”Kashmir of Orissa” reels under intense heat

Berhampur (Orissa), Jun 6 (PTI) Kandhamal, popularly known as ”Kashmir of Orissa” for its cool climate, is reeling under intense heat with the mercury touching 40 degree Celsius, MeT officials said. 60 per cent area under forest cover, 1587 mm average annual rainfall and altitude ranging between 300 and 1100 metres contributed towards the coolness of the district, however, most parts of Kandhamal are reeling under 40 deg C temperature since the beginning of June, they said.

Environmentalists and weathermen attributed the rising temperature to global warming. “Effect of global warming and climate change could have led to rise in temperature in many areas of the state including Kandhamal,” P C Mohanty, a marine science expert, said.

“We have analysed the temperature data of the last six years in different parts of the state and observed that the minimum temperature in most places except Puri increased from the 1990s,” he said. Apart from global warming, there are several other factors responsible for rise in temperature in Kandhamal.

These included increase of population, automobile emission and shrinking of forest cover, a senior forest officer said. Deforestation is the main cause of rise in temperature in the district, an environmentalist said.

Deforestation was caused due to various factors including felling of trees by agitators to use for road blockades, smuggling of timbers and cleaning forest by tribals to get forest rights. Of the total 8021 sq km area in the district, 5709.08 sq km are under forest cover.

Korea hopes India would renew POSCO Steel MOU in Orissa

Busan (S.Korea), June 4 (ANI): Alaying doubts over the fate of South Korean steel company Posco’s memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Orissa government to build a steel plant to be lapsed next month, South Korean former Finance Minister and Chairman of Presidential Committee for the G20 Summit hoped that India will renew its license further.

The MoU for the largest foreign investment in India, signed on June 22, 2005, is valid only for a period of five years and an extension is possible only if there is mutual agreement.

But the ongoing agitation by locals and tribals at the proposed site in Jagatsinghpur district, who are not willing to part with the land for the steel plant has cast show over its viability of the project and it has angered the steelmaker Posco due to lack of progress even after five years of signing the agreement.

Defending Korean steel major Posco, South Korean Leader said, “I hope it will be renewed and I know the Posco is doing well there and working very closely with Indian counterpart. Direct investment is a win-win proposition anyway, I hope India will renew the agreement.”

As per the MoU, the project’s first module, comprising a 3MTPA crude steel plant and a 2.82MTPA finished steel plant, should have been commissioned by July 2010 or within 36 months from the date of taking possession of the land, or the registration of the executed prospecting license, whichever is later.(ANI)

‘Nepalis living in terror in Meghalaya’

Kathmandu, May 29 (IANS) Known as the tranquil abode of clouds, India’s north-eastern Meghalaya state has now become an abode of terror for Nepali migrants who say they are being attacked, threatened and told to leave the state immediately or face dire consequences.

‘Nepalis can’t sleep at night,’ says Til Bahadur Bishwakarma, a 40-year-old Nepali who served with the Indian Army for nine years and lives in Shillong, the capital of Meghalaya. ‘In many places, men have formed bands to guard their families at night. Those who want to leave have to seek tortuous routes through the neighbouring state of Assam for fear of vigilantes.’

Bishwakarma is the secretary of the Migrant Nepalese Association India that has submitted a memorandum to Meghalaya’s new government headed by Chief Minister Mukul Sangma, asking him to stop attempts to ‘terrorise Nepali people in

Meghalaya with the ultimate goal of total elimination of Nepali population’.

Though there are no official figures about the number of Nepalis working in Meghalaya, Bishwakarma estimates there are between 5-800,000 migrants, working mostly in the coal mines of Garo, Khasi and Jayantia regions.

Since the violence started this month, he says nearly 70 percent of the coal mine workers have begun fleeing.

The trouble started after renewed friction with neighbouring Assam state, from which Meghalaya was separated in 1972 but with which it still remains locked in border disputes.

