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Northern Telengana slipping into Red Zone
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The naxals are having a field day in Northern Telengana. 123telugu was among the first to report early in September that the AP police will be having a tough time in this part of the state, come November. True to form, the central government has identified this section of the state as an area where likely offensive will be launched.
The severity of the problem can be gauged by the fact that it has been bracketed along with other high naxals tri-junction states. They are Andhra Pradesh-Maharashtra-Chhattisgarh; Orissa-Jharkhand-Chhattisgarh and West Bengal-Jharkhand-Orissa.
As part of a central government initiative and according to home ministry sources around 40,000 paramilitary personnel will assist the respective state police forces during the operations that will be launched soon. Almost 7,000 specially-trained troops in jungle warfare are also part of the total strength of the central forces to be deployed for the task.
The anti-naxal plan also includes Rs 7,300 crore package for unleashing developmental works in areas cleared off the Left-wing extremists. The northern Telengana region in AP will receive a sizeable portion of this package.
[url="http://news.rediff.com/report/2010/feb/08/maoists-blow-up-tracks-on-howrah-mumbai-route.htm"]
Maoists blow up tracks on Howrah-Mumbai route, goods train derails[/url]
Quote:Suspected Maoists blew away a portion of railway tracks in the wee hours of Monday near Rourkela in Orissa causing derailment of a goods train and disruption of train services on the Howrah-Mumbai route.
A portion of the railway track at a place between Bhalulata and Jareikela, about 30 km from Rourkela, was blown up by suspected Maoists at 1 am leading to derailment of two wagons of a goods train, Rourkela railway station manager S K Panda said.
However, there have been no reports of injury or casualty in the incident.
[url="http://http://www.hindustantimes.com/Naxals-attack-joint-forces-camp-in-Bengal-17-cops-feared-killed/H1-Article1-509125.aspx"]17 feared killed as Maoist attack army camp in Bengal[/url]
Now they are killing inside their own living room.
73 CRPF ambushed by Maoists in Dantewada
[quote name='dhu' date='06 April 2010 - 07:08 PM' timestamp='1270560616' post='105736']
73 CRPF ambushed by Maoists in Dantewada
[/quote]
Very sad day.
Now appointed PM of India can have good sleep, only bunch of Indians are killed by sweet commies.
No comment from Queen.
Quote:"Something has gone very wrong," a sombre Chidambaram told reporters outside his North Block office.
moron, useless minister.
<img src='http://www.india-forum.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt='

' /> "Anti-naxal strategy is a flop strategy. It is totally flop. Somebody has picked up the strategy from some book and forced it down on the paramilitary forces who are obedient servants and they never objected to what is thrusted on them," K P S Gill, who was ex-security advisor to the Chhattisgarh government, said.
Gill asked as to who is being hunted in the Green Hunt operation, launched as a major anti-naxal operation in the country.
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/parami...y/600832/2
from elsewhere:
Quote:[url="http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20100406-262607/RP-Reds-now-train-Maoist-rebs-in-India"]RP Reds now train Maoist rebs in India[/url]
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 04/06/2010
MANILA, Philippinesââ¬âThe Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) is not only thriving, it is exporting its cadres to train Maoist insurgents in India, according to reports reaching the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).
A DFA senior official, who asked not to be named saying he did not want to preempt an official reaction from the agency, said the Philippine government was expecting an official request from New Delhi for help in tracking down the CPP members in India.
Indian media reports over the weekend said two suspected Naxalites recently arrested in the western Indian state of Gujarat had confessed to their police interrogators that CPP members had been training them in guerrilla warfare.
This is the first time that the CPPââ¬âSoutheast Asiaââ¬â¢s longest-lived communist insurgent groupââ¬âhas been reported to have engaged in such training activities overseas.
The CPP was founded in 1968 by English teacher Jose Maria Sison, who is now 71 and lives in exile in the Netherlands.
Military officials say that the CPP has become irrelevant since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 that led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. The officials say that the CPPââ¬â¢s armed wing, the New Peopleââ¬â¢s Army (NPA), is nothing more than a bandit group engaged in blackmail and extortion.
