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Nepalese Maoists Aiding Indian Rebels

Posted: Nov 5, 2009 Thu 09:40 pm     Views: 151    Interacts: 14

Is this the start of a bloody revolution by the poor and left-behind Indian masses? Does the size of the force of over 100,000 Indian soldiers represent the seriousness of the threat the Indian government face in fighting the rebels? Contrast this with the force of 30,000 soldiers Pakistan has deployed in South Waziristan, or the 68000 American troops in the entire Afghan war theater.

Indian author and activist Arudhati Roy has accused Indian government of mounting an assault on the poor by maligning them as terrorists. "You know, when September 11th happened, I think some of us had already said that a time would come when poverty would be sort of collapsed and converge into terrorism. And this is exactly what’s happened. The poorest people in this country today are being called terrorists", she said recently.

Gajurel, a senior leader of the Nepalese Maoists, has recently been quoted by Rajdhani daily as saying, "We have extended our full support and cooperation to the Indian Maoists, who are launching armed revolt."

There has been a surge in Maoist violence in India in recent months - the rebels have kidnapped and killed policemen, held up an express train, attacked police stations, and blown up railway lines and communication links in affected states.

The Maoist insurgency started in 1967 and has spread to cover a third of India's districts, forming a so-called "red corridor" in mainly central areas.

The rebels have a presence in more than 223 of India's 600-odd districts across 20 states, according to the government.

There have been more than 1,400 cases related to violence by Maoists between January and August, according to official records. Nearly 600 civilians have died over that period.

India’s rapid economic growth has made it an emerging global power but also deepened stark i nequalities in society. Maoists accuse the government of trying to push tribal groups off their land to gain access to raw materials and have sabotaged roads, bridges and even an energy pipeline, according to the NY Times.

The intensity of Naxalites' hatred for the Indian ruling elite can be gauged by the fact that their leader Ganapathi, a former schoolteacher, denounced Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Home Minister P Chidambaran as "terrorists." In a recent interview at his secret jungle hideout with the weekly magazine Open, he said "the people will rise up like a tornado under our party's leadership to wipe out the reactionary blood-sucking vampires ruling our country." At another point, the 59-year old Ganapathi declared: "Those (government) sharks want to loot the wealth and drive the tribal people of the region to further impoverishment."

The Maoists were once dismissed as a ragtag band of outdated ideologues, but the Indian government is now preparing to deploy nearly 100,000 strong force for a prolonged counterinsurgency campaign to hunt down the guerrillas in some of the country’s most rugged, isolated terrain.

By threatening to unleash a violent revolution if the Indian government went ahead with its planned large-scale offensive against his insurgent forces, Maoists leader Ganapathi has made the intentions of the rebels obvious. Already, his men, and even some women fighters, have carried out acts that are now normally associated with the Taliban. They have kidnapped and beheaded government officials, blown up electricity and telephone towers, destroyed roads and railway tracks, killed political opponents and attacked police stations and other official installations. The offensive against the Naxalites will certainly weaken and deprive them of some of their bases and hideouts, but the issue cannot be resolved by the use of force alone. Many members of the Indian intelligentsia sympathize with the cause of the Maoists and objective analysts see it as an economic issue and one concerning social justice. The Indian ruling elite needs to deal with the root-cause of the insurgency instead of applying force through the state apparatus to decimate the rebels.

Here's are two video clip about Maoists in India:





Related Links:

Bloody revolution in India

Arundhai Roy on Maoist Revolt

India's Maoist Revolution

NY Times on Maoists

Can Indian Democracy Deliver?

G rinding Poverty in Resurgent India

Pakistan's Choice: Globalization or Talibanization

The Tornado Awaiting India

Countering Militancy in FATA

Taliban or Rawliban?

Political, Economic and Social Reforms in Pakistan

Fix ing Sanitation Crisis in India

Western Myths About "Stable, Peaceful, Prosperous" India

Taliban Target Landed Elite

Feudal Punjab Fertile For Terror

Caste: India's Apartheid


+ add to my favorite ilogs + flag objectionable content


Latest comments
Posted by khadija-saxena on Friday November 6, 2009 11:10 am
"""he latest reports, including the video I posted,""""


Ohhh so you rely on these dime a dozen youtube videos, and when it comes - you want credeble and neutral sources from us?

Shame on you takle budhe.....
Posted by RiazHaq on Friday November 6, 2009 09:49 am
The latest reports, including the video I posted, indicate the number of Indian security forces involved exceeds 100,000. It's a clear indication of the scale and scope of the bloody insurgency in India.
Posted by khadija-saxena on Friday November 6, 2009 09:19 am
""""Contrast India's 70,000 against Maoists""""

You scaled down your own figures from INFLATED 100,000.

Read yr fine print in the following:

······Does the size of the force of over 100,000 Indian soldiers represent the seriousness of the threat the Indian government face in fighting the rebels? ········


Paki INFLATION must be hurting Pakistanis overseas too! LOL

Posted by khadija-saxena on Friday November 6, 2009 09:15 am
#####Contrast India's 70,000 against Maoists with the force of 30,000 soldiers Pakistan has deployed in South Waziristan, or the 68000 American troops in the entire Afghan war theater.#####


Ohh my!

