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Me and Hemendra Sharma of CNN-IBN crossing a stream with the help of the PLGA soldiers inside the Chhatisgarh jungle (Pix by Ranjan Basu, photo editor, The Sunday Indian) Maoist rebels begin urban push By Sanjay Basak New Delhi June 10: Maoist rebels, who are now observing "Jan Pituri Saptah (revolutionary week)" in Chhattisgarh, have blown up power lines and disrupted communication links, targeting industries and power stations in the Abhujmar and Bastar regions and plunging much of the state into darkness. A senior state police officer, in a telephonic conversation with this newspaper, said that the Maoists, who had declared a "parallel government" some time back, were now trying to move from the jungles to urban areas. The blast at Durg on June 8, in which three CRPF jawans were killed, and the attack on the Bishrampur police station "are clear signals that they are pushing towards urban areas," he said. Comrade Sonu, a top Maoist central committee memb...
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me with the maoist soldiers in chhattisgarh jungle Maoists' form revolutionary government in Chhattisgarh (Pix by Ranjan Basu, photo editor, The Sunday Indian) Taking control of the entire tribal belt stretching from Abujhmar, Bastar and Dandakaranya, the Maoists in Chhattisgarh have announced the formation and functioning of their first-ever parallel "revolutionary government". This "government" has also announced the formation of "ministries" of agriculture, finance, judiciary, health, school and culture and forests. The Chhattisgarh government appears to have completely lost control of this remote tribal-dominated region, over which soldiers belonging to the dreaded People’s Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA) hold sway. While the Maoist health ministry is creating awareness on family planning and hygiene, the education ministry has come up with its own version of "revolutionary history." Attacks on the government-sponsored "Salwa Judum...
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Sanjay Basak interviewing the second-in-command in the Central Committee of the Maoists, Comrade Sonu....(top) Maoists...our guides in the jungles of Chhattisgarh Training camp..somewhere in Chhattisgarh (Pix by Ranjan Basu, photo editor, The Sunday Indian) Inside the Maoist World (The Sunday Indian) As the weak rays of the red sun struggled to break through the dense mist on a frosty wintermorning, we saw her for the first time. Clad in a green uniform, with a .303 rifle firmly gripped in her left hand, she was leaning against the door post. The comrade, a soldier in the band of dreaded Maoists, was supervising the preparation of our breakfast, “Poha” (a mixture of beaten rice and peanuts).” The day before, travelling in a Bolero, on that isolated stretch of Pakhanjur Road, notorious for the IED blasts carried out by the Maoists at regular intervals, we were heading for a village in the Kanker district of Chhattisgarh. Around 9 pm, after driving for nearly seven hours, racin...

And the war wages on.............

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Police burning a martyr's column of a slain maoist, Raju school buildings in remote chhattisgarh village, demolished by he Maoists .. These are some of the pictures of my journey into darkness.. (Pix by Ranjan Basu, photo editor, The Sunday Indian) Below...my journey into the land of darkness

Life here is cheap and death comes easy...

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on my trip to the jungles of Chhattisgarh along with a local police officer... (Pix by Ranjan Basu, photo editor, The Sunday Indian) “ Heaven is a forest of miles and miles of mohua trees, and hell is a forest of miles and miles of mohua trees …” The dry season made it impossible to tread silently in the jungle. As we walked around restively, we trampled upon dead leaves. They let off a wave of loud crunching noises. Surrounded by five armed policemen, including three special police officers (SPOs-former Maoists), we were made to wait in the bushes in the forest touching Barga village in north Bastar, a Maoist-infested belt in Chhattisgarh, a region where death is a silent, invisible stalker. “Awaz kyun kar rahan hain, (Why are you making that noise),” hissed the Dhanera police station havildar from a perch behind a huge rock, his AK-46 in an assault mode. The object of his indignation was a gun-totting SPO, who dared to walk away from his assigned position. The only sound pierci...

LEFT TO THE WOLVES

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February 2, 1995. Ashok Kumar was about to board the train at Chakmaru Station in Pakistan. His destination was Lahore from where he would cross over to India. Suddenly, two Pakistani rangers, appeared from nowhere and accosted him. “Why is there mud on your shoes?” the probing eyes of the rangers sought to know. “Sukumal gaon se ayah hun (I have come from Sukumal village).” Ashok replied. “What’s your father’s name, what do you do, what about your family, wife and children,” the barrage of questions did not stop. “Come to the rest room,” the rangers ordered.Inside, Ashok was made to take-off his pathani suit and his undergarments. The game was up. Ashok, spying for the Indian security forces since 1989 was caught. For the next eight years, this man would go through a nightmarish journey of terror and torture. The TSI team located Ashok and others from Dadwan and Kang villages in Punjab, who risked their lives for the nation, only to be left in the lurch, after being caught by the Paki...

The Last Soldiers of Mao

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February 19 2007. Deep inside the jungles of Jharkhand bordering Orissa, one hundred delegates, comprising the core of the Maoist leadership in India had gathered. The event was the much awaited 9th Congress of the CPI(Maoist). A protective umbrella was thrown around by the armed People’s Liberation Guerilla Army(PLGA). Several sentry posts were put up inside the thick forest to keep a constant vigil. Patrolling teams formed by the comrades of the Central Military commune, called CM-KC commune, continuously scoured the area for any slightest sign of enemy movement and the villages surrounding the forest had been asked to act as “eyes and ears of the Party.” For any trespasser or any suspicious character, the order was :”Shoot to Kill.” According to a document in possession of the TSI, homage was paid to two “martyrs”, comrade Chandramouli alias Naveen and his wife, a divisional committee member, Karuna, who were “arrested tortured and murdered” by the police. The document, while spe...