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naxalrevolution
21st December 2006, 10:25
A spectre is haunting India, the spectre of communism
http://pkmcyber.com/images/communists.jpg
Report and updates on the developing revolutionary situation in India

The revolutionary situation in India today stands at a crucial juncture
and events in the next few years could very well decide it's
success or failure.

India is country with a population close to 1.1 billion but what many don't know
is that it is also one of the two countries in the world to have an estimated
100-120 million workers in trade unions and as members of communist
organizations.(China being the other one)

They are extremely fragmented,divided and opposed to each other but
nonetheless have immense potential.
With the rise of the CPI(Maoist) there is now hope that many of these
organizations could consolidate.

Who are the Naxalites ?

Naxalite or Naxalism is an informal name given to revolutionary communist groups that were born out of the Sino-Soviet split in the Indian communist movement. The term comes from Naxalbari, a small village in West Bengal, where a leftist section of Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)) led by Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal led a militant peasant uprising in 1967, trying to develop a "revolutionary opposition" in order to establish "revolutionary rule" in India.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/te/thumb/4/47/CharuMazumdar183_262.jpg/180px-CharuMazumdar183_262.jpg
Father of the Indian revolution - Comrade Charu Mazumdar

Majumdar greatly admired Mao Zedong of China and advocated that Indian peasants and lower classes must follow in his footsteps and overthrow the government and upper classes whom he held responsible for their plight. In 1967 'Naxalites' organized the All India Coordination Committee of Communist Revolutionaries (AICCCR), and broke away from CPI(M). Uprisings were organized in several parts of the country. In 1969 AICCCR gave birth to Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist). After the internal revolt led by Satyanarayan Singh in 1971 and the death of Majumdar in 1972, the movement was fragmented into many competing factions.

Since then in the last three decades the movements have witnessed splits,petty ego clashes,recombinations and what has remained constant throughout is the brutal state repression.

Today, there exists a large number of political organizations whose roots are in the AICCCR/CPI(ML). Some maintain and develop Majumdar's concept of armed revolution, whereas others have condemned the excesses of the sectarian epoch. The organizations belonging to the latter category have established legal overground structures (trade unions, student groups, etc.) and started participating in elections.

The more militant sector comprises:Take part only in armed struggle.

* Communist Party of India (Maoist) -- result of a September 2004 merger
between the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC) and the
Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) People's War,
also known as the People's War Group (PWG)
* Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Janashakti
* Communist Party of United States of India
* Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Naxalbari
* Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) (Mahadev Mukherjee)

The more moderate sector comprises:Take part in parliamentary elections.

* Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation
* Provisional Central Committee, Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist)
* Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist), led by Kanu Sanyal
* Communist Revolutionary League of India
* Marxist-Leninist Committee

A middle-category can be said to consist of parties such as Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) New Democracy (who combine legal methods with armed struggle).

What is currently being witnessed in India is the third wave
of expansion, the first two in the 1970's and mid 1980's
were brutally crushed.

Out of all these naxalite/maoist parties ,The Communist Party of India(Maoist)
has emerged as the largest and the most powerful organisation.

Some pictures of CPI(Maoist) cadre

At a Training camp in Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh
http://i13.tinypic.com/2vanpjt.jpg

Young maoist soldiers practice war
http://i10.tinypic.com/2mqop34.jpg

http://i10.tinypic.com/35bdnwm.jpg

Members of the a CPI(Maoist) Dalam(squad)
http://i13.tinypic.com/2n0sv7r.jpg

CPI(Maoist) Rally deep inside the jungles
http://i14.tinypic.com/48589br.jpg

A Maoist martyr's memorial in secundrabad,Andhra Pradesh
http://i17.tinypic.com/2v154hu.jpg

The Maoists have spread and grown rapidly from

55 districts in 9 States in 2003 to
105 districts in 13 States in 2004 to
170 districts in 15 States in 2006.

India is divided into 28 states and seven union territories,
and has approximately 600 districts
http://i17.tinypic.com/2zj9d0g.gif
The above map mainly shows the areas where the CPI(Maoist)
is waging People's War.

They have around 10,000 armed cadres with 50,000 active supporters and
15 to 20,000 weapons of all makes including AK-47's and INSAS rifles.

There are 1500 illegal arms manufacturing units in Bihar alone and an
indeterminate number in dense forests of other States.

A recent study by Amnesty International and OXFAM estimated that out of 75 million illegal arms worldwide, 40 million guns were in central India. The annual budget is approximately Rs 200 crore supported by taxations amounting to Rs 250 crore.

It is estimated that they run 80 training camps and train 300 Maoists at any one time.

The people's militia which is currently untrained and does not possess
many weapons easily runs into a couple of millions.

Government of India Response

The ruling classes have been gripped by panic and paranoia.
They have unleashed large scale repression.

Since the last one year a brutal anti-maoist campaign called
Salwa Judum is being carried out in the state of Chhattishgarh
the strong hold of Maoists.

An estimated 75,000 people have been moved out of their villages
and are being held in concentration camp like conditions.
Most of these people were formerly maoist sympathisers.

Chairman Mao had said the guerilla is a fish in an ocean of people.
The Indian government is trying to empty the ocean.

Hundreds have been killed in the last one year alone.

List of women raped and hacked to death by Salwa Judum goons,CRPF and Naga Battalion and State Police Forces (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/11/statement-from-all-india-womens-team-to.html)

List of people killed by state police, Naga police, para-military forces and goons in the name of Salwa Judum(Partial) (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/list-of-people-killed-by-state-police.html)

List of villages burnt by Vigilante Gangs of Salwa Judum, CRPF, Naga Police and State Police Forces(Partial) (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/list-of-villages-burnt-by-vigilante.html)

For detailed coverage on Salwa Judum
http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/search/label/Salwa-Judum

It has deployed 23 central paramilitary battalions,
several battalions of the Indian army, UAVs and helicopters.
It has also stepped up recruitment and is assembling new
anti-maoist units.

The total number of personnel currently engaged in the
anti-maoist drive exceeds 100,000 personnel.

In October 2006
The Centre and the Naxalite-affected states drew up a 'hit list' of 100 top
Maoists who have to be neutralised as part of a strategy to tackle this
serious internal security threat.
Newsreport-Government of India plans to neutralise top 100 Maoists (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/11/off-target-by-prakash-singh.html)
2-3 of the top maoist leaders in the list have already been killed in encounters
in the last two months.

Spread of Maoists in India causes panic among the American government.
CIA and World bank closely monitoring the situation.

The mixed success of the Maoists in Nepal shook the US government out
of it's slumber.Afraid that India is headed the nepal way the US has chosen
to directly intervene with the help of Indian ruling classes.

In May 2006 the U.S government offered India help to fight the Maoists


U.S government offered India help to fight Maoists

RAIPUR, India, May 26 (Reuters) - The United States has offered to help an Indian state remove thousands of mines planted by Maoist rebels and train its police force to battle the insurgents, a senior Indian official said on Friday.

Two American diplomats made the offer to the government of the central state of Chhattisgarh during a visit on Thursday, said B.K.S. Ray, senior state official for home affairs.

http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/0...-is-afraid.html (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/06/octopus-is-afraid.html)

In Novemeber 2006, the US Army and Indian Army held joint millitary exercises
in Maoist territory.


India, U.S. hold counter-terrorism drill

The 10-day exercise themed "Shatrujeet" (victory over the enemy), the second in the series, is essentially a capsule on counter terrorism, being conducted in semi-urban insurgency environment with the objective of enhancing interoperability at functional level
News Report - US army holds joint exercises with Indian army in maoist territory (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/11/us-army-holds-joint-exercises-with.html)

A Band of fierce maoist warriors
http://economist.com/images/20060819/3306AS4.jpg

As of today civil war like conditions exist in large parts of the country.
The state repression is immense and Maoist sympathisers
have been jailed and killed in fake encounters,prison cells.
Thousands of students have jumped into the movement
and slowly the flame shall engulf the entire country.

The path of the Indian revolution has been long,
painful and torturous. But the struggle carries on.....

Will post more updates as and when they happen.

Below I leave you with some documents and material on the
Maoist Movement in India.



Blazing Trail: A Journey Through the Indian Revolution

An awe inspiring video documentary from the Red areas of India. This film documents the emergence of the Indian revolutionary process, coming as it is in a world of struggle, mass upheaval, rebellion and revolution!

This film includes footage of the Vietnamese people's defeat of the US imperialists, the victory and success of the Chinese People's Revolution and massive street rebellions shaking the citadels of imperialism. It shows the overall dialectical development of revolution, both in the oppressed and oppressor nations, shaking the imperialist system's foundations.

Today in India, the communist forces are stronger, united within the Communist Party Of India (Maoist), leading the Indian revolution by developing People's War.

This movie is a saga of heroism and sacrifice in the face of a brutal enemy masquarading as the World's "largest democracy", foundations are being laid for a New Democratic India..

Click below
Watch the documentary Blazing Trail - journey of the Indian revolution (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/09/blazing-trail-journey-through-indian.html)

Ganapathy, General Secretary of CPI(Maoist) replies to questions posed by
Independent Citizens Initiative
Maoist reply to Independent Citizen Initiative on Dantewada (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/11/maoist-reply-to-independent-citizen.html)

Important Articles on The Maoist Movement in India
from Economic and Political Weekly(A progressive magazine of India)
http://www.epw.org.in/images/logo_top1.gif
Beyond Naxalbari (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/beyond-naxalbari.html)

Learning from Experience and Analysis (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/learning-from-experience-and-analysis.html)

Maoism in India (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/maoism-in-india.html)

On Armed Resistance (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/on-armed-resistance.html)

The Spring and it's Thunder (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/spring-and-its-thunder.html)

The Maoist Movement in Andhra Pradesh (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/maoist-movement-in-andhra-pradesh.html)

Comrade Azad official spokesperson of the CPI(Maoist) responds to
the above articles which appeared in the Economic and political weekly
Maoist reply to the above articles (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/11/comrade-azad-official-spokesperson-of.html)


Other Resources

Website of the CPI(Maoist) (http://peoplesmarch.googlepages.com/)

Communist Parties of India List on Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Communist_parties_of_India)

The economist-India's Naxalites : A spectre haunting India (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/08/indias-naxalites-report-in-economist.html)

Guardian Article Inside India's hidden war - Mineral rights are behind clashes between leftwing guerrillas and state-backed militias (http://www.guardian.co.uk/india/story/0,,1770612,00.html)

Vice Magazine-In the name of Mao, India pick's up the slaughter (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/11/salwa-judum-coverage-in-international.html)

The Naxalite Movement in Central Bihar- By Bela Bhatia (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/11/from-economic-and-political-weekly.html)

Becoming a Naxalite in rural Bihar: Class struggle and its contradictions (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/06/becoming-naxalite-in-bihar.html)

A State at War With its People Anything goes against the Maoist insurgency in Central India (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/07/state-at-war-with-its-people.html)

July 2006, Interview with CPI(Maoist) spokesperson on Nepal developments (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/07/exclusive-interview-with-cpimaoist.html)

Varavara Rao Archives(Revolutionary poet) (http://www.varavararao.org/)

Chattishgarh People's Website on Naxal Issues (http://www.cgnet.in/N1)

November 13th. Latest Press release of Com Azad spokesperson of CPI Maoist on Nepal Developments (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/2006/12/latest-press-release-of-com-azad.html)

naxalrevolution
21st December 2006, 10:30
Please note I am here to inform

I understand that this forum is populated by anarchists
who are not very fond of maoists.

