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10 policemen killed in Maoist attack in central India
DPA ^ | Apr 16, 2006

Posted on 04/16/2006 11:15:58 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

New Delhi - At least 10 policemen were killed and six injured in two attacks by Maoists in India's central Chhattisgarh state on Sunday, police said.

A group of 60 rebels opened fire at an outpost of Chhatisgarh Shashatra Bal (Chhatisgarh Armed Forces) located in Bijapur district, some 500 kilometres south of state capital Raipur.

'The guerrillas, armed with sophisticated weapons launched a massive attack this morning. Six civilians recruited as special police officers and four Chattisgarh Armed Forces personnel were killed in the attack,' said Ram Rattan, a policeman at the Bijapur control room.

Four policemen who were seriously injured were taken to nearby hospitals.

'It was an attack that caught the policemen unawares. While a few scrambled for their weapons in an attempt to return the fire, most of them could just manage to save themselves,' a police officer said on condition of anonymity.

The Maoists also set off a landmine blast in the Dubaiguda village in the same district which injured two Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel.

Police said the rebels had been trying to disrupt traffic and supplies to various districts of Chhattisgarh since Saturday by felling trees on roads, laying land-mines and firing at buses.

At least 13 states in India are affected by the Maoist insurgency and senior Indian officials last month decided to step up the fight against the Maoists.

The Maoist groups reject parliamentary democracy and believe in establishing communist rule through a protracted armed struggle based on guerrilla warfare.

It is estimated that over 20,000 armed Maoist rebels are active in remote and predominantly tribal areas of the Indian states.

Barring the central Chattisgarh state, where the Maoists have stepped up their attacks, all other states have witnessed a reduction in Maoist violence in the past months.

Over 100 tribals and security personnel have been killed in the growing spiral of Maoist violence in Chhattisgarh since January.

State home official BKS Ray told the NDTV network extra security forces were deployed in the state, but the rebels were conducting hit-and-run operations which resulted in a number of deaths.

'There have been a lot of encounters over the past months...but we are also attacking them,' he said.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: chicomstooge; india; pakiscum
Indians continue to pay the price for their government's deranged support for the maoists and their political allies in Nepal. The commies want czar Nicholas' fate for the king of Nepal. If they succeed, then India will be the next to fall to the Red Cancer.
1 posted on 04/16/2006 11:15:59 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Gengis Khan; sagar; CarrotAndStick
Centre to blame, says Advani - 04/16/2006 - Mr. Advani said he was astonished at the UPA Government's realisation, after two years in power, of the naxal threat, which required an approach based on greater inter-State and Centre-State coordination.

The approach that each affected State was free to adopt its own strategy boomeranged. Soft options such as lifting the ban on the People's War Group and holding talks with its representatives without insisting on surrender of arms resulted in the outfit furtherstrengthening itself.This experiment also helped it in its merger with the Maoist Communist Centre to form the Communist Party of India (Maoist).

Criticising Dr. Singh for his failure to explicitly mention the link between the Maoist insurgents in Nepal with naxalites in India, Mr. Advani said he suspected that the UPA Government had a sort corner for the Nepal Maoists. "The UPA's support to insurgency in the Himalayan kingdom is a dangerous policy, harmful both to our neighbour and ourselves."

2 posted on 04/16/2006 11:20:28 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe

In India, Maoist Guerrillas Widen 'People's War'


3 posted on 04/16/2006 11:22:09 AM PDT by sagar
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To: Tailgunner Joe

I know that Nepal will be the first victim of this Maoist cancer, but I will surely laugh when India finally goes down in flame.


4 posted on 04/16/2006 11:27:18 AM PDT by sagar
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To: Tailgunner Joe; sagar; Gengis Khan; sukhoi-30mki
Only war can quell Maoists

http://www.dailypioneer.com/columnist1.asp?main_variable=Columnist&file_name=swapan%2Fswapan89%2Etxt&writer=swapan


The nation should be grateful that wisdom has finally dawned on the UPA Government. Last Thursday, at the conclusion of a two-day conference involving the Centre and the States, the Prime Minister proclaimed Naxalism "the single biggest internal security challenge ever faced by our country."



It took the Government two years to acknowledge what should have been evident from the day the "inner voice" made way for the gentle sirdar. In these two years, the Government allowed an "infantile disorder" - Lenin's evocative description - to escalate into a full-fledged insurgency. Today, the "red corridor" isn't some crazy pipedream of dogmatists who quibble over the virtues of Lin Biao and the Shining Path, it is a near reality.