The Assam government sent people to disputed villages on its border with Meghalaya for a census but the Khasi tribals of Meghalaya, living in the no-man’s-land villages, reportedly sent away the investigators, saying they belonged to Meghalaya.

Soon after that, Bishwakarma says hundreds of Khasis, armed with knives and bows and arrows, attacked Nepalis during a weekly market. When police intervened, five Khasis were said to have been killed in the firing, resulting in even more fierce attacks on Nepali migrants.

In Umiam village, Vishwakarma says a 70-year Nepali cowherd was set ablaze. Three more Nepali huts were also set on fire.

The killing was followed by attacks on Nepalis and threats. ‘People, including even government employees, have been receiving quit Meghalaya notices, warning them to leave within a week or even 24 hours,’ Vishwakarma says.

The association says Meghalaya has seen such attacks against migrants since the 70s. There were riots targeting Bengalis in 1979, against Nepalis in 1987, followed by still more violence against people from Bihar and non-tribals.

Nepalis, it says, are a peace-loving community who have sacrificed their lives for India during the wars with China and Pakistan.

The association is asking the Meghalaya government to provide compensation to the displaced and injured Nepalis, medical treatment and deployment of paramilitary forces in the trouble-prone areas to ensure their safety.

Dantewada bus blast: Five more bodies identified

New Delhi, May 19 (ANI): The Union Home Ministry on Wednesday released a list of five more civilians whose bodies have been identified from among those killed by Naxals in Chhattisgarh’s Dantewada District on Monday.

With this, all 15 bodies have been identified.

It also shows that those killed included medical personnel and tribals from small villages.

The brutality and desperation of Naxals is clear from the list.

List of civilians who died in the land-mine explosion by naxalites in Dandewada- Sukama Marg near Chingavaram is given below:

1.
Madkami Kosa (25) father Hadma village Bursathapal Chingavaram

2.
Makami Sukda (62) father Hurra village Koram Sukma

3.
Madni Kosa (45) father Hurra village Chingavaram

4.
Sangeeta Nag (17) father village Gangaram Barseras

5.
Mitturam Kashyap (50) father Ram Singh village Adhikariras (ANI)

Maoists threaten supporters of bauxite mining in Visakhapatnam

Visakhapatnam, May 13 (ANI): Maoists in Visakhapatnam district released a letter on Wednesday explaining why they killed Somalingam, the vice-chairman of Visakhapatnam Zilla Parishad.

They said in the letter that they killed Somalingam due to the huge support he extended to bauxite mining in the area. They also warned that other political leaders who support bauxite mining would face the same fate.

Chalasani Prasad, Secretary of Viplava Rachaithala Sangham of Andhra Pradesh, an organisation supporting the Maoist movement, said that the government had no right to deprive the tribals of their livelihood and accused them of harassing the tribal people.

“Government is looting them and government is depriving them. The government has mortgaged the entire wealth of the country: forest wealth, stones, water, everything, they have mortgaged to the Americans. This we seriously condemn. This should not happen. They are playing with fire, so fire naturally burns,” said Prasad.

Prasad added that the government”s industrialization policy is a false policy and that the country belongs to its people.

Calling the Central government “fascist” and “brutal”, Prasad demanded that Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh and Home Minister P Chidambaram should visit the area and see how tribals live.

“What will happen if bauxite is taken out from there? The entire Andhra will become dry like the Sahara desert. Do you like it? We forecast it because we see the problem for the people, and government is sitting in their AC (air-conditioned) rooms at Delhi. They don”t know how people live in India,” he said.

Thousands have been killed during the Maoist insurgency, which began in the late 1960s, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has described the Maoist threat one of the gravest homegrown threats to India”s internal security.

The rebels claim they are fighting for the rights of poor farmers and landless labourers.
They have spread into the rural pockets of 20 of India”s 28 states. (ANI)

Orissa tribals demand ST status

Malkangiri (Orissa), May 10 (ANI): Tribals of the Konda Reddy community staged a protest in Orissa”s Maoist-infested Malkangiri District on Monday demanding Scheduled Tribe (ST) status from the state government.

