Experts call for creation of Adivasi Police, tribal autonomy to deal with Naxal problem

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Former Indian Police Service officers and Naxal experts today strongly criticised the government”s strategy in dealing with the Maoist challenges and suggested a development strategy with justice to the poor and tribals through good governance.

Participating in a roundtable on “Meeting the Maoist Challenges: A relook at the current strategy”, organised by Observer Research Foundation, experts also suggested providing autonomy to the tribal areas and establishment of an ‘Adivasi Police’ to deal with the increasing problem.

They said the poor and tribals cannot be blamed for the current situation as every institution of the government has become institutions for exploitations of these people.

Mahendra Kumawat, former Special Secretary, Internal Security of the Home Ministry, suggested setting up a special force with training in jungle warfare to fight the menace. Kumawat, who earlier led the successful Greyhounds in Andhra Pradesh, said the government should adopt a multi-pronged strategy with focuses on good governance, development, political measures and security measures.

Dr. D.M. Mitra, another IPS officer, said he differed with the security-centric approach. “Security is not the solution. But Governance is,” he said, stressing on the importance of “right and appropriate structure of force” to deal with the menace. He also focused on good governance and right policies which should also take care of the local interests.

Well-known economist and author Mohan Guruswamy, who has worked extensively on the subject, suggested creation of an Adivasi Police force and providing autonomy to tribal areas to tackle the problem.

K. Subramaniam, former IPS officer who had long stints at the Home Ministry, said the ministry is facing an information crisis with lack of reliable information and institutional mechanism for policy formulation.

He said the ministry is depending on IPS officers of state police and Intelligence Bureau officers who have no training and capacity to do such a task which in turn creates biased, prejudiced information.

He criticised the policy of the present Home Minister, who he said, does not talk about much need police reforms, human rights of the people or their exploitation. He blamed lack of government policies for the spread of naxalism. Pointing out that the minister has been able to increase the home ministry budget by Rs. 15,000 crore in the last two years, he asked what the minister is going to do with that?

A senior Environment Ministry official said there is an onslaught of corporates on our rich forests which is benefiting only a small section. He said India is following a wrong development model, vying with China to ape the US. “The forests are being destroyed. India is also being destroyed,” he said. He called for a debate on the expenditure-based GDP growth, saying wealth is not created, but only transferred.

Prof. Nandini Sundar from the Delhi School of Economics, who had been working among the tribals, narrated how they had been hounded by the police forces, allowing research work only to police officers. “All our information is one sided nowadays. The government is least interested in solving the problem,” she said.

Prof. Sundar said the problem should be addressed by ensuring justice to the poor and tribals by restoring civil administration, providing education and setting up a judicial commission to monitor violence by the state and the Maoists.

Speakers were very critical of the inaction of the central government which has not taken any action even on the report of the committee formed by the Planning Commission. (ANI)

India home min takes responsibility for Maoist attack

NEW DELHI, April 9 (Reuters) – India’s home minister said on Friday he took responsibility for the deaths of 76 police this week, as New Delhi mobilised more security forces to flush out the rebels from their forest bases.

More than 1,000 Maoist fighters, armed with sophisticated weapons, ambushed 81 central police in a forested area of insurgency-hit central Chhattisgarh state on Tuesday, exposing a lack of intelligence and planning. [ID:nSGE6350AE]

Since the attack, the government has come under criticism from opposition parties who say it has failed to tackle the insurgency. Pressure to do more could rise as India faces polls over the next two years in eight key states, including some Maoist-hit ones.

“I accept full responsibility for what happened in Dantewada (in Chhattisgarh),” minister Palaniappan Chidambaram said on Friday at a New Delhi ceremony to mark the deaths.

“I have been asked directly and indirectly, where does the buck stop for what happened,” said Chidambaram, who was named home minister after the 2008 Mumbai attacks — in which 166 people were killed — to plug gaps in the security system.

“I have no hesitation in saying the buck stops at my desk.”

Indian newspapers have carried front-page stories on the government’s failure to tackle the decades-old insurgency that began with a peasant’s movement in 1967 in the eastern state of West Bengal and has now spread to 22 out of 28 states.