The daily Indian Express described as ââ¬Åstartlingââ¬Â the revelation that international Maoist groups were involved in arms training.
One such training took place in the forests of the southwestern state of Kerala, according to the suspects.
Police based in Gujaratââ¬â¢s Surat district who conducted the arrests said that the Naxalites were operating among landless tribal farmers in the neighboring Dang district.
The DFA official said it was possible that the CPP members who went to India came from Europe, saying most Filipinos who go to India are businessmen.
The CPPââ¬â¢s political front, the National Democratic Front, is based in the Netherlands. The CPP and the NPA are considered terrorist groups by United States
Interesting how the Netherlands managed to host this filipino group..
[url="http://news.rediff.com/report/2010/apr/07/is-the-bloodbath-at-dantewada-a-wake-up-call.htm"]Is the bloodbath at Dantewada a wake-up call?[/url]
Who will wake up sleeping appointed PM of India?
73 killed, i dont believe it.
[quote name='rhytha' date='08 April 2010 - 12:16 AM' timestamp='1270665504' post='105772']
73 killed, i dont believe it.[/quote]
Today 25 bodies reached Delhi, so numbers are correct. Some are saying it may be much higher.
Looks like inside job. Somebody from administration tipped Maoist.
[url="http://www.dnaindia.com/opinion/main-article_dynasty-vs-government_1368625"]Dynasty vs government[/url]
R Jagannathan
The brutal massacre of over 75 security personnel by the Maoists in Chhattisgarhââ¬â¢s Dantewada district is a pointer to two things: one, the men in uniform are ill-prepared for their challenges, and two, there is a strange inconsistency between official assessments of the growing Maoist threat and the political will backing those assertions.
Both the prime minister and the home minister have minced no words in calling a spade a spade. While Manmohan Singh has called the Maoists the biggest security threat to the country, P Chidambaram has promised tough action to deal with it. But hereââ¬â¢s the point: months after launching Operation Green Hunt, it is not clear whoââ¬â¢s hunting whom. The Maoists have been more successful in intimidating the state ââ¬â aided by a cacophony of phony human rights advocates ââ¬â than the other way around. It is the security forces who are being hunted and eliminated.
What explains this gap between thought and action? The answer lies in the complete lack of will at the top of the political pyramid. This means Sonia Gandhi, not Manmohan Singh or Chidambaram. Given the extremely secretive nature of the Manmohan Singh-Sonia-Rahul Gandhi interface, it is not possible to conclusively prove this, but it is reasonable to presume that Sonia is not actively backing the government in its anti-Maoist campaign.
We certainly havenââ¬â¢t heard a single Sonia statement on Maoism that backs the official stand of her government. At best we have had non-descript statements deploring violence ââ¬â something similar to what the human-rightswallahs mumble when confronted with the latest Maoist atrocities. In her last statement before the Jharkhand polls, Sonia said ââ¬Åthere is no place for violence in a democracyââ¬Â ââ¬â a motherhood statement at best. Her son Rahul blamed non-Congress governments for the Maoist violence, neatly deflecting the issue.
This reluctance to back their own government on a hard policy issue is in sharp contrast to the way the dynasty hogs all credit for the aam aadmi schemes implemented by the UPA government. From NREGA to farm loan waivers to extending coverage under the food security bill, Sonia and Rahul are seen to be driving the governmentââ¬â¢s actions. They vanish whenever there is talk of an oil price hike or action against Maoists.
There is some political method to this madness. A substantial chunk of the future vote bank of the Congress lies in the tribal belts where missionaries are active. This is also the area where the Maoists rule. But we do not hear of any clashes or even tensions between the soldiers of god and the mercenaries of Mao. On the other hand, we do have a case of a Maoist claiming ââ¬Åcreditââ¬Â for murdering a Hindu religious leader who was also doing missionary work in the tribal areas of Kandhamal ââ¬â a traumatic event that triggered a terrible massacre of Christian tribals in retaliation. So whatââ¬â¢s the nexus?
