By Arun Srivastava
The police of Narendra Modi and
Rajnath Singh has succeeded to eliminate a good number of Maoist cadres, but
they could not quite break the backbone of Maoists in Chhattisgarh, despite
severe repression using the state machinery and putting a number of innocent
people in jail for being sympathisers of the Maoists.
While the police of the BJP
government roamed the terrains and the Maoist bastions, the Maoists assembled
and took stock of the situation, adopted resolutions and took oath to resurrect
their organisation. Most importantly, they elected a new general secretary,
asserting that the party was alive and kicking.
Some months back CPI(Maoist) had
announced a voluntary retirement scheme for its leaders, who were physically
and mentally unfit. The eventual mission was to rejuvenate and reorganise at
the grass root and make the party a ‘lean and mean’ fighting machine.
Incidentally, the 67-year old general secretary, Ganapathy (Mupalla Laxman Rao)
stepped down to set an example to the leaders down the ranks. He became the
head of CPI(Maoist) in 2004. Of late he was not keeping well and as a
consequence the party had to suffer a lot.
Ganapathy has been replaced by
Basavaraj alias Namballa Keshav Rao as the new general secretary. Basavraj’s
installation did not attract much fanfare, as the leadership did not intend to
take much risk. Basavraj was preferred because of his experience of working
across Maoist territories.
Ganapathy, a former school teacher,
joined the Naxalite movement in the early 1970s. He went underground and became
the Karimnagar district committee secretary of CPI(ML)(PW) when the outfit was
formed in 1980. Within a couple of years, he was installed as the general
secretary. Under his leadership the outfit made strides in many areas hitherto
beyond the reach of the party. He was the prime mover of the idea of merger of
Party Unity and MCC.
This is the first major move to
strength the party. Sources maintain that the change of guard is also expected
in the eastern regional bureau, headed by the party’s senior-most leader, the
septuagenarian Prashanta Bose, alias Kishan da, who has been suffering from
multiple ailments. A first batch Naxal who joined Maoist politics in the
mid-1960s and was based in south Bihar since 1970, Bose looks after party
organisation for the in Jharkhand, West Bengal and parts of Bihar and Odisha.
The decision to relieve sick and
stressed out leaders of their responsibilities was taken after the leaders were
found to be too weak to lead. This also become imperative after a section of
the leaders openly started opposing the leadership of Ganapathy and pushing
their own retirement. These leaders were primarily active in areas like West
Bengal, Jharkhand, Bihar, Odisha and Maharastra.
In a three-page circular distributed
earlier this year the party had observed, “the comrades of physical and mental
limitations must demonstrate revolutionary consciousness in identifying their
limitations and voluntarily step out of their committees and come forward to
take up responsibilities that they can do justice. The central and the state
leadership must establish such an ideal in the party through their (own)
practice.”
It basically meant that, those who
were aged and mentally stressed should relinquish responsibilities and take up
overground activities, said a source associated with the party. However, the
document did not mention any cut off age to determine what the party means by
“aged” leaders.
“In areas of severe offensive the
issue of protection of veteran comrades came forward. If the situation does not
allow protection to the comrades we must try to send them to other movement
areas or areas of no movement in the rural and urban areas. Comrades released
from jail and suffering with old age and ill health must be told to live openly
and take up responsibilities,” the circular states.
No doubt the changes are
significant; it is nevertheless believed that the party would not give a relook
at it strategy and also not frame a fresh ideological approach. Even a senior
official of the Odisha Police said there will not be major operational changes
in the Maoist organisation. Obviously, they too will have to make a major
change in dealing with left wing extremism (LWE) after CPI(Maoist). Basavraj,
the new general secretary is one of the most wanted Maoists listed by the
National Investigation Agency on its website. He has a Rs1.57 crore reward on
his head.
The change of guard was anticipated
ever since the Maoist party’s Central Committee meeting held in February 2017
passed a resolution on ‘veteran comrades’ asking senior leadership to
voluntarily step down from their responsibilities because of their age. The
central committee resolution spoke about forming special squads to protect
these veteran leaders and in case it is difficult to provide security to them in
forest areas, they should be moved to towns of cities with ‘due protection’.
Namballa Keshava Rao was heading the
Central Military Commission (CMC) and is known to be an expert in field craft,
use of explosives and military tactics. He had been underground for the last 28
years and had graduated from the Regional Engineering College (REC) in
Warangal, which is now rechristened the National Institute of Technology (NIT).
He was known to have been arrested in Srikakulam only once after a clash
between members of the Radical Students Union (RSU), then a student’s wing of
the CPI-ML People’s War (PW) and the Rasthriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) on
January 21, 1980.
His predecessor, Laxmana Rao, is
known more to be ideologically strong than in military tactics. Laxmana Rao had
worked as a teacher in Eligedu village of Karimnagar district and had been with
Kondapalli Seetharamaiah (KS) who founded the CPI-ML People’s War (PW). He
commanded the Peddapally dalam and later worked as the District Committee
secretary of Karimnagar and later elected to the Andhra Pradesh State
Committee, Central Organising Committee.
Though the Maoist leaders do not
like to speak at this juncture, there is a feeling inside the party that
violent mode of action by the party has forced it to lose much of its ground.
The violent model of protest and movement has made the party lose some of its
precious and really good leaders. They believe that a new initiative could be
made to build a mass movement. Since the party has strong base this will help
it expand and get wide support of the peasantry and agricultural labourers. (IPA Service)
The post Change Of Guard For Maoists Shows New Approach appeared first on Newspack by India Press Agency.