The China Mail - Red sunset: India's bloody push to crush Maoist revolt

USD -
AED 3.672498
AFN 68.511278
ALL 83.785921
AMD 381.977863
ANG 1.789783
AOA 916.999864
ARS 1356.0117
AUD 1.540285
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.70115
BAM 1.680703
BBD 2.016534
BDT 122.009487
BGN 1.68194
BHD 0.377073
BIF 2984.583391
BMD 1
BND 1.286866
BOB 6.940052
BRL 5.4313
BSD 1.000705
BTN 87.688196
BWP 13.435824
BYN 3.392513
BYR 19600
BZD 2.012581
CAD 1.38384
CDF 2867.504144
CHF 0.80453
CLF 0.024638
CLP 966.550403
CNY 7.1529
CNH 7.151971
COP 4055.12
CRC 504.26234
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.755431
CZK 21.07825
DJF 178.201911
DKK 6.41769
DOP 62.766396
DZD 129.975976
EGP 48.596499
ERN 15
ETB 142.075742
EUR 0.85973
FJD 2.26405
FKP 0.74134
GBP 0.742688
GEL 2.694973
GGP 0.74134
GHS 11.157707
GIP 0.74134
GMD 71.498951
GNF 8675.924653
GTQ 7.670494
GYD 209.275746
HKD 7.781645
HNL 26.208236
HRK 6.477101
HTG 130.938059
HUF 340.579929
IDR 16339.25
ILS 3.35105
IMP 0.74134
INR 87.674298
IQD 1311.013337
IRR 42049.999784
ISK 123.13044
JEP 0.74134
JMD 160.22446
JOD 0.709029
JPY 147.738998
KES 129.289769
KGS 87.425302
KHR 4011.412072
KMF 423.250573
KPW 899.980721
KRW 1395.409811
KWD 0.30566
KYD 0.833906
KZT 535.155713
LAK 21696.686374
LBP 90073.387873
LKR 302.359755
LRD 200.639351
LSL 17.652018
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.412141
MAD 9.036677
MDL 16.702186
MGA 4417.881204
MKD 52.883954
MMK 2099.202559
MNT 3597.80022
MOP 8.04087
MRU 39.978345
MUR 45.970318
MVR 15.409839
MWK 1735.270865
MXN 18.6674
MYR 4.228028
MZN 63.949923
NAD 17.652018
NGN 1534.489571
NIO 36.822838
NOK 10.141755
NPR 140.301457
NZD 1.70857
OMR 0.3845
PAB 1.000705
PEN 3.52004
PGK 4.169513
PHP 57.17798
PKR 283.799842
PLN 3.662435
PYG 7242.540905
QAR 3.648941
RON 4.3475
RSD 100.726031
RUB 80.500021
RWF 1449.023787
SAR 3.752301
SBD 8.217066
SCR 14.791953
SDG 600.495038
SEK 9.56915
SGD 1.286725
SHP 0.785843
SLE 23.249591
SLL 20969.49797
SOS 571.892617
SRD 38.324502
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.054079
SVC 8.755844
SYP 13002.330428
SZL 17.656916
THB 32.521499
TJS 9.581758
TMT 3.5
TND 2.931648
TOP 2.342098
TRY 41.04405
TTD 6.79912
TWD 30.553014
TZS 2524.197987
UAH 41.422298
UGX 3565.413172
UYU 40.019593
UZS 12314.381961
VES 141.606965
VND 26376.5
VUV 119.048289
WST 2.67662
XAF 563.691908
XAG 0.025939
XAU 0.000295
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.803503
XDR 0.701052
XOF 563.691908
XPF 102.485219
YER 240.174999
ZAR 17.629302
ZMK 9001.186976
ZMW 23.345765
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    1.4500

