually unhindered.

Chidambaram hinted that air operations could be in the offing soon.

Chidambaram has held many meetings with regional leaders to discuss anti-Maoist strategyBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Chidambaram has held many meetings with regional leaders to discuss anti-Maoist strategy

"I believe that collective wisdom is better than an individual's judgment. The security forces, the chief ministers want air support. The chief minister of Bengal, the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, the chief minister of Maharashtra, the chief minister of Chhattisgarh, the chief minister of Orissa – all ask for air support. They are the men on the ground."

Generals, civil rights activists warn against escalation

The Cabinet Committee on Security had earlier rejected deploying either the armed forces or using air power against the Maoists. Army generals privately argued against it, explaining that their weapons were meant for the enemy across the border and not for use in areas with large numbers of civilians.

Civil rights groups who work in these impoverished regions have also argued against air strikes for a long time. The move would be counter-productive, argues Harish Dhawan, a member of the People's Union for Democratic Rights.

"The talk about the use of air power has been going on for some time and we have been consistently saying that it would only mean an escalation of the war that this government has decided to wage against the Maoists. The issues behind this war are important to be taken up at a political level. It would be really counter-productive in case the government at this stage only thinks in terms of a war or further using air power."

The pressure on the government to take a tougher line in its anti-Maoist strategy is definitely mounting with escalation through the use of the military now an option.

Author: Murali Krishnan (New Delhi)
Editor: Grahame Lucas

India reviews anti-Maoist strategy after new attack | Asia | Deutsche Welle | 18.05.2010
 
India needs to get rid of Maoists, Who itself are a threat to The nation, if they wanted prosperity they would never try to gain attention by killing innocents
 
listen one thing with your clear mind

no one and nothing is more important then India and its peoples

no one means no one

Maoists are just killer killing Indian civilian so don't try to justify them

well its there good luck there are living in the great democracy INDIA if they will be in china they till now they will be rest in peace


time has come when we have to kill rats

don't try to justify the killer
 
@Nemesis
My friend, your heart may be in the right place, your facts however are not.
Rs 150 crore: Maoists extortion amount from Chhattisgarh SSIs
10 Apr 2010, 0406 hrs IST,Bharti Jain,ET Bureau

NEW DELHI: Maoists could be extorting up to Rs 150 crore annually from Chhattisgarh, tapping sources such as forest produce contractors, mining companies, road contractors, transporters and other small-scale industries operating out of affected areas, according to chief minister Raman Singh.

Speaking to ET, Mr Singh, currently on a visit to the Capital, conceded that extortion levies from Chhattisgarh, mineral-rich Jharkhand and Orissa, besides Andhra Pradesh, Bihar and other affected states were annually swelling up the Maoist kitty to Rs 1,000-1,200 crore. It is thanks to this cash-rich status that Maoists were now independently procuring weapons and ammunition from the illegal arms bazaars of Myanmar and Bangladesh. The hand grenades of Chinese make recovered from the attack site in Dantewada are testimony to this fact, Mr Singh pointed out.

It was only last month that home secretary G K Pillai had put the estimated annual income of the Maoists at a whopping Rs 1,400 crore, largely sourced through extortion.

According to the Chhattisgarh chief minister, Maoists were primarily targeting the forest produce and mining industry, besides road contractors, in the state for extortion. &#8220;The Maoist-infested regions of Chhattisgarh are abundant in forest produce like tendu leaves, sal and timber...the Naxalites force the contractors as well as transporters to pay up in return for &#8220;protection&#8221; of their business in extremism-hit areas,&#8221; Mr Raman Singh said adding that the Maoists often threatened to set fire to the trucks carrying the tendu leaves if the contractors and transporters refused to pay the extortion &#8216;levy&#8217;.

The contractors, he admitted, were often left with little choice but to comply with the extortion demands.

