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Separatist Insurgencies in India - News and Discussions.

Ministry of Home Affairs
19-July, 2017 15:26 IST
Internal Security Situation

The terrorists violence incidents in J&K, casualties of civilians / Security Forces (SFs) Personnel and terrorists killed from 2011 to 2017 (upto 9th July) are as under:-



Year
No. of terrorist violence incidents
Civilians killed
SFs Killed
Terrorists killed


2011
340
31
33
100

2012
220
15
15
72

2013
170
15
53
67

2014
222
28
47
110

2015
208
17
39
108

2016
322
15
82
150

2017
(Upto 9th July)
172
12
38
95


In LWE affected areas, during the last three years (July 2014 to June 2017) there is reduction in incidents of violence by 22.25% (3999 to 3109) compared to the preceding three years (July 2011 to June 2014) and an increase of 78% (228 to 406) in killing of Left Wing Extremists compared to the preceding three years (July 2011 to June 2014).


A meeting of the Chief Ministers of the Left Wing Extremism affected States was called by the Union Home Minister on 08 May 2017. Both security and development related measures for elimination of Left Wing Extremism were discussed.


This was stated by the Minister of State for Home Affairs, Shri Hansraj Gangarm Ahir in a written reply to question by Shri Prabhat Jha in the Rajya Sabha today.



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Ministry of Home Affairs
19-July, 2017 15:24 IST
Emergency response centres in States/UTs

The Government has introduced a Pan-India integrated emergency helpline number ‘112’ for implementation of Nationwide Emergency Response System (NERS) across the country with an approved financial outlay of Rs. 321.69 Crore with the objective of addressing emergencies such as those relating to Police, Fire and Health services.

Financial support is being provided to the States/UTs to setup their Emergency Response Centers (ERCs), which will cover expenditure related to computer hardware, connectivity, well trained call takers and for a limited number of MDTs (Mobile Device Terminals) fitted vehicles for last mile service delivery to be deployed on a pilot basis. Each ERC is being provided with an emergency response software suit developed through C-DAC, Thiruvananthapuram. Establishment of ERCs in States/UTs will be carried out in a phased manner and is likely to be completed by December, 2018.

This was stated by the Minister of State for Home Affairs, Shri Hansraj Gangaram Ahir in a written reply to question by Smt. Viplove Thakur in the Rajya Sabha today.

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Surging militancy in Kashmir

Sheikh Athar and Palvi Singh Ghonkrokta
Countercurrents.org


Kashmir is on the brink once again. The recent surges in military operations and encounters in Kashmir underline the urgency in the official circles to curb militancy and take control of the situation in Kashmir. The visibly tough stand in the approach of the government is in sync with the on ground activities which have placed talks on the backseat, advocating a military course of action instead.
The use of force it seems is aimed at eliminating rather than engaging ultras. This is the typical state response of power without prudence but employing it poses a very real risk of resurgence in violence and militancy fuelled by home support.

Escalation of insurgency
A sledgehammer approach to insurgency has invariably proven to escalate the conflict and Kashmir is no exception. The approach itself is questionable in that it can no doubt quell the changing faces of the movement, from the streets to fatigues, from stones to arms but the underlying ideologies are not as easy to dismantle and put down with the gun. Consider, for example, the number of militants before 2016. Between 2011– 2013, the total number of new recruits was sixty. In 2014 there was an upward spike with fifty three men picking up the arms while 2015 saw a total of sixty six fresh recruits.
In 2016, notwithstanding the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani being considered a big success and a bolt to militancy, the surging numbers tell another story. Wani’s death was able to sway a large number of youth, eighty eight to be exact, to join the militant ranks. Further in the first four months of 2017, another thirty took to militancy, according to police records and the chances of it stopping seem slim.

As per official records, presently, there are about two hundred and twenty four militants operating in the Kashmir valley out of which a hundred and thirty are locals and Burhan Wani’s home district of Pulwama accounts for a whopping number of seventy out of this .This is unusual considering the past trend where foreign militants outnumbered the locals and substantiates the point that the killing of local militants creates a ripple of sympathy and anger among youth and results in more people opting for guns out of vengeance.