    77

    +1.88%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.36

    -0.52%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.86

    -0.08%

  • RIO

    -0.3800

    61.95

    -0.61%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    14.33

    +1.05%

  • BCC

    -1.1300

    88.85

    -1.27%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    47.86

    +0.15%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    71.04

    +0.77%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    39.83

    +0.48%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.87

    -0.63%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    16.62

    +1.38%

  • CMSC

    0.0620

    23.862

    +0.26%

  • BTI

    -0.4700

    57.33

    -0.82%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    24.9

    -1.29%

  • AZN

    0.3900

    80.05

    +0.49%

  • BP

    -0.3000

    34.67

    -0.87%

Red sunset: India's bloody push to crush Maoist revolt
Red sunset: India's bloody push to crush Maoist revolt / Photo: © AFP

Red sunset: India's bloody push to crush Maoist revolt

After India's Maoist rebels executed his father, accusing him of spying, the young tribal man dropped out of university to join a controversial paramilitary group hunting down the insurgents.

Text size:

"They claim to be fighting for us, but they kill us," the 21-year-old member of the District Reserve Guards (DRG) told AFP.

India is waging an all-out offensive against the last vestiges of its Naxalite rebellion, named after the Darjeeling village in the foothills of the Himalayas where the Maoist-inspired guerrilla movement began nearly six decades ago.

More than 12,000 rebels, soldiers and civilians have died since a handful of villagers rose up against their feudal lords there in 1967.

At its peak in the mid-2000s, the rebellion controlled nearly a third of the country with an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 fighters.

But the "Red Corridor" across east and central India with its parallel administration that included schools and clinics has been ruthlessly squeezed since.

Security forces have killed nearly 400 suspected rebels -- a record -- since the start of last year, with Home Affairs Minister Amit Shah vowing to wipe them out by next April.

Most have died in the insurgency's last stronghold, the mineral-rich forests of Bastar region in central Chhattisgarh state, where police say up to 1,200 insurgents are still holding out.

- 'Personal fight'

Police say their success is largely down to the DRG, a force of local Indigenous tribal men and disillusioned Maoist fighters with intimate knowledge of the ancient forests and the rebels' operational secrets.

"They are our actual fighting force," the commander of a DRG unit in Bastar told AFP, requesting anonymity.

"My DRG fighters have directly suffered. For them it's a personal fight," he added.

"We are familiar with every aspect of the forest," said Kiran, a rebel-turned-DRG commando, who changed sides because he felt "undermined" by the Maoist leadership.

"We can sneak the forces in through one secret road and take them out through another," he added.

But many Indigenous tribal communities in the forests of Bastar say the crackdown has failed to distinguish between armed insurgents and ordinary villagers.

Rameshwar Negi was shot dead last year in the forests near his home -- the police justifying the killing by saying he had been carrying a firearm and Maoist literature.

His grieving wife Somari said he was just an ordinary farmer.

"They killed an innocent man," Somari, 40, told AFP from her mud home on the fringes of dense woodland where her husband foraged for food.

- 'Killing civilians' -

"We have no guns in the house," she added. "He went out carrying an axe, the same as he always did."

Two other men were killed alongside him, including Suresh Teta, 31, who lived in the same village.

His brother, Dinesh, said he supported the military crackdown on the Maoists, but insisted that Suresh was not a rebel.

"What the government is doing is right, but it is unacceptable that they are killing unarmed civilians like my brother."

Several villagers said that while many men and women in Marda had joined the Maoists, the three killed that morning had not.

The main opposition Congress party say the killings were a "fake encounter" -- a term for staged confrontations in which security forces execute unarmed suspects and later claim to have acted in self-defence.

- 'Counting dead bodies' -

DRG commandos have been implicated in several such cases.

Among the most notorious was the killing of 12 people in the remote forest village of Pedia last year.

A rights group, the People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), claimed that those killed "were civilians who were later branded by police as insurgents".

A DRG commando, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal, confirmed that "civilians died" in Pedia.

"It was a mistake," the commando said.

Police prevented AFP from visiting Pedia and several other villages where military operations have come under scrutiny, citing security concerns.

Bastar police chief P. Sundarraj said his troops carry out all their operations lawfully.

"Security forces retaliate as part of the right to self-defence," he said. "We take no pleasure in counting dead bodies."

