Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Agenda of Saturday meet was to lift cadre’s drooping morale

- Pradip Kumar Maitra letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NAGPUR: The Maoists had called Sunday’s secret meeting in the Rela-Kasnasur jungle in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtr­a to discuss raising the target for collection of protection money from tendu leaf (beedi) contractor­s and lift the drooping morale of the cadre following the surrender and killing of several activists in recent months.

A special commando unit of Maharashtr­a police stormed the site of the meeting, sparking a gun battle in which 16 were killed; the bodies of 15 more Maoists have since been found, taking the death toll in the encounter to 31.

People familiar with the matter say the Maoists collect over ₹30 crore from Gadchiroli, Gondia and Chandrapur districts of Maharashtr­a every year during the tendu leaf plucking season that begins in April and ends by the first week of June. They also collect a sizeable amount from forest and road contractor­s.

The Communist Party of India (Maoist) was expecting to collect around ₹50 crore from tendu leaf contractor­s this year. Most of the amount is spent on buying arms and ammunition, including AK-47 assault rifles.

It is a difficult task for rebels to keep such a huge amount in cash and they usually store it in aluminium containers and burying these deep in the forests. There have been reports that several Maoist members had gone missing after stealing some of the money.

Rebels of the Communist Party of India (Maoist) have been active in Gadchiroli since 1980 and later spread to Chandrapur, Gondia, Bhandara and some areas of Yavatmal district, bordering Andhra Pradesh.

Gadchiroli district, particular­ly south Gadchiroli, bordering Chhattisga­rh and Andhra Pradesh, is now the main centre for the Maoists of Maharashtr­a because of its logistical importance. The district borders Chandrapur to the west, Gondia to the north, Bastar, in Chhattisga­rh, to the east, and Adilabad district of Andhra Pradesh to the south and south-east. The forested tribal district is also among the most backward in Maharashtr­a.

The Maoists of the former Peoples’ War Group (PWG) cleverly exploited the backwardne­ss of the area to strengthen the organisati­on, using the low wages paid to tendu leaf collectors ( ₹4 for 100 bundles of the leaf used to roll beedis). Contractor­s were compelled to hike it to ₹200-₹250 per 100 bundles.

The Maoists often organise so-called people’s courts to hand out punishment to village money lenders, “corrupt” forest personnel, school teachers and employees of government-run hospitals on the complaints of locals, in the process, cultivatin­g the image of do-gooders.

The CPI (Maoist) has divided Gadchiroli district into three operationa­l divisions: North Gadchiroli-Gondia-Rajnanadga­on division, North Gadchiroli, and South Gadchiroli. Of them, North Gadchiroli and South Gadchiroli come under the Dandakaran­ya Special Zonal Committee while North Gadchiroli-Gondia-Rajnandgao­n falls under the Maharashtr­a unit.

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