Counterproductive moves
It comes as no surprise then that the activities of the state agencies and militant outfits proportionally match each other. That is not to say that military action is the sole reason for the rise in militancy. With the BJP-PDP government at the helm of affairs, little meaningful political engagement has ensued while there has been a steady rise in the number of militants operating in the valley. The urge to resort to coercive actions has not been dovetailed with a political engagement of any sort for any good to come out of it. It is baffling that even as the Agenda of Alliance of the BJP-PDP has acknowledged the need to take every opinion into consideration including those of the separatists but in practice their efforts have been lukewarm at best. The lone attempt to reach out seemed to be a crisis management manoeuvre, rather than a well chalked out political move.

Already the media portrayal of a Kashmiri youth as a stone pelting ‘anti-national’ has gained traction. It has severely detracted from the real issue at hand i.e., of peaceful, political resolution of the Kashmir conflict – not territorial, not religious but a political solution that mirrors the rights and representative aspirations of the average Kashmiri.

Measures that rely on sheer force while sidestepping soft power initiatives may provide short term reprieve but can prove to be counter-productive even detrimental in the long term. What should be an emergency measure to curb unrest is painfully prolonged in the interest of maintaining normalcy and disengagement from the political process invariably follows even as the underlying dilemma of the movement remains.

Institutional democracy in peril
The lasting fatality then will be that of the collapse of the already shrinking political space. With no majority consensus in sight and no end to the schisms in Kashmiri society, the political impasse is the only constant among the volatile variables in the Kashmiri equation.
The general feeling of a trust deficit in the democratic process persists. The separatists have also lost their appeal to some extent as they could not achieve any concrete goal. Their hartaal politics has only crippled the economy and made common people suffer.

This has disillusioned people further and led everyone to pursue their own path and paint the conflict in their own colour. In an increasingly hostile society unfortunately the most extreme elements take the fore front as was seen in the gruesome and inhumane act of the lynching of a Deputy Superintendent of Police, outside Jama Masjid.

Likewise when former HM commander Zakir Musa comes out and brands the Kashmir struggle as an Islamic struggle rather than a political one, it personifies the division in society, that endangers the very fabric of Kashmiriyat. There must therefore be an implicit recognition that it has the potential to snowball into a wider, religious revivalist and decisively fundamentalist conflict and that its consequences would be nothing short of a calamity.

It is therefore time that government shuns the might is right attitude and initiates talks with the separatists, the youth including stone pelters and even try to get the most extreme ones on board.
Institutional democracy in Kashmir is already in peril. A state clamp down in such circumstances is a predictable though arguably an inefficacious measure. It is true that coercive action and use of force is a universally recognised measure to maintain law and order and restore peace. However it has limited life and what is equally true is that no law can be allowed to subsume the legitimate political process let alone supplant it.
If the State seeks to strengthen the arms of democracy, it must recognise, its forceful actions may well prove contrariwise, even if inadvertently, striking at its roots.

Sheikh Attar And Palvi Singh Ghonkrokta are freelance journalists.

http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=2&date=0
 
High alert as violence mounts in Darjeeing again
Kolkata Correspondent, August 21, 2017
blast-ani.jpg

The explosion occurred near a motor stand, the news agency ANI reported. (ANI)
Violence has once again emerged in the Darjeeling hills. The administration had imposed high alert in the area, following explosions on two consecutive days in Darjeeling town and Kalimpong. Extensive searches are being conducted and Section 144 has been imposed in Kalimpong town for a month.

No one was injured in the IED blast in the old market area of Darjeeling on 18 August night, but a civic volunteer was killed in a grenade attack later night on Saturday at the Kalimpong town police station. A para-military soldier and a home guard were injured in the incident.

Within 52 minutes of the attack, a second explosion took place at the Kalimpong police station gate. CCTV footage reveals miscreants came up on a motorbike and hurled the grenades. Both the explosions were serious.