“No water, food or medicines. Now, go fight ‘biggest threat’,” The Times of India newspaper said, highlighting the challenges in training and equipping the police force.

The police killed in Tuesday’s ambush were not trained in jungle warfare before deployment in the Maoist stronghold in Chhattisgarh, officials said after a preliminary investigation.

Thousands of paramilitary troops have been scouring the jungles in east and central India, officials said.

The government says it will consider use of the air force to aid police in future offensives against the rebels, but has so far ruled out using the army.

India has hesitated to use the army to tackle counter-insurgency, experts say, because of sharp criticism after pressing it to root out a Sikh insurgency in 1984 in Punjab state.

The Maoists snatched weapons including light machine guns and mortars in this week’s surprise attack, and lost eight men, a rebel commander said in a statement to local media on Friday.

Besides raiding police bases for weapons, the rebels also buy them from Chinese smugglers and are in touch with other militant groups operating in India, including Kashmir and the northeast.

The estimated 20,000 Maoist combatants operate across a “red corridor” stretching from the Nepal border to West Bengal and through central India into the southern state of Andhra Pradesh. (Additional reporting by Sujeet Kumar; Editing by Rina Chandran and Jerry Norton)

Intensified search operations for missing Andhra CM resume

Hyderabad/New Delhi, Sep.3 (ANI): Search operations for missing Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy resumed at first light on Thursday morning.

State Government sources said that they have narrowed down the search to a 20-square kilometer radius in the Nallamalla Forest Range where they believe the seven-seat Bell helicopter carrying the chief minister may have gone down on Wednesday at around 9.30 a.m.eddy’s chopper went missing while he was on his way from Kurnool to Chittoor.

He is accompanied by his Principal Secretary S Subramanyam and Chief Security Officer A S C Wesley. There were two pilots also on board the twin-engined Bell 430 helicopter that lost contact with Air Traffic Control at the Begumpet Airport in Hyderabad when it was headed for Chittoor district, about 600 kilometres from Hyderabad.

Indian Space Research Organisation chief G. Madhavan Nair and his team are monitoring a low flying remote sensing plane. Satellite images are being used to try and trace the place. So far, 41 images have been taken but none of them have revealed any information about the chief minister’s whereabouts.

As of now the Indian Government has said that it has not requested the United States for help in the matter, but has confirmed that the unmanned vehicle that is presently deployed in the north eastern part of the country is being kept on standby.

The Army, Indian Air Force (IAF), Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel, Andhra Police Greyhound commandos along with local police and district officials has entered the Nallamalla Forests to launch the massive search and rescue operation for Reddy.

About 250 Army personnel with night vision devices have joined the search operations.

“We have deployed two columns and one Ghatak (jungle warfare specialist) platoon in the area for searching the Chief Minister. Our troops are equipped with night vision devices such as goggles and hand held thermal imagers,” Army officials said.

Congress president Sonia Gandhi is expected to arrive in Hyderabad shortly to be with Reddy’s anguished family members and to get a hands on assessment of the search operation.

She has already sent Union Law Minister and Congress general secretary in charge of Andhra Pradesh affairs Veerappa Moily and Union Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office Prithviraj Chauhan to the city to monitor developments. Chauhan told press persons that the State and Central Governments are sparing no efforts to search for the chief minister.

Meanwhile, National Security Advisor M.K. Narayanan has said that while both the state and central governments are extremely concerned and worried about the missing chief minister, all available resources are being deployed for the search.

He said Army and Air Force helicopters have been conducting a search of the region. He also confirmed that two fixed-wing aircraft with synthetic aperture radar capabilities have been pressed into service.

Forces on the ground are also on the lookout for the missing helicopter and its individuals. arayanan said that the lack of communication is a major problem and also ruled out the probability of a Naxal strike.

“I don’t think the Naxals have the capability to bring down a helicopter,” he said.

“There is no question about calling off the search till we discover what happened there. We are hopeful we will find the Chief Minister, his chief secretary and PSO without serious injuries,” he added. (ANI)

Sonia Gandhi to visit Hyderabad on Thursday morning

New Delhi, Sep.2 (ANI): Congress President and United Progressive Alliance Chairperson Sonia Gandhi will visit Hyderabad on Thursday.