The Maoists have cast their terror net over an area that covers some 20 per cent of India's forests and districts where 17 per cent of the population of the live. To consider the magnitude of the Naxalite problem you have to keep in mind a contrasting statistic: ethnic and religious insurgencies in the North-east and Jammu and Kashmir affect only three per cent of the population.



Ironically, it was the magnitude of the menace that made the Government look the other way initially. After the UPA Government was installed, its so-called national security pundits, better versed in political surveillance and collecting tittle-tattle from mobile phones than countering terror, evolved a fantastic theory. Since the Naxalites were in a position to influence the outcome in nearly 50 parliamentary constituencies, it would be expedient, they suggested, for the Congress to cut a covert deal with them. After all, it was asserted, the nature of the ramshackle coalition made it necessary to be prepared for an election at all times.



The lessons of history were not learnt. It was the Bhindranwale and LTTE strategy all over again! Consequently, the Andhra Pradesh Government dispatched the Greyhounds to the barracks, declared a cease-fire and began a bout of negotiations that both the Government and the extremists knew was pointless. There was unending talk of addressing the ubiquitous "socio-economic" roots of terror, and bleeding hearts decreed that the antidote to the perversions of Charu Mazumdar was the Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme and the Tribal Bill.



For the Maoists, it was carnival time. They used the respite to set their own house in order and prepare for a long haul. First, even as the Centre abandoned the "unified command" strategy proposed by the erstwhile NDA Government, the Naxalites abandoned their ideological hair-splitting and came together under the banner of the Communist Party (Maoist). The name reflected the new party's deep links with the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) which controls nearly three-fourths of the Himalayan kingdom. Second, the interregnum was used by the Naxalites to develop deep pockets and re-arm. It is estimated by the Delhi-based Institute of Conflict Management that the Naxalites in Andhra Pradesh collected Rs 50 to 60 crore by extortion in the six months of the ceasefire.



Even after the battle was resumed in Andhra Pradesh, the Centre rubbed its hands gleefully as the Naxalite problem was exported to Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Orissa-states with NDA Governments. Some six months ago when Chhattisgarh approached the Home Minister with a detailed plan of airborne operations against the Naxalites in the jungles, it was told the suggestion was preposterous. "Talk to them, they are our own boys", the state government was gratuitously informed.



It has taken the Government two years to realise that the Naxalites are no longer content with welfare sops and lectures on land reforms. Promoting development and fighting poverty was never on the agenda of the Maoists. Their target was and remains political power. The assault is not on high landlordism or venal usury. It is an assault on the sovereignty of the Indian State. The Maoists want the Tricolour and the Constitution replaced by the Red Flag and "people's power".



The Maoists have unleashed a civil war. And a war has to be fought militarily. Has the Prime Minister finally realised this?


5 posted on 04/16/2006 11:27:22 AM PDT by CarrotAndStick (The articles posted by me needn't necessarily reflect my opinion.)
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To: sagar
"It is one of the most sustainable anti-state ideologies and movements," argued Ajai Sahni, a security analyst and executive director of the New Delhi-based Institute for Conflict Management.

What a surprise. The New York Slimes find another starry-eyed parlor pink convinced that the maoists just represent the interests of the poor downtrodden common folks. If the greedy capitalist fascist city folk don't start sharing the money they got from exploiting the poor, then the democratic progressive maoists will be sure to rectify the situation and ensure sustainable economic stability.

6 posted on 04/16/2006 11:31:42 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: sagar
I wounder how the maoist guerrillas will effect India growing economic Exchange-Traded Funds,ETF?
7 posted on 04/16/2006 11:45:04 AM PDT by FreeRep
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To: FreeRep
PS. I was sorry to hear of the their death, protecting their country from these murdering pol-pot similar communists.
8 posted on 04/16/2006 12:14:22 PM PDT by FreeRep
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To: Tailgunner Joe

the red devils and the slamo fascists are the biggest threat to humanity and civilisation. india is a test ground for cooperation between these murderers. in some ways india is like spain. once they succeed here the commie-slammie alliance will spread the disease elsewhere.


9 posted on 04/16/2006 2:20:14 PM PDT by The Lion Roars
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