Just received an SMS. From Kavita Srivastava.But then it is also on the net.

A great loss.
An extremely erudite person. His article on capital punishment in the EPW
(in mid-1998) is such a formidable scholarly exercise. Apart from his so
many other articles. His one on Naxalism in the EPW again in the recent past
is just another illustration.
But he was also a barefoot activist firmly rooted in the grassroots
activism. That's what made his analysis of Naxalism all that insightful.

I personally had happened to meet him a few times.
First time in 2000 in Nagpur in a preparatory meet which would would lead to
the birth of the Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace (CNDP) later in
November that year. Then in January 2006 in Nalgonda (Telengana), Andhra
Pradesh during a padyatra against a proposed uranium mining project. And for
the last time in December 2007 at the XXXI Indian Social Science Congress.
I do join the grieving human rights activists in India and deeply mourn his
untimely passing away.

Sukla

http://beta.thehindu.com/news/states/andhra-pradesh/article31021.ece

Civil rights activist K. Balagopal passes awayK. Srinivas Reddy

Noted Civil rights activist K. Balagopal (52) died of cardiac arrest in a
hospital in Banjara hills on Thursday night. He is survived by wife and son.

Balagopal was one of the staunch civil liberties activist in Andhra Pradesh
and had broken away from the Andhra Pradesh Civil Liberties Committee
(APCLC), with which he was associated since its inception in ‘80’s, on the
issue of violence perpetrated by the erstwhile CPI-ML Peoples War.

Professor Balagopal founded the human rights form (RF) in A.P. The civil
liberties leader had been steadfastly opposing the ‘red violence’ of the
Maoists as he was opposing the state violence also. He was a prolific writer
on people’s issues and had recently written about the developments on the
Maoist front in west Bengal.

His bold criticism of the Maoist’s propensity to indulge in violence
attracted severe criticism from the naxalites. As recently as a fortnight
ago, Maoist Central Committee member, Mallojula Koteshwar Rao had challenged
Professor Balagopal to visit Lalgarh resistance area to know the real
picture. Professor Balagopal opposed the state violence as much he opposed
the ‘Red violence’.

Professor Balagopal gave up teaching in Kakatiya University and took to
practice of law nearly a decade ago and had argued dozens of cases
pertaining to encounter killings by the police. When the erstwhile people’s
war cadres resorted to a rash of kidnaps in late ‘80’s, a vigilante
organisation ‘Praja Bandu’ abducted him demanding the release of two
policemen from naxalite custody. The ‘Praja Bandu’ which was suspected to
have been floated by the state police had released him only after the
abducted policemen were let off.

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