Police feel that these midnight explosions were a rehearsal for making powerful landmines in Darjeeling. Gelatin sticks, detonators and batteries were recovered from the site of the incident, reinforcing the police’s assumption. In June this year, 24 sticks of gelatin were stolen from a thermal power plant storehouse. The two hand grenades exploded in Kalimpong Saturday night were fitted with timers.

Police have begun investigations into the incidents. The police have filed cases against the president of the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha and five leaders of the organisation under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act for declaring war against the state, and under the Explosive Act.

Investigators feel that the hardliners are preparing for large scale violence in order to threaten those in favor of negotiations. The Morcha denies these allegations, saying this was part of a conspiracy to thwart the Gorkhaland movement. Chief of the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha, Bimal Gurung, has written a letter to the central home minister Rajnath Singh, saying that this is a conspiracy hatched by the state against the Morcha leaders. He said that those opposed to Gorkhaland were the ones behind the explosions.

In the meantime, a Nepalese Maoist has been caught, suspected to be involved in the attack on the police. Police sources say that the bomb blasts resemble those occurring in Maoist areas. They suspect this was just a rehearsal and that a patrol vehicle might be targeted next.

West Bengal’s Tourism Minister Gautam Deb said that there is a deep-seated conspiracy to create unrest in West Bengal.

Schools and colleges have been closed for 70 days so far in the hills. Production in the tea gardens has been disrupted.

The Morcha took up the movement after the government in June declared it compulsory for Bangla to be taught in all schools of West Bengal. Later Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee declared that this did not apply to Darjeeling, but the Morcha did not move away from their movement. They began a non-stop strike from 12 June, demanding a separate Gorkhaland.

The Gorkhaland Movement Coordination Committee has been formed, comprising all political parties and social organisations of the hills. But the protestors are disappointed that the central government has not supported them. However, they are not moving away from the movement.

In fact, political observers feel they are taking the movement in a different direction. Various quarters say that Nepal’s Maoists and insurgents of the northeast are behind this movement.

http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/08/21/high-alert-violence-mounts-darjeeing/
 
Maoist problem continues to be a matter of concern: Rajnath Singh
SAM Staff, August 30, 2017
rajinath_sing.jpg

Rajnath Singh (File)
The Maoist problem continues to be a matter of concern for internal security and the menace has badly hit 35 districts in seven states, Home Minister Rajnath Singh said Tuesday. He was addressing a meeting of the consultative committee for the Home Ministry on “Left Wing Extremism (LWE) related issues” here.

Singh said the Maoist scenario remains an area of concern for internal security of the country even though it has exhibited a significant improvement over the years. He said 106 districts in 10 states were affected by LWE and 35 districts were identified as most affected in seven states.

The home minister said the Maoist scenario has been showing a declining trend in the last three years. As compared to 2010, 2016 reflected a decline of 53 per cent in the number of violent incidents and 72 per cent in resultant deaths and the trend continued in 2017, an official statement said.

Singh informed the Parliamentarians that this year overall situation so far indicated a declining trend and the number of violent incidents had declined by 25.6 per cent as compared to the corresponding period of 2016. The home minister apprised the MPs about security-related measures which include the deployment of central armed police forces battalions in the LWE-affected states, use of 56 specialised India Reserve Battalions mainly to strengthen the security apparatus, construction of about 400 fortified police stations and various training initiatives.

Singh said other security measures were deployment of UAVs, helicopters, unified command and joint command and control centers at Jagdalpur (Chhattisgarh) and Gaya (Bihar). The home minister said the central government has been doing proper monitoring with the necessary assistance of the states by empowering them with financial assistance and security forces with proper training, technology and latest equipment. He said the joint operations of the central armed police forces and the state police have given good results in the recent past and hoped that the situation would improve further in the near future.