Vargha Poralli
21st December 2006, 14:25
As a person living in India this posts simply exaggerates the strength of Naxalites.The soul and Brain of Naxalites is gone with Death of Charu Majumdar and Vinod Mishra. In reality Naxals have not a bit of support or Enthusiasm outside ther strongholds in Telengana Region in AP,Chhattisgarh and Bihar. And Maoists their strength too is waning now a days because of more reforms taken by the respective state govts.

And most of the moderate reformist state govts makes it totally an unfavourable situation for guerilla wars.

a Personal Request: Could please give me an Update about Salwa judum ? Nothing is in Newspapers and Big Media and People's march site is Shut down. Thanks.

naxalrevolution
30th December 2006, 04:57
@ G Ram
You are entitled to your views but please note you claims
are not credible and you have not posted any evidence to back them up with
while I have

All updates on Salwa-Judum can be found at the link below
Salwa-Judum - A brutal state sponsered anti-maoist campaign (http://naxalrevolution.blogspot.com/search/label/Salwa-Judum)

Peoplesmarch can now be accessed at
Peoplesmarch (http://peoplesmarch.googlepages.com)

Brownfist
30th December 2006, 05:19
Hello Naxalrevolution, it is good to see you here. I completely disagree with g.ram about the size or the strength of the Naxalite movement. Today the movement definitely is strongest in Andhra Pradesh, Chhatisgarh and Bihar, however, it has a lot of support in several other regions including Punjab, Maharashtra and West Bengal. A report that was put out suggest that today the 12% of India is either under control or infiltrated by the Naxals. However, it must be noted that this infiltration or control is not singularly under one party, so one must speak of the 'Naxalite Left'. I think that the Naxals have a lot more support than people are willing to give them credit for.

naxalrevolution
30th December 2006, 05:34
Comrade Brownfist

Good to see you here...

Yes you are right the control does not rest with one single party
Historical reasons, bad blood and petty ego issues might prevent
any consolidation for now until a new leadership rises which will be
able to rally them together.

Brownfist
30th December 2006, 05:40
I agree that there is an element of bad blood and petty egos that make it more difficult to have the kind of consolidation that is required in India, however, there are some very large tactical and ideological differences between the parties as well, especially if we look at the CPI(Maoist) and the CPI(ML)Liberation. However, I do think that if we look at the last 10 years of history there has been a lot of principled ideological struggle which has allowed for the consolidation of numerous parties. Whether this be the CPI(ML)Kanu Sanyal, the CPI(Maoist) or the Punjabi CPRCI(ML). I mean the situation is a lot more clarified than it was less than 20 years ago. I mean there are some rumors of 1 or 2 other mergers between parties, but those have yet not occurred.

naxalrevolution
30th December 2006, 05:54
I agree comrade
There has been some consolidation.

Now if only they could all find a way to blunt
the offensive of the security agencies....

OneBrickOneVoice
30th December 2006, 07:45
great to see you here comrade, I enjoy your blog very much. I am a Maoist and one of the reasons I became interested in Mao Zedong Thought was the Revolutions in Nepal, Peru, the Philipines, and of course India where workers and people continue to fight for socialism in the day and age where communism is supposedly "dead". Keep up the fight comrade.

As for G.Ram/Ganapytharam and the Naxalites: he criticizes the Naxalites once for "following the Mao to much" lol

OneBrickOneVoice
30th December 2006, 07:50
Also, comrade Naxal would you mind if I reprint your original post and link to your blog?

Vargha Poralli
30th December 2006, 09:09
As for G.Ram/Ganapytharam and the Naxalites: he criticizes the Naxalites once for "following the Mao to much" lol

I criticise Naxalites more for doing what Mao did in China which more different than India.


I completely disagree with g.ram about the size or the strength of the Naxalite movement. Today the movement definitely is strongest in Andhra Pradesh, Chhatisgarh and Bihar, however, it has a lot of support in several other regions including Punjab, Maharashtra and West Bengal.

And have no presence in other states. It not weakness of them alone. There many regional differences in India and mode and methos which works in One region may/do not work in another.As Internationalists Naxalites must have grown past this but the fact they too have stuck within it shows their bankruptcy. And once Naxalbari movement had a great following all over India from which they have been reduced in to those Mentioned states.And i say i am truly not happy for it.

naxalrevolution

Thanks for the Links. I am not claiming anything but just gave an Opinion.

razboz
30th December 2006, 14:49
Can somone please say exactly what support this movement has with the every day Indian? Are they criticised for using violent tactics or being too tough/authoritarian? How do they relate to other social movements in India? Do they hold strong sectarian views as to who they cooperate with? How do they justify using tactics which might hurt civilians (not a loaded question, the topic of mines especially concerns me: how do they ensure that civilians are not killed?) What relation do they have with other violent factions in India and in the area. More specifically how do they relate fundamentalist relgious groups (Muslim, Hindu and any other)?

Please no: "We will blaze the path you utpoian anarchist! The People demand it! For Mao!" I would like some answers please.

Vargha Poralli
30th December 2006, 15:51
Originally posted by [email protected] 30, 2006 08:19 pm
Can somone please say exactly what support this movement has with the every day Indian? Are they criticised for using violent tactics or being too tough/authoritarian? How do they relate to other social movements in India? Do they hold strong sectarian views as to who they cooperate with? How do they justify using tactics which might hurt civilians (not a loaded question, the topic of mines especially concerns me: how do they ensure that civilians are not killed?) What relation do they have with other violent factions in India and in the area. More specifically how do they relate fundamentalist relgious groups (Muslim, Hindu and any other)?

Please no: "We will blaze the path you utpoian anarchist! The People demand it! For Mao!" I would like some answers please.

Can somone please say exactly what support this movement has with the every day Indian?

India is very much diversified country so some things which apply and work in one place may not be applicable or workable in other.During the early 60's during Sino-Soviet split Naxalites broke from CPI and CPI(M) broke that barrier and had great following and sympathy from people all over India.They were so much feared by the Indian ruling elite that they implemented halfheartedly Land Redistribution as a way to check their influence and it worked partly.Actually Naxalites committed a political suicide during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation war when Mao's China asked them to support Pakistan(Charu Majumdar opposed this proposition from CPC leading in to the first split) and after Majumdar died in police custody naxlaites suffered from extreme repression from the Central Government and Various state governments and also from the lack of unity among themselves(which is very difficult in Indian politics almost all parties have split in to various times here) and lack of tactics.

They have good strongholds in
(1) Telengana region in AndhraPradesh(It is the most backward area in that state and for many years the people have been demanding for a seperate state there)

(2)Many country side in Chattisgargh(It is the most backward state with still remains of feudalism still present.Oppressed people there follow their leadership passionately).

(3) In Countrysides of Bihar and Jharkhand(These two states are very much rich in Natural resources despite it are the poorest and most underdeveloped states in India because of super exploitation of those resources by Big Businesses in coalition with corrupt politicians)

Outside these states some groups do not carry out the people's war instead participate in elections.


Do they hold strong sectarian views as to who they cooperate with?
Well this list shows how much sectarian they are. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_left)



More specifically how do they relate fundamentalist relgious groups (Muslim, Hindu and any other)?

I cannot say much about Muslims in India. They always vote for CPI and CPI(M) as long as there is BJP.Naxalites strongholds have very little Muslim population and as long as they are not interfered in their religious practices they will not oppose any body(most of the Indian Muslims have more moderate and reformed outlook than their world counterparts).Most of the Naxalite ranks are filled by Hindu OBC's,MBC's and (Hindu and Christian)Dalits who are not fooled by their respective caste based populist politicians.


How do they justify using tactics which might hurt civilians (not a loaded question, the topic of mines especially concerns me: how do they ensure that civilians are not killed?)

Their rank and file is formed by oppressed masses. In their strongholds they have total control and they are conducting a War against Central and State governments.Of course it affects civilians as they form a part in Modern warfare right from WW2.

razboz
30th December 2006, 16:48
Thnaks for that g.ram . You will have to forgiv eme for not using any of the various names and acronyms seeing as i havent quite identified what and who every one is yet.

What kind of suppor tis their in Urban areas? As far as i understand it appears that they are mostly focusing their war on the areas outside of large cities and have support base outside of the cities as well and mostly in rural areas.

Does the list mean they are quite sectarian. Because forgive me, but those are a lot fof different partys. Though when taking into account how utterly huge India is it is not that much. Do the Communists run in both national and regional elections?

I was referreng to the alleged terrorist groups. I have heard that there is some relgious warring goign on in India. Specifically there was an atttack on a train in which some hundreds (thousands?) died. Do the Maoists see this as a threat or as de-facto allies ina greater war against the Indian government. How differnet ifs the Governmental response to the Local response? In the Zapatista upriosing of 1994 in Mexico i know that the Federal Government was much more reluctant to fight the EZLN than the local government. In Oaxaca we saw a converse effect in which the Local government was much less strong than the Federal response.


Their rank and file is formed by oppressed masses. In their strongholds they have total control and they are conducting a War against Central and State governments.Of course it affects civilians as they form a part in Modern warfare right from WW2.

This implies that civilians are used as legitimate targets by both side. This is how modern warfare has been conducted by most (by no means all) armies. For example the Nazis targeted civilian populations in the UK and the Allies targetted civilians in Germany (London Manchester, Cologne, Dresden etc). Do the Maoists see civilians contained wihtin government controlled areas as enemy combatants and target them specifically? Or is it "just" cross fire?

How do the Indian Maoists defend the failures of Maoism in China? These failures are in my view millions of unecessary proletarian and intelectual deaths in the Great Leap Forwards, brutal repression and dictatorship on the people, involvement in imperialist struggles (Tibbet) and a slow but definite migration towards a corporate dictatorship.

Vargha Poralli
30th December 2006, 18:07
What kind of suppor tis their in Urban areas? As far as i understand it appears that they are mostly focusing their war on the areas outside of large cities and have support base outside of the cities as well and mostly in rural areas.

The Naxal support in Urban areas mostly varies. In some cities most people with sympathise for their cause and in others they might not.But for most of the Urban workers everyday life is is basically hell as they have a big competition for their jobs most of the Indian workers are the hardest working people in the world working as much as 10 times worth their wage every day.So it is difficult for them to analyse every news so they take news for facts and few big businesses control all media outlets.So we can't determine what urban workers truly think about Naxals.

But the Naxalites do not seem to care about it.It is perhaps my biggest criticism of them.


