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* Jharkhand  News *
  <http://jharkhand.org.in/>














*discontent, poverty fueling Naxalite rebels*
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Amid increasing violence sparked by India's Maoist insurgency, politicians
and observers have called for leaders to tackle the causes of the rebel
movement: poverty, landlessness, and unemployment.

India's Maoist revolt, or Naxalism, is thought to have killed thousands
since it began in the 1960s. Some 13 of India's 29 states have been affected
by the insurgency. India's prime minister, Manmohan Singh, has previously
described the movement as the biggest domestic security threat facing the
country. Since surprise Maoist wins in Nepal's general elections last month,
there have been fears in India that the Naxalites would be emboldened by
that victory.

New government figures also show that Naxalite violence is on the
rise<http://www.zeenews.com/articles.asp?aid=438493&sid=NAT>,
reports the website of Zee News, an Indian TV channel. Some 698 deaths were
reported in 2007, compared with 678 the previous year. The rise was
attributed to a greater use of improvised explosive devices and land mines
by the rebels and more attacks.

On Monday, the Times of India reported that a high-level committee appointed
by the central government had urged the government to focus on the
discontentment that fuels
Naxalism<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Talk_to_Naxalites_says_govt_panel/articleshow/2989145.cms>.
The report was written by members of the Planning Commission, an Indian
policy think tank. It also urged the government to seek peace talks with
Naxalite leaders.

On growth of Naxalism, the report said that while policy documents admitted
direct correlation between extremism and poverty, in practice, the
government treated it as a law and order problem. "It is necessary to change
this mindset and bring about congruence between policy and implementation,"
the panel said.

 The report has exhaustive details about social, political, economic, and
cultural discrimination faced by [Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, who
are among India's poorest people] and how that resulted in discontented
people finding succor in immediate justice provided by the Naxalites.

 To buttress its point, the committee did a survey of four districts
affected by Naxalism and compared it with four comparatively more developed
areas [in eastern India, including] Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh,
Jharkhand, and Orissa.

 It was found that the districts where Naxalism had grown were different
from developed ones in 10 ways: [a higher percentage of poor], low literacy,
high infant mortality, low level of urbanization, high forest cover, high
share of agricultural labour, low per capita foodgrain production, low level
of road length, high share of rural households without bank accounts, and
high share of rural households without specified assets.

Naxalites have found willing recruits among some rural poor, who feel left
behind as India rushes to modernize. Forest-dwelling tribal people, in
particular, have suffered displacement by large development projects –
including dams – and a government failure to ensure food security.

Last week, the chief minister of the southern state of Tamil Nadu, M.
Karunanidhi, said that efforts should be made to dissuade young
men<http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/004200804221757.htm>from
joining the Naxalites, according to the Press
Trust of India (PTI), a domestic news wire.

"Do they lack education? If be so, what is the reason? Economic conditions?
If that is the propelling factor, then we should take steps to improve the
conditions," he said....

And over the weekend, Rahul Gandhi, heir of India's Nehru-Gandhi dynasty and
a probable future leader of the ruling Congress Party, toured insurgency-hit
areas of the eastern state of Chhattisgarh, where Naxalism is especially
prevalent <http://newspostindia.com/report-50661>. Security was tight, says
the News Post India, an online newspaper, which also reported that Mr.
Gandhi had wanted to spend a night with a tribal family but was cautioned
against it.

Gandhi asked why Maoism was on the
rise<http://news.in.msn.com/national/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1355962>in
the area, reports the Indo-Asian
News Service (IANS).

Congress sources said that [nongovernmental organizations] and party local
tribal youths informed Gandhi that "decades of total neglect of local tribal
masses by various governments in welfare schemes and the government's
failure to work out a proper plan for the social and economic development of
tribals have nurtured Maoism".

In the meantime, the violence
continues<http://www.telegraphindia.com/1080427/jsp/nation/story_9194438.jsp>.
Over the weekend, Naxalites murdered three policemen in the eastern state of
Jharkhand, reported the Telegraph, a paper published in Calcutta . A rebel
and a villager were also killed in the crossfire.

Last week, a group of armed Naxalites attacked an iron ore plant in
Chhattisgarh and set
fire<http://www.business-standard.com/common/news_article.php?leftnm=3&subLeft=1&chklogin=N&autono=321170&tab=r>to
53 trucks, reported the Business
Standard, India's leading business newspaper. Sources suggested that the
attack was a protest against the exportation of iron ore outside the state.

And while some urge the government to address the causes of Naxalism, others
call for might to fight the "Maoist menace" as Indian reporters have dubbed
the rebels' armed struggle.

The Khaleej Times reported last week that a senior Maoist leader told
journalists the rebels would never back down from their armed
struggle<http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/subcontinent/2008/April/subcontinent_April691.xml&section=subcontinent&col=>.
The rebel leader said that unlike Nepal's Maoists, who triumphed in last
month's general election, the Naxalites would continue to believe "in
capturing power through armed struggle."

In an editorial in the Bihar Times, P.V. Ramana, an analyst at New Delhi's
Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, wrote that the Naxalite
movement<http://bihartimes.com/newsnational/2008/April/newsnational28April5.html>had
brought funds to the rebels.

The Naxalites extort money from those who they can reach, and those who have
ill-gotten wealth. The fear of violent retribution makes people pay money.
Those who pay up include politicians – big and small, corrupt government
servants, businesses and rich landlords. Besides, the rebels also raise
funds through contributions from sympathisers and activists

 …All this persuades one to wonder if Naxalism is indeed not a thriving
business proposition.


 csmonitor.com/2008/0428/p99s01-duts.html
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