Tribals residing in the Paplur village shouted slogans in favour of the ST status.

Pandama, a tribal woman, said the lack of ST status has deprived them of basic facilities like health and education.

“We are demanding for the Scheduled Tribe status. We have been staying here since the British period. Earlier, there was no school. It was only after the 1970s, that schools were built,” said Pandama.

“But our children are still not getting educational benefits, as we don”t have a Scheduled Tribe status,” she claimed.

“We are demanding the ST status. Our children are not getting any facility, neither in the education field nor in service field. Several times, we have raised voices but there are no results,” said Cina Bhai Palasa, a tribal.

Konda Reddy tribals had earlier handed over a memorandum to the district collector urging the state government to grant them ST status soon.

There are several groups that benefit from government affirmative action such as the Scheduled Castes (SC), made of former ”untouchables”, Scheduled Tribes (ST) made of ”tribal groups”, and the Other Backward Classes (OBC) made of a host of ”lower castes”. (ANI)

Orissa bonded labourers rescue themselves from clutches of serfdom

Koratpur (Orissa), May 6 (ANI): Over 11 elders including women and a couple of children hailing from Orissa”s Koratpur District managed to save themselves from the clutches of serfdom in an obscure village of Karnataka.

They reached Orissa on Wednesday, where a voluntary forum apprised the District Labour Officer and facilitated their return to their native village.

The role of middlemen luring poor landless labourers came to light due to the efforts of Pragati, the non-governmental organisation (NGO).

Despite of employment schemes and poverty alleviation programmes like National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA), many tribals here either migrate to other states in search of work or fall prey to the promises of such middlemen.

The workers, who were rescued, recalled that middlemen lured them and promised to provide them employment, food and shelter, but betrayed them following which they were left deserted in the unknown place.

Later, it was ascertained that the place in Karnataka was Lingathalli and it bordered Andhra Pradesh.

It was also revealed that initially the middlemen told them about work at the port city of Visakhapatnam, but later took them to Lingathalli, where they were herded in a hovel and made to work sans proper food and water.

According to Baidei Khara, a woman labourer, they had to start their work early in the morning and continue till late hours of night, due to which they fell sick and there was nobody to attend to them.

As a result, one woman with her two children fled from the spot and reached Koratpur, where she disclosed the plight of other bonded villagers.

“They did not provide us food and water. So we fled away from there during night. We were facing a lot of problems there. Without food and water we suffered from stomach problems. No one cared for us. They did not even pay our dues,” said Baidei Khara, a woman labourer.

Pravakar Adhikari, Secretary of Pragati noted that these villagers migrate because the NREGA has not been implemented properly in the rural areas.

“I had seen the people, who were migrating from Kukudaput; I tried to stop them but they left by saying that they don”t get work over here and hence they have to leave. This is the main problem. The NREGA scheme has not been implemented properly in Nandapur block because the villagers don”t even get an application form from the village council office to enroll themselves in the NREGA scheme,” said Adhikari.

“Those people, who want to work are not getting any work. If they get work over here, then they will not have migrate,” she added.

Despite a ban on bonded labour, it is still widely prevalent in many parts of rural India.
Bonded labourers are overworked and underpaid and made to do just about anything their employer wants. They are not even paid minimum wages at times, which makes it tough for them to run their families.

They are denied basic amenities such as drinking water and medical aid. Their children are deprived of schooling and are instead made to work to help their families repay the loans.

Bonded labour is exploited in sectors such as domestic work, brick-kilns, rice-mills, mining quarries and carpet weaving.

The Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976 prevents the economic and physical exploitation of the poorer and weaker section of society and Article 23 of the Constitution forbids the use of forced labour. (ANI)

Displaced Uttar Pradesh tribals demonstrate against Mayawati government

Sonbhadra (UP), Mar 19 (ANI): Displaced tribals Uttar Pradesh”s Sonbhadra district staged a demonstration on Thursday against the Bahujan Samaj Party-led state government, demanding adequate compensation.

