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Separatist Insurgencies in India - News and Discussions.

Last Updated: Wednesday, May 13, 2015 - 13:01
Naxal involved in landmine blast held in Chhattisgarh | Zee News

Raipur: A Naxal, who was allegedly involved in attack on a police anti-landmine vehicle in Chhattisgarh's Dantewada district, has been arrested, police said on Wednesday.


Baman Kunjan (25), active as militia commander of Tikanpal village in the region, was apprehended near his native place under Kirandul police station limits last evening, Kirandul Sub-Divisional Officer of Police MZ Baig told a news agency.

The Naxals had blown up an anti-landmine vehicle on Cholnar-Kirandul road in Dantewada on April 13, killing five policemen and injuring eight others.

Acting on a tip-off that a rebel, in civil dress, was travelling on a motorcycle towards Cholnar from Tikanpal via a kuchcha forest road, police nabbed Kunjam near Mullapara, Baig said.
Naxal pamphlets and few other Maoist-related material were recovered from him, he said.

During interrogation, he admitted to his involvement in the Cholnar blast, right from conducting recee of the movement of security forces to executing the deadly incident, the SDOP said.

Kunjam also revealed that he was tasked with keeping a tab on the movement and activities of security personnel since the day a police camp was set up in Cholnar, Baig said, adding that his interrogation was on.

PTI
 
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Chhatisgarh: Two cops, Maoists killed in gunbattle in Bijapur | Zee News
Last Updated: Sunday, May 17, 2015 - 12:25

358321-maoist700.jpg

Raipur: Two policemen and as many Maoists were on Sunday killed in a gunbattle between security personnel and ultras in Chhattisgarh's Bijapur district.


A police jawan was also injured in the incident.

The face-off between the security personnel and Naxals took place in a dense forest under Mirtur Police Station limits this morning, Bijapur Additional Superintendent of Police Indira Kalyan Elesela said.

A joint contingent of STF and district police force was on an anti-Naxal operation in Gangaloor and Mirtur areas, around 450 kms away from the state capital. When the team reached Mirtur forests, a group of armed rebels opened indiscriminate firing on them following which the police personnel retaliated, he said.

After the gun fight that lasted for around two hours, the Naxals escaped into the core forests.

"A Special Task Force (STF) jawan and another from district police force died in the incident while one was injured. Besides, two Naxals were also killed in the incident," he said.
Reinforcement was rushed to the spot and efforts were on to retrieve the bodies of jawans and Naxals from the dense forests, he said.

Combing operations have been launched to nab the attackers in the forests, the ASP said.

The deceased have been identified as STF constable Sitaram Kunjam and district police reserve group's assistant constable Moti Ram (28), he said.

Efforts were on to retrieve the injured constable Payku Ram Poyam from the forest, he added.

PTI

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Woman Maoist killed in encounter in Bihar | Zee News
Last Updated: Sunday, May 17, 2015 - 12:37
Gaya: A woman Maoist was killed in an encounter with security forces at Sondi-Jhanjhor in this district on Sunday.


A team of security forces, comprising CRPF and district police, launched a combing operation in the village bordering Jharkhand during which an encounter took place in which a woman ultra was killed, Senior Superintendent of Police Manu Maharaj said.

The security forces recovered a walkie talkie, an Insas rifle and a haul of ammunition from the spot, Maharaj said.

The combing operation against the Maoists was going on.
 
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4 Cops Kidnapped by Maoists in Chhattisgarh Killed with Sharp Weapons

BIJAPUR: The bodies of four policemen kidnapped by Maoists on Monday were found in Chhattisgarh's Bijapur district today. Their bodies were found just 5 km from where they were kidnapped.

The policemen, all assistant constables, were kidnapped from a bus while it was passing through the Maoist-dominated Kutru village in Bijapur late on Monday. They were killed with sharp weapons, said Sukhnandan Rathore, a senior police officer involved in anti-Maoist operations.

The bodies were thrown on the roadside near a forest area, just a few km from a paramilitary camp, he added.

"It is a matter of concern. We condemn the incident. The government will look into the matter," said state Home Minister Ram Sevak Paikra.