It is interesting to note that the jholawala sympathisers of the Maoists have attacked the Government of India and the states for their anti-Maoist operations. They have criticised local resistance groups like the Salwa Judum in Chhattisgarh, but not Sonia or Rahul. One thing is starkly clear. The Manmohan Singh governmentââ¬â¢s main job is not to do right by the country, but by the dynasty. As long as the decisions taken are politically acceptable to Sonia and Rahul, itââ¬â¢s fine. But when political capital has to be expended in the long-term interests of the country, the family will be far away. What else explains the reluctance of Rahul Gandhi to join the government when the PM was more than willing to give him a chance? The decision to decline power gives him obvious advantages: the media tom-toms this as a great sacrifice, something that proves that the Gandhis are not power-hungry. Actually, they are only wary of accountability.
It is not surprising that the government chose this moment to resurrect the National Advisory Council (NAC) under Sonia Gandhi ââ¬â an unnecessary appendage and extra-constitutional authority that inhibits real accountability in government. The official reason given for reviving NAC is that the party needs to monitor the implementation of its pro-poor programmes. Wouldnââ¬â¢t it have been simpler to appoint Rahul as programme implementation minister? But then he would have become accountable to Parliament and even the PM. Horror or horrors. How can a member of the dynasty be accountable to a mere PM or the legislature?
The dynasty is internally playing the same role in UPA-2 that the Left was doing in UPA-1: demanding power without an iota of responsibility. Sonia and Rahul are involved only in the spending decisions that will presumably ensure re-elections. They are stonewalling or opposing the harder decisions that true governance calls for. You never hear a Sonia or a Rahul talking about fiscal prudence, targeting subsidies better, implementing reforms, or public sector autonomy. This does not serve their political purposes.
Letââ¬â¢s be clear. Manmohan Singh is the dynastyââ¬â¢s fall guy. He had better watch out.
Dynasty is supporting Maoist for their own survival.
Government priorities are somewhere else. They are more happy to prosecute Modi then shutdown commie labs all over India.
Quote:Eggs thrown at Medha Patkar in Chhattisgarh
http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/unca...00074.html
January 7th, 2010
Raipur, Jan 6 (IANS) Dozens of tribals Wednesday threw eggs and tomatoes at social activist Medha Patkar and Magsaysay award winner Sandeep Pandey in Chhattisgarhââ¬â¢s insurgency-hit Dantewada district for allegedly supporting Maoist sympathisers, police said.
Trouble began when Patkar, Pandey and a few activists reached Dantewada, some 380 km south of Raipur, to join the ongoing campaign of rights activists against alleged atrocities being committed by security forces on local tribes.
A large number of tribals, under the banner of Ma Danteshwari Swabhiman Manch, opposed the activistsââ¬â¢ visit to the tribal area and alleged that they were supporting Maoist sympathisers, who were trying to stall the anti-Maoist operations in the restive Bastar region.
ââ¬ÅLocal tribals threw rotten tomato and eggs on the social activists and raised slogans against them,ââ¬Â a witness told IANS from Dantewada town. The protesters were demanding that the activists should leave Dantewada immediately.
The activists then marched to the office of Dantewada district superintendent of police and staged a sit-in, alleging that the local people were being ifluenced by some vested interests.
Superintendent of Police Amresh Mishra told IANS over phone: ââ¬ÅBefore the people got violent, the police took control of the situation and cordoned off the activist leaders. They were escorted to my office.ââ¬Â
Both of them are funded by ASHA and other commie organisation.
"The Naxals know that a security force will not use the same route to get back to its base. However, the fact that they mined the route this party had taken while going into the forests indicates that they were reasonably sure the party will come back the same way. The local informer apparently planted information that led this team to take the same route while returning," a government source said.
"This local source apparently enjoyed full faith of the securitymen who failed to see through the plan. At the time they were cornered, the CRPF party had been trapped in a Y-shaped area, from where there was no escape route," the source added.
http://news.in.msn.com/internalsecurity/...342&page=3