The MPs participated in a detailed discussion on the subject and appreciated the work of the ministry in controlling the situation in LWE affected states, the statement said. The use of technology, intelligence sharing and specialised training for the forces was also discussed. Some of the members mentioned that LWE problem was not a law and order problem alone but was also a socio-economic problem.

There was a need for adopting a sustained policy and intelligence sharing in the LWE affected states. They also suggested that the police should be further strengthened with the use of better communication and connectivity facilities, the statement said. The home minister informed the members that their valuable suggestions had been noted for appropriate action and further improving the situation.

Singh told MPs that a new initiative SAMADHAN has also been introduced to control the situation in the LWE affected states. SAMADHAN stands for Smart Policing and Leadership; Aggressive Strategy, Motivation and Training, Actionable Intelligence; Dashboard for Development and Key Performance Indicators, Harnessing Technology for Development and Security, Action Plan for each Theatre and No access to Financing.

The home minister said 743 Scheduled Tribes candidates from four most affected LWE districts of Chhattisgarh–Bijapur, Dantewada, Narayanpur and Sukma–had been recruited in Bastariya Battallion in order to enhance local representation in security forces.
SOURCE PTI
http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/08/30/maoist-problem-continues-matter-concern-rajnath-singh/
 
Half a Century of India’s Maoist Insurgency
A political analysis of the long-running conflict.
By Siddharthya Roy
September 21, 2017
With the largest Communist guerrilla army in the world — the FARC of Colombia — handing over its guns to the United Nations on June 27 this year and preparing to contest elections in the coming month, a curtain has been drawn on the once ubiquitous phenomenon of “Marxist insurgencies.”

Once present all across the globe, Communist guerrillas and their armed offensives against governments had shaped much of the 20th century. From small bands of deadly fighters to full-fledged armies with combatants numbering in the thousands, such groups once held significant firepower and control of land across Latin America, the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. But as things stand today most of these groups have either been crushed, chosen the ballot over the bullet, or have withered into political irrelevance.

Bucking that trend, a protracted people’s war has been running for the past 50 years between Maoist guerrillas and the Indian government with no end in sight.

In fact, with anywhere between 8,000 and 10,000 regular troops in its guerrilla army and nearly 40,000 cadres in the people’s militia, the Indian Maoists are the largest organized Communist fighters outside of the Syrian YPG.
A Brief History
The Maoist party was the result of multiple splits and fratricidal wars inside the Indian communist movement.

The first Communist Party of India (CPI) was formed in 1920 under the aegis of the Soviet regime at a meeting in Tashkent. Following India’s independence in 1947, when the Soviet apparatus supported the centrist Indian National Congress, the CPI followed suit. This led eventually to an acrimonious split, from which the Communist Party of India (Marxist) was formed 1964.

The CPI(M) – now the largest overground communist party in India that pursues a more or less social democratic agenda – split over Soviet hegemony, but declared its distance from the Chinese Communist Party (CPC) as well and followed what it called “Communism with Indian characteristics.”

But within three years of that split, the CPC managed to engineer another. Led by a man named Charu Majumdar, this new group rejected elections and opted for Mao Zedong’s “protracted people’s war” doctrine.

The group’s first altercation with police took place in a small sub-Himalayan hamlet called Naxalbari during a violent protest of peasants against a landlord said to be extracting heavy rates of interest from them.

The 1967 Naxalbari uprising was quelled quickly. Majumdar was captured and killed in police custody in Calcutta soon after. But the movement had electrified hundreds inside the ranks of the communist party and soon groups emerged across the country pledging themselves to the “Naxalbari path.” And attesting their loyalties to the CPC, slogans of “China’s Chairman is Our Chairman” appeared on walls in Calcutta, Bombay and Hyderabad.

Following Mao’s death and China’s abandonment of sponsoring international revolution, the movement broke down into a chaos of splinters and factions that named themselves in an almost incomprehensible alphabet soup. By some estimates, during the 1980s, as many 149 Naxalite parties functioned independently, with each claiming to be the true flag-bearers of the Naxalbari legacy.

