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Comrades in arms
Special Task Force sleuths arrested eight Naxalites - five Nepalese Maoists
and three MCC activists - on 25 February from an ‘‘innocuous’’ looking
computer training centre in Patna which served as MCC’s nerve centre. Two
days later, STF arrested four more Nepalese Maoists from another MCC
hide-out in Patna’s Gandhi Maidan area. Those arrested include Dilip Kumar
Sah, Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) central committee member, and Jeetan
Marandi, MCC’s Jharkhand ‘‘zonal commander’’.
“There’s now enough evidence to say MCC and PW operating in Bihar and
Jharkhand are extending all sorts of support to their Nepalese
counterparts,” said a senior police officer, when the Indian government is
providing military hardware and training to Nepal’s army to help it fight
the Maoists.
“Yes, we’re giving military hardware and training to Nepal’s army to equip
it counter the insurgency,” defence minister George Fernandes said recently.
“India is committed to helping Nepal root out insurgency.’’
King Gyanendra will be in new Delhi on 20 March on a two-day diplomatic
visit during which he’s expected to meet President APJ Abdul Kalam, Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and some senior ministers. The visit comes
before the Nepal government is scheduled to begin talks with the Maoists,
who have called a temporary truce now. Needless to say the king would expect
more cooperation from India in fighting the Maoists of his country.
But has the Indian government been able to control the rise of ultra-Left
politics in its own states? Senior MCC leader Vijay Kumar Arya told this
correspondent that his outfit and PW “are extending all cooperation to the
revolutionaries in Nepal to replace the monarchy by people’s power.’’ He
said: “The goal of Indian revolutionaries and their Nepal counterparts is
common. Both of us are fighting a revolutionary battle to end the repressive
rule based on the philosophy of a Hindu rashtra and replace it by the rule
of the people… And people’s power comes out of the barrel of the gun… as
simple as that.”
People’s War (which the CPI-ML Party Unity and Andhra Pradesh’s PW merged to
form in Bihar) and MCC are on a merger course which may be effected by
November. MCC and PW leaders held their first joint congress in a Jharkhand
jungle in December 2001 and resolved to “cooperate” with the Maoist movement
in Nepal, the ‘‘war of liberation’’ in Jammu and Kashmir and the NSCN
(I-M)-led separatist movement in Nagaland.
But MCC and PW are concentrating more on the Nepalese Maoist, especially
because the Himalayan kingdom shares a 745-km porous border with India.
Several north Bihar districts including Kishenganj, Araria, Madhepura, East
and West Champaran, Madhubani and Sitamarhi share a border with Nepal. The
reason for the “close cooperation” between ultra-Left groups in Bihar and
Jharkhand and Nepal is the easy movement of extremists, illegal arms and
contrabands from both sides of the border and the parallel administration
run by the Naxalites in large parts of Bihar and Jharkhand.
Moreover, the Naxalites, particularly MCC and PW which earlier were active
in central and south Bihar (now Jharkhand) only, have now expanded their
operations to north Bihar districts bordering Nepal. Intelligence reports
show that East and West Champaran, Muzaffarpur, Darbhanga, Madhepura,
Saharsa and Madhubani are new areas where MCC and PW have become active
since the past two years. Almost 80 per cent of the people in these north
Bihar districts depend on agriculture and most of them are exploited by the
ruling and landed class - a fertile ground for Naxalites to indoctrinate the
masses. What has made the Naxalites’ task easier is that 60 per cent of the
people here are from the Backward Classes or Scheduled Castes, 80-90 per
cent of who own less than five acres of land each.
The region has a history of a strong peasant movement. After Naxalbari in
north Bengal, Musahari in north Bihar’s Muzaffarpur district was the most
volatile region during the height of the Naxalite movement in the late
Sixties and early Seventies. It was from here that the Naxalite philosophy
spread to other parts of Bihar. But Jaiprakash Narayan’s and Karpoori
Thakur’s movement in the mid-Seventies, in which many BCs and STs
participated, thwarted the growth of Naxalism in north Bihar. The rise of
Laloo Prasad Yadav was a dream come true for many a BC. But the Laloo-Rabri
regime has hardly brought about any fundamental change in the material
condition of the Dalits and BCs. For Laloo Yadav has not yet implemented his
promised land reforms which could have bettered the condition of the
downtrodden. Instead of keeping his promise, Laloo Yadav used the
permutation and combination of castes to stay in power, thus increasing the
frustration of the landless Backward Classes and the Dalits populace.
Banned ultra-Left outfits such as MCC and PW have been using the failures of
the ruling parties to draw people to their fold. And they have succeeded in
a big way, for this region borders Nepal where too people live in poverty
and deprivation under a “repressive” system. “We don’t differentiate between
the people of Nepal and those of India for they are suffering at the hands
of the same exploitative regime,’’ said Santosh, PW central committee
member. Liberating Nepal from the “anarchy of monarchy” and establishing the
rule of the proletariat is the “first goal of the revolutionaries.”
The Special Service Bureau has deployed six battalions along the Indo-Nepal
border to prevent arms and and ammunition and extremists from slipping
across into either country. Each battalion comprises 1,100 jawans. “But
their number is hardly enough to man the long border,” an SSB senior officer
said. “Moreover, police have their limitation in dealing with such problems.
For, they demand a bigger political and economic intervention to be solved.”
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