Dear Friends:

This article is extracted from the book Riding The Elephant by John Elliot and 
the extract, a shorter version than the original, appeared in 
today's;Independent (4 March 2012))
-bhuban


India’s Maoist rebels need mainstream party politics
Naxalite rebels need to be tackled with mainstream political activity, not just 
development projects and repression by security forces. This new approach for 
handling India’s most serious internal security problem is being pushed by 
Jairam Ramesh, the minister for rural development. It is also being tacitly 
accepted by the state government of Orissa where Naxalite candidates won 
elections in 30 panchayats (village-level councils) last month.
Ramesh (below) is the first central government minister to pick on party 
political activity as an essential means of providing a peaceful alternative to 
the violent occupation of tribal and other remote areas by Naxalite Maoist 
rebels, who are active in nearly a third of India’s 600 administrative 
districts and ultimately want to overthrow democracy. He first did so in a 
letter to Manmohan Singh, the prime minister, at the end of December, but that 
was shuffled off to the Planning Commission which has been loosely in charge of 
the government’s non-security Naxalite policies for several years.


.

The Ministry of Home Affairs is in charge of security operations, along with 
individual states, and that has been stepped up since Palaniappan Chidambaram 
became Home Minister at the end of 2008. There was a decrease in violence last 
year, though the number of those killed by Naxalites was still high – nearly 
450 civilians and over 140 members of security forces according the ministry 
statistics.


There are reports of Naxalite attacks almost daily. Last weekend about 150 
rebels raided a stone-mine in the Bastar region of Chhattisgarh in eastern 
India looking for explosives and, failing to find any, set fire to eight stone 
crushing machines. Others torched seven construction vehicles nearby, and a 
defaulter was reported to have been buried alive for not repaying a loan 
provided by a Naxalite organisation.
The Planning Commission was given charge of development policies a few years 
ago. In 2008, it produced a massive 90-page report, “Development Challenges in 
Extremist Affected Areas”, but it does not have the political or administrative 
muscle needed to implement change. Ramesh, whose high profile initiatives 
transformed the Environment Ministry (at least temporarily) when he was in 
charge there for two years till last July, is now using his current job to fill 
the vacuum.
The government has not taken up his call for political activity since his 
letter to the prime minister, but he proposed it again at the launching of a 
book on Naxalites – “More Than Maoism” – in Delhi last week and he then chatted 
to me about his ideas. “Lack of political mobilisation is the biggest weakness 
in these areas – you need mainstream political party activity,” he says. Last 
October he presented a comprehensive paper on “The Maoist issue” in Delhi 
(which was re-printed in Outlookmagazine).
He proposed a “two track approach – one that deals with the leadership of the 
Naxals, who wish to overthrow the Indian state, and the other which focuses on 
the concerns of the people they pretend/claim to serve”. He did not mention 
political activity because, he says, he had not then realised how important it 
is for party cadres to attract young people who would otherwise turn to 
Naxalites leaders. He has now visited 24 of the 78 administrative districts 
that are most seriously affected by Naxalite occupations and violence, and says 
he was struck by the lack of mainstream politics in areas that had become 
“security fortresses” without any presence of government machinery or authority.
Politics, people, police
A “three pronged approach through politics, people and police” was now needed. 
“Democracy by itself won’t solve the problem,” he says. “People need to have 
confidence in political parties and instruments of state such as the 
judiciary”. That may seem an odd remark at a time when public opinion about 
politicians and the judiciary is desperately low because of widespread 
corruption and the government’s failure to govern effectively.
But Ramesh points to success in West Bengal where the Trinamool Congress chief 
minister, Mamata Banerjee, has been taking party politics and development into 
Naxalite areas. He picks out for special mention a popular young Trinamool MP, 
Subhendu Adhikary, who was elected last year for a constituency that 
includesLalgarh, a town occupied by Naxalites in 2009. Adhikary has been 
holding well-attended public rallies, despite the risk of bomb attacks.
There was concern in the state of Orissa (now officially renamed Odisha) when 
Naxalites won the panchayat elections, several without any opposition because 
rivals had been warned not to stand. The Home Ministry is believed to have 
favoured cancelling the elections, and there was also concern that development 
funds allocated to the panchayats would be diverted to buy arms and explosives, 
or into organisations run by the Naxalites’ alternative form of government 
(such as the one involved in the loan defaulter’s death) .
However, Ramesh sees the panchayat elections as “a good first step” into the 
system. ”This is an opportunity for political dialogue,” he says. He 
acknowledges the risk of funds being diverted to the Naxalites and says that 
special safeguards will be needed – he avoids saying that panchayat funds 
probably leak to them already, or to other illicit recipients.
Sceptics will say that Ramesh is playing to the gallery and that talks have 
been tried before with little success, but governments usually come round 
eventually to talking to rebel groups and Ramesh’s proposal is broader based 
than just talks.
No-one is suggesting that political rallies and panchayat elections will end a 
rebellion that has raged to varying degrees for 60 years in different parts of 
central and eastern India. These ideas could however give politicians and 
official organisations a chance to offer an alternative to people who have only 
come under Naxalite influence because of neglect and maltreatment by mainstream 
society.

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