CoBRA and Army cannot suppress our movement: Maoists

September 29, 2009 08:40 pm | Updated December 17, 2016 04:26 am IST - HYDERABAD

Maoist guerrillas have adopted a belligerent stand against the centre's move to send security forces into Maoist controlled areas in several States, by declaring that neither the commando force raised by the CRPF nor the Rashtriya Rifles of the Indian Army could suppress the revolutionary movement in the country.

The recent offensive in Bastar forests of Chhattisgarh by the CRPF's Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (CoBRA) and Chhattisgarh police was “courageously” repulsed by the Maoist guerrillas who killed at least six security forces personnel. "After suffering the biggest loss, the commandoes caught several unarmed adivasis and killed them in cold blood", Azad, spokesperson of the Maoist Central Committee said in a statement here on Tuesday.

Referring to the September 18 offensive in forested areas of Dantewada district in Chhattisgarh, Azad said the massive operation was part of a bigger offensive being taken up in Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal.

The brutal onslaught in Dandakarnya showed the extreme demoralisation of and desperation of the "fascist clique" at the centre over its failure to lay hands on the mineral wealth in the adivasi-inhabited regions in Eastern and Central India.

Azad alleged that the Centre was planning 'aerial bombardment' of some Maoist-held areas even at the cost of civilian casualties and destruction of clusters of villages. The centre had already tried 'Vietnam type' resettlement of adivasis in 'strategic hamlets' through the Salwa Judum campaign in Bastar forests. The visit of Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram to Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand on September 25 was akin to "morale-boosting trips" of Donald Rumsfeld and George Bush to Iraq and Afghanistan.

The advertisements in newspapers on naxal violence was part of a simultaneously taken up psychological war, but such 'cheap propaganda' was bound to backfire, as people witness the violence perpetrated by the security forces daily.

Conceding that the arrest of Kobad Ghandy was a 'great loss' to the revolutionary movement in India, Azad said Ghandy was betrayed by a 'weak element' in the party. The courier had led the Special Intelligence Branch (SIB) of Andhra Pradesh and the intelligence wing in Delhi to Bhikaji Cama Place in South Delhi, where Ghandy had an appointment after his return from a trip to a Guerrilla zone in the country. Ghandy was arrested on September 17 and not on 20th as police claimed, he said charging that the police had planned to ‘torture and murder' him, but with the intervention of democratic civil rights organisations foiled their plans.

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