Does the list mean they are quite sectarian. Because forgive me, but those are a lot fof different partys. Though when taking into account how utterly huge India is it is not that much.
Most of the splits occur because of petty politics of Individuals.The first split in CPI occurred before Independence when some of them refused to go in line with Comintern's policy of supporting British imperialism during WW2.The next one is even before Sino-Soviet split and following Sino-Soviet Split and many more afterwards mainly due to leadership issues.



Do the Communists run in both national and regional elections?

Yes CPI and CPI(M) and many leftist parties(except die-hard Maoists) have joined a big alliance and that alliance Have captured power in states of Kerala and West Bengal and offer critical support for the present neo-liberal Congress led United Democratic Front.They oppose neo liberal policies in states they don't rule and implement them in the states they rule making them biggest hypocrites in the eyes of Indian Masses.

Maoists who participate in elections have some minimal support in Most industrialised areas.They dont have big base as their armed Naxalite counterparts or CPI and CPI(M).


I was referreng to the alleged terrorist groups. I have heard that there is some relgious warring goign on in India. Specifically there was an atttack on a train in which some hundreds (thousands?) died.

There have been no year passed in India without major a religious clash from the day Babri Masjid was demolished in 1991.Trains and buses are favorite target for both Hindu and Muslim fundamentalists.Which incident are you referring to
? Recently some bombs have been planted in trains in Mumbai which weer set to explode during the peak hours.Indian govt suspects range from local mafia to Al-Quaeda.


Do the Maoists see this as a threat or as de-facto allies ina greater war against the Indian government.

They cant ally with Hindu fundamentalists. As far as Muslim fundamentalism 80% of which exported from Pakistan I suppose they neither ally or oppose it.



How differnet ifs the Governmental response to the Local response? In the Zapatista upriosing of 1994 in Mexico i know that the Federal Government was much more reluctant to fight the EZLN than the local government. In Oaxaca we saw a converse effect in which the Local government was much less strong than the Federal response.

The central government here normally does not respond every petty issues going on in the states(Except Jammu and Kashmir). It involves only when thing get out of control(means when opposition party gets voted to power in state). It is mostly the state government which responds to Naxalites and they receive special funding from the Central government.



Do the Maoists see civilians contained wihtin government controlled areas as enemy combatants and target them specifically? Or is it "just" cross fire?

I don't live anywhere near those states which have been controlled by Naxalites . So i am not in a position to give you a honest answer.



How do the Indian Maoists defend the failures of Maoism in China? These failures are in my view millions of unecessary proletarian and intelectual deaths in the Great Leap Forwards, brutal repression and dictatorship on the people, involvement in imperialist struggles (Tibbet) and a slow but definite migration towards a corporate dictatorship.

For most part they put the Blame on Deng Xio Ping.


involvement in imperialist struggles (Tibbet)

In this case they acknowledge that it is good for the Tibetan people who had been freed from Lamas.Trust me lamas are not as good as they are projected in the west but China's occupation of that region has more military and strategic reasons apart freeing Tibetian masses from Lamas oppression.

Brownfist
30th December 2006, 20:49
I have been studying the Naxalite movement pretty closely for the last 3 years and these are some of the few inflections and thoughts on the below questions. There are several good books on the topic of the Naxalite movement, and if one reads them they will find that there have been numerous disagreements and debates in the Naxalite movement from Day 1 which has resulted in the history of the movement being incredibly complicated, and thus one cannot talk simply of the Naxalite movement as if it were a unified movement, but rather one can see some general trends but have to focus on some very specific parties and their particular policies.



What kind of suppor tis their in Urban areas? As far as i understand it appears that they are mostly focusing their war on the areas outside of large cities and have support base outside of the cities as well and mostly in rural areas.


The Naxal support in Urban areas mostly varies. In some cities most people with sympathise for their cause and in others they might not.But for most of the Urban workers everyday life is is basically hell as they have a big competition for their jobs most of the Indian workers are the hardest working people in the world working as much as 10 times worth their wage every day.So it is difficult for them to analyse every news so they take news for facts and few big businesses control all media outlets.So we can't determine what urban workers truly think about Naxals.

But the Naxalites do not seem to care about it.It is perhaps my biggest criticism of them.

The Naxalite movement does have some support in urban areas but much of the focus indeed has been on the countryside. However, we must look at which sectors of the Indian city have supported the Naxalite movement, and which have not. Largely the city-based support from my study has come from working-class and petite bourgeois students enrolled in a wide variety of universities. There has been less support from the working-class. However, the CPI(ML)Liberation for example, which is the pro-Deng Xiaoping faction of the larger movement has made several in-roads in the last 20 years into the urban centers, and has developed several small-medium sized trade unions. In recent years however, even the CPI(Maoist), which g.ram would characterize as "not seem[ing] to care" has started to work with the Indian urban working-class. I have met several comrades in places like Delhi who are now organizing trade unions within the industrial working class. Having said that, it is still largely true that the movement has concentrated on the rural peasantry and tribal populations, but this is largely due to the kind of exploitation, oppression and dispossesment that they face, which no party or grouping in India has been adequately been able to deal with.




Does the list mean they are quite sectarian. Because forgive me, but those are a lot fof different partys. Though when taking into account how utterly huge India is it is not that much.

Most of the splits occur because of petty politics of Individuals.The first split in CPI occurred before Independence when some of them refused to go in line with Comintern's policy of supporting British imperialism during WW2.The next one is even before Sino-Soviet split and following Sino-Soviet Split and many more afterwards mainly due to leadership issues.

The series of splits that we can see in the list are due to numerous reasons, some of which are indeed due to petty politics of individuals. Many of the groupings that you see are limited to regions, in which a CPI or CPI(M) state committee will have a split. However, there have been several real tactical line differences which have caused differences as well. Within the Naxalite movement there were numerous splits according to various issues. One of which actually occurred in 1969, due to major tactical issues between Charu Majumdar, who advanced the annihilation line and T.N. Reddy who advanced a mass line. The Charu Majumdar CPI-ML went through a series of splits and consolidations on various questions including 1) Lin Biao 2) Deng Xiaoping 3) Tactical line 4) Maoism vs. Mao Zedong Though 5) Annihilation line 6) People's War. Indeed some of the differences are due to sectarianism, but also one has to see the list as actually demonstrated the vibrancy of the Indian party left, which consistently is debating theoretical and political line.




Do the Communists run in both national and regional elections?


Yes CPI and CPI(M) and many leftist parties(except die-hard Maoists) have joined a big alliance and that alliance Have captured power in states of Kerala and West Bengal and offer critical support for the present neo-liberal Congress led United Democratic Front.They oppose neo liberal policies in states they don't rule and implement them in the states they rule making them biggest hypocrites in the eyes of Indian Masses.

Maoists who participate in elections have some minimal support in Most industrialised areas.They dont have big base as their armed Naxalite counterparts or CPI and CPI(M).


What g. ram has written is largely true. However, the one exception is the CPI(ML)Liberation that has given up people's war and has advanced a line of parliamentary communism. They have had success not at a national level, but at a regional level, in which they have several MLA's in Jharkand, Bihar and Andhra Pradesh. But it is true that majority of the Naxal or Naxal-inspired parties have not much success in elections. But, I do need to remind people that rural people get to vote too, so let us not act as if the elections in India, or the nature of Indian economy, is completely industrialized.



I was referreng to the alleged terrorist groups. I have heard that there is some relgious warring goign on in India. Specifically there was an atttack on a train in which some hundreds (thousands?) died.


There have been no year passed in India without major a religious clash from the day Babri Masjid was demolished in 1991.Trains and buses are favorite target for both Hindu and Muslim fundamentalists.Which incident are you referring to
? Recently some bombs have been planted in trains in Mumbai which weer set to explode during the peak hours.Indian govt suspects range from local mafia to Al-Quaeda.

QUOTE
Do the Maoists see this as a threat or as de-facto allies ina greater war against the Indian government.


They cant ally with Hindu fundamentalists. As far as Muslim fundamentalism 80% of which exported from Pakistan I suppose they neither ally or oppose it.

There is no religious warring in India. Indeed there have been dreadful moments in India when religious fundamentalist forces, especially Hindu fundamentalist forces, have conducted mass pogroms against the Muslim population. This has been done by the states in which the BJP, a Hindu nationalist party, has taken power. The incident that you are referring to is the Godhra train massacre, which resulted in a series of pogroms being conducted in the state of Gujrat. The supreme court ruled that the incident had not been started by Muslims, and that the incident had been created with the direct intention of starting the pogroms. Thus, what we see in India is a fascist party which is trying to create a crises so that they can regain control of the state.

The Maoists are opposed to any kind of religious fundamentalism and do not work with any of these parties. The Maoists are not interested in the destruction of the country, rather they are patriots that would like to see the end of semi-colonial rule in India, and the proper and egalitarian distribution of wealth within the Indian polity.




Do the Maoists see civilians contained wihtin government controlled areas as enemy combatants and target them specifically? Or is it "just" cross fire?


I don't live anywhere near those states which have been controlled by Naxalites . So i am not in a position to give you a honest answer.

The Maoists do not see civilians that live within government-controlled areas as enemy combatants, rather they unfortunately get hurt due to crossfire between Indian forces and the Maoists, especially during raids on police posts. In recent years the police has funded a group called the Salwa Judum, which was initially heralded as a civilian response to the Naxalite movement, but subsequently has been found by numerous independent citizen committees to be funded, armed and paid for by the Indian state governments (they essentially pay the Indian peasants and tribals to fight against the Naxals).




How do the Indian Maoists defend the failures of Maoism in China? These failures are in my view millions of unecessary proletarian and intelectual deaths in the Great Leap Forwards, brutal repression and dictatorship on the people, involvement in imperialist struggles (Tibbet) and a slow but definite migration towards a corporate dictatorship.


For most part they put the Blame on Deng Xio Ping.

The Indian maoists would argue that the failures that you speak of are due to bourgeois propaganda, and indeed much of what you are stating is exactly that. There has been some initial good work done on whether the deaths that are attributed to the Great Leap Forward actually occurred, and if some deaths occurred what were the causes. I would suggest that you read an article that is on the Monthly Review website entitled, "Did Mao Really Kill Millions in the Great Leap Forward?" The website link is http://monthlyreview.org/0906ball.htm. I think that we need to recognize that or a revolution to occur, and for the necessary changes in the modes of production people will die. This is unfortunate but true. Even if we look at the changes in the modes of production that occurred in Europe from feudalism to industrial capitalism to finance capitalism, we see millions of deaths occurring except that they are spread over time thus making them invisible (and also the fact that in the capitalist narrative of Western development these deaths are consistently downplayed). Marx writes about this in Capital Vol. 1 in his chapter on "Bloody Legislation", Michel Foucault (who is not a Marxist) writes about this when he writes about the birth of prison and the mental establishments. The debate about what actually happened in China during the Great leap Forward and the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution needs to be still written.