The policemen, Jaidev Yadav, Mangal Sodi, Raju Tela and Rama Majji, were recruited as auxiliary personnel, who assist the state police in anti-Naxal operations and are known as 'followers'.

The police said Maoists were searching civilian vehicles in the area and when they saw the policemen in the bus, they took them away at gunpoint.

Police teams have been sent out to the jungles to look for the killers.

The government describes the Maoist insurgency as the country's most serious internal security threat.
 
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3 killed in police firing, Manipur violence toll up to 8 - The Times of India

IMPHAL: Three persons were killed today when police opened fire on protesters in Manipur's Churachandpur district taking the overnight toll to eight as fresh violence erupted there, forcing the authorities to continue the indefinite curfew imposed last night.

The police said that they opened fire on a mob which attacked Churachandpur police station, leaving three of the agitators dead.

Two of the killed were in their 30s while another was 10 years old, police sources said.

READ ALSO: Manipur violence: Four killed, 13 injured

Four persons were injured in the police firing, taking the total number of the injured to 31. They were admitted to Churachandpur district hospital this evening, a hospital source said.

Five persons were kille during a general strike called by the tribal student organisations called a bandh yesterday protesting against the passage of three bills - Protection of Manipur People Bill, 2015, Manipur Land Revenue and Land Reforms (Seventh amendment) Bill, 2015, and Manipur Shops and Establishments (Second Amendment) Bill, 2015 - in the state assembly to protect the indigenous people.

The tribals feared that the passage of the laws would allow "outsiders" to have rights over tribal land.

While three bullet-riddled bodies were found in Churachandpur town yesterday, a charred body was recovered from under the debris at the residence of Henglep MLA Manga Vaiphei this morning in the town, a police officer said, adding that another body was also found.

According to the police, the houses of MP of Outer Manipur Lok Sabha seat Thangso Baite, Manipur family welfare minister Phungzaphang Tonsimg, and that of five MLAs, including Manga Vaiphei and Vungzagin Valte of Thanlom, were set on fire in Churachandpur town during the bandh called by the students last evening.

@mods e.g. @WebMaster @Horus - Please re-name thread to "india insurgency news and discussion" as many of these rebel/seperatist attacks dont apply to just maoist/naxal movement
 
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3 killed in police firing, Manipur violence toll up to 8 - The Times of India

IMPHAL: Three persons were killed today when police opened fire on protesters in Manipur's Churachandpur district taking the overnight toll to eight as fresh violence erupted there, forcing the authorities to continue the indefinite curfew imposed last night.

The police said that they opened fire on a mob which attacked Churachandpur police station, leaving three of the agitators dead.

Two of the killed were in their 30s while another was 10 years old, police sources said.

READ ALSO: Manipur violence: Four killed, 13 injured

Four persons were injured in the police firing, taking the total number of the injured to 31. They were admitted to Churachandpur district hospital this evening, a hospital source said.

Five persons were kille during a general strike called by the tribal student organisations called a bandh yesterday protesting against the passage of three bills - Protection of Manipur People Bill, 2015, Manipur Land Revenue and Land Reforms (Seventh amendment) Bill, 2015, and Manipur Shops and Establishments (Second Amendment) Bill, 2015 - in the state assembly to protect the indigenous people.

The tribals feared that the passage of the laws would allow "outsiders" to have rights over tribal land.

While three bullet-riddled bodies were found in Churachandpur town yesterday, a charred body was recovered from under the debris at the residence of Henglep MLA Manga Vaiphei this morning in the town, a police officer said, adding that another body was also found.

According to the police, the houses of MP of Outer Manipur Lok Sabha seat Thangso Baite, Manipur family welfare minister Phungzaphang Tonsimg, and that of five MLAs, including Manga Vaiphei and Vungzagin Valte of Thanlom, were set on fire in Churachandpur town during the bandh called by the students last evening.

@mods e.g. @WebMaster @Horus - Please re-name thread to "india insurgency news and discussion" as many of these rebel/seperatist attacks dont apply to just maoist/naxal movement

Nothing to do with insurgency or separatism .
 