Sonia called up Reddy’s wife on Wednesday evening and is believed to have expressed concern with the family over the missing incident of Reddy.

A high-level search operation is on to trace out the missing CM.

Army’s 300 special Commandos (especially trained in jungle warfare), 5,000 Central Reserve Police Force personnel and State’s anti-Naxal Force personnel have been engaged into the seach operation.

Reddy has gone missing since 9.35 a.m. of Wednesday morning. (ANI)

Air Force Sukhoi-30 pressed into service to search out missing Andhra CM

New Delhi, Sep.2 (ANI): As the search for the missing Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister has intensified, the Air Force’s Sukhoi-30 aircraft has been pressed into service to help in the ongoing operations.

“A Sukhoi-30 aircraft has left Bareilly in Uttar Pradesh to search out for the missing Andhra Pradesh CM. It will carry out its search in the Nallamalla region for the CM,” stated a TV report at 8 o’clock.

As part of government attempts to search for the missing CM, the Army is sending 500 commandos of its Special Force “Ghatak”, who are specially trained in the jungle warfare.

Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, has gone missing since 9.35 in the Wednesday morning. (ANI)

Sonia calls YSR’s wife, Army sends in 500 commandos for search

New Delhi, Sep.2 (ANI): Congress President and UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi on Tuesday evening called the wife of missing Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y.S. Rajshekhar Reddy.

The State and Central Governments have pulled out all steps to trace out the missing Andhra Pradesh CM.

Meanwhile, as part of government attempts to search for the missing CM, the Army is sending 500 commandos of its Special Force “Ghatak”, who are specially trained in the jungle warfare.

Moreover, TV channel reports stated Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister, who is missing since morning, had reportedly left on a secret visit to the villages of State.

According to a private channel report, Reddy told media persons: The objective to undertake such a visit was to reach out to villages. There is need to ensure Ration Card and water supply.”

The secrecy of his proposed tour was maintained due to security reasons. The two officials accompanying the chief minister were also informed just two hours before the scheduled departure. (ANI)

Head constable of Chhattisgarh Police commits suicide

Kanker (Chhattisgarh), Aug 30 (ANI): A Head Constable of the Chhattisgarh Armed Police committed suicide using his AK-47 service rifle at Kanker in Chhattisgarh.

He died on Saturday evening after shooting himself on his chest.

“Manoj Tigga was deployed at the Jungle Warfare College. He was in-charge of the mess, ” said Sunil David, in-charge of the Kanker Police Station.

Reportedly, Manoj had some family and odd domestic problems, which might have led him to take the drastic step of committing suicide.

While Tigga’s body has been sent for post mortem, investigations are in progress to ascertain the cause of his death. (ANI)

Centre asks W. Bengal Government to ban Maoists under 1908 Act

New Delhi, June 28 (ANI): The UPA Government has reportedly asked the Left Front government in West Bengal to declare the CPI (Maoist) an “unlawful association” and ban it under a 1908 Act.

Home Ministry officials have advised the West Bengal government to outlaw the CPI (Maoist) because the UAP Act, under which it declared the outfit as banned on June 22, is essentially directed against unlawful associations that support secession.

“The Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1908 (CLAA) has a very different objective. It is directed against associations, which encourage or aid person to commit acts of violence or intimidation. The power is vested in the state government to declare an association as unlawful,” a Home Ministry official said.

Union Home Minister P Chidambaram had said last week that the state government should ban the Maoists.

West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee said the state government would enforce the Central ban, which reluctant Left Front partners also accepted after some persuasion by Bhattacharjee.

The Central Government advisory comes a day after security forces captured Ramgarh, an area under Maoists in a two-sided attack to reclaim areas in West Midnapore district.

Security forces had to face stiff resistance as Maoists had detonated landmines and opened gunfire.

Security forces headed from Lalgarh in the south and Kadasole in north on Friday, towards Ramgarh.

Ten companies consisting of 1000 men of the CRPF, the India Reserve Battalion and Rapid Action Force set out from Kadasole. They had to counter firing and three landmine explosions Maoists.

