View From The Right: Red terror
The cover story in the Organiser, “Trouncing the red terror”,
highlights the need to tackle the “most serious internal security
challenge” in the country. It notes that “every now and then” reports
about the “waning Naxal might” emerge, but we also “find them gaining
ground in some other part of the country with a different name”. “What
are the reasons that, despite setbacks, they continue to challenge the
state,” it asks, and adds “the biggest reason is that we never dissected
the ideological plank and character of this category of communists”,
who “keep on changing goalposts”. It notes that they “effectively use
propaganda” and “exploit all possible constitutional means to challenge
the Constitution”.
The story says that “we, as a nation, get carried away by their
agenda… and keep debating whether it is a development issue or security
issue”. It highlights the failure “vote-bank politics” as “we allow
people with Maoist ideology to thrive in urban spaces while banning the
organisations they speak for”. “This contradiction in purpose and
positioning is the real reason why Maoists have survived and spread
their wings in different areas,” it says. Contending that the Maoists
“should be treated like any other terrorist organisation”, it says that
if “no implicit or explicit support to the Islamic State is permitted,
then why are legal, ideological or literary battles on behalf of the
Maoists allowed”.
Maoist extremists have brought in units of Company-10, trained to
kill with precision; 37 people are known to be on their hit list.
Contrary to the Maharashtra government’s recent claim that left-wing
extremism is on the wane, the State faces a rejuvenated red cadre that
has vowed to eliminate 37 senior police officers and informants in 2016.
The latest hit list has been issued by Naxals in response to the
State’s lucrative surrender policy, which, the government claims, has
taken off in a big way resulting in a substantial drop in violence. But
the latest data show that this claim could be exaggerated. Intelligence
inputs have revealed that to execute the hit list, the extremists have
brought in several units of Company-10 from Chhattisgarh, each with a
strength of 30 men trained to kill with precision.
“This (the latest hit list) is a matter of serious concern for the
State, even as inputs show new strategies are being adopted to attract
youth with fresh vigour,” an intelligence note in the possession of The
Hindu reads. Counter-strategy As part of the Naxal revival policy,
documents recovered recently by Gadchiroli Police show that plans are
afoot to win the surrendered cadre back to the Maoist fold or eliminate
them. The counter-strategy was launched by the CPI-Maoist’s Dandakaranya
Special Zonal Committee (DKSZC) in villages around Gadchiroli where
most of the surrendered cadre lives. Dandakaranya stretches over 92,000
sq km across five States — Chhattisgarh, Telangana, Maharashtra, Odisha,
and Andhra Pradesh. — and is a significant holding area for Maoists.
“Left wing extremists adopted a similar strategy in 2009-2010 in
Bastar and now, cornered by police action and a spate of surrenders, the
outfit is desperate to retain its hold in the red bastion,” reads an
intelligence report of the Anti-Naxal Operation Unit of Maharashtra
Police. The State government has claimed that thanks to its latest
policy – a Rs 5 lakh cash reward and rehabilitation – as many as 51
extremists surrendered in 2015. Violence, too, has ebbed, the government
claims.
However, there is another side to the story. In 2015, 18 tribal
informants were killed, and 15 murders connected to red extremism were
reported as against 14 the previous year, 66 policemen injured as
opposed to 43 in 2014, 18 civilians were killed as opposed to six the
previous year. Naxals also killed 10 police informants in 2015 as
opposed to 8 in 2014. Data also show only two extremists were killed in
2015 as against 13 the previous year. Property worth Rs 1.76 crore was
destroyed in 2015 as against Rs 1.49 cr the previous year. Two policemen
were killed in 2015, while the number was 11 the previous year. This
spate of violence and destruction took place despite the government
making the Special Director General (Nagpur) accountable for protecting
surrendered Maoists under the new surrender policy. Senior officials
told The Hindu that a minor drop in violence could be attributed to the
joint operations carried out in 2015.
Another internal note revealed that surrenders were on account of
various factors in addition to the state policy, such as ‘health
problems, love affairs, internal rifts, sexual exploitation,’ because of
which ‘guns were dropped’. Before the new policy came into effect, 40
extremists had surrendered in 2014, and 48 in 2013, showing there has
not been a substantial decrease in either violence or number of persons
surrendering since the new policy was introduced in end-2014.
Maharashtra first launched a Naxal surrender policy on August 29, 2005,
and has claimed that 502 extremists have given up arms in the last 10
years since then in violence-hit regions. “The 2015 scenario indicates
that the government’s new approach has ensured a retreat of Maoists and
advancement of our forces. But we must move with caution,” a senior
official said.
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