. . . .
So what exactly is your point ?

This particular incident has nothing to with insurgency .

Sure - the whole world is wrong, including many many indians especially those dealing with these insurgencies everyday...... those 76 CPRF guys in dantewada were killed, their weapons taken away by oscar the grouch and cookie monster

(indian source):

Roots of Manipur insurgency | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis

As of now, Manipur remains the most violent North-Eastern state with over 20,000 young men killed in violent conflict
  • 344877-insurgency.jpg
    PTI
The tragic death of 18 security forces personnel in an ambush in the Chandel District of Manipur on 4th June has once again jolted the people and policymakers of India to the fragile situation in the state. While the central government has rushed the army chief and ordered the military operation “Search and Destroy“, many have simultaneously renewed their defence of the draconian Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA). The ongoing debates and discussions however fail to analyse the roots of the problem in its historic context. This lack of understanding is what lies behind the collective failure to maintain the peace in Manipur for so many decades. This article tries to facilitate an understanding of this beautiful and historically rich North-Eastern state, which has been mismanaged and misunderstood for so long.

Manipur remained independent until the Lapse of Paramountcy in 1947 when the British quit India. It was then that the then maharaja of the state, Bodh Chandra relinquished his monarchy and instituted a new constitution, perhaps the first of its kind in India. The constitution was called the “Manipur Constitution Act, 1947”. This was an attempt to introduce democracy in Manipur. As mandated by the Act, an election was held in 1948.The first ever elected Manipur State Assembly was inaugurated by the maharaja on October 18, 1948.

On September 1949, the Governor of Assam, Sri Prakasa, invited Maharaja Bodh Chandra to Shillong for talks. On the first day of the meeting, September 18, 1949, the governor presented to the maharaja a tailor-made “Merger Agreement,” whereby Manipur would be merged with India. Bodh Chandra was asked to sign the “Merger Agreement,” which he refused. He offered instead to discuss the matter with his council of ministers. The maharaja on return to his Redlands residence in the hill station found that Indian Armypersonnel had surrounded the premises. And the maharaja was placed under house arrest. Finally, on September 21, 1949, Bodh Chandra signed the “Merger Agreement.”

Under the terms of the agreement, Manipur was to come under Indian rule from October 1949. The agreement was kept secret until October 15, 1949. The same day an executive order was passed dissolving the Manipur state assembly and the elected council of ministers. Following the dissolution of the assembly, Hijam Irabot Singh, a member of the dissolved council went underground. Although Irabot died six years later, in 1955, the seeds of protest then sown germinated into full-blown insurgency by the early 1960s.

Meanwhile, elections were held during November and December 1951. In the elections, around 30 people were elected to guide Manipur into an era of peace and prosperity. But that was never to be. The main architects of democracy had betrayed Manipur, and led the state to a half-a-century of bloodshed.

In the year 1952, Manipur’s first general elections were held. Fourteen political parties contested these elections. In the year 1956, the 7th Amendment Act in the Constitution of India converted the Part ‘C’ state status of Manipur into a Union Territory.

A prolonged agitation had started on April 11, 1960, for the restoration of a responsible government. The agitation ultimately led to the granting of statehood to Manipur in 1972, and BK Nehru was sworn in as the governor. Although Manipur continues to enjoy the status of a full-fledged state within the Indian Union, many people are angry at the way New Delhi handles the situation in the state. This sense of apathy for the Indian nationalist ideal paved the way for the second phase of insurgency.

The unfinished task of Manipur’s first communist leader Hijam Irabot Singh was taken up in March-April 1969, almost 18 years later, by an underground group which called itself the Revolutionary Government of Manipur (RGM). A decade later the RGM was dissolved by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) leader, Bisheshwar Singh.

In 1970, the Government of India declared Manipur as a disturbed area and all revolutionary organisations were declared unlawful. The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 was enforced. An army officer, stationed in Manipur during the time, had then observed: “Imphal, the capital for Manipur – today -- is like Saigon during the Vietnam war and nobody can explain why so many paramilitary forces are stationed in such a small area. Thus began the era of little wars and insurrection, a bane which continues to ail Manipur to this very day.”