As for the restoration of capitalism in China the blame goes to capitalist-roaders. These are people within the Communist party who wanted to liberalize China economically, this people were led as mentioned earlier by Deng Xiaping and we do see that under his leadership that China does start to take a capitalist path. There will always be ideological struggle in a party, and we cannot assume that just because one is a left-wing group or collective (be it communist of whichever shde or anarchist) they have been able to expunge the mode of thought that they learnt under capitalism. Thus, the party tried to ensure that capitalism did not occur in China by engaging the in the Cultural Revolution and for a time it was successful, but with the death of Mao and the imprisonment of the "Gang of Four", we see a complete putsch by the capitalist-roaders.

Brownfist
1st January 2007, 19:30
I think that on the question of Tibet the movement in India would indeed argue that there have been benefits to Chinese interventions in Tibet, and the removal of the Lama regime. However, I think that they would be (and I cannot find any documentation to support or counteract this) that what would be needed in Tibet is a national liberation struggle in which the Tibetan people would engage in their own people's war against the Chinese revisionist state.

Vargha Poralli
2nd January 2007, 05:23
Originally posted by [email protected] 02, 2007 01:00 am
I think that on the question of Tibet the movement in India would indeed argue that there have been benefits to Chinese interventions in Tibet, and the removal of the Lama regime. However, I think that they would be (and I cannot find any documentation to support or counteract this) that what would be needed in Tibet is a national liberation struggle in which the Tibetan people would engage in their own people's war against the Chinese revisionist state.
There is Possibly 0% chance for it as all religious and ethnic minorities(like Tibetians,Uighurs,Mongols etc) enjoy more freedom and autonomy than the majority Han people.So if any resistance will be started by Han people which is likely as generally chinese workers and leaders approach any problem in Nationalistsic rhetoric and rarely use Marxism(Even Mao is no exception to it)

Brownfist
4th January 2007, 02:43
CM rules out stopping industrialisation
(Source: The Statesman)

Statesman News Service
KOLKATA, Jan. 3 : “History of Bengal will come to an end if we stop the process of industrialisation just because the Opposition wants us to stay away from agricultural land. And, history will not spare us”, the state chief minister,Mr Buddhadeb Bhattcharjee, said this afternoon even as reports of the clash at Nandigram were coming in. “We are on the right track. The government accepts the moral responsibility to provide affected people with alternative means of livlihood”.
Addressing audience at the 41st foundation day celebration of the CPI-M mouthpiece, Ganashakti at Netaji Indoor Stadium,Mr Bhattacharjee made it clear that the political impasse over Singur will not affect the process of acquiring agricultural land for industry and Sez in other parts of the state.
The chief minister quoted statistics in support of this statements. “About 68 per cent of Bengal’s population now depends on agriculture while it contributes only 26 per cent to the state’s total income. We have to boost industry....People of this state cannot sustain on agriculture forever.”

The CPI(M) and the Left Front are displaying their revisionist pro-capitalist anti-worker politics in the open. There cannot be any dispute that the CPI(M) and the Left Front have become the handmaidens of the capitalists in West Bengal. They have given up any pretense that they are truly concerned with the plight of the working-class and the peasantry.

Vargha Poralli
4th January 2007, 12:57
Originally posted by [email protected] 04, 2007 08:13 am
CM rules out stopping industrialisation
(Source: The Statesman)

Statesman News Service
KOLKATA, Jan. 3 : “History of Bengal will come to an end if we stop the process of industrialisation just because the Opposition wants us to stay away from agricultural land. And, history will not spare us”, the state chief minister,Mr Buddhadeb Bhattcharjee, said this afternoon even as reports of the clash at Nandigram were coming in. “We are on the right track. The government accepts the moral responsibility to provide affected people with alternative means of livlihood”.
Addressing audience at the 41st foundation day celebration of the CPI-M mouthpiece, Ganashakti at Netaji Indoor Stadium,Mr Bhattacharjee made it clear that the political impasse over Singur will not affect the process of acquiring agricultural land for industry and Sez in other parts of the state.
The chief minister quoted statistics in support of this statements. “About 68 per cent of Bengal’s population now depends on agriculture while it contributes only 26 per cent to the state’s total income. We have to boost industry....People of this state cannot sustain on agriculture forever.”

The CPI(M) and the Left Front are displaying their revisionist pro-capitalist anti-worker politics in the open. There cannot be any dispute that the CPI(M) and the Left Front have become the handmaidens of the capitalists in West Bengal. They have given up any pretense that they are truly concerned with the plight of the working-class and the peasantry.
They are no longer communists. They are Neo-Liberal sellouts.Obviously Buddhadeb Bhattacharya takes China and DengXioPing as his role model.

And worse is Kerala chief minister Achuthananthan.He is driving on a wave of Anti-Tamil(People of his neighbouring states) on the Mullai-Periyar Dam issue. I really don't know why the fuck they call themselves Marxists and Communists.

Brownfist
5th January 2007, 06:56
Com. G. Ram,
I completely agree. The CPI and CPI(M) have lost any revolutionary core that they may have had in the 1940's and 50's. The parties have become social democratic parties with a communist guise. I know that there were some preliminary discussions to actually reunify the CPI and CPI(M) into one undivided party. However, the talks broke down very early due to a number of issues including political platform and a perceived paternalistic role on the part of the CPI(M). However, this does not suggest any further radicalization within the party, rather, when I talked to many of the younger comrades who were more radical than some of the senior members, it became very clear that the party machines ensure that the youth are de-radicalized through party education and machines.

Vargha Poralli
5th January 2007, 16:34
Comrade Brownfist:

I think it is wrong to entirely dismiss CPI(M).Their rank and file members are the most honest politicians in India and they truly have a great potential for a revolution. But the leadership is totally running without a vision for the future.The newspapers today revealed that Prakash Karat is organising resistance against the SEZ next page says that Buddhadev says that people should co-operate in building them. It is this hypocrisy that weakens them.

Brownfist
6th January 2007, 22:46
Com. G. Ram,
I think that the CPI(M) has become a petty bourgeois revisionist party. Today there would need to be a real re-evaluation within the party of their line and ideology. Today, I dont think the party provides a real revolutionary core around which genuine revolutionaries can gather and mobilize. If tomorrow the party is able to undo 40 years of revisionism then I would think that there is a chance that the CPI(M) would be able to become a revolutionary party, however, I seriously do not think that this is possible. From all of the books that I have read about the formation of the CPI(M) I have come to the understanding that the party has never had a clear idea of the future and that the party has just become another machine for the petit bourgeoisie.

naxalrevolution
25th May 2007, 07:50
Interview with Ganapathy, General Secretary, CPI(Maoist)

Download the Interview
http://www.savefile.com/files/721247

Source: we received the following interview by an email.

[The questions that follow have been sent by various newspapers to Ganapathy, General Secretary, CPI(Maoist). More than half of these were sent by BBC. The answers by Ganapathy are being sent to the media in the background of the successful completion of the Congress of the CPI(Maoist) and other recent developments—Azad, Spokesperson, CPI(Maoist), 24th April, 2007]


On the Unity Congress of CPI(Maoist):


Q: We heard that you had successfully held your Congress recently after a gap of almost 37 years. Why has there been such a long delay?

A: It is true that we held our last Congress—8th Congress—way back in 1970. The reason for not holding it for almost 37 years is the condition of the revolutionary forces in the country. Two years after the last Congress the movement suffered a serious setback; the highest committee, the CC, became disintegrated following the martyrdom, arrests, and even betrayals by some members like SN Singh who had, in fact, split the Party in September 1971 itself. After the martyrdom of comrade Charu Majumdar, the entire CC ceased to exist as it got splintered into several factions. I say factions because they were all part of the original CPI(ML). Prolonged existence as separate groups gave them distinct identities in course of time as independent groups and parties with their own respective programmes and tactics. Moreover, they made their own self-critical reviews of the past. Such a state of affairs had rendered the prospects of unity all the more difficult.


Some groups began to traverse the same old path of the Danges and Joshis, although they claimed to oppose their line, such as the "Liberation" group led by Vinod Mishra whose degeneration began in the early 1980s after a history of glorious struggle during the 1970s. There were some that went on postponing the initiation of armed struggle against the state indefinitely to some auspicious day in the future with the plea that the state is too powerful and armed confrontation with it required more time and preparation. Hence they confined themselves to so-called phase of armed peasant resistance or the anti-feudal phase of struggle. Till today these groups have not completed their preparations to begin their armed confrontation with the state! These were the Right opportunist groups such as TN-DV, ND, various factions of CP Reddy etc. Then there were some others that stuck to the original programme of the CPI(ML) but refused to adopt a critical outlook towards the past mistakes. They continued dogmatically with the Left sectarian mistakes such as over-assessment of the international situation and the subjective strength, and an underestimation of the enemy forces and hence could not build any movement of significance. It was only a few Parties such as the CPI(ML)[PW] and CPI(ML)[PU] which had upheld the basic line of the 8th Congress, made a self-critical review of the past tactical mistakes and shortcomings in the movement thereby enriching the line further, carried on the people's war based on the enriched line, and hence could develop relatively strong movements in different parts of the country.


While this was the condition of the CPI(ML), on the other hand, the MCC led by comrades KC, Amulya Sen and Chandra Shekhar Das, grew up as a separate party with almost the same programme as that of the CPI(ML). Both parties would have been part of a single party but due to some historical reasons this did not materialise during the time of comrade CM. Later, as the CPI(ML) itself got split by 1972, unity became a thing of the future. From then on unity of the Communist Revolutionaries remained one of the principal tasks in the agenda of every revolutionary organisation. But unity cannot materialise due to the desire of the revolutionaries itself. The will, i.e., the sincere desire for unity, is no doubt, an important factor but what is decisive is the political line and practice of the parties. Hence it was only during the 1980s and 90s when movements were built by Parties such as the MCC, CPI(ML)[PW] and CPI(ML)[PU] that a strong basis for unity was laid. However, the unity between these Parties could not materialise for a long time due to political differences and also due to shortcomings on the part of the leaderships to make conscious efforts for unity. I can elaborate this if needed. The main reason for the long delay in holding the 9th Congress has been the failure to achieve unity among the major revolutionary forces in the country.

[COLOR=red]Q: How is democracy ensured in the Party when you could not hold the Congress for so many years? How are the cadres involved in formulating the line, tactics and policies of the Party?

A: The specific feature that I had described above, i.e., not holding the Congress for a long period due to our failure to achieve unity of all the genuine communist revolutionaries in the country, does not negate inner-Party democracy. Each revolutionary Party had its own internal democratic process of involving cadres in policy-making. The erstwhile MCCI, CPI(ML)[PW] and CPI(ML)[PU] had their respective central conferences, plenums, special meetings etc at regular intervals where they summed up their past work and the positive and negative aspects in advancing the people's war, made the necessary changes in the policies and tactics, and enriched the line. A central conference is, in essence, similar to the Congress. The only reason for not naming it as the Congress is the recognition of the existence of various revolutionary parties and groups in the country. It was generally felt that a Congress could be held after achieving the unity of all the revolutionary forces in the country. The erstwhile parties that are now part of the CPI(Maoist)—the MCCI, CPI(ML)[PW] and CPI(ML)[PU]—had held their central conferences and plenums at regular intervals. The PW had organised its first regional conference of Telangana way back in 1976. It had its state conference in 1980, its central plenum in 1990, its All India Special Conference (AISC) in 1995, and its Congress in 2001. Likewise, the MCCI had its central conference in 1996 and the PU in 1983, 87 and 1996.