Though Mr Singh pointed out that the state-run companies like National Mineral Development Corporation (NMDC)did not have to directly deal with Maoists, he indicated that the extortion levies were often forced out of contractors and transporters working for NMDC. Similarly, small industries in Maoist-infested areas were, in some way or the other, forced into paying &#8220;protection&#8221; money.

According to inputs dating back to 2007, while extortion from Bihar contributed Rs 200 crore, Chhattisgarh pitched in with Rs 150 crore, followed by Jharkhand, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh which together raised Rs 300 crore.

While the expenditure of CPI(Maoist) polit bureau is not said to be too high, the central military commission, R&D wing, arms procurement wing, information and publicity wing, state committees and dalams spend big money to arm CPI(Maoist) with training, intelligence and sophisticated weaponry.

A good chunk is also spent on publicity, both through the internet as well as in-house publications. For example, one of their main publications, Awam-e-Jung, has a good circulation among 10,000 cadres and many more sympathisers, despite no advertising revenue to fall back upon.

Significantly, the extremists depend in a big way on their urban network to source and transport weapons, fight court cases for arrested leaders, arrange medical care for the ill and wounded cadres, source uniforms and material for IEDs and run cyber and psychological campaigns. The Chhattisgarh Police, as part of a 2008 crackdown on the urban support network of Maoists, had seized account books of urban wing of the state which put the total outlay at Rs 5.43 crore.

Maoists' financing - the blood flows as long as the cash flows
As hundreds of crores and thousands of forces are committed for the offensive against the Maoists, one question sticks out: why is choking their money taps not part of the battle strategy? We know where it is flowing from, but not how much or how to stop it. Strange, isn&#8217;t it?
Prasanna Mohanty | New Delhi / Dantewada | April 07 2010

A day after the Chhattisgarh bloodbath, the question is what next, how to tackle the Maoists who are at war with the state. While many strategies are being suggested, a key element -- of blocking their finances -- is overlooked. That is the argument we made in this report, first published in Governance Now in the issue dated February 28:

The state, with all its might, is at war. Security forces are battling Maoists in dense forests and tiny hamlets in tribal hinterlands. There was even talk of air attacks on rebel dens. This, after all, is a no-holds-barred war. Except for a small detail, largely ignored in TV talk shops as well as strategy rooms. As long as Maoists&#8217; lifeline, channels that deliver cash in hundreds of crores, are secure, they will not be defeated, air attacks or no air attacks.

Speak to strategists in New Delhi and troopers in Chhattisgarh, and they point out two things: one, leftwing radicals have put in place a financial system to rival an MNC, and two, authorities have chosen not to do much to block their fund flows.

The state, in fact, seems to be clueless even about the the size of the Maoist empire.

Maoists are collecting &#8216;tax&#8217; to the tune of Rs 1,600 crore to Rs 2,000 crore a year, up from Rs 500 crore in 2005, if you go by the figure Home Secretary G.K. Pillai gives, based on the Intelligence Bureau&#8217;s assessment. But the whisper in North Block corridors is that the actual figure is at least twice that.

Raman Singh, chief minister of the most-affected state of Chhattisgarh, says the Maoist extortion racket is worth about Rs 300-400 crore &#8211; down from Rs 600 crore he used to mention earlier. The state&#8217;s Director General of Police Vishwa Ranjan puts the figure at Rs 150 crore before saying that this is a mere &#8220;guesstimate&#8221; since there can&#8217;t be accurate information on this score.

Orissa Director General (Intelligence) Prakash Mishra is not sure how much money the Maoists are making in his state. Less than 24 hours after quoting the figure of Rs 300-400 crore a year, he scaled down his &#8220;guesstimate&#8221; to &#8220;less than Rs 100 crore&#8221;.

Here is another way to figure out the sum. Chhatradhar Mahato, head of the Maoist-sympathising People&#8217;s Committee Against Police Atrocities, has confessed before police that PCPA imposed a one-time &#8216;levy&#8217; on people in Lalgarh area of West Bengal. His rate card: Rs 200 for primary teachers, Rs 100 for para-teachers, Rs 400-500 for high school teachers, Rs 700 for bank managers, Rs 200-300 for bank employees, Rs 100-200 for anganwadi workers, Rs 100 to Rs 5,000 for businessmen and Rs 12,000 for Ramgarh High School teachers. Every village family was asked to cough up Rs 10 and one kg of rice.