The story of Manipuri insurrection, which began in the 1950s and the genesis of which seems to lie to an extent in the manner in which the state was merged with India, continues without an endgame in sight.

At present, there are over 72 armed groups which operate in the state. Every ethnic group seems to be arming itself. While the first few armed groups were set up to fight the Indian State, several others were later formed to demand autonomy for the state or to preserve the state’s natural resources. Some armed groups had political objectives. Armed insurrections have even been mounted for the revival of culture and religion.

As of 2015, Manipur remains the most violent state in the region with over 20,000 killed. Over 20,000 women became widows as many young men from the state were killed in conflict. Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network was launched in 2007 to respond to the humanitarian crisis that has engulfed the state’s widows.

Manipur’s women and children are traumatised by the deaths of family members. They bear the brunt of the emotional and socio-economic impact of violence. Apart from that, women themselves are particularly vulnerable to violence and intimidation at gunpoint, often used as a deliberate military and political tactic. Also women and girls continue to be tortured, raped and killed at gunpoint. In most operations, the armed forces, under the aegis of AFSPA, have done away with the basic, minimal safeguards accorded to women suspects by the Criminal Procedure Code as well as the Supreme Court. Manipur alone has 20,000 registered conflict widows.

Recall the incident of 12 Manipuri mothers disrobing themselves and storming the local army headquarters in an extraordinary act of protest following the rape and brutal murder of Thangjam Manorama, a 32-year-old Manipuri woman, picked up and brutally raped by Indian armed forces personnel, in July 2004.Till date, the killers of Manorama have not been punished. It is the women of Manipur who continue to be a guiding light in the dark night. In a meeting with the Union Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju, I emphatically conveyed that there can be no peace in Manipur without women’s participation. It is time that Government of Manipur and India include the women of Manipur and North-East India in the peace talks and negotiations. The women have the blueprint for bringing peace to Manipur and the North-East. In September 2015, women leaders from across North-East India will lead the campaign to develop a National Action Plan revolving around women, peace and security. The women of Manipur and the North-East have to be the legitimate vanguard of a peace process if it is to succeed in this region.

The author is founder of Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network/Control Arms Foundation of India and is convenor of North-East India Women Initiative for Peace. She tweets at @BinaNepram
 
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Sure - the whole world is wrong, including many many indians especially those dealing with these insurgencies everyday...... those 76 CPRF guys in dantewada were killed, their weapons taken away by oscar the grouch and cookie monster

(indian source):

Roots of Manipur insurgency | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis

As of now, Manipur remains the most violent North-Eastern state with over 20,000 young men killed in violent conflict
  • 344877-insurgency.jpg
    PTI
The tragic death of 18 security forces personnel in an ambush in the Chandel District of Manipur on 4th June has once again jolted the people and policymakers of India to the fragile situation in the state. While the central government has rushed the army chief and ordered the military operation “Search and Destroy“, many have simultaneously renewed their defence of the draconian Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA). The ongoing debates and discussions however fail to analyse the roots of the problem in its historic context. This lack of understanding is what lies behind the collective failure to maintain the peace in Manipur for so many decades. This article tries to facilitate an understanding of this beautiful and historically rich North-Eastern state, which has been mismanaged and misunderstood for so long.

Manipur remained independent until the Lapse of Paramountcy in 1947 when the British quit India. It was then that the then maharaja of the state, Bodh Chandra relinquished his monarchy and instituted a new constitution, perhaps the first of its kind in India. The constitution was called the “Manipur Constitution Act, 1947”. This was an attempt to introduce democracy in Manipur. As mandated by the Act, an election was held in 1948.The first ever elected Manipur State Assembly was inaugurated by the maharaja on October 18, 1948.