While Maoists are scattered in nine states of India, amounting to apx million square KM, Afghanistan´s terretory is just 650,000 square KM.

Pitted against above, South Waziristan is just 11.5 thousands square KM.

Now do your math for soldier per capita on KMs LOL

But we understand your deceptive agenda here.

I have smoked you out, so have others, with your lies n twists.
Posted by RiazHaq on Friday November 6, 2009 08:30 am
Contrast India's 70,000 against Maoists with the force of 30,000 soldiers Pakistan has deployed in South Waziristan, or the 68000 American troops in the entire Afghan war theater.
Posted by khadija-saxena on Friday November 6, 2009 08:12 am
With about 1,414,000 soldiers in active service and about 1,800,000 reserve troops, the Indian Army is the world's second largest active standing army and the largest in terms of army populace.

And I did not include one million Paramilitary forces in above!
Posted by khadija-saxena on Friday November 6, 2009 08:02 am
#### 100,000 Indian soldier ####


Soldiers (Indian Army) are different from Para military forces, more, Indian Army is not active against Maoists.

The Paramilitary Forces of India (PMF) are those agencies of the Government of India which aid the operations of the law enforcement agencies of India and the Indian Armed Forces. With over a million personnel in active service, the PMF is one of the world's largest paramilitary organizations.


As I earlier said, you always try to make a mountain out of molehill.....



Posted by RiazHaq on Friday November 6, 2009 07:51 am
Is this the start of a bloody revolution by the poor and left-behind Indian masses? Does the size of the force of over 100,000 Indian soldiers represent the seriousness of the threat the Indian government face in fighting the rebels? Contrast this the force of 30,000 soldiers Pakistan has deployed in South Waziristan.
Posted by RiazHaq on Friday November 6, 2009 07:28 am
PakDoc:
I am embedding the video you suggested:

Posted by pakdoc on Friday November 6, 2009 01:49 am
here's another perspective about why maoist movement is being hyped by indian govt

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmIaX7W-BFU&feature=player_embedded
Posted by bharat25t on Friday November 6, 2009 01:41 am
Riaz Mian will cry his heart out for few problems that India has.. While his country is using kids for Jihad....

I wonder if he is really insane or he is a closet Indophile.

The Abduls in Pakistan are going around saying this on internet,,,,,

kaleem says:
2009/10/23 at 21:51

i m kaleem,and proud to b a pakistani,i wanna join pak force , mujy indain,USand isrealian se hate ha,mein cahta hoon jahan mily uder h ishoot ker doun,they are balck sheap,hate this hy give me trenning,give me weapon, pl;z tell me waht i do love pak army


Posted by bharat25t on Friday November 6, 2009 01:30 am
Watch this video::: Young kids attending Prep Schools.

Posted by bharat25t on Friday November 6, 2009 01:24 am

"""While the notorious madrasa system has been a wellspring for the radicalisation of Pakistani and Afghan youth since the days of the Soviet jihad, Islamist leaders, analysts and American military officials in both countries say they are seeing a sinister new development in which young children are being taken from their villages and forced to undergo training as suicide bombers.


The children, some as young as six, are considered disposable in the increasingly nasty war between the Pakistani and Afghan governments and the insurgents trying to overthrow the two states.

“The thinking is that these kids are very young and extremely vulnerable, which is why we need to get work out of them immediately,” says a recruiter for Lashkar-i-Taiba, a violent Pakistani jihadist outfit who did not want his name to be published.

“These kids are also more likely to spill the beans or have a change of heart and this is why we only use them as bombers.”

Statistics are difficult to come by but children represent only a small minority of suicide bombers. However, their psychological impact on people is devastating.

“Employing children as perpetrators of suicide attacks is an even more effective instrument of psychological warfare than using an adult attacker,” says Christine Fair, author of a 2007 UN report on suicide bombs in Afghanistan. “Indistinguishable from the other children, the spectre of the child attacker is as terrifying as it incomprehensible.”


Some parents are paid to keep their child in a madrasa. Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images

The main clearing houses for the young recruits straddle the porous Afghan-Pakistan border with many deep inside North and South Waziristan.

In some cases poor Pakistani parents are paid 1,000 rupees (Dh80) a month, a huge sum, to allow their sons to stay in the madrasa where, after a long period of rote memorisation of the Quran, the use of weapons is slowly introduced. The teachers look for children with the right attributes – malleable or emotional youngsters. When they find one, the recruiters from the loose network of jihadist groups in the tribal areas are alerted.""""


Posted by khadija-saxena on Friday November 6, 2009 12:07 am
With the Naxals facing the heat of an imminent concerted operation by security forces, a top Maoist leader on Thursday said that the ultras were ready for talks "if there was ceasefire on both sides" and withdrawal of the para-military forces deployed in the naxal-hit states.

"The process of talks with the central Government can only begin if there is ceasefire on both sides," top Maoist leader Kishenji said on Thursday.


Their fire crackers are no match to our paramilitary forces, and they know it, its just a matter of time, once they saw the danda coming, they will retreat in their cave. Its as simple as that. Hence people of India are not that worried about this factor, but nice try, in making a mountain out of molehill.

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