In response to the Maoist attacks, the security forces struck back with AK-47s, mortars and rocket propelled grenade launchers, the officer said.

A mine detection unit and a team from the District Intelligence Bureau preceded the security forces, which also comprised jungle warfare experts of the CRPF.

Maoists also burnt down an office of the All India Trade Union Congress, when they were not allowed to take refuge in the building shortly before the security forces entered Ramgarh. (ANI)

Naxals cleared from Ramgarh in West Bengal

Ramgarh, June 27 (ANI): Security forces on Saturday captured Ramgarh, an area under Maoists in a two-sided attack to reclaim areas in West Midnapore district.

“We have secured Ramgarh. We will establish a police outpost and a camp. The police will restore normalcy. The operations will continue,” said Inspector General CID (special operations group) Siddhinath Gupta.

Security forces had to face stiff resistance as Maoists had detonated landmines and opened gunfire.

Security forces headed from Lalgarh in the south and Kadasole in north on Friday, towards Ramgarh on Saturday morning, a senior CRPF officer said.

Ten companies consisting of 1000 men of the CRPF, the India Reserve Battalion and Rapid Action Force set out from Kadasole. They had to counter firing and three landmine explosions Maoists. n response to the Maoist attacks, the security forces struck back with AK-47s, mortars and rocket propelled grenade launchers, the officer said.

A mine detection unit and a team from the District Intelligence Bureau preceded the security forces, which also comprised jungle warfare experts of the CRPF.

Maoists also burnt down an office of the All India Trade Union Congress, when they were not allowed to take refuge in the building shortly before the security forces entered Ramgarh. (ANI)

Maoist stronghold in Ramgarh breached

Ramgarh (West Bengal), June 27 (ANI): The key Maoist stronghold of Ramgarh was breached by security forces on Saturday through a two-pronged attack in West Bengal’s West Midnapore district.

Braving landmines and incessant gunfire, the security forces appeared to have the Maoists on the run, but not before the rebels torched an AITUC office.

Security forces entered Ramgarh from Lalgarh in the south and Kadasole in the north.

A senior Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) officer confirmed that Ramgarh had been secured, but added that operations against the rebels would continue.

Earlier in the day, the Naxalites detonated three landmines and were engaged in a vigorous firefight with security forces in the Mohultol Forests.

The 1000-strong Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF)- Rapid Action Force retaliated with mortars, LMGs and AK-47s overcoming some of the rebels.

Security forces claimed to have gained control of Lalgarh in the south, and said that 1100 security personnel were heading towards Ramgarh and Amdanga.

A mine detection unit and a team from the District Intelligence Bureau preceded the security forces, which also comprised jungle warfare experts of the CRPF. nti-landmine vehicles and bulldozers to clear the road accompanied the forces advancing from the forested flanks of the roads.

DIG CID (Special Operations Group), S N Gupta said the operations have entered a critical phase with resistance anticipated from Maoists and tribals under the People’s Committee against Police Atrocities (PCPA).

Troops are meeting the people, listening to their grievances and assuring them of security from the Maoists.

West Midnapore District has been in the grip of Naxal blockade for over eight months. On Friday and Saturday, the Maoists were made to quit Kadasole for Mohultol village. (ANI)

Naxals detonate three landmines in W. Bengal; engage in firefight with security forces

Kolkata, June 27 (ANI): Naxalites detonated three landmines and were engaged in a vigorous firefight with security forces in the Mohultol Forests of West Bengal on Saturday, a day after security forces gained control of Kadasole in Lalgarh District.

The 1000-strong Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF)- Rapid Action Force retaliated with mortars, LMGs and AK-47s overcoming some of the rebels.

Security forces claimed to have gained control of Lalgarh in the south, and said that 1100 security personnel were heading towards Ramgarh and Amdanga.

A mine detection unit and a team from the District Intelligence Bureau preceded the security forces, which also comprised jungle warfare experts of the CRPF.

Anti-landmine vehicles and bulldozers to clear the road accompanied the forces advancing from the forested flanks of the roads.

DIG CID (Special Operations Group), S N Gupta said the operations have entered a critical phase with resistance anticipated from Maoists and tribals under the People’s Committee against Police Atrocities (PCPA).