Some, like the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation, went back on the plan for an armed insurrection and returned to elections.

But two major groups stuck to their guns: the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC) in areas adjoining Nepal and the People’s War Group (PWG) in the areas that made up the princely state of Hyderabad (modern day Andhra Pradesh and Telangana).

The MCC and the PWG were the largest, most organized and best-armed. They maintained links with international groups like the Revolutionary Internationalist Movement (RIM) and Coordination Committee of Maoist Parties and Organizations of South Asia (CCOMPOSA). But a bloody territorial feud between the two parties, combined with a state crackdown, kept them apart, and occupied with maintain their own territory.

This situation lasted until September 21, 2004, when the two groups merged and formed the new Communist Party of India (Maoist). The combined force is now the single largest armed group operating inside India.
The Resource War
The fight in Naxalbari in 1967 was about who had the right to farm produce. The Maoists say the essence of their people’s war remains the same – only farm produce has been replaced with minerals and the landlord with mining corporations.

“The war persists because the conditions that create the war do,” said Gautam Navlakha. Navlakha, who spoke to The Diplomat over a secure connection from Sweden, has been one of the most prominent faces to speak against military action on the Maoists. Taking a potshot at the slogan of “development” he says: “There has been no development for the tribal. The land, the forests, the rivers have been exploited for resources and the tribal women have been exploited for sex.”

While the ranks of civil rights activists and Maoist watchers in India are divided over the Maoists’ choice of using violent means, there is almost no disagreement that their cause is rooted in the pushback against unscrupulous exploitation of forest lands and the displacement of tribal populations for the sake of mineral ore.

The economies of China and India have, in the past three decades, become insatiable metal hungry monsters and feeding them has become a multi-billion dollar industry. According to a report by the Centre for Science and Environment (India): “Globally, the mining industry is in boom time. World prices of minerals, ores and metals have soared to record levels, a trend that began in 2002 with unprecedented demand from China. In 2006 alone, global prices of all minerals skyrocketed up 48%.”
thediplomat-lwe_conflictmap2017-790x648.jpeg

Credit: South Asia Terrorism Portal

Little wonder that the Chota Nagpur and Orissa plateaus — loaded with 93 percent of the country’s iron ore, and 84 percent of its coal — have become home to mining behemoths turning up every square mile of the plateaus hills, forests and rivers.

And it is these exact areas that form the core zone of Maoist conflict.

“At the behest of the mining corporations, the government takes away the land and the forests of the tribal people and thereby their livelihoods away from them,” Navlakha explains. “But when the corporations set up shop, they don’t even employ the local people! There is nothing in this for the tribal!”

India’s mining industry has, in fact, been rife with systemic corruption. With little to no government oversight or regulation, regional satraps and families with political clout have pilfered ore at prices below international market rates and above legal quotas and faced no legal action.

The effects of this are borne out by the fact that despite the boom in mineral excavation and sales in India, the mining industry’s contribution to the economy has been lackluster and its share in the GDP has stagnated at 2.2-2.5 percent for more than a decade. Moreover, India has been experiencing jobless growth for a long time and when it comes to unemployment and low wages, the regions in the Maoist conflict zone are some of the worst affected.

The Indian authorities, however, have turned a blind eye to this exploitation and chosen to pursue a purely military approach to the situation.

In April 2006, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, a celebrated “moderate,” described the Maoists as the “single biggest internal security threat” — underscoring the country’s adherence to seeking a purely military solution to the conflict. Thereafter, Singh proceeded to allot a special budget for providing combat assistance to districts where Maoists were present. A rapid militarization of the police was undertaken and armories were upgraded with drones and other equipment designed for high-intensity warfare.

Traditionally, anti-Maoist activities had been under the purview of civilian police and the central paramilitary forces. But Singh — for the first time — tried roping in the Indian military. Ideas like the bombing of Maoist strongholds floated around New Delhi’s power circles.