PCPA also collected Rs 17,000 from the Lokart Forest Beat Office, Rs 15,000 from Ramgarh Forest Beat Office and Rs 20,000 from Goaltore Range Office. Some PCPA members run regular &#8216;check gate collection&#8217;, like octroi or toll tax on roads, and collect Rs 200 to Rs 300 from every vehicle passing through areas under their influence. This booty was kept in a joint account in United Bank of India&#8217;s Kantapahari branch in Lalgarh, Mahato admitted.

Now extrapolate these figures to 223 districts of 20 states and we are looking at probably the biggest systematic extensive extortion racket. The Communist Party of India (Maoist), the most dominant among the leftwing radical organisations, is virtually ruling over 40,000 sq km &#8211; according to Pillai&#8217;s admission before a Parliamentary Standing Committee in September. Maoists are running a parallel government, called Janatana Sarkar, collect tax from everyone who is involved in any economic activity, dispense justice through kangaroo courts and carry out violent attacks on government functionaries and whoever else they think is inimical to their interests.

Funds are collected from industrialists, businessmen, contractors, mine operators, poor tribals and even government officials and establishments.

So much so that Vishwa Ranjan, the man who has christened the operation to rid Chhattisgarh of Maoists as &#8216;Operation Green Hunt&#8217;, says without batting an eyelid, &#8220;if you go there, they will take money from you too.&#8221;

Thus, it would make sense if the strategy to fight insurgency begins with choking the source of the Maoist funding. &#8220;You choke their finance and ammunition they are finished,&#8221; says former Border Security Force (BSF) director general Prakash Singh, an expert on Maoist insurgency. But policy makers have completely ignored this area.

The only time the government made an attempt in this direction was way back in 2005 when the Home Ministry set up the Committee on Combating Financing of Terrorists (CFT). But the Maoists were not declared terrorists till June 2009, so the committee had only one perfunctory discussion on them and concluded that nothing much could be done since this matter was linked to the overall security environment of the area and the money flow was more through non-banking channels. The matter was then left to the &#8220;sensitisation of the state governments&#8221;.

Why has the government, which has launched such a massive offensive against the Maoists and has deployed thousands of troops for the purpose so far, never tried to sever the finance link? Pillai says the government is &#8220;not able to provide security&#8221; in those areas because of &#8220;the lack of effective policing&#8221;. &#8220;How do you check extortion if you don&#8217;t have policemen to catch the extortionist?&#8221; he asks.

The police presence in the Maoist-affected states is indeed a problem. The number of policemen in these states is half (current vacancies stand at 300,000) of the national average of 120 policemen for a population of 100,000 (developed countries have 450 of them). The entire Bastar region has only 6,500 policemen.

Moreover, routine policing is one thing, fighting Maoist guerillas is quite another. Pillai says funds are awaited to set up 12 more specialised combat training schools to add to the existing eight, each of which can train only 300 to 500 men a year.

But all the passouts of these schools do not necessarily go out to battle rebels. Brigadier B.K. Ponwar, director of the Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare College of Kanker in Chhattisgarh &#8211; one of the eight schools &#8211; says only 65-70 percent of the cops trained there are posted in the insurgency-hit areas.

Yet, even the limited police force has no intention to block money going into rebels&#8217; hands. Asked why, Chhattisgarh DGP Vishwa Ranjan insists that &#8220;nobody has complained&#8221; to him in this regard -- a common refrain of central and state officials. Bound as they are by the &#8220;rules of procedure&#8221; they can&#8217;t act, they say, unless somebody lodges a complaint.

Orissa DG Prakash Mishra candidly confesses that the finance angle simply never crossed his mind.

