India’s Maoist insurgency has become the most violent of its domestic
conflicts, said the Asian Center for Human Rights, an independent monitoring
group.



The broad network of Maoist cells known as the Naxalite movement is present
in at least 11 of India’s 28 states, especially in rural, impoverished and
heavily forested eastern India. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said the
movement is India’s most serious internal security threat and his government
said this week it would step up its response to the guerrillas and other
domestic threats.



“Current security-driven responses are not working; indeed they are
counter-productive” in addressing the Naxalite uprising, the New Delhi-based
center said in a statement accompanying the report’s release today. It said
some Indian security forces have operated with “impunity.”



The Indian government has said the Maoists are among the country’s main
security threats.



“Terrorism, Naxalite violence and insurgency in the northeast are the key
challenges before the country,” Home Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram told
reporters in New Delhi this week. He said Singh’s Congress party-led
government, re- elected this month with an increased parliament majority,
will “respond with speed and decisiveness” to security threats.



The human rights report also criticized the government of Uttar Pradesh,
India’s most populous state, for what it said is an increase in suppression
and atrocities against Dalits, those at the bottom of the Hindu caste
hierarchy.



Caste Hierarchy



While the state’s chief minister is a Dalit, people from the group “continue
to be denied entry into temples” and schools, and denied the use of water
wells, because of traditional religious beliefs, the report said.



>From 2005 through 2008, the Naxalite conflict has led to 1,965 civilian
deaths, more than either of India’s two regional secessionist movements, in
Kashmir and in the northeastern states, the center said in its annual human
rights report. During the same period, the number of security personnel
killed in Naxalite clashes doubled, while declining in other conflict zones,
the report said.



“Among the armed opposition groups, the Naxals were responsible for the
gross violations of international humanitarian law,” the center said in the
report. The movement has used “violence of extraordinary brutality,
including the gouging out of eyes, bludgeoning to death and slitting of
throats of those suspected of colluding with the state.”



The Naxalite movement is named for the West Bengal village of Naxalbari,
where impoverished villagers staged an uprising against landowners in 1967.
The movement seeks to overthrow the government to improve the lives of the
poor.



Singh’s government was criticized by opposition parties after the November
terrorist attack in Mumbai that killed 166 people. The government has since
then created a federal anti- terrorism agency, strengthened coastal borders,
improved training for anti-terrorism officers and bolstered the country’s
intelligence agencies.



bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601091&sid=a9X6usYZK7qI&refer=india

Reply via email to