The move was decried as overkill and unethical. Singh’s cabinet didn’t find adequate support for this even in the ranks of his own party. Moreover, the Indian Army publicly expressed its reluctance to get involved in domestic issues and turn its guns on citizens.

As a workaround, the government sponsored counter-militias and split tribes into those “for” and “against” Maoists. Those willing to fight the Maoists were offered guns, money and an honorary rank of “special police officer.”

The infamous “Salwa Judum” (meaning purification hut) militia, headed by tribal leader Mahendra Karma, was a result of this move.

Karma had been a former member of the Communist Party of India but had rapidly risen through the ranks of power by switching sides and going over to the centrists, the Indian National Congress.

Before long, violence spiraled out of control and the Salwa Judum came under international scrutiny for gross violations of human rights and employment of child soldiers. Acting on a petition moved by the People’s Union of Civil Liberties in India, the Indian Supreme Court declared it illegal in 2011.

Soon after, the Maoists too hit back violently by assassinating Mahendra Karma and clutch of other leaders of the Indian National Congress.

The Military Stalemate

Between 2005 and 2017, the body count on both sides of the people’s war, and of the civilians caught in the crossfire, has ebbed and flowed. 2010 was the bloodiest year in this span. That year, fighting left over a thousand people dead. But with the exception of 2016 (due to one major ambush) the number of casualties has experienced a gradual but steady decline.
thediplomat-maoist-conflict-data-790x522.png

Data from the South Asia Terrorism Portal

But this is more the result of a stalemate, than a situation promising peace. In fact, lasting peace has remained elusive for a variety of political, social and economic reasons.

“The FARC peace deal happened because the Colombian government had the political will for it and because of the role that Cuba played,” Navlakha opines. “That simply doesn’t exist here! Despite declarations of unilateral ceasefire by the Maoists, the Indian government has shown absolutely no willingness to work towards peace. The killing of Azad is an example of government betrayal.”

Cherukuri Rajkumar, known as Azad, was a member of the Central Politburo and the spokesman of the Communist Party of India (Maoist). Reportedly, in 2010 he was supposed to be heading peace negotiations with the Andhra Pradesh government. But for reasons that remain unknown, talks ended abruptly and Azad was killed in an encounter with the police. A journalist and a mediator were also killed. The police said a gun battle had ensued and lasted through the night. Protests erupted in several quarters, with critics of the government saying that the police’s claims were fake and that Azad and the others were killed in cold blood.

Yet things aren’t quite as straightforward as the Maoists offering peace talks and the government rejecting or betraying them.

The Maoists have from time to time tried to play kingmaker by intervening in the competitions between democratic parties. Stepping in during crucial elections, they have on multiple occasions used their firepower to sway results in one direction or the other.

For example, in 2007, the Maoists played a key role in bringing down the 34-year run of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) as the ruling party of West Bengal. Involving themselves over a land acquisition dispute in Nandigram, Maoist guerrillas declared war on the Marxists and killed and drove members out of their homes in large numbers. This led to a landslide win for the opposition leader, Mamata Banerjee. The operation was led by famed guerrilla leader Mallojula Koteswara Rao a.k.a Kishenji.

But soon after the election, Banerjee’s administration engineered Kishenji’s assassination by winning over one of his trusted aides.

The Kishenji episode wasn’t an isolated case. Across Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Orissa, the Maoists’ experiments at working as hired guns for big players have resulted in losses for the group.

The Nepali Maoists having given up their armed efforts, and the CCOMPOSA and the RIM have ceased to be functional, effectively leaving their international links dry. The acrimonious recent past the Indian Maoists share with the other communist parties has made them pariahs in mainstream leftist collectives.

Moreover, unlike the other communist parties that have strong presence in trade unions, student unions, farmer collectives and other mass organizations, the Indian Maoist party has little more than their guns.

This has resulted in political isolation, and locked them inside the conflict zone.
Tribal Identity vs. Development
“The challenge to the Maoists comes as much, if not more, from satellite television and mobile telephony as it does from the Indian armed forces,” Siddharth Mitra, a New York-based human rights activist and Maoist politics watcher, says.