Then there are politicians. Former BSF DG Prakash Singh points out: &#8220;There are former chief ministers who have had a nexus with the Maoists, who patronised them for their political ends. And going by media reports, in (former Jharkhand chief minister) Madhu Koda&#8217;s corruption case it is clear that the Maoists were among the beneficiaries of the loot.&#8221;
This is why Home Ministry officials snigger at the very suggestion of choking Maoists funds. They say the source of illegal money is often the same for both politicians and Maoists.

Former IB director Ajit Doval takes the argument a little further when he says the Maoists can extort money only when there are surplus funds and illegitimate money floating around. For example, mine owners who dig up 100 truckloads a day more than they are authorised to do would happily pay protection money to the Maoists, which may amount to the cost of two truckloads.
Similarly, the lack of accountability in the government&#8217;s development projects works to the advantage of the Maoists.

Corrupt officials and Maoists join the contractors in the loot. &#8220;What happened to all the money sanctioned in the name of development all these years? Thirty to 40 percent of it has gone to the Maoists and the rest to the corrupt officials,&#8221; Doval remarks, adding, more money for development also means more money to the Maoists. This would also partly explain why &#8220;nobody is complaining&#8221;.

Doval, too, thinks it is easier for the government to check the finances of the Maoists than to chase them in jungles but says this is not possible because the entire approach of the government is based on &#8216;watch and ward doctrine&#8217;. Simply put, it means when there is a threat from the dacoits put a watchman outside the house to ward off the threat.
If nobody else, at least industry can be expected to put pressure on the government to plug fund leakages. After all, industry would be the prime target for extortion.

Here is an illustrative case. Maoists blew up Essar Steel&#8217;s 267-km iron slurry pipeline, which transports iron ore from Bailadila mines in Dantewada to the Visakhapatnam pellet plant, at several places in May and June 2009. The entire pipeline passes through a Maoist-held terrain. The first blast happened on May 20 in Koda village of Dantewada. This could only be repaired on May 31 as the Maoists did not allow repairs for a while, but as the team was returning, it learnt that another section of the pipeline had been blasted in Malkangiri, adjoining district of Orissa. The team, led by A.K. Banerjee, plant in-charge of Essar&#8217;s Kirandul unit, moved there and repaired it ignoring locals&#8217; advice. While they were returning the same evening, their convoy was stopped by the Maoists near Panasgandi village in Chitrakonda tehsil, close to the spot where 36 Greyhound commandos had been gunned down on June 28, 2008. There, rebels burnt five vehicles for carrying out the repair work without the express consent of their leadership. Everyone in the region says the attacking mob was led by Maoist leader Madhav, divisional committee member of Malkangiri. A day later, Essar learnt that the pipeline had been blasted at at least 17 places in the area. The company did file a police complaint about the burning of the vehicles but not about the pipeline blasts.

Its Kirandul plant has remained shut for more than eight months and the company is losing Rs 2 crore a day. When asked about the episode, a company official simply dismissed the matter saying: &#8220;Essar has laid the slurry pipeline after receiving all necessary approvals from the concerned authorities and in compliance with rules of the land. This has been damaged may be (by) some miscreants. It is in the process of being repaired. We would like to categorically state that Essar has nothing to do with any of the insurgency organisations.&#8221;


The industry has made a beginning, though. The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) and Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) have set up task forces to discuss the issue. The CII&#8217;s report on &#8220;Security of Investment&#8221;, yet to be officially released, deals specifically about the Maoist threat and admits that extortion does take place. It says: &#8220;Naxalites have effectively created an environment, via threats and targeted executions, where extortion is a standard cost (on average 10 percent) of running a business.&#8221;

But Home Secretary Pillai says the the industry bodies have never approached him seeking government protection or complain about the extortion demands.

In other words, &#8220;nobody is complaining&#8221;. That, however, does not solve the problem. And if the government is willing to provide security to industry and block funds falling into rebels&#8217; hands, there is a precedent too. The government set up the Assam Tea Plantation Security Force (ATPSF) in 1993 to guard tea gardens from rebels and the force was funded by tea companies.