Thus through these conferences and plenums the entire Party was involved in the democratic process of discussions, internal struggle, and resolution of all disputed issues democratically. In fact, the CPI(ML)[PW] began preparations for holding the Congress in 1995 after the break-down of the merger talks with MCC. The AISC of erstwhile PW in 1995 was actually planned as a Congress but at the eleventh hour we decided to change its name to that of a special conference but having the significance of a Congress. This was done keeping in mind the prospect of unity with the CPI(ML)[PU]. In 2001, the unified CPI(ML)[PW] held the 9th Congress but it was the Congress of revolutionaries belonging basically to only one stream of the Indian revolution, the CPI(ML). The Congress was held due to an assessment by the PW leadership that unity with MCC may not materialise for a relatively longer period of time especially in the background of strained relations between the two parties at that time. Later, this assessment proved to be wrong. Within 3 ½ years after that Congress the new Party, CPI(Maoist), was formed with the merger of CPI(ML)[PW] and MCCI. To sum up, healthy democratic processes were in place throughout the histories of the major Parties constituting the present CPI(Maoist) even though we could not hold the Congress for a long period.

[color=red]Q: We heard from some media reports that serious differences had emerged in the recently-held Unity Congress, that there was strong opposition to your re-election as General Secretary, that the Congress could not even elect the central bodies, and so on. Are these true?

A: Such concocted reports are based on speculation by some media personnel but are mainly part of the disinformation campaign unleashed by the Intelligence agencies. The APSIB, in particular, has a special department for such disinformation with the sole purpose of spreading confusion among the people and Party cadre. They have been circulating such stories ever since the merger of the two Maoist Parties, particularly over the past one year. They have been desperately trying to spread the rumour that the merger was not a principled one, that there are serious differences between the two erstwhile parties, and that both have different lines of thinking which are reflected in their respective practices, and such trash.


And we know from where the so-called media reports that you are referring to had originated. These police stories had been faxed from Hanamkonda by the SIB and were published in some Telugu dailies on March 26. Through these reports these liars had desperately tried to project a totally false picture about the situation in our Party. They tried to prove that while the erstwhile MCCI wants to intensify the people's war by resorting to more and more military actions, the erstwhile PW comrades think it is better to put off the actions for a while and concentrate on building militant mass movements. It is indeed amusing to see such reports just 10 days after the PLGA had carried out the biggest ever action in the history of the Maoist movement by eliminating 68 police personnel including SPOs in Rani Bodili in Chattisgarh and after we had declared that more such actions would follow if the reactionary ruling classes do not give up the brutal campaign of mass murder and destruction in the name of salwa judum. There isn't an iota of truth in these fabricated lies.


These police stories also spread the lie that "the setbacks and differences were so serious that the Congress could not even reconstitute the Politburo, Central Committee, Central Military Commission, and various sate committees and that some of the key leaders are likely to face disciplinary actions." In fact, at no point in the history of the revolutionary movement in India we had such strong and closely-knit central and state Party structures. The Congress had unanimously elected the Central Committee which then set up the Politburo, CMC, various Regional Bureaus, and central departments and sub-committees. I would proudly say, the establishment of a strong, centralized leadership for leading the Indian revolution has been one of the significant achievements of the Congress. The state committees are elected by the concerned state conferences and not by the Congress. The press release shows the poor homework of the SIB.


It was even more amusing to hear from the report that disciplinary action, including demotion, is likely to be taken against some key leaders. There is not an iota of truth in these wild assertions. The above shows not merely the disinformation campaign but also the psychology of the SIB and the police in AP who desperately wish that the "key" leaders of our Party be demoted.


Q: Then you say there are no differences at all?

A: Why not? Ideological-political debates are the life-blood of any communist party. It is through such internal struggle that a Party's line gets further enriched and the Party becomes stronger and more unified. We never keep our differences secret. We had published the differences in the last issue of our theoretical magazine, the People's War. In the current issue of the magazine the debates which took place in the Congress are reported in detail. These debates indicate the strength of the party, not its weakness. It shows the democratic credentials of the Party which allows freedom of expression for all kinds of opinions and viewpoints, and its ability to digest various opinions if they are expressed in a constructive way to enrich the Party line and not with a malafide intention to wreck the Party. Whatever opinions had come up at the Congress were placed by the comrades in all sincerity, with a view to enrich the line and find solutions to the problems confronting the Indian revolution.


One very important point to be noted here is that differences which had come up at the Congress were not differences between erstwhile MCCI and CPI(ML)[PW] but were those within a single Party. If you are aware of the history of our Party you would find that even more serious differences had come up in our earlier conferences and Congress. In the AISC of PW in 1995 or the central conferences of PU in 1987 and 1996, or in the 2001 Congress of the unified PW, the differences were of quite a serious nature. There were differences on the principal contradiction in the world, on the contradiction between the CBB and the Indian people, mode of production in India, and so on. There was also a sharp debate on the question of Right deviation in the Party line during the 2001 Congress of erstwhile PW. All these serious differences were resolved through a healthy debate and by placing for vote where needed. This time the differences were not as much serious as in the past. The media reports, obviously, were wide off the mark. Thus the differences within the old PW, or the unified PW after the merger of PW and PU in August 1998, or in the CPI(Maoist) after the merger of the PW and MCCI, are very much normal in a Communist party. Any difference, even the most serious ones, can be resolved in a Communist party by adhering to the principle of democratic centralism. That is the greatness of the principle of democratic centralism which is the basis for the existence and functioning of a communist party.


It was only in Karnataka that a small group calling itself the Minority had split away from the Party after they had lost the majority for their Right opportunist line in the state conference. If they had the communist spirit and discipline and were not carried away by petty-bourgeois individualism and anarchic methods, they would have remained in the Party and fought for their line in the Congress. Of course, while carrying out the line and policy decided by the majority in the Congress, one has the right to bring up one's line or standpoint on any question once again as part of the next Congress.


Q: So you say there is no truth in the reports about the strong opposition to your re-election as the General Secretary and that you had to accede to many of the demands of your detractors as part of the compromise formula?

A: No truth absolutely. Reports of opposition to my election as GS are a planned fabrication by the Intelligence agencies like the central IB, APSIB etc., which had taken the task of spreading disinformation about the leadership as one of their principal tasks. My re-election was a unanimous decision of the CC. They saw no reason to make any change. And I do not understand what they mean by my detractors or their demands for neither of these is true. As regards the so-called compromise formula I can only laugh at the desperation of the enemy camp to establish fictitious differences and compromises.


The losses in AP are not seen as the losses of erstwhile PW but as those of the entire Party. The entire Party concentrated keenly on analysing the reasons for the losses and took lessons from the positive and negative experiences of the movement in AP. Synthesising the experiences of the movement in AP was very useful for the entire Party, which had imbibed its positive experiences and drew lessons from its negative aspects.


Q: Where was the Congress held? How did you manage to hold it when the government has been seriously trying to foil it?

A: (Laughs ) Let the Intelligence agencies keep guessing where it was held. As for the media, we can take you people to the place sometime later. As history is being built, these places will assume great historical importance for future generations. Then everyone will come to know. But one thing I can say for the present—it is held in the midst of people, protected by people and nature all around. And, of course, at the venue it is our heroic PLGA fighters who worked day and night, doing 24-hour duty, alert to every move of the enemy forces, sitting in ambushes for the police forces if ever they dared to venture into the area. Even if the enemy forces had entered the area our guerrillas would have ensured that there were no losses of leadership. Placing full confidence on the PLGA and the masses, we conducted the Congress without any tension or problem. In fact, we had even extended the Congress by a few days.


Holding the Congress was only the final act of the entire democratic process. As part of this process, we held conferences in about 15 states; 12 of these were state-level conferences, and these were preceded by regional, zonal/divisional/district conferences and in some places sub-zonal and area conferences too. There was a big education campaign with study camps, classes etc. All these had consumed a large part of our time last year. But for the extensive mass support and the protection provided by our guerrilla forces, these programmes would have been simply impossible given the continuous suppression campaigns unleashed by the enemy. We had to shift the conference venue in AOB and one or two other places when we were informed by the people that the enemy was surrounding the place. It is the people who are our eyes and ears and as long as we enjoy the support of the people, and maintain methods of strict secrecy, no enemy force can do anything.


There were serious attempts by the central and state governments to disrupt the conferences and the Congress. There was open declaration to that effect in the papers in the months of November and December last. A special wing was set up for a period of three months in the Home Ministry to foil the Congress. They knew it would be held in the months of January or February since it would be relatively difficult to hold after that due to the onset of summer. Thus holding the Congress was one of the biggest challenges the newly-unified Party had faced after the merger. More than a hundred delegates—the core of the Maoist Party—had to come from different states unnoticed by the enemy. A huge force of tested PLGA fighters had to be mobilised for protection purpose. And the arrangements for such a huge camp, that too in the coldest days of winter, were not easy. Any small leak anywhere would have disturbed the programme. Under these difficult conditions successful completion of the Congress is definitely a big achievement for the Party. It has shown that anything is possible with meticulous planning, secret methods of functioning, a committed guerrilla force and the strong support of the people.


One tragic incident that took place on the eve of the Congress was the martyrdom of our beloved comrades Chandramouli (BK) and his life-partner Vijayalaxmi (Karuna). Chandramouli was a member of the CC and the CMC and Karuna was a DC member. They were caught by the APSIB goons on 26th night and murdered in cold blood the next day after cruel torture. There was some tension when we heard the news of their martyrdom. However, the enemy did not find anything indicative of the Congress on their person and both of them stood like rock when unspeakable inhuman tortures were being inflicted upon them. The cruel enemy could not extract a single bit of information from these great communists, the proud son and daughter of the Indian people. Even in their martyrdom they made great contribution in blood for the success of the Congress. Their sacrifices will be remembered forever by all our Party cadres and the revolutionary masses.


Q: What are the major decisions of the Unity Congress? Will there be any change in your overall plans and tactics now?

