[QuoteMaoist military wing leader Koteshwar Rao - or Kishenji - called the BBC 
from an undisclosed location.He said the group would stop violence if the 
government invited intellectuals and rights activists like Ms Roy and B D 
Sharma to mediate in peace talks.
Unquote

The despair is showing. "Barkis is willing." But alas, response is awaited.]

http://news. bbc.co.uk/ 2/hi/south_ asia/8553983. stm

Indian writer accepts talks roleBy Rajesh Joshi 
BBC News, Delhi 
Indian writer Arundhati Roy says she is ready to be an "independent observer" 
if the Indian government agrees to peace talks with Maoist insurgents.She gave 
her reaction following a fresh proposal for talks made by the rebels.Maoist 
military wing leader Koteshwar Rao - or Kishenji - called the BBC from an 
undisclosed location.He said the group would stop violence if the government 
invited intellectuals and rights activists like Ms Roy and B D Sharma to 
mediate in peace talks.Although refusing to be a mediator in any talks, Ms Roy 
told BBC Hindi radio that she would be happy to participate in talks as an 
independent observer.Support"I am a writer and I know for sure that I don't 
have the skills of a mediator," she said.She added that she couldn't act as a 
representative for the Maoist party, but she supported the offer of talks made 
by them."I think it is very important that Kishenji says his party is ready for 
talks and the government should welcome the
 offer," said the Booker Prize winning author.The government and the insurgents 
have been locked in an armed conflict which has claimed hundreds of lives in 
recent years.The rebels say they are fighting for the rights of poor people.But 
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the insurgency as the 
"biggest internal threat to India since independence".Recently, a senior home 
ministry official, G K Pillay, said that some retired army officers were 
helping Maoists plan out their military offensive.He said that the way the 
Maoists plan and execute their military operations indicates they get help from 
trained military people.But Kishenji has denied that his party gets any help 
from retired army officials.Indian Home Minister P Chidambaram has already said 
that he would accept "no ifs, no buts and no conditions" for talks after the 
Maoists made a conditional ceasefire offer.The Maoist movement originated more 
than four decades ago in a village
 called Naxalbari in the state of West Bengal.It is believed that the rebels 
now have a presence in 223 out of about 600 districts in India.
Peace Is Doable

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