http://www.thehindu.com/news/states/other-states/article2880109.ece 






Many cadres becoming trigger-happy, admits Odisha Maoist leaderSATYASUNDAR BARIK
BHUBANESWAR, February 10, 2012 




Many who join us do not know the objectives, principles of our movement, and 
must be better oriented: Sabyasachi Panda
Holding that “ideology should control the gun and not vice versa,” Odisha 
Organising Committee secretary of the Communist Party of India (Maoist) 
Sabyasachi Panda admitted that many of the outfit's cadres were becoming 
trigger-happy due to an inadequate understanding of revolutionary movement and 
society.
“Ideology should control the gun, not vice versa. Many of our cadres, who are 
armed, do not know about principles. As a result, they resort to killing 
without doing much homework,” the top Maoist leader told a select group of 
journalists at an undisclosed location in Kandhamal district, about 250 km from 
here, on Thursday.
“Those joining the movement do not know its objective. They are coming under 
different circumstances. They neither know about society nor about communism,” 
Mr. Panda said.
Candidly admitting that there had been some erosion within the party's ideology 
base, the State committee member said: “The organisation does not have the 
strength to give these cadres proper perspective about the revolution. As the 
party is busy combating the State's repression, not much attention is being 
paid towards [orienting] cadres.”
The Maoist leader, who has been elusive for years now, said: “No organisation 
is pure. An organisation evolves from process of internal debate over several 
contentious issues. We will surely rectify our mistakes. Cadres will be 
motivated to work in close coordination with people at the grass-roots level.”
“It is not that we are not taking action against undisciplined members. The 
party is demoting some cadres while some are being deliberately kept away from 
important assignments. In some cases, we are suspending them from the party,” 
Mr. Panda said.
Conflict with state
Mr. Panda admitted the party was under pressure from security personnel. “The 
state is involved in a low-intensity conflict with our parties. The repressive 
rulers are mounting pressure from all sides. Security personnel are involved in 
arson, raping women and targeting people who support the movement,” he said.
He said the situation had deteriorated to such an extent that cadres sometimes 
were resorting to taking panic action, and for which they were being held to 
blame.
Asked whether the party regretted certain killings, Mr. Panda said: “The timing 
of the killing of [former Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader] Laxmanananda Saraswati 
in Kandhamal was a mistake. But the decision to kill him was not a mistake. We 
should have exposed him in society prior to killing him. Some cadres became 
restless and killed him.”
His killing led to a riot in Kandhamal in 2008.
Pointing out that that Jagabandhu Majhi, Biju Janata Dal MLA, was killed by a 
CPI (Maoist) cadre in haste, Mr. Panda, said: “I admit that [our] cadres have 
committed mistakes. Before killing a political activist, we should expose him 
before the people. For example, if somebody earns huge property, we should not 
kill him. We should seize the property from him and distribute it among the 
destitute. If a person is clearly proved to be a police informer, only then 
should he be given the death penalty.”
The Maoist leader dismissed news of his being elevated in the party ranks after 
the killing of Kishenji, the top Maoist leader, in an encounter. “It was part 
police strategy to divert the attention of cadres,” he said.

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