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An India Pushed under Carpet hits back

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Vjavasi
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Post Number: 2158
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Posted on Wednesday, April 07, 2010 - 08:17 am:       

This is a shocking trend we are seeing
by Vishnu Sharma on Apr 07, 2010 12:34 AM | Hide replies

Telugus are becoming hardcore Naxals.

All this is because of the propagation of Marxist ideologies in Andhra Universities.

Marxism immediately appeals to the crook and criminal who cannot find a place in society
by any effort.

Marxists do not have any talent other than a deep criminal streak in them to murder and lie all the time.

This lays a complete lie to the claim by people like Gaddar, Vara Vara Rao, Arundhati Roy and Praful Bidwai that Naxals are indigenous to the region.

THE TRUTH is all dangerous naxalites in the country are Telugus.

We need to eradicate Marxism from our curriculum and abolish all Marxist Unions.

This will not be possible until we establish Large concentration camps to hold these criminals and work them to death.

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Re: This is a shocking trend we are seeing
by Manoj on Apr 07, 2010 01:00 AM
Vishnuji... AP is a tearful story of how people who are rampantly brutalized for generations, if not allowed a proper means to redress their grievances will pervert not just their province but the entire nation.

Its not just the universities, but centuries of Izxcslzxamic rule has left the majority of Telangana impoverished beyond words..

There is no effective redressal to their problems...

Sure, BJP points out the injustices happening to hzxcindus all over India - but what from an economic front ?

These people have found only one ideology that bothers about their cause - MAOISM..

Until hzxcindutva addresses the economic challenges of these people, it will always remain an elitist ideology for them.

But as I said earlier, first hzxcindus need to grab power.. then destroy szxceckulars and only later on can economic development begin.

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Re: Re: This is a shocking trend we are seeing
by Vishnu Sharma on Apr 07, 2010 02:38 AM
If Hindus grab power undemocratically and destroy seculars, they will be creating too many enemies to handle quickly and the effort is bound to fail.

The change should be gradual and democratic, Yet we need a dedicated cadre for propaganda and public enlightenment.

The values which our fathers and fore-fathers possessed which made them fight for and win India's freedom are no longer there.

If you are a serious nationalist, you are laughed at today.

Which is why I have the BACK TO THE VILLAGE FOR ONE YEAR program.

City folks cannot afford to be cut off from rural areas in Today's India. Each and every person has to adopt one village and bring change to it.

It could be your ancestral village.

Once again a struggle from grass roots level, needs to be launched to preserve India's pristine soul and give strength back to its people.

What we want is a GRANITE SOLID ideology which accepts no other isms other than NATIONALISM.

Pure Nationalism is the need of the hour. Neither caste, nor creed, nor social status nor gender matter anymore.

All Marxists and Secular want is to replace this GRANITE SOLID NATIONALISM with a watery mess that we find at the center
with each person pulling in different directions and completely diluting the concept of our NATION STATE.
 

Vjavasi
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Posted on Wednesday, April 07, 2010 - 08:13 am:       

C onversation between PC & MMS
by vijaya kumar on Apr 07, 2010 12:36 AM | Hide replies

PC: Good evening madam MMS
I am here to brief about naxal killing people, madam, it is the duty of State govts. to save people from attacks. So I issued a statement. Madam you may go and have a good sleep.
MMS: PC you are wrong. I know it the duty of these state govt. I could not sleep yesterday night not due to what happened in Chattisgarh or WB, it is due to the news of bomb blasts happended in Pakistan. Soniaji is angry with us. PC we should issue a statment condemning the bomblast in Pakistan, expressing our sympathy with those died in the Pakistan bomb blast so that we can strenghten our vote bank.
PC: Madam MMS sorry for the lapse on my part. I am immediately calling a press conference and issuing statement condemning bomb blast in pakistan.
 

Nippu
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Posted on Wednesday, April 07, 2010 - 08:06 am:       

telangana iste kanuka .


andhra pradesh will be under the leadership of naxals.

andulo no doubt.
 