Troops are meeting the people, listening to their grievances and assuring them of security from the Maoists.

West Midnapore District has been in the grip of Naxal blockade for over eight months. On Friday and Saturday, the Maoists were made to quit Kadasole for Mohultol village. (ANI)

Security forces reclaim Kadasole from Maoists near Lalgarh

Lalgarh (West Midinapore), June 26 (ANI): Security forces on Friday reclaimed control over Kadasole village from Maoists, located north of Lalgarh in West Midinapore district, during phase II of ongoing operations against the naxals who set off two landmine blasts.

Led by the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), the troops including jungle warfare expert and personnel of the Indian Reserve Battalion and State Armed Police, who were helped by a helicopter, exchanged fire for 45 minutes with the Maoists who later fled the village, said a senior CRPF official.

“There was no casualty and no arrest. The operations for the day is over and Kadasole has been secured. The forces will be stationed here,” said the official.

The security force launched the operations from Goaltore in the morning, five days after taking control of Lalgarh police station and faced no resistance till Pingboni three kilometres away.

The security forces then moved another four km to Kadasole, where they spotted a group of 15 armed Maoists.

The troops came under fire from the Maoists and retaliated with mortars, light machine guns and AK-47s.

A helicopter also arrived and tried to spot the Maoists. Maoists triggered a landmine blast near a forest at Kadasole, four kms from Pingboni.

” Our main concern were landmines. There were two landmine explosions at Kadasole,” the officer said.

Two other landmines, one an IED and another a sophisticated one, were defused near a bridge near Kadasole, he said.

The security forces after trading fire for 45 minutes cordoned off the village and moved in, but the Maoists had escaped by then. (ANI)

Full-fledged COBRA operation to start soon in naxal-hit states

New Delhi, June 21 (ANI): The full-fledged operation of the special anti-Naxal force, the Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (COBRA) battalion, in naxalite effected states is set to start soon to combat the growing Left-wing extremism in the country.

According to sources, about 2,000 personnel of COBRA have already been deployed in Chhattisgarh and Orissa.

Nearly 2,000 commandos of the force, who completed their training at the Jungle Warfare Training School from Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu and Silchar in Assam, and equipped with 19 different modern assault weapons, are waiting for a final decision to start their operations.

According to the deployment plan, two battalions of the elite force would be stationed in Jharkhand and three in Chhattisgarh. One each battalion would be posted in Orissa, Bihar and Maharashtra besides two in Uttar Pradesh.

Over 70 districts in the country are affected by Left wing extremism, which has been described by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as a “virus” and the biggest internal security threat.

The Government recently approved formation of a 10,000-strong special anti-Naxal force “COBRA”-to tackle the menace.(ANI)

Heart of Maoist land is no-go area for politicians

Raipur, April 10 (IANS) In the southern tip of Chhattisgarh, the 4,000-odd sq km Abujhmad forest is called by Maoists a ‘liberated zone’. It is part of the Bastar Lok Sabha constituency. With Maoists calling for a poll boycott, not one candidate has dared to enter Abujhmad to campaign.

‘Campaign in Abujhmad? No way!’ said Shankar Sodhi, the Congress candidate in Bastar. ‘Everybody knows the situation there. It’s meaningless to talk about the issue.’

Former legislator and Communist Party of India candidate Manish Kunjam told IANS: ‘I don’t think any of the seven candidates in Bastar can even think of campaigning in Abujhmad. It’s because of the fear of Maoists.’

The Abujhmad forest is among the densest in India. It has few roads and there is no police station.

Most of the 26,000-odd people living in the 237 villages in the area are from the Abujhmaria tribe that is largely dependent on the forest for a living and has almost no contact with the outside world.

According to officials, the Maoists have a terror infrastructure in Abujhmad from where they keep in touch with their counterparts in as many as 13 Indian states.

‘I have not heard of any leader at any level addressing any public meeting in the region,’, said Brigadier (Retd.) B.K. Ponwar, director of the Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare College (CTJWC) in the Bastar region. The CTJWC was set up by the state government in 2005 to train policemen to ‘take on guerrillas like a guerrilla’.