On September 1949, the Governor of Assam, Sri Prakasa, invited Maharaja Bodh Chandra to Shillong for talks. On the first day of the meeting, September 18, 1949, the governor presented to the maharaja a tailor-made “Merger Agreement,” whereby Manipur would be merged with India. Bodh Chandra was asked to sign the “Merger Agreement,” which he refused. He offered instead to discuss the matter with his council of ministers. The maharaja on return to his Redlands residence in the hill station found that Indian Armypersonnel had surrounded the premises. And the maharaja was placed under house arrest. Finally, on September 21, 1949, Bodh Chandra signed the “Merger Agreement.”

Under the terms of the agreement, Manipur was to come under Indian rule from October 1949. The agreement was kept secret until October 15, 1949. The same day an executive order was passed dissolving the Manipur state assembly and the elected council of ministers. Following the dissolution of the assembly, Hijam Irabot Singh, a member of the dissolved council went underground. Although Irabot died six years later, in 1955, the seeds of protest then sown germinated into full-blown insurgency by the early 1960s.

Meanwhile, elections were held during November and December 1951. In the elections, around 30 people were elected to guide Manipur into an era of peace and prosperity. But that was never to be. The main architects of democracy had betrayed Manipur, and led the state to a half-a-century of bloodshed.

In the year 1952, Manipur’s first general elections were held. Fourteen political parties contested these elections. In the year 1956, the 7th Amendment Act in the Constitution of India converted the Part ‘C’ state status of Manipur into a Union Territory.

A prolonged agitation had started on April 11, 1960, for the restoration of a responsible government. The agitation ultimately led to the granting of statehood to Manipur in 1972, and BK Nehru was sworn in as the governor. Although Manipur continues to enjoy the status of a full-fledged state within the Indian Union, many people are angry at the way New Delhi handles the situation in the state. This sense of apathy for the Indian nationalist ideal paved the way for the second phase of insurgency.

The unfinished task of Manipur’s first communist leader Hijam Irabot Singh was taken up in March-April 1969, almost 18 years later, by an underground group which called itself the Revolutionary Government of Manipur (RGM). A decade later the RGM was dissolved by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) leader, Bisheshwar Singh.

In 1970, the Government of India declared Manipur as a disturbed area and all revolutionary organisations were declared unlawful. The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958 was enforced. An army officer, stationed in Manipur during the time, had then observed: “Imphal, the capital for Manipur – today -- is like Saigon during the Vietnam war and nobody can explain why so many paramilitary forces are stationed in such a small area. Thus began the era of little wars and insurrection, a bane which continues to ail Manipur to this very day.”

The story of Manipuri insurrection, which began in the 1950s and the genesis of which seems to lie to an extent in the manner in which the state was merged with India, continues without an endgame in sight.

At present, there are over 72 armed groups which operate in the state. Every ethnic group seems to be arming itself. While the first few armed groups were set up to fight the Indian State, several others were later formed to demand autonomy for the state or to preserve the state’s natural resources. Some armed groups had political objectives. Armed insurrections have even been mounted for the revival of culture and religion.

As of 2015, Manipur remains the most violent state in the region with over 20,000 killed. Over 20,000 women became widows as many young men from the state were killed in conflict. Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network was launched in 2007 to respond to the humanitarian crisis that has engulfed the state’s widows.

Manipur’s women and children are traumatised by the deaths of family members. They bear the brunt of the emotional and socio-economic impact of violence. Apart from that, women themselves are particularly vulnerable to violence and intimidation at gunpoint, often used as a deliberate military and political tactic. Also women and girls continue to be tortured, raped and killed at gunpoint. In most operations, the armed forces, under the aegis of AFSPA, have done away with the basic, minimal safeguards accorded to women suspects by the Criminal Procedure Code as well as the Supreme Court. Manipur alone has 20,000 registered conflict widows.

Recall the incident of 12 Manipuri mothers disrobing themselves and storming the local army headquarters in an extraordinary act of protest following the rape and brutal murder of Thangjam Manorama, a 32-year-old Manipuri woman, picked up and brutally raped by Indian armed forces personnel, in July 2004.Till date, the killers of Manorama have not been punished. It is the women of Manipur who continue to be a guiding light in the dark night. In a meeting with the Union Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju, I emphatically conveyed that there can be no peace in Manipur without women’s participation. It is time that Government of Manipur and India include the women of Manipur and North-East India in the peace talks and negotiations. The women have the blueprint for bringing peace to Manipur and the North-East. In September 2015, women leaders from across North-East India will lead the campaign to develop a National Action Plan revolving around women, peace and security. The women of Manipur and the North-East have to be the legitimate vanguard of a peace process if it is to succeed in this region.