Like elsewhere in the country, rising aspirations for urban life among the younger generations of the tribal people has rendered older methods of public outreach by the Maoists ineffective. And this has in turn catalyzed the shedding of past cultures in favor of the more homogenized, pan-Indian one.

“Besides, one has to be nuanced about what the term tribal culture means,” Mitra explains further. “The tribal from Bastar (Chhattisgarh) is not the same as the tribal from Chandrapur (Maharashtra) or Dandakaranya (Orissa). So, when a Maoist guerrilla from Warangal (Andhra Pradesh) comes and talks to a tribal… in Bastar, the Maoist is as alien or as close to the tribal as the paramilitary soldier.”

This alienation and disillusionment can be gauged from the rising number of surrenders among the Maoist fighters. Tired of an itinerant life in the jungle, scores of mid-level leaders and fighters have deserted their brigades in the past five years and chosen salaried wages and family life instead. This in turn has led to the Maoists recruiting teenagers as combatants to fill the gaps.

The desertions notwithstanding, India’s changing political climate may indirectly be breathing fresh life into the Maoist movement.

In May 2014, the Manmohan Singh-led Congress Party was voted out and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Narendra Modi took over the prime minister’s office. Buoyed by an absolute majority in the lower house of the parliament, Modi and his cabinet have pursued a hardline Hindu nationalist agenda. Critics say Modi has leaned on Hindu supremacist politics and the muzzling of dissent.

This has led the opposition to grow closer and begin coordinating among themselves. Centrists, liberals, communists, Dalits, Muslims, feminists and a sweeping brush of the political-ideological spectrum on the Left have come together to push back against what many see as an onslaught of the Right.

“Gauri’s murder shows this like no other,” says Navlakha, referring to the recent shooting of independent journalist Gauri Lankesh. “This fascist government might just bring the Left closer.”

Lankesh was the Bangalore-based editor of a Kannada-language daily that had good readership among the working class and took a strident anti-Right line. Lankesh spoke out against Modi and his politics from multiple public platforms and had been openly threatened by Modi’s supporters. Shot dead at the gate of her home by “unknown” assailants, her death was openly celebrated on social media by supporters and followers of Modi.

“They tried to pin her murder on the Maoists – calling it infighting,” Navlakha explained. “But no sooner had they done that, the Maoists gave a statement flatly denying the charge. And the charge was rejected by all parties in the opposition.”

Less than a year ago, right after a similar public execution of a Modi-critic in Maharashtra, firebrand Dalit leader Prakash Ambedkar said, “the Right needs to know that if they have goons, we have the Maoists.”

Irrespective of what opinion one holds of the Indian Maoists and their approach to politics, or what one makes of their mixed bag of setbacks and successes, the Indian government can’t wish away their existence – neither their military might nor their political raison d’être. Steeped in a history as old as the Indian polity itself and after half a century of warring, the Indian Maoists remain a force in the country.
Siddharthya Roy is a journalist specializing in politics and global affairs who has reported extensively from South Asia.
http://thediplomat.com/2017/09/half-a-century-of-indias-maoist-insurgency/
 
Rs 3.96 lakh in fake notes seized along India-Bangladesh border
Security agencies have seized fake Rs 2,000 notes with a face value of Rs 3.96 lakh along the India-Bangladesh border in West Bengal's Malda district.

The Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) and the Border Security Force (BSF) conducted the operation in the Charianantpur area of Malda yesterday.

"The DRI had gathered intelligence about the movement of fake currency notes. Asikul Sekh was intercepted with 198 fake bills of Rs 2,000 when he was boarding a train. He was arrested by DRI sleuths," a senior official said.

Sekh is a resident of Charianantpur.

A joint search was subsequently conducted by the DRI and the BSF in that area for further leads, a senior official said.

He said it is suspected that the consignment of counterfeit notes had come from across the border. NES GVS https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...ia-bangladesh-border/articleshow/61508922.cms
 

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