The tribals say that they have not yet received the compensation promised by the state government, which took their land for setting up a thermal power plant.

“The government promised us jobs in lieu of our land along with the compensation. We were also promised that the basic civic amenities, such as roads, water supply, education etc. will be developed in our region, but nothing has been done so far. We are waiting for the jobs and the compensation,” said Jiya Ram, a tribal.

“We are looking for our self-esteem, land and jobs. We need our land back if the state government can”t give us compensation. At least we can till the land and survive.” said Munia, another tribal.

The tribals said that it is ironic that in spite of a thermal power plant being erected on their land, their district of Sonbhadra is still deprived of electricity.

The tribals are supported in their protest by the Congress party, which hopes to woo Dalit voters in time for state elections in 2012. (ANI)

Orissa tribals stage massive rally against illicit liquor shops

Laxmipur (Orissa), Sep 9 (ANI): Armed with bows and arrows, tribals took out a massive rally on Tuesday in Laxmipur region of Orissa, against illicit liquor shops operating in the area.

Dressed in red and wielding red flags, the members of the Maoist backed tribal outfit Chasi Muliya Adivasi Sangh (CMAS), marched from Narayanpatna block till Laxmipur to wage a war against illicit liquor shops.

The Adivasi Sangh been involved protest against in forcible acquisition of lands from non-tribal farmers for past three months.nother motive behind the rally was to motivate the tribals residing in Laxmipur to join their outfit.

“This organisation is of poor tribals and we are inviting all the tribals to join us. We are staging an anti-liquor movement. The upper class people (non-tribals) take advantage of the innocent tribals. We condemn this and we will break all the illicit liquor shops. We also demand the release of our two members, arrested by the police,” said Nachika Linga, Leader, CMAS.

The rally took place in the presence of the administrative authorities and the police.

“There is no tension, till now it is peaceful, by god’s will it will remain peaceful only,” said Gadadhar Parida, Collector, Koraput.

The Adivasi Sangh also demanded release of two of their members who were arrested by the Laxmipur police on charges of destruction of liquor units in the area.

The administrative authorities are wary of the CMAS extending its hold in Laxmipur as well.

The CMAS is now ridden with violent factionalism, one belonging to Bandhugaon and other to Narayanpatna.

Both the groups have been involved in forcible acquisition of land from the non-tribals in a bid to restore the land to the tribals.

In the past three months, they had acquired around 3,000 acres of non-tribal land in both these regions and distributed it amongst the tribals. The unrest had also prompted many non-tribals to flee the region. (ANI)

Situation remains tense in Koraput

Koraput (Orissa), Sep. 8 (ANI): Orissa’s tribal-dominated Koraput district remained tense on Tuesday, a day after a man was killed in a clash, which broke out between the two factions of the Maoist backed tribal outfit, Chasi Muliya Adivasi Sangh (CMAS).

The densely forested Narayanpatna and Bandhugaon regions have been witness to violent fights between the members of the two factions for past some days.

Involved in forcible acquisition of lands from non-tribal farmers for past three months the outfit is now ridden with violent factionalism, one belonging to Bandhugaon and other to Naraynapatna.

“We were going to talk to them (people from Narayanpatna) asking them not to fight but they had planned to attack us. They suddenly attacked us; one of our people was injured. They killed one person and misbehaved with the ladies,” said Hari Lara, a villager in Bandhugaon region.

On Sunday, a group of tribals blocked the stretch between Bandhugaon and Narayanpatna, making movement impossible.

Both the groups have been involved in forcible acquisition of lands from the non-tribals in a bid to restore the land to the tribals.

The officials however said that they are trying to calm the situation.

“There was a clash between two groups, we are trying to calm them. The media is sensitising it. We are trying to restore normalcy in the region,” said Gadadhara Parida, District Collector, Koraput.

