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Persisting dangers of Maoists

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May 04, 2017

What is the issue?
Described by Ex-PM Dr. Manmohan Singh as “India’s biggest internal security threat”, the recent attack by the Maoists is a sign of their waning strength, although perhaps not the flicker of a dying flame.

What is the course of action taken by the government?

  • The response of the Indian state has been twofold.
  • It attempts to provide basic services to win back the Adivasis, and simultaneously, it seeks military conquest of the Maoists.
  • Its battle strategy includes emptying out the river that gives the Maoists sustenance: the people living in those areas.
  • Mass incarcerations (Chhattisgarh has the highest capacity utilization of prisons in India), fake encounters, and large-scale recruitment into the police forces constitute the strategic line of the state.
  • This state of affairs benefits the Indian state as the focus on the “law and order problem” allows it to avoid questions arising about the foundations of its development model.
  • Companies find it easier to pay off politicians and bureaucrats to secure their projects rather than genuinely winning the hearts of people, something.
  • The Maoists also gain as they get a steady stream of recruits from people fleeing the excesses of the government.

What is the present state of Maoists?

  • The insurgents have been losing power for several years.
  • People have begun to fear them as much as they fear the Indian state.
  • Social services have begun to reach many areas.
  • The charms of modern society and education are exerting a pull on the youth, including members of the Maoist cadre.
  • The elimination of many top leaders and the inability to offer a compelling alternate vision has led to ideological bankruptcy of the rank and file.
  • In their current weakened state, the Maoists seem to have abandoned whatever principles they espouse.
  • However, the ongoing excesses on the Adivasis and, the inexorable urge of the Indian state to accelerate mineral extraction mean that Maoists may continue to serve as a refuge for some more time.
  • Like ordinary people, NGOs, lawyers and journalists are caught in the cross-fire between the government and the Maoists.
  • The government finds it convenient to classify them as over-ground organizations of the Maoists and repress them.
  • In this manner, the state turns the threat posed by the Maoists against the cause they claim to be struggling for.
  • While many NGOs have condemned the Sukma incident, there is a compelling need for NGO’s to carry out a consistent and concerted communication campaign to counter the government’s strategy of labelling them “Maoist sympathizers”.

What could be done?

  • Our mining sector is a den of corruption and illegality.
  • The average daily employment of labour in mining decreased from 549,000 people in 2004-05 to 512,000 people in 2013-14, despite a fourfold increase in the value of production.
  • Most development projects were accompanied by violence, not just those in Maoist areas but also outside it.
  • There exists a much needed rethink on development, including the Panchayats (Extension to the Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996, and the Forest Rights Act, 2006.
  • A healthy contestation over the pace of extraction and distribution of natural wealth will be great for the country as well as the countryside.

 

Source: Live Mint

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