A: The general direction of the Congress is to intensify the people's war and to take the war to all fronts. Concretely it decided to take the guerrilla war to a higher level of mobile war in the areas where guerrilla war is in an advanced stage and to expand the areas of armed struggle to as many states as possible. The destruction of the enemy forces has come into the immediate agenda in these areas without which it is very difficult to consolidate our gains or to advance further. Likewise, there is an immediate need to transform a vast area into the war zone so that there is enough room for manoeuvrability for our guerrilla forces. And in expansion the element of secrecy is very important. Keeping in view the massive deployment of the central forces and special police forces of the states the Congress had drawn up plans to adopt various creative forms to cause serious damage to the enemy forces. The police and central forces will be taught how dangerous it is to enter our areas. We decided to strengthen the Party and the PLGA, mobilise the masses actively to resist the enemy forces, and to transform these areas into our strong bases by destroying the enemy's power in all forms. And all this will be achieved by wide mobilisation of the masses into the war. As it is, hundreds of people, and at times even more than a thousand, are involved in the attacks against the enemy as you can see from the recent counteroffensive operations as in Rani Bodili, Riga, CISF camp in Khasmahal in Bokaro district, and so on in the past one month itself.


With the experiences we gained in AP in the midst of ever-increasing and continuous state repression and state-sponsored repression, it is all the more important that our forces are not exposed wherever they are working. But at the same time we shall be in the forefront of every people's movement. The Congress has decided to take up struggles against the SEZs which are nothing but neo-colonial enclaves on Indian territory. They are not just snatching fertile farmlands of the peasants but are transforming the entire country into special zones for the unhindered ruthless exploitation and control by imperialists and the comprador big business houses. The Congress gave the call to go deep into these struggles. We have no illusions on the cruel, fascist nature of the Indian state, and hence there is utmost need for maintaining secret methods of work as well as to be prepared for every kind of sacrifice.


Q: Finally, how do you sum up the achievements of your Unity Congress and its significance?

A: Our Unity Congress is an event of great historic significance in the history of the revolutionary movement of India. It not only marks the near-completion of the process of unification of the Maoist forces in the country but also the consolidation of the Party and the political line for the Indian revolution. The reaffirmation and enrichment of the revolutionary political line established by our founder leaders-comrades CM and KC-is the biggest achievement of the Congress. Several ideological-political questions were debated and settled by the Congress thereby bringing about a higher level of unity. Another achievement of significance is the establishment of a unified centralised leadership for the Indian revolution.


After a long time in the history of the revolutionary communist movement in India since the 1970s, a single directing centre has come into existence, with the merger of the MCCI and CPI(ML)[PW] in September 2004 and this centre has become further consolidated and firmly established in the unity congress with the approval of the entire Party.


On the losses in Andhra Pradesh:


Q: There have been serious losses in Andhra Pradesh in recent times. What are the reasons? Has your movement become weakened overall? How do you plan to overcome these losses and regain the initiative?

A: I agree that the losses in the state of Andhra Pradesh are quite serious. They certainly have a considerable impact on the revolutionary movement in the country as a whole. AP, particularly the region of North Telangana, has been an important centre of revolutionary movement for a long period and a great inspiration to the revolutionary masses of our country. But we have to keep in mind that so far as the question of establishing base areas goes, it has been the more backward areas falling in central and eastern India that were selected by the Party with the immediate task of liberating these vast areas. Hence the focus of our movement had gradually shifted to Dandakaranya and Bihar-Jharkhand.


You must have known that AP was made into a model state, an experimental state where the imperialists, particularly the World Bank, and the Indian ruling classes had concentrated to implement their multi-pronged LIC strategy against the revolutionary movement, with its focus on brutal suppression and reform. No other state affected by the Naxalite movement has such a massive police commando force as in AP, nowhere do you find such extensive intelligence network, infrastructure, funds, training in counter-insurgency warfare, and unlimited powers to the police. No other state had witnessed such a bloodbath as AP had for the past four decades and particularly from the mid-1980s. There are hardly any political prisoners in AP jails since the policy had always been to bump off the revolutionaries—whether they are members of the central committee or sympathisers—after they are arrested. Fake encounter killings had been the tradition right from the time of Vengal Rao during the struggle of Srikakulam almost 40 years ago. Thousands of crores have been spent on so-called reforms with the aim of weaning away a section of the people from the revolutionary movement. It is a fact that a small but articulate and influential section in the countryside has been won over through these reforms. In a word, we can say that the Party and the revolutionary movement in AP bore the brunt of all the counter-insurgency measures initiated by the reactionary ruling classes in the initial stages. Today these are being implemented in several other states. We are making an in-depth study of enemy's counter-revolutionary tactics, plans and methods and taking lessons from these. The movement in AP, at the cost of huge sacrifices of thousands of comrades, has given us invaluable experiences on how to counter and defeat enemy's tactics and plans. With these, the Party is now more equipped to defeat the enemy's tactics in other states.


Setbacks and losses are not unnatural in protracted people's war. Revolution proceeds along a zig zag course and not along a straight line. The movement in AP has seen many ups and downs. But always it rose up like the proverbial Phoenix. No doubt, at the present juncture, we are facing a tough situation in AP and the enemy has the upper-hand from the tactical point of view. We had lost a good part of the state leadership and cadre but the most promising aspect is that the people are still with our Party. The support base of the Party has not eroded much although the They meet us secretly, ask us to solve their problems, and they work without getting exposed to the brutal State. For them our Party is the only hope. People are pained at every loss suffered by the revolutionaries. You can gauge the mass support from the turn out at the funeral meetings of our martyrs. In spite of the threats and restrictions imposed by the police goons, more than 20,000 people had turned up at the funeral of comrade Chandramouli (BK) and Karuna in the former's native village of Vadkapur in Karimnagar district. The pent-up anger and hatred of the people for the reactionary rulers and their police-Grey Hounds-SIB goons will grow into a movement of such great proportions that it will wash away the exploiters and oppressors and all the muck accumulated in society for long. No force on earth can stop this high tide of revolution whatever losses and setbacks we might be facing today in AP. The ruling classes are aware of the great potential for the revolutionary movement in AP. That is why while boasting that Maoists in the state had become completely weakened and that AP will serve as a model on how to deal with the Maoist movement, the fascist YSR government has initiated several measures with a long-term plan such as a hundred per cent increase in the strength of the Grey Hounds commando force, acquiring helicopters for anti-Naxal operations, sanctioning of Rs. 2000 crores of central aid to deal with the Naxal movement, and so on.


The present historical epoch is an epoch of great turmoil with tumultuous changes taking place worldwide. Even the most powerful militarised imperialist power like the US is finding it impossible to suppress the national liberation struggle in a small country such as Iraq or Afghanistan. In India, the ruthless exploitation and oppression of the people by the ruling classes in collaboration with imperialism has created an explosive situation. Utilising the excellent international and domestic situation prevailing today we are confident we will be able to come out of the temporary setback in AP.


And what is more important, we made advances in many other states in spite of the losses we had suffered in AP. The situation is now qualitatively different from that of the earlier periods in that we are now able to advance the movement in a number of states even if we suffer losses and setbacks in one or two states. Way back they could suppress a Naxalbari, a Srikakulam, a Birbhum, a Mushahari, a Kanksa or Sonarpur but today the revolutionary movement has become further strengthened, has spread to large tracts of the backward countryside, has well-knit Party structures, Army and vast mass base. It is advancing through centralised planning and direction. Hence it is not an easy thing for the state to suppress the movement as in the past although it might achieve an upper hand in one place. The Congress had chalked out a concrete plan to overcome the setback in AP by transforming the unfavourable factors into favourable ones. Overall there is great future for the Party and revolution.


On SEZs, Nandigram and role of CPI(M):


Q: How do you see issues like Singur and Nandigram? Are your people involved in inciting violence in Nandigram as claimed by the CPI(M)? Do you intend to get actively involved in such issues?

A: One should only be surprised if we are not involved in such life-and-death issues of the masses. We intend to mobilise the masses against the conspiracies and treacherous policies of the rulers to snatch the land of the people and hand over the same to the MNCs and the comprador big business in the name of development through creation of hundreds of SEZs. The policy of SEZ is aimed at creating neo-colonial enclaves within our country where no laws of the land can be applied. The SEZ policy is being aggressively pushed by the Indian ruling classes goaded on by the imperialist MNCs as part of their globalisation offensive. Struggles against the SEZs acquiring fertile farmland of the peasants and also huge projects are turning more and more militant as witnessed in Kalinga Nagar, Singur, Nandigram, Lohandiguda, Polavaram, etc. Kalinga Nagar, Singur and Nandigram, in particular, have become important symbols in this struggle against exploitation by the big comprador houses and the imperialists.


As regards Maoists inciting violence in Nandigram, the entire world would laugh at the temerity of these "Left" Front rulers. Even Goebbels would turn in his grave seeing how much his art of lying has been improved by "Marxists" like Buddhas, Karats, Yechuris etc. These political brokers have been desperately trying to divert the issue by repeating ad nausea that Maoists from outside had incited the local people and hence the police had no other alternative than to open fire in self-defence. Like every reactionary ruling class the "Marxist" rulers of Bengal too are harping on themes such as "foreign hand" for the mess which they themselves had created. Brinda Karat had commented that Maoists had used the sea-route to enter Nandigram. It is sickening to see the utter political bankruptcy of these so-called ideologues and the poverty of their logic. In the eyes of these hypocrites and double-dealers, a Salim or a Tata, are not outsiders while Maoists, who live and die for the people, become outsiders. Worse still, like ostriches, they think that the world does not know how thousands of armed goons had been brought by their Party from different parts of the state to Nandigram along with a huge police force to enact the massacre. Karats and Yechuris are placing this on outsiders in their sheer desperation to justify their savage massacre in Nandigram.


Nandigram reveals the ugly cruel face of the social-fascist CPI(M) whose goons along with the police shad committed indescribable atrocities on the people, raped women, killed over a hundred people including even children, and, what is most abominable, had buried the corpses or thrown them into the river. Buddhadeb had emerged as Bengal's Dyer and has proved himself to be a loyal servant of the big comprador houses and the MNCs. Like a true dalal, his government had taken up the task of acquiring lands from the people to hand over to the big business. One thing has become established beyond a shadow of doubt with the state terror and state-sponsored terror in Nandigram: the CPI(M) is the best bet for the MNCs and comprador big business for securing their class interests in the country. It will not be a surprise if they choose to bring these most loyal servants in Marxist guise to power even at the Centre in the future.


As for our role in such movements we shall definitely make all efforts to be in the forefront and lead the movement in the correct direction. We call upon the people to turn every SEZ into a battle-field and assure them that we will render all support to the people's movements against SEZs.


On the annihilation of Sunil Mahto:


Q: Last month JMM leader and MP from Jamshedpur, Sunil Mahto, was gunned down by your guerrillas along with five others. There have been reports that Dy Chief Minister Sudhir Mahto was also warned. How far are these acts justified? Is your Party planning more such political assassinations in the near future?

A: We do not kill everyone just because he/she is an MP or a minister. Although all legislators are directly or indirectly responsible for all the policies made by the government, it is mainly a small coterie of political leaders that play a crucial role in finalising the policies under the dictates of the imperialist-CBB-feudal combine. It is such political leaders that we single out for attack.