In the past three months, they had acquired around 3,000 acres of non-tribal land in both these regions and distributed it amongst the tribals.

The unrest had also prompted many non-tribals to flee the region. (ANI)

Orissa tribals adopt beekeeping business

Koraput (Orrisa), Sep 8 (ANI): Tribals in Orissa’s Kaoraput district take to apiculture to earn a living. A non- governmental organization called ‘Sarvodaya Committee’ initiated the honey collection in 1955, aided by Orissa Khadi and Village industry board.

The beekeepers collect the honeybees and keep them in a box hive and wait for at least three months for the bees to produce honey.

“At first we catch the queen bee from the jungle and keep it in a safe place. Then all the other bees come searching for the queen bee and we catch them. This is how we collect the bees and keep them in a box hive,” Ugresan Guntha, a honey collector.

“The Koraput area is a cold region due to which the cultivation of the Italian bee known as Melifera Mexica is very profitable. The honey produced by the normal Indian bee is around fifteen kilograms of in a year but the honey produced by the Italian bee known as the Malifera Mexica is around 40-45 kilograms,” said Krushna Dalei, a beekeeper.

He also said that the months from December to April are very good season for the collection of honeybees.

The demand for the honey produced in these beekeeping fields is very high.

The beekeepers have to check the honeybees every ten days and look after their needs.

The five kinds of honey bee that are found in Orissa are called Rock bee, Apis bee, Apis Melipa, Apis Maila, and Apis Melifera, which is the most profitable. (ANI)

Violence erupts between Orissa’s tribal groups

Bhubneshwar, Sep. 7 (ANI): Violence has rocked Orissa’s Narayanpatna region following a clash between the two factions of the Maoist backed tribal outfit Chasi Muliya Adivasi Sangh (CMAS).

Involved in forcible acquisition of lands from non-tribal farmers for past three months the outfit is now ridden with violent factionalism, one belonging to Bandhugaon and other to Naraynapatna.

The activists of the Bandhugaon unit set at least a dozen tribal houses afire, accusing the owners of being supporters of the Narayanpatna unit.

Reportedly, one person has died in the fighting.

On Sunday, a group of tribals blocked the stretch between Bandhugaon and Narayanpatna, making movement impossible.

However, with the situation turning bad, the state authorities have assured intervention in the matter.

“They not running parallel, they are fighting each other to prove their superiority. The law will take its own course of action,” said Surya Narayan Patra, Revenue Minister of Orissa.

In the past three months, they had acquired around 3,000 acres of non-tribal land in both these regions and distributed it amongst the tribals.

The unrest had also prompted many non-tribals to flee the region. (ANI)

Tribals attend RBI’s financial outreach camp in Tripura

Agartala, Sep. 6 (ANI): Thousands of tribal families turned out to participate in a financial outreach camp organized by the Reserve Bank of India in Pitra village of Tripura.

The camp was organised with the objective of bringing awareness among villagers about banking norms.

“Bank wants to lend for projects which would generate economic activity will lead to development of north east.

So we have to be able to work together. The state government, the banks, the non-governmental organisations, the locals, Panchayati Raj institutions and the Reserve Bank will act like a catalyst to make people come together and work together for economic development,” said Usha Thorat, deputy governor, Reserve Bank of India.

Organised on the occasion of Platinum Year celebration of Reserve Bank, the camp witnessed hundreds of villagers gathered at the stalls of different banks for opening of new bank accounts.

The villagers were also informed and familiarized with various banking facilities, security features of currency notes, exchange their soiled and mutilated currency notes, exchange currency notes for coins and also look into their complains with regards to banking facilities.