- Atrocity claims -

Yet atrocity allegations have dogged the DRG and their previous incarnation, the Salwa Judum tribal militia, which was set up to spearhead the fight against what former prime minister Manmohan Singh called India's "biggest internal security threat".

Salwa Judum was accused of carrying out mass murders, rape and arson in raids on village as well as forcing people into government-run camps.

Those atrocities saw ranks of the rebels swell with disaffected villagers.

Kiran, the former Maoist fighter, said he joined the rebels in 2005 after his house and village were razed in one such raid.

"I resisted for a long time but joined them to save my life," he said.

In 2011, India's top court ruled it illegal for the government to recruit tribal youths driven by a "desire for revenge".

In response, it created the DRG as a formal unit of the police.

It now comprises more than 4,000 troops -- more than triple the police estimate of the remaining Maoist guerrillas.

- 'Tribals are killing tribals' -

But some warn that the recruiting tribal youth -- many nursing personal vendettas -- to fight Maoist rebels is only perpetuating the cycle of violence.

"Adivasis are killing Adivasis," said Bastar-based rights activist Soni Sori, using the local word for members of India's tribal communities. "No one else is dying."

Soni said most people killed in the conflict were either innocent villagers or low-ranking foot soldiers from the community forced into service by Maoists who come from higher castes elsewhere.

Some of the DRG commandos also expressed unease.

"The ones dying are our own people," said former Maoist commander-turned-paramilitary commando Yogesh Madhvi.

"Here, it is us Adivasis, the other side is also us Adivasis."

The 41-year-old, who spent almost 15 years with the rebels after joining as a teenager, said he quit the Maoists because he was "done with the mindless violence" and wanted to put an end to it.

- Security camps -

Police chief Sundarraj hailed the security camps being set up in areas cleared of rebels as "epicentres for developmental activity", allowing the building of roads and mobile phone towers.

But critics argue their expansion -- often without public transport -- is a precursor to opening up the forests to large-scale mining.

A report by activists and academics said the Bastar region had been turned into a "vast (military) cantonment".

It estimated that there was "one security person to every nine civilians", making it "one of the most militarised regions" in India.

AFP journalists were subjected to repeated police interrogations while in Bastar -- part of a draconian security cordon that has hindered independent reporting of the conflict.

The tribal communities living in the hamlets that dot the sparsely populated forest -- many still without basic services such as running water and electricity -- are resigned to life under the shadow of the gun.

While the Maoists claimed to protect them from discrimination and exploitation, they also ruled by terror, ruthlessly executing "informers".

"The camps make us feel safe from the Maoists, who would earlier threaten us if we did not help. But now (government) forces are routinely killing innocent people and branding them Maoists," said one elderly man.

- Mining endgame? -

Many are deeply worried mining will rob them of their traditional livelihoods from farming and foraging, with the state government announcing plans to further expand operations into a forest considered sacred by locals.

Mining has already displaced tribal communities and caused severe environmental damage, according to locals, with an iron ore mine at Rowghat pushed through in 2022 despite fierce opposition.

"The endgame is to open up the forest to mining by big corporations," said rights activist Sori.

Chhattisgarh has a long history of communities being forcibly moved to make way for mining, an issue the Maoists have sought to exploit.

Their top body last month claimed that the crackdown was to "facilitate the plunder of land, forests, water and other resources by imperialists, big corporations and feudal lords."

Even among those fighting the insurgency, there are concerns that history could repeat itself.

"If it becomes all about mining, and people are displaced without proper rehabilitation, they will say that maybe the Naxals were better," one DRG member told AFP.

Cornered by the all-out offensive, the Maoists are now believed to be holed up in a rugged and mountainous stretch of forest, where long-term sustenance is difficult.

Last month their top body offered to engage in peace talks if a ceasefire was called.

The authorities rejected the offer.

Activists say it is a missed opportunity -- and one that could backfire.

The military approach will only temporarily suppress the rebellion, Sori warned.

"If the government has to end Maoism, it needs to have another strategy," she said.

"The militarisation of their land will only make the tribal people run towards the Maoists to save their lives."

O.Tse--ThChM