The author is founder of Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network/Control Arms Foundation of India and is convenor of North-East India Women Initiative for Peace. She tweets at @BinaNepram

I can only laugh at these posts .

Nobody here denied the existence of insurgency in Manipur or other parts of India .

The only thing I said is that the particular incident which you posted in post#1238 has nothing to do with insurgency which is clearly written in the article of the background of the incident as well .

Looks like your inferiority complex is not allowing you to accept the fact that you have made a mistake .
 
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Peace process hits roadblock: govt bans Naga insurgent group NSCN (K)

Peace process hits roadblock: govt bans Naga insurgent group NSCN (K)
SUHAS MUNSHI@suhasmunshi
|16 September 2015


The action
  • The Union Home Ministry has banned Naga group NSCN (K)
  • It says this group's 'violent activities' have gone on in spite of the peace process with other groups
  • The Khaplang group was behind the ambush of 18 Armymen on 4 June

The reaction
  • Experts on the insurgency feel this move may turn out to be counter-productive
  • Naga civil society may end up sympathising with the Myanmar-based NSCN (K)
  • Govt-appointed interlocutor RN Ravi is understood to have raised objections to the move


horizontalBar.png


The Home Ministry on 16 September effectively declared war on the NSCN (Khaplang) by banning it for five years. The Naga militant outfit now joins the list of 36 other banned militant organisations in India, including Babbar Khalsa International, Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) and United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA).

The government will now act against NSCN (K) cadres under the stringent anti-terrorism Unlawful Activities (Prevention), Act.

Continuing violence
The reason for this, according the ministry's declaration, is "continued hostility and violence on the part of the NSCN (K) against the Indian security personnel, from their bases in Myanmar."

While the government was ready to work on a peace framework with other insurgent groups like NSCN (Reformation) and NSCN (IM), it said the faction headed by Khaplang had carried out at least six 'violent activities', including the 4 June ambush in which 18 Indian Army soldiers were killed.

The government had already made its intentions of dealing with the Khaplang faction clear when it announced bounties on the heads of NSCN (K) chief SS Khaplang and the group's military commander Niki Sumi five days ago.

Naga society's reaction key
So how does the fight with NSCN (K) change after the ban?

Those who have observed Naga insurgency over the past several decades say that while the government's stance against the militant group is reasonable, reactions from other quarters of the region will have to be seen.

"The Khaplang faction doesn't have any interest in talking to India. For Khaplang, he would not want to let go of the areas he controls, which he uses for arms dealing. Besides, his organisation is based out of Myanmar. Why would India also talk to them? Would we talk to a militant organisation based out of Islamabad or Lahore?" said Deepak Dewan, editor of the North East Sun.



The govt has accused the Khaplang faction of six 'violent activities', including the 4 June ambush



However, what remains to be seen is the reaction of Naga civil society.

A delegation of Nagaland legislators had recently gone to Myanmar, with the government's consent, to persuade Khaplang to come to the negotiating table. It wanted to persuade Khaplang's faction to resume the 2001 ceasefire, which was abrogated in March this year.

"The Naga civil society wanted peace and a ceasefire with the Khaplang group. So we will have to see if they're happy or disappointed with today's development," Dewan said.


Ban may be counter-productive
Naga civil society members may not be alone in feeling unhappy about the ban on NSCN (K), which finishes off all chances of peace talks.

The government-appointed interlocutor, RN Ravi, is understood to have been a long-time advocate of continuing peace talks with the Khaplang faction. According to sources, Ravi had opposed the Home Ministry's decision during consultations on the matter.

This is because some believe that banning the militant organisations may actually turn out to be counter-productive in the long run.

"What happened when we banned SIMI? Their organisation went underground, they gained some sympathisers and a lot of their associates arrested under UAPA walked out of jail after some time anyway," a home ministry source told Catch.