In the case of Sunil Mahto, we had to eliminate him only because he has been actively involved in unleashing brutal repression on the revolutionary movement in Jharkhand. He is not just a leader of JMM but is associated actively in the vigilante gang called the Nagrik Suraksha Samiti (NSS) which had taken part in the cold-blooded murder of 11 of our Party cadres in Lango village in Dumaria bloc in East Singhbhum district in 2001. Although he was not the main architect of this massacre, he had encouraged the activities of this private mercenary gang sponsored by the state. Of late, he had come to the forefront organizing the armed campaign against the Maoists movement according to the game plan of the reactionary ruling classes to divide and pit a section of the adivasis against the revolutionary movement in the name of Sendra. We already have bitter experiences in Chattisgarh where the so-called peace campaign in the name of salwa judum is playing havoc with the lives of thousands of adivasi people. Over 700 villages had been razed to the ground, almost 60,000 people were uprooted from their homes, over 400 were murdered, several women were raped and property of the people was destroyed by these salwa judum vigilante gangs accompanied by the police and central forces. We also have the experiences of AP where vigilante gangs such as Cobras, Tigers, etc had created a campaign of terror in some areas. A similar plan is being sought to be unleashed in Jharkhand in the name of sendra and Sunil Mahto was one of the main leaders spearheading this campaign against the Maoists. The so-called Tritiya Prastuti Committee (TPC) too has been playing a similar role in Bihar with the support of the state. Hence we had to eliminate the main leader, Murari Ganju, in a daring attack by our PLGA on the 9th of April. Such punishments will be carried out where necessary on cast-to-case basis in a selective manner and this must not be treated as our general policy.


We wish to make one thing clear: we are not for indiscriminate killing of leaders or ordinary members of political parties. We basically rely on mobilization of the masses to isolate, expose and fight the anti-people policies of various political parties and the attacks by the vigilante gangs while engaging our PLGA squads and action teams where needed. Annihilation of Sunil Mahto should not be interpreted as our antagonism towards JMM as a whole. We are not against JMM as long as it desists from indulging in anti-people activities and attacks against the revolutionary movement. We appeal to the activists and ordinary members of JMM to understand the conspiracy of the ruling classes to divide the adivasi people in the name of sendra and call upon them to fight the state-sponsored private vigilante gangs like NSS as well as all those leading the notorious campaign of sendra against the revolutionary movement in Jharkhand.


On the biggest ever attack by the Maoists in Chattisgarh:


Q: Recently your PLGA had inflicted one of the biggest blows to the police force and the salwa judum by killing a huge number of police and SPOs in Rani Bodili in Chattisgarh. Do you foresee more such attacks in near future? And do you believe the salwa judum can be stopped through such actions?

A: The daring tactical counteroffensive operation carried out by the PLGA led by our Party, the CPI(Maoist), on March 16 on a police base camp in Ranibodli in Bijapur police district in Chattisgarh in which 68 policemen including Special Police Officers (SPOs) were wiped out is an inevitable consequence of the brutal reign of terror unleashed by the state and central governments in the name of salwa judum. You must know the actual ground situation in Dandakaranya to understand why such a massive operation had to be planned.


For almost two years since June 2005, the BJP government in Chattisgarh and the Congress-led UPA government in the Centre had sponsored a counterrevolutionary terrorist campaign of mass murder, torture, and arrests of thousands of the adivasi peasantry, gangrapes and murder of hundreds of women, destruction of thousands of houses, foodgrains, and all property of the adivasis, killing or taking away thousands of cattle, forceful evacuation of tens of thousands of people from almost eight hundred villages and issuing threats and intimidation to anyone suspected of being a member of revolutionary mass organization or sympathetic to the Maoists in Dandakaranya, particularly in Dantewara, Bastar, Kanker, Bijapur and Narayanpur districts. Over 5000 youth were inducted into a state mercenary armed force, paid monthly salaries, and pitted against the native adivasis who are fighting for land, livelihood and liberation under the leadership of the CPI(Maoist). The Naga and Mizo Battalions were specially brought in along with a huge CRPF and other special police forces to Chattisgarh who had been committing the most barbaric and inhuman acts against the adivasi population.


All these cruel attacks against an entire population are meant to establish peace of the graveyard and clear the way for the unhindered loot by rapacious hawks like Tatas, Ruias, Essars, Mittals, Jindals and imperialist MNCs. Over one lakh rupees worth of MOUs were signed by the Chattisgarh government with these corporate comprador big business houses to drain the rich mineral and forest wealth of the state. At the behest of these day-light robberers, adivasi dalals like opposition leader of the Congress, Mahendra Karma, Home Minister Ramvichar Netham of the BJP and others have been leading this counter-revolutionary war against the adivasi population.


A huge central force is deployed which is now more than 13 battalions, recruited 10 additional battalions of state forces, and inducted even minors of 14 years of age into their mercenary police force. KPS Gill, notorious for the mass murders of youth in Punjab, was specially appointed as advisor to the Chief Minister. A carpet security system is initiated with police camps in close proximity in order to strike terror among the people.


We, on behalf of the CC, CPI(Maoist), once again warn the state and central governments that our Bhumkal Sena and PLGA and people will carry out attacks on a much bigger scale if the murder campaign in the name of salwa judum is not disbanded immediately. We declare that the sole responsibility for such needless loss of lives of hundreds of policemen and SPOs lies squarely on the shoulders of the state and central governments. Large-scale armed retaliation by the adivasis led by our Party is inevitable if the atrocities on the adivasi people continue in the name of salwa judum. Like George Bush who can only think in terms of using more brute force to control the fire of national liberation in Iraq, the Indian ruling classes too can only think of sucking in more and more repressive forces in order to suppress the people's war and grab the mineral wealth of Dandakaranya. However, they will only end up in further escalating the civil war in Dandakaranya.


We do share the grief of the families of the dead policemen and SPOs but we are being compelled to wipe out the police and mercenary gangs who are obeying the orders of the ruling classes and their imperialist mentors to suppress the revolutionary movement for looting the wealth in the state. We appeal to the jawans of the central forces, particularly the Naga and Mizo battalions, to disobey the orders of the rulers and to withdraw from Chattisgarh. We appeal to the SPOs who are being pitted against the adivasi people to quit the mercenary force as they are fighting an unjust war against their own brothers and sisters in the interests of the reactionary rulers. We call upon the democratic organizations and individuals and the vast masses of the country to condemn state terrorism and state-sponsored terrorism on the adivasi people of Dandakaranya, to demand immediate disbandment of salwa judum and the mercenary SPO force, to fight for the withdrawal of the notorious central forces from the region, set up a judicial enquiry into the killing of over 500 adivasis by the police-salwa judum mercenary combine.


On the Party's plans to win over the middle class:


Q: History shows, the middle class wants status quo. Indian middle class is growing more powerful. How do you plan to co-opt them?

A: It is true that the Indian middle class has grown in number. At the same time, a sizable chunk of the middle class is facing cute crisis due to soaring prices, unemployment, growing insecurity of life, steep increases in family expenditure due to high cost of education, health, transport etc., which have become privatized to a great extent and had gone beyond the reach of a significant section of the middle class. In short, despite the numerical growth of the middle class it is at a receiving end. Hence we see that the growing frustration in large sections of the middle class is forcing them into streets for their demands as witnessed in strikes and other forms of struggles by teachers, government employees, students, and even shopkeepers who are affected by the shopping malls and FDI in retail sector. Another important factor has to be noted—most of yesterday's luxury consumer goods have become today's daily necessities. And the list of necessities is growing by the day with the large-scale proliferation of consumer goods and the promotion of consumerism by the market-place. Hence frustration is growing among members of this class as they are unable to procure these goods since much of their incomes have to be spent on the basic necessities such as food, clothing and shelter.


Middle class is terribly affected by such issues as price-rise, insecurity, corruption, unemployment for their children, high cost of education and health-care, threats from real estate mafia etc. Keeping these in mind, our party has drawn up plans to mobilize the middle class into struggles on such issues.


In Defence of armed struggle:


Q: Why armed struggle is a must? (Isn't it a fact that violence pushes a large chunk of people away from the Party?)

A: The question of armed struggle or non-violent struggle is not based on the subjective whims and wishes of any individual or Party. It is independent of one's will. It is a law borne out by all historical experience. It is a fact of history that nowhere in the world, nowhere in the historical development of the class society, had the reactionary ruling classes given up power without resorting to violent suppression of the mass protests, without violent resistance aimed at clinging on to power until they are thrown out by force. Of course, one can cite instances of regime changes occurring through peaceful movements, through massive protests, but all of these were mere regime changes—not systemic changes. A section of the ruling classes might give up power to another section of the same class without the need for a violent upheaval but the same is not the case when one ruling class is replaced by another with diametrically opposing class interests. However, we find that even these regime changes are not infrequently marked by violent clashes as witnessed in several parts of Africa, Asia and Latin America. We will indeed be the happiest people to bring about systematic change without the need for armed struggle.


When we began the struggle it was basically a peaceful movement on the various issues of the people such as land, livelihood and liberation from feudal and imperialist exploitation and oppression. It needs hardly any genius to grasp the fact that no feudal lord would give up his land or power just because the masses demand it as their democratic right. The landlord would use all means at his disposal to suppress the mass resistance by brute force. He would get the local police and special forces, the central para-military forces and, if needed, the army. We had seen this whenever we had initiated the anti-feudal struggle. ----in Jagtyal during the late 1970s, social boycott of the landlords imposed by the peasantry had forced them to flee the villages our revolutionary movement had spread to over a hundred villages which shook the powers that be. What happened next to this non-violent struggle should be an eye-opener to all those who harbour illusions or biased against armed struggle. After few weeks the landlords came back with the mercenary forces and unleashed large-scale violence and cruel repressive measures such as arrests, torture of peasants, destruction of their property, declaration of the area as disturbed, clamping down on the civil rights of the people, and so on. It was at that juncture that the Party was compelled to take up arms and not out of any romantic notion. ---the same is the case with anti-imperialist struggles and nationality movements. Who would want to give up their precious lives and undergo harsh, rigorous lives tortures and hardships when the demands of the masses such as land, national self-determination and liberation from imperialist exploitation and oppression are achieved through peaceful means? All movements began as peaceful movements but had to take the form of armed struggle due to the moves of the reactionary ruling classes. The case of Iraq is a classic illustration of how an entire population has been compelled to take up arms due to the unbridled violence unleashed by the imperialists for satisfying their unsatiated greed for oil. The same is the case with Palestine, Kashmir or elsewhere.


The second part of your question is a big myth. Nowhere had the masses been repelled from the Party on account of armed struggle. Rather, it is the lack of effective resistance that is acting as a discouragement wherever the state had bared its fangs. Without destroying and defeating the armed forces of repression it is impossible to rally the people or give them confidence. In fact, it is not our guerrilla squads alone that are putting up resistance. The people are playing a great role in heroically resisting and actively supporting the PLGA in its armed resistance to the police forces. Well, that's the ground reality notwithstanding what the intellectuals analyzing events from their ivory towers might think and theorise.