‘This is a liberated zone and under the total influence of Naxalites (Maoists); there is no police station in the region, and the Naxalites have put up explosives and landmines at all entry routes,’ Ponwar said.

‘Security forces must carry out a creeping re-occupation of this territory by establishing a new police force and counter Naxal bases,’ he added.

Political analyst Anil Vibhakar said: ‘The government of India’s writ does not run in Abujhmad, no leader of any party can dare to campaign or address a rally there. I ask Indian leaders to show some guts and address at least one rally in Abujhmad to convince the people here that government has some authority.

‘But I am sure that power- hungry politicians of this country won’t take such a major security risk to step into Abujhmad for democracy,’ he added.

While calling for the election boycott, the Maoists have threatened to chop off the hands of anyone who votes.

Pawan Deo, deputy inspector general (special intelligence branch), said: ‘Abujhmad is a largely inaccessible area with hardly 10 km of roads. Security forces go into the region occasionally and carry out attacks on rebels. We are in the process of taking possession of the area.’

In 2005, the government-funded and Raipur-based Tribal Research and Training Institute (TRTI) sent an eight-member team to Abujhmad to survey the residents. But the Maoists did not allow them to enter the forest.

T.K. Vaishnav, joint director of TRTI, said: ‘The people of Abujhmad are on the verge of extinction as they lack health facilities and have no connection with the outside world.

‘I am associated with several government works and projects in the tribal areas of Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh for more than two decades. But I have never heard of any leader visiting Abujhmad to seek votes. I don’t think any politician can even dream of going inside Abujhmad. The Maoists command the entire area.’

Four street dogs have a poll job on hand

Lily, Sally, Kareena and the lone male Teja used to roam the streets, but they will soon be reporting for election duty in the restive, forested terrain of the Bastar region in Chhattisgarh. The job on hand will need all their dogged determination – sniffing out explosives.

The four street dogs, which ‘graduated’ from the Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare College (CTJWC) in Bastar, will make a poll debut of sorts in the April 16 elections in the state. They have been specially deployed to the area known as a stronghold of Maoist rebels who have called for a poll boycott.

‘The mongrels Lily, Sally, Kareena and Teja are going to Bastar for poll duty where guerrillas have laid landmines for years to prevent security forces from entering forested stretches,’ Girdhari Nayak, additional director general, Chhattisgarh Armed Forces, told IANS.

He said, ‘The mongrels have got poll assignments for the first time in India.’

The four mongrels completed a nine-month explosive detection course in April last year at the CTJWC. They will now have to sniff out explosives up to 12 inches below the ground surface.

The officer said the street dogs will mainly be deployed for VIP security, de-mining and escorting polling parties in violence-hit pockets where Maoists may have buried landmines in bulk.

‘These mongrels are tougher and sharper than labradors and alsatians that are favoured traditionally in India as sniffer dogs,’ Nayak said.

‘I found these street dogs more handy for police in thickly forested, Maoist-infested, difficult terrain as they can survive in high temperatures and walk up to 25 km on foot a day while labradors and alsatians are sensitive to climate.’

Brigadier (Retd) B.K. Ponwar, the CTJWC director, said: ‘Our mongrels are making their poll assignment debut in this elections, they will be deployed in Bastar’s terror ground to ensure safety. They will alert cops in case explosives are kept under the ground surface so that the democratic process takes place in right earnest.’

The state has 11 Lok Sabha seats that go to the polls in the first phase – April 16 – and police have a tough task ahead, especially in the backdrop of large-scale violence in the November assembly polls.

The CTJWC that trains policemen to ‘take on guerrillas like a guerrilla’ had for the first time in India picked up four puppies from roadside locations and made them graduate in 2008 to replace elite alsatians and labrador sniffer dogs.

Ponwar remarked, ‘There is always a big gamble for the security forces taking labradors and alsatians to thick forested areas like Bastar where you can’t come out of the war zone for three to four days because they have a lot of veterinary problems.

‘But street dogs hardly fall sick and can walk long distances in jungle terrain plus they are low maintenance and entail no purchase cost whereas one labradors or alsatians cost about Rs.85,000 each.’