“In the village there is no banking system and this camp will be of great benefit to us. The villagers had no means of saving but now we think we can save something for our future,” Bubantala Jamatia, a villager

Under the model, post offices, cooperatives, NGOs, financial institutions, self-help groups, retired employees of state or central government may act as an agent of the banks and provide services to people. (ANI)

Malaria spreads in Orissa’s Gajapati district

Gajapati (Orissa), Sep 4 (ANI): Malaria scare is on an all time high in Orissa’s Gajapati district as at least 15 tribals have succumbed to the deadly disease in the past one-month and around 300 people are being treated at ill-equipped primary health care centres.

Being one of the tribal dominated and poverty stricken districts of the state, Gajapati is deprived of basic amenities and medical facilities, following which the region has become a breeding ground for mosquitoes and the situation is further complicated by the unhygienic life-style of many poor families.

“Around thirteen people have died due to malaria in our village council. We apprehend more deaths in the coming days. If the government and the health department do not take any notice of this emergency situation, then people may die like worms,” said Udaya Nath, a local resident.

Most of the affected villages are in remote areas and isolated in the dense forests, due to which medical facilities are out of reach to the ill people.

However, officials of the State Government contend that the Health Department is keeping a track of the situation in this region.

Orissa’s Revenue Minister, Surya Narayan Patra, claimed that numerous awareness camps are being held to educate the people about cleanliness and they are keeping a check on breeding of mosquitoes.

“Not only Gajapati, but most of the tribal belts are prone to malaria. The Health Department and the NGOs have taken lot of preventive measures. We have held training camps, where people were taught how to destroy the wastage of their houses. We have also provided mosquito nets and medicines to the tribals,” Patra said. (ANI)

Four tribals die after eating mango kernel in Orissa

Koratpur (Orissa), Sep 4 (ANI): Four tribesmen died in Koraput district of Orissa after they were forced to eat a soup made of mango kernel recently.

Preliminary medical reports said the soup was bacteria-infected and the tribals, who belong to Narayanpatna block, died of food poisoning.

“My wife and two of my grand daughters died. They consumed mango kernel and wild leaves, as we didn’t have anything else to eat. Most of the times we consume this because we do not have rice at our homes,” said Balsi Suika, relative of the dead.

However, Surya Narayan Patra, the state revenue minister said that the tribals were provided with rice, but they often keep it for a number of days, leading to food poisoning.

“The habit of tribals is to keep cooked rice for four to five days which actually gets spoilt. In recent cases the reports from doctors confirm that they kept the food for a longer period of time. We have directed the extension officer and the collector to propagate them about it in those areas,” said Patra. (ANI)

Museum in Tamil Nadu showcases tribal lifestyle

Palada (Tamil Nadu), Sep 3 (ANI): A museum in Tamil Nadu’s Palada district provides an insight into the life of tribal communities living in Nilgiri Hills as it displays traditional tribal weapons, utensils, musical instruments, jewellery and costumes.

The museum, established in 1983, is funded by the State Government to conserve and protect testimonies of tribal life.

“In this museum we have various items used by tribals in ancient time. In the Nilgiris area, there are six tribal communities living here. They include Todas, Kothars, Kurumbars, Irulars, Panayars and Kattu Naickers. We have displayed the various items, weapons and medicines used by these tribes,” said Murugan, Curator, Tribal Museum, Palada.

Tourists and other visitors, including researchers in anthropology have said that the museum has enhanced their knowledge about tribal culture, festivals and allied traditions.

“This museum is very important to us for taking records in the college and schools and I have seen this only in this place. Wherever (else) I went, I have not seen like such instruments. It’s very useful for me also,” said Mohana Nandini, a student of anthropology.

Another visitor Minu Darshini said that the ‘tour’ of the museum was enriching, as she got to know more about the lifestyle of the tribals.

“I had read about tribals and their way of life only in books.

But, here I can see for myself how actually they lived, the kind of equipment and weapons they used for hunting animals. It’s really nice and beautiful,” said Minu. (ANI)

Local tribals’ help also being taken to search Andhara CM: Guv Tiwari

New Delhi, Sep.2 (ANI): Andhra Pradesh Governor Narayan Dutt Tiwari on Wednesday evening asked the District Collectors of Prakasham, Kurnool, and Chittoor districts of the State to organise village committees in and around the Nallamallai forest area and engage them in the search for the missing Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy.