Vjavasi
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Posted on Wednesday, April 07, 2010 - 08:01 am:       

Knowing the man who killed 75 CRPF men on Tuesday
Last updated on: April 06, 2010 23:57 IST
Tags: Andhra Pradesh, CPI, M Koteshwara Rao alias Kishanji, Cherukuri Rajkumar, People's Guerrilla Army
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CommentAppearances can be deceptive. He is short, dark-complexioned, a college dropout -- and also the mastermind behind the deadliest Naxal attack that killed 75 Central Reserve Police Force men in Chhatisgarh on Tuesday.

Fifty-three-year-old Katakam Sudarshan, a recluse as many other Maoist leaders, has emerged to be one of the most powerful and most wanted Maoist leaders in the country.

Like the shadowy chief of the organisation Muppala Lakshman alias Ganapathy and senior Maoist leader M Koteshwara Rao alias Kishanji, Sudarshan too hails from Telangana [ Images ] region from Andhra Pradesh who started from the grassroots and rose to the top position of being a central committee member.

Known as a master strategist, Sudarshan heads a unit of the People's Guerrilla Army and is also the member of the powerful Central Military Commission of the organisation, which has planned and approved major attacks, including the assassination attempt on former Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrababu Naidu [ Images ].

Sudarshan, who has a long list of aliases including Mohan and Brinderji, is also the head of one of the several regional CPI-Maoist bureaus.

Hailing from the coal belt town of Bellamaplly in Adilabad district, Sudarshan dropped out of a polytechnic in Warangal district in late 70s and joined the Radical Students Union. He went on to become an active member of the underground People's War Group, a forerunner to the CPI Maoist group.

Long before joining the Maoist group, Sudarshan was already wanted in many petty crimes in his local area. According to a dossier filed with the special investigation bureau of the Andhra Pradesh police, Sudarshan carries a reward of Rs 12 lakh and has been accused in 17 cases including looting and murder in his home state.

Apart from the re-emergence of Sudarshan, the Dantewada massacre has also revealed the active role played by Naxal leaders of Andhra Pradesh in Maoist operations especially in West Bengal [ Images ], Jharkhand and Chattisgarh.

Another top leader and CPI Maoist central committee member Cherukuri Rajkumar alias Azad too hails from Telangana and was based in Bastar region -- a liberated zone in Maoist lexicon. Rajkumar is also said to be back in action after going underground for a few days.

Many of the Naxal leaders, including the former secretary of Andhra Pradesh state committee Ramakrishna, were forced to take shelter in safe zones outside Andhra Pradesh after the state police went all out against them following the failure of the peace talks.

Many Naxal leaders from Andhra had been killed during the raids, most recent being Shakamuri Appa Rao, who was working with intelligence wing of the organisation.
Mohammed Siddique in Hyderabad
 

Vjavasi
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Posted on Wednesday, April 07, 2010 - 07:39 am:       

http://news.rediff.com/column/2010/apr/07/an-india-pushed-un der-the-carpet-hits-back.htm

An India pushed under the carpet hits back
April 07, 2010 11:43 IST
Tags: Central India, Indira Gandhi, Chennai Centre For China Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru, Institute For Topical Studies
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CommentUnless and until we have a two-pronged approach to the problem -- better counter-insurgency to put down violence, and better governance and administration to remove the exploitation of tribals -- blood will continue to flow in the jungles and roads of the tribal homelands, says B Raman

There are two Indias.

The dazzling India [ Images ] which we see every day on our television channels, in the spins of our political leaders, and in the writings of our so-called strategic analysts. This is the India which, according to them, is moving rapidly forward to take up its position as a world power, and which is courted by the other nations of the world.

But there is another India which we rarely see or write about. This is the India of grinding poverty -- a victim of social exploitation of the worst kind, where the inhabitants, mainly tribals, are treated like chattel and domestic animals by the upper caste political leaders, landlords and forest contractors.