Q: Why there cannot be protest in a non-violent way?

A: You must rather put the question the other way round. You must ask the reactionary ruling classes—the big landlords, the big business houses, the imperialist MNCs, the powerful Indian state and its armed forces, the state police and the bureaucracy—if at all they would listen, as to why they do not allow protest in a peaceful way. Why do they beat up, arrest, torture, and kill people who dare to go on strike? Why do they terminate the services of workers and employees for going on strike? Why do they send their mercenary police forces, the CRPF and the army to open fire upon people staging peaceful marches, dharnas and meetings without any provocation, why do they allow the khaki gangs to rape women, destroy property, enact fake encounters in violation of all provisions of the Indian Constitution, and for all these crimes against humanity, are let scot-free? Why do they create a Kalinganagar, a Nandigram, an Arwal, an Indravelli, and scores of such barbaric acts? Why peaceful protests of people in Kashmir against disappearances are not just ignored but even attacked with such ferocity? Why do they continue to enforce the savage Armed Forces Special Powers Act in Manipur when it is actually the Indian army and the police forces that are committing atrocities upon the people as the case of the rape of Manorama classically illustrates? Can you ever forget the savage beatings of the protestors by these khaki-clad or olivegreen goons breaking their skulls, and not sparing them even after they fall down seriously injured?


No ruling classes anywhere in the world had allowed the people to achieve their basic demands of land and liberation from oppression in a peaceful way; even the so-called democratic states allow it only to the extent they do not pose a threat to the status quo, to their exploitation and amassing of super profits. Ahimsa (non-violence) and Karma (fate) are the ideological bases and the dubious catch-words of the exploiting classes to perpetuate their violence and hegemony over the vast masses.


To begin with, none would or could go directly to violent ways to solve their problems. It is only after their peaceful marches, rallies, dharnas, hunger-strikes, general strikes etc., go unheeded or sought to be crushed that they are forced to resort to violent methods. This is an incontrovertible fact whether it is the anti-feudal armed agrarian struggle led by the revolutionaries, nationality movements of the North East, Kashmir or the anti-imperialist struggles. You only have to take a glance at the origin of the armed movements anywhere in the world, not just India, to appreciate this universal truth. To put it shortly, forms of struggle adopted by the people always depend upon the moves of the ruling classes and not vice versa. And you should also bear in mind that even today we use both violent and non-violent forms of struggle and not just violent forms.


Q: Is your violence for self-defence or to grab state power?

A: Strictly speaking, you cannot separate the two. In the long-term perspective, or ultimately our goal is to seize state power without which it is impossible to liberate the people of our country from the clutches of imperialism, feudalism and the big comprador bourgeoisie i.e, change the existing unjust socio-economic system. But in the process of preparing the people for the ultimate goal of establishing their own power, the ruling classes are resorting to savage repression on the party, the masses and the revolutionary movement as a whole. Hence in the course of mobilizing the masses into movements we are compelled to take up arms for self-defence even at an early stage. And for a relatively long time our war will have this nature and all our tactical counter offensive operations and campaigns should be seen as part of the war of self-defence at this stage.


On the fight against the "mighty" Indian state:


Q: Indian state is getting increasingly powerful. How do you plan to fight the Indian state?

A: Tactically speaking, yes. There has been a massive growth in the repressive forces and a strengthening of the Indian state. It is spending huge amounts on defence and "internal security", liberally disbursing funds to the states to suppress the revolutionary forces, nationality movements and other democratic movements.


However, this growth of repressive forces brings one important point to the fore i.e., the Indian state is finding it impossible to control the growing people's movements without continuously increasing its forces. Seen this way, the massive growth in the security forces does not signify the strength but rather the weakness of the Indian state and that it has lost its legitimacy to rule in the old way. It shows the desperation of the Indian ruling classes and the imperialists to rely more and more on the coercive methods in order to cling on to power and ensure their exploitation. If it were not for the ever-growing democratic and revolutionary movements in the country there would not have been the need to desperately strengthen the state apparatus and resort to such massive increases of repressive forces.


But let me tell you one oft-forgotten fact. No state, however powerful it might seem to be, can surpass the power of the people. As comrade Mao had correctly pointed out, even the mightiest state is, after all, a paper tiger. Yesterday we saw how the mightiest army of the most powerful state in all human history had to tuck its tail after the humiliating defeat in Vietnam. Today the entire world is watching with disbelief in their eyes as the mightiest imperialist armies led by US imperialism are being trounced in Iraq by ordinary ill-trained, ill-equipped but resolute national liberation fighters. In the ultimate analysis, it is the freedom-loving people who are mightier than any state. And one must not forget the universal truth that wherever there is oppression there will be resistance. However strong and powerful the state might appear to be it can and will be defeated through the resistance of the masses.


Our recently held Unity Congress—9th Congress had addressed this issue in much detail and worked out plans to counter the state by relying on the vast masses of our country who are oppressed by imperialism, feudalism and the comprador big business. And, of course, by enhancing our military capabilities as well. A specialised study of the strength and weaknesses of the Indian state is taken up. As you might be aware, even the mightiest enemy will have the weakest points. We have to correctly identify these weak points and deal effective blows so as to achieve victories.


On the question of Parliament and Party's stand:


Q: Why can't you fight election and go to Parliament and raise issues in a democratic way?

A: It is indeed a logical question which anyone who sees only the outer shell of so-called parliamentary democracy would ask. What is important is the kernel, the essence, the content and not just the form. When you strip off the outer garment of democracy you find the rotten, stinking corpse inside. That is why Lenin described Parliament as a pig-sty and a mere talking shop. Why are we calling it a talking shop?


Firstly, the real problems of the people can never be addressed by the Parliament and Assemblies, not to speak of solving them. The Parliamentary institutions are not meant for that. They have no real power. They may pass some resolutions that seem to do good for the people but these have to be implemented through the Executive which has the real power. We know the fate of the Land Ceiling Acts, legislation on untouchability, dowry, etc which are only showpieces. It is the executive which carries out everything. In periods such as Emergency during Indira Gandhi's regime, when the Parliament itself was subverted, the real power of the Executive had come openly to the fore. But the man on the street knows how it is the revenue official, policeman, and the local magistrate who decide his life. However good a legislative act might seem to be, it is money power, muscle power and nepotism that decide every aspect of his life.


Secondly, Parliamentary institutions are meant to defend the status quo, not to change the system. They do, of course, make some cosmetic changes now and then to maintain their credibility among the masses. Most important of all, it is the imperialists, comprador big business houses, big landlords, contractors and the mafia which control the Parliament. Those who enter the Parliament are the representatives or mere puppets in the hands of these powerful lobbies. Even a good-intentioned parliamentarian cannot go beyond the rules drawn up by these bigwigs. If you see the business transacted in the parliament, you would find that more than 90 % of it is just trash, with no bearing on the real problems of the country.


That the system of elections is a big farce needs no elaboration as it is known even to a schoolchild. Do you call it democracy to purchase votes with liquor and money, whip up caste, religious, and ethnic sentiments? And even after the election, purchasing the legislators as you purchase any other item in the market-place? If a Narendra Modi, the butcher of thousands of Muslims in Gujarat, can win elections and get reelected as the chief minister; if criminals, dacoits, and most notoriously corrupt politicians can get elected; and if votes can be obtained at gun-point and through booth capturing and rigging, then do you really think that there is any meaning in this so-called democracy?


That is why our Party has complete clarity on the nature of legislative system unlike some other parties that swear to be revolutionary but indulge in parliamentary politics in practice. We are firm in our belief that it is only through struggle that people can solve their problems and the parliamentary institutions can do nothing good except creating illusions. Parliament is a safety-valve to let out the pent-up anger of the masses lest the system blow to pieces. You think raising issues in the parliament is the democratic way whereas we believe that people are raising their issues in a democratic way through organised protests. We shall always be at the head of such struggles and not step into the mire of the undemocratically elected powerless talking shop called Parliament that serves as the instrument of the big business and the feudal forces, and is subordinate to imperialist dictates.


Q: Do you fear that if you go to Parliament, the party can become corrupt?

A: The answer to this question is already covered in my earlier elaboration. To say in one word, more than being corrupted after entering Parliament, which is also true in the case of the ML parties, it is the corrupt parties and individuals that can really become part of the parliamentary system. Our Party firmly believes that as against the money power of the Parliament the real alternative before the people is the establishment of genuine people's democratic power. We had built such organs of people's power in some parts of the country such as janthana sarkar in Dandakaranya. These revolutionary organs of power show how real power is exercised as compared to the impotent, corrupt and criminal parliamentary institutions.


On the mass base of the Maoists:


Q: What is your mass base?

A: Our mass base is the vast oppressed masses, the wretched of the earth, the impoverished, deprived, destitute, alienated masses. The workers, peasants, middle class, dalits, women, advasis and all the toiling millions upon millions of masses are our base. These vast masses constitute the real India, not the fatty upper layer of five or ten per cent of the society. It is these vast masses who need revolution and they see us the alternative even if most of them have not seen us. As our subjective forces grow we shall enter these vast sections throughout the country. Today we have a strong mass base among these sections in all the areas where we are leading the anti-feudal armed agrarian struggles. There is still the need to go deeply into other sections in the urban areas—the working class, students, youth, middle class, small traders, hawkers, and so on.


Q: Can you give statistics how much of your cadre base has increased in last one year?

A: I cannot give the exact statistics as we do not want the enemy to know about the actual growth of our Party. Let them keep guessing and produce statistics through so-called research foundations, intelligence agencies, and so on. Anyway we are a bit flattered to see the statistics given by these agencies about the rate of growth of our Party and areas of our struggle and influence. But one thing I will make clear—we have certainly increased our overall cadre strength, our mass base and its quality in the past one year despite severe losses in some states.


Q: How much of Indian territory is under Maoist control? Indian PM once said 160 out of 604 districts –was it an exaggeration?

A: As I said earlier, we are indeed flattered by such statistics regarding our movement. But one thing we can understand from the Prime Minister's statement i.e., how much of a nightmare we have become to the reactionary ruling classes of India. In fact, several agencies and foundations churn out figures to show how much of a threat the Maoists have become. One author says we are increasing at the rate of two districts per week! Another says we had expanded from a mere 64 districts in 2005 to 169 districts by the beginning of 2007, yet another researcher assertively says that the Maoists had expanded to most of AP, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chattisgarh and Orissa, and so on. Most of these figures are only their imagination and are deliberately presented in an exaggerated manner in order to deploy more police forces and allot greater amount of funds to suppress the revolutionary movement.


It is an exaggeration to say Maoists control that many districts. But as far as our influence goes I should say it is even more than that.


On People's Power:


Q: What do you mean by 'people's power—we have seen in a communist state in West Bengal what communists do when they come to power. How would you ensure you will be able to give power to people?

A: It is not surprising that like most people, you too are confused by the names. Just because a Party calls itself Communist does not make it communist just as a party calling itself bharatiya janatha party does not make it an Indian people's party or a samajwa