Others believe that the inclusion of the Khaplang group in the list of banned organisations could also be an empty symbolic gesture, unless the government shows some real intent in tackling NSCN (K).

Former Union home secretary K Padmanabhaiah, who once was the principal negotiator in the Naga peace talks, said the government will have to do more than just ban the group.

"There's no meaning in banning the group unless the government really means business. It will have to find and cut down the sources of Khaplang's funding. They will have to find ways of disarming them. Banning the organisation in itself doesn't make any difference. We will also have to see if Myanmar is ready to cooperate with India on this, since Khaplang is based out of their country," he said.
 
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Separate incident
Another Maoist killed in gun battle with police

ourkela/Bhubaneswar: One more Maoist was shot dead in a fierce gun battle with security forces during a joint combing operation inside Chandiposh forest area on Rourkela-Jharkhand border late on Wednesday night.

Giving a detailed account of the encounter at a press briefing in Bhubaneswar on Thursday, Director General of Police K B Singh said of the two Maoists killed during encounter one has been identified as Sangram, platoon commandant of Saranda Sub Division in Jharkhand.

He said acting on a tip-off from reliable sources about the movement of the Maoists, the Odisha Police along with the CRPF, SOG and DVF personnel had launched a joint combing operation inside Surakhol hill forest under Chandiposh police limits on Tuesday. The operation was carried out by three units of SOG (Special Operation Group) and one unit each of CRPF (Central Reserve Police Force) and DVF (District Voluntary Force).

“During the operation, two Maoists including Sangram were killed in encounter while the security personnel seized a huge cache of arms and ammunition from inside the forest including four .303 rifles, 284 rounds of live bullets, four grenades, gelatine sticks and camp equipments like Maoist literatures, uniforms etc”, Singh added.

It is worthwhile to mention here that the security personnel had also gunned down one ultra early on Wednesday during the combing operation inside the forest.

“The combing operation in the area is on since there is every possibility that some Maoists might have been injured in the encounter. Considering the seizure of huge cache of arms and ammunition and specific intelligence input, we have come to know that the Maoists had targeted the ensuing panchayat elections in Jharkhand and had planned to launch an attack from their camps based in Odisha”, IG, Western Range, RK Sharma told OTV in Rourkela.

Maoist killed in gun battle with police | Odisha Television Limited

Another incident

Bihar: Three hardcore Maoists arrested

Three hardcore Maoists have been arrested from a village in Bihar's Gaya district, a police officer said.

Acting on a tip off, the police raided Orwatand village last evening and nabbed three hardcore Maoists, identified as Manoj Yadav, Ramesh Kumar and Sanju Yadav, all members of proscribed naxal outfit - CPI (Maoists), Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Manu Maharaj told reporters.

Manoj Yadav was wanted in eight cases of naxal violence in the district, including an incident in which the Maoists had blown up a minibus carrying security personnel in which two were killed on February 24 last, he said.

Yadav was also among those Maoists who had torched 32 trucks during their bandh in the district in May this year, Maharaj said.

Bihar: Three hardcore Maoists arrested | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis

Another

Six Maoists arrested

A militia platoon section commander and five militia members of the CPI (Maoists) were arrested by the police during two separate search operations in the forest area in Charla mandal late on Wednesday evening.

The arrested militia platoon section commander was identified as Madavi Jogaiah of Rallapuram in Charla mandal, police said.

A country made tapancha with two live cartridges was seized from him.

He was apprehended by a police team during a search operation at Chelimala forest area on Wednesday evening.

He was allegedly involved in a total of 12 cases, including three murder cases under various police station limits in Bhadrachalam division.

The remaining five Maoist militia members were nabbed by a team of special party policemen near a forest fringe village a few kms away from the Taliperu reservoir late on Wednesday evening.

Police said the arrested militia members were involved in digging of pits on roads in Charla mandal during the Maoist martyrs week observance over three months ago.

They were produced before a court in Khammam on Thursday afternoon.

Six Maoists arrested - The Hindu

So, total cleanup operation going on in full speed.
 
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