Pillai says the centre does provide security to some coal mining companies through the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) and has asked the states to set up similar security forces. Assam is the only state which has responded so far, and is converting ATPSF into a State Industrial Security Force.

Rajiv Chandrasekhar, a Rajya Sabha member and former FICCI president who piloted a report on the subject by the FICCI Task Force on National Security and Terrorism, says the industries are not averse to the replicate the ATPSF model but &#8220;the government must create a framework&#8221; for that.

In absence of security, industrialists have devised what Chandrasekhar calls &#8220;sweetheart deals&#8221; with the Maoists. &#8220;It is unfortunate reality that many Indian businesses often take shortcuts to solve many of their problems. Unfortunately, most shortcuts are neither legal nor a correct thing to do,&#8221; he says.

But then he explains that the industry takes matter in its hands as much because of incompetent state governments as the fact that it is an &#8220;easier, cheaper and quicker&#8221; way of dealing with the situation.

A Home Ministry status paper admits: &#8220;Naxalites operate in the vacuum created by functional inadequacies of field level governance structures.&#8221; Clearly, the functional inadequacies are not restricted to &#8220;field level&#8221; alone.

GovernanceNow.com | Maoists' financing - the blood flows as long as the cash flows

The maoist don't want the bigger companies coming in because they probably can get government protection & it would ruin the illegal mining companies who are now paying tax to the Maoists & not to the Indian state.

The truth, my friend is rarely as cut & dry as you would probably imagine it to be. If Government officials can be bought & bribed by MNC's as alleged by you, so too can the Maoists. They too are Indians after all, not having come as divine saviours from another planet as many would like to believe.

The difference is the state legitimises itself through elections, the maoists arrogate that power to themselves without being answerable no matter who they claim to speak for.
 
While the cause of the Tribals is something that must be dear to each Indian (I am sure on this forum too), it is a shame when we allow sociocrats like Arundhati Roy to hijack the cause for their personal 5 minutes of fame.

The bigger fear is that the credibility of the cause is judged by the people associated with it and therein lies the bigger disappointment that page 3 activists like Arundhati Roy and her supposedly social leaning ilk of our countrymen and diluting the just cause of the tribals deprivation and injustice for nothing but their own glorification.

The diatribes of Arudhati Roy and her ilk offer no solutions or ask for measures such as rebellions while thinking nothing of the consequences that these very tribals suffer for challenging the authority of the state by raising arms and when the show is over, nothing stops the ilk of Arundhati Roy to go back to the comforts of their air conditioned rooms sipping their evening scotch and soda.

While I am all for inclusive growth, universal justice, right to health, education, prosperity, but pray someone tell me that how is that being achieved for the tribals by supporting the naxals in raising arms.

And if someone comes and tells me that the naxals are fighting for the cause of the tribals, I would like to tell them to take a hike in as many words. While it is fashionable to talk against the state, it is more ardous to work for the benefit of the poor with the state.

How does one expect to develop the adivasis when the job opportunities are not created in their regions. How do you expect the industries to move there when the infrastructure development is not allowed.

India is only 60 years young and the development progression will always be skewed initially. The more important factor is that the growth should over the period permeate to the remotest regions of our country and hence providing inclusive growth to each region. So it is easy to dress in to a some khadis and get on the podium to shout a few slogans, it is difficult to follow up on the development agenda and work for the benefit of the people.

Any one who thinks that naxalism is a solution to the problems of the tribals, come back with answers to Why too and not just rant about the situation on the ground. The situation on the ground is already known to be precarious otherwise even a mutt will know that people will not resort to arms.

India certainly does not need any of such pseudo-intellectuals who flip opinions at the drop of the hat just to continue to try and stay on the right side of the camera.

Utterly disgusting to see the cause of the poor of my nation being hijacked by these 5 minute famers before they go back to their dinners in some expensive restaurants, and rant about what is wrong with India and how they care.
 
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