“The State Government is also involving the tribals living in these forests in the search and rescue operations,” said Tiwari.

Meanwhile, the chopper carrying the Andhra Pradesh CM was reportedly not fit for flying and had a trouble history. (ANI)

Tribals lament lack of adequate medical facilities in Orissa

Dasmantpur (Orissa), Aug 27(ANI): Tribals living in Orissa’s Dasmantpur village are deprived of basic amenities and health facilities leading to several health hazards.

Locals say that the Central Government had made development plans for education, health and communication, but they are yet to see development in this regard.

The plight of the residents of the village has become manifold with the onset of monsoon, as tribals are facing the wrath of epidemics like cholera and diarrhoea.

“We are not getting the facilities provided by the government, as they get diverted en route. People here consume mango kernel during rainy season, so chances of suffering from Cholera increases,” said Subas Patika, another local.

“They cannot reach the medical centres, as there is no proper road connectivity. The river en route also swells up during rainy season. Education facilities are also very poor here,” he added.asmantpur village was in news for the last few years for the number of deaths due to cholera and diarrhoea like epidemics after floods.

“We are facing water problems. There is a tube well, but worms fall from it, in the morning. So people don’t use it for drinking. Our village doesn’t even have proper road connectivity.

The Anganwadi (government sponsored centre to help poor) does provide us some medicines,” said Keshab Chandru, a local. (ANI)

Pakistan government’s strategy to “isolate” Mehsud a non-starter: Report

Islamabad, July 15 (ANI): The Pakistan government may have announced an all out war against the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud in South Waziristan,but it has so far failed to bring the important Taliban leader Jalaluddin Haqqani on its side as part of its strategy to isolate the warlord, the BBC reports.

While Pakistan Air Force’s fighter jets continue to pound suspected hideouts of the Taliban in South Waziristan, every step to garner support of Haqqani, a key Afghan leader, has failed.

Haqqani has refused to side by the government and isolate Mehsud.

Experts believe that the government’s strategy to disassociate Haqqani from Mehsud would never succeed.

It was Haqqani’s son, Sirajuddin who had played a vital role in uniting three major Taliban leaders – Hafiz Gul Bahadur, Baitullah Mehsud and Mullah Nazir in Waziristan, so it is very hard to believe that he and his father would side by the government, they opine.

The government, through local tribal leaders, is also pushing to alienate Hafiz Gul Bahadur and Mullah Nazir groups from Mehsud, but local tribals said its efforts have failed to yield desired results till now, The Nation reports. (ANI)

Maoists surrender in Orissa

Rayagada (Orissa), July 7 (ANI): Three Maoist rebels have surrendered to the police in Orissa’s Rayagada District.

The three Maoist rebels are Trinath Shrambutika, Prakash Kimbaka and Prakash Kimbaka.

Ashish Kumar Singh, Superintendent of Police (SP), Rayagada said that the surrendered Maoists were important members of Chandrapur Divisional Committee.

“Three Maoist of Chandrapur Divisional Committee have surrendered in front of the police on Monday evening. Shrambutkta is a history sheeter. He is in charge of Chandrapur Division. All three are very important members of Chandrapur Divisional Committee,” said Singh.

Shrambutkta said that he surrendered because he could not identify himself with the Maoist ideology any longer.

“I have become a Maoist because I thought we could fight against the exploitation of tribals. But the Maoist ideology has changed and they are more involved in killing people. So I want to join the mainstream,” said Shrambutkta.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the Maoists as the biggest internal security challenge since independence.

Hundreds of Maoists had declared the town of Lalgarh about 170 km from Kolkata, as a “liberated zone” before they fled last week in face of police action.

Some experts said the ban would have little impact in the battle against an estimated 22,000 Maoist combatants. (ANI)