We rarely see the India of negative images because it has been sought to be pushed under the carpet by the dazzling India, which feels embarrassed to admit to the world that such an India exists 63 years after independence.

It is this India that is kept pushed under the carpet, which has managed to struggle its way out from under the carpet and is hitting out with ferocity at all its perceived exploiters -- whether in the government or in society.

It is this India from under the carpet which is flocking to the banners of the Maoist ideologues and taking to arms against the government and its social exploiters. For it, the government is not of the people, by the people and for the people, but of the exploiters, by the exploiters and for the exploiters.

Unless we have the moral courage to admit this harsh reality we are going to see more and more incidents of utter savagery as we saw on April 6, 2010, in the Dantewada district of Chattisgarh where a group of Maoists -- estimated at between 300 and 1000 -- ambushed and butchered about 75 members of the Central Reserve Police Force, who had gone into the jungles for counter-insurgency operations.

This is not the first incident of butchery of the security forces in the history of our counter-insurgency operations. This will not be the last unless and until we realise that counter-insurgency is not only about putting down violence against the State and society, but also about making a resort to violence unnecessary by addressing the problems and grievances of tribals.

It would be very easy to dismiss Maoist insurgency as the political manipulation of illiterate or semi-literate tribals by Maoist ideologues from cities to achieve political power through the barrel of the gun. Yes, there is an element of cynical political manipulation of the tribals by many city-bred Maoist ideologues.

But the claim of political manipulation alone cannot explain how hundreds and hundreds of tribals are flocking to the banners of the Maoists. Intense anger over the failures of successive governments to recognise and address their problems is driving them to heed the call of the ideologues to massacre their perceived class enemies.

Unless and until we have a two-pronged approach to the problem -- better counter-insurgency to put down violence, and better governance and administration to remove the exploitation of tribals by non-tribals and improve their quality of life -- blood will continue to flow in the jungles and roads of the tribal homelands in Central India.

Tribal India had always posed law and order problems. The tribal homelands in the North-East did so when Jawaharlal Nehru [ Images ] and Indira Gandhi [ Images ] were prime ministers. They put down the Chinese and Pakistani supported tribal insurgency in the North-East with a firm hand. At the same time, they interacted vigorously with the tribal people and addressed their problems in an attempt to wean them away from violence. Nehru started a special service called the Indian Frontier Administration Service and inducted the best officers from other services into it to improve governance in the tribal areas, not only in the North-East but also in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands [ Images ]. They were always ready for a dialogue with the tribal leaders -- even with those who had taken to arms against the State.

They addressed poverty and social injustice not only in the tribal areas, but also in the rest of the country. Indira Gandhi used to start her day by mingling with the poor and exploited people outside her residence and listening to their tales of woe. Her shoulders were always available to the poor and exploited to rest their head on and cry.

After Rajiv Gandhi [ Images ], we have had a succession of prime ministers without a human touch in governance and administration in the tribal areas. They tend to look upon the tribal revolt in Central India as purely a law and order problem, and not also as a problem with human dimensions.

Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh [ Images ] is rarely seen or heard. He hardly ever mingles with the poor and downtrodden in the tribal belt of Central India. He deals with the tribal belt of Central India in the same way as the Pakistani leaders deal with the tribals of the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas -- as mainly a problem to be tackled by the security forces, as if the political class has no responsibility for leadership.

There is hardly a medium and long-term strategy --- with a judicious mix of the law and order and hearts and minds dimensions. All new ideas on counter-insurgency coming up are about how to make the security forces more effective. It is important for them to be effective. But it is equally -- if not more -- important for the political leadership to be seen by the tribals as caring and sensitive to their anger and bitterness towards their exploiters.

The time has come for the prime minister to take in his hands the responsibility for working out a comprehensive political, operational and human strategy for dealing with the problems of the tribal homelands in Central India.

If we continue to dither as we are doing now, Mao Zedong may have his last laugh in India.

The writer is Additional Secretary (retired), Cabinet Secretariat, Government of India, New Delhi [ Images ] and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com
B Raman

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