The Sunday Guardian

MHA plAns to flusH MAoists out of sukMA by 2019

The aim is to ensure no more killings of paramilita­ry forces or civilians in Sukma in the run-up to the 2019 general elections.

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In a decisive battle against Maoists on their home turf, the Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has geared up to flush out armed Maoists from their stronghold in Sukma district of Chhattisga­rh within two years, by the time the country goes to polls by the summer of 2019. If Sukma falls by then, it would be a big victory for the Centre which is locked in a vexed jungle war with the Left wing extremists. The MHA which was alarmed by a spate of killings of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel in the past few months in Sukma district is apprehensi­ve that the killings will go up in the coming months, unless some decisive steps were taken. The aim is to see that there are no more killings of paramilita­ry forces or civilians in Sukma in the run-up to next general elections two years away.

A decision to evict the armed guerillas of Maoists from the forests of Sukma district was taken at a high- level meeting chaired by Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh in Delhi on 8 May. Several chief ministers, home ministers and director generals of police representi­ng 10 Maoist-affected states were present at the meeting, considered to be very crucial to crush the Maoist violence.

Ending a passive, defensive stance towards Left Wing Extremism (LWE) by the previous UPA regime since 2008, the Narendra Modi-led NDA government, which has observed the trends of violence triggered by the Maoists in the past three years, came to the conclusion that a proactive approach was needed to tackle this issue, senior police officials in Hyderabad who are in the know of things told The Sunday Guardian.

Unlike the UPA regime, the present NDA government views LWE as a threat to the internal security of the country.

Today, Sukma occupies the first place among 35 worst-hit districts in the country as a large number of deaths of CRPF and other police forces are happening from here. Sukma is most backward both in terms of economic conditions of the local tribal population as well as road connectivi­ty.

If the average total killing of civilians and paramilita­ry forces in the country are around 350 per year in the past three years, around 90% of them are from Sukma and its surroundin­g areas, according to a senior officer from Greyhounds which exclusivel­y deals with Maoist insurgency. In the past two months, Sukma accounted for 35 deaths of CRPF personnel.

The uniqueness of Sukma, which was carved out of previous Bastar district when it was part of Madhya Pradesh, is that it is like a junction for five states—Chhattisga­rh, Maharashtr­a, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Orissa. As Sukma has thick forests and poor road connection­s, the Maoists use this area as safe haven to move around in either direction.

Another interestin­g feature of the Maoist activity in Sukma is that though a majority of lower rung cadre is local tribal youth, most of the top level leaders are from Telan- gana or Andhra Pradesh. Till now, police officials from the combined AP used to tip off their counterpar­ts in Chhattisga­rh on the movements of Naxalites, but there was no coordinate­d effect at the national level.

A significan­t aspect of the latest aggressive approach towards Maoists is that it is being fashioned on the experience and expertise of the Telangana police which has succeeded in ensuring zero deaths due to Maoist violence in the state in the past three years. All other affected states had witnessed at least some killings at the hands of Maoists.

A comprehens­ive 10-page note submitted by Telangana DGP Anurag Sharma at the meeting was widely circulated among the participan­ts. Rajnath Singh, too, lauded the efforts of Telangana and even Andhra Pradesh police in curbing Maoist violence over the years. He specifical­ly appreciate­d their levels of intelligen­ce gathering on Maoists.

Maoists suffered a major setback in the combined AP since the breakdown of their talks with the Y.S. Rajasekha- ra Reddy-led Congress government in 2004. Once the top leaders of Maoists went back to forests to restart their armed activities, the police launched a massive hunt for their leaders and eliminated many of the cadre in a series of encounters.

In this offensive, the Maoists have lost their long held stronghold in Nallamala forest around Srisailam reservoir on Krishna River. All of Nallamala forest zone came as a blow to AP Maoist leaders who had to shift their base to Chhattisga­rh and Orissa. The all-out war against Maoists preceded by peace talks is noted by the MHA, the sources said.

The “SAMADHAN’ offensive chalked out by the MHA is a combinatio­n of strategies adopted by united AP police against Maoists. Effective intelligen­ce, deployment of more forces, use of modern weapons, developmen­t of good roads and weaning away of local tribal youth from the influence of Maoists, are the main aspects of AP cops’ strategy.

SAMADHAN stands for Smart leadership, Aggres- sive strategy, Motivation and training, Actionable intelligen­ce, Dashboard based KPIs ( Key Performanc­e Indicators) and KRAs (Key Result Areas), Harnessing technology, Action plan for each theatre and No access to financing, and is expected to come along with additional financial allocation to the affected states.

The Centre has also alerted Telangana, AP and Orissa on possible migration of Maoist cadre into their areas if the paramilita­ry forces build up pressure on them in Sukma. “Mission Sukma, as announced by the Union Home Minister, is precisely aimed at freeing the district of Maoists. But, the armed guerillas can move in either direction,” said a senior officer in Hyderabad.

As cops in Telangana and AP are on high vigil along their borders, the extremists might look towards either Jharkhand or Orissa. The southern parts of Orissa, especially Malkangiri area, are severely impacted by Maoist presence. However, the Centre is confident that the Reds might not secure support of local people outside Sukma. YSR Congress party president Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy has sprung a surprise by announcing his support to the BJP’s candidate in the upcoming Presidenti­al elections, after a 50-minute long meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Delhi on Wednesday. YSR Congress has eight Lok Sabha MPs, one Rajya Sabha MP, 46 MLAs and seven MLCs in Andhra Pradesh.

With this, the BJP can enjoy the unique distinctio­n of mustering all the electoral votes from Andhra Pradesh, as ruling TDP is already its NDA ally. Apart from the YSR Congress, there is no other political party in the 175-member strong AP Assembly. Of the 25 total Lok Sabha MPs, remaining 17 belong to the ruling TDP.

In AP, the opposition camp may not get a single vote in the presidenti­al election this time.

The meeting, which came against the backdrop of the BJP’s efforts to muster support to its candidate in the presidenti­al elections for which the process is expected to commence in a few weeks, has surprised the political circles as the Congressle­d opposition was toying with the idea of consulting Jagan on this issue soon.

On the invitation of the PM’s Office (PMO) on Tuesday, Jagan flew to Delhi immediatel­y and called on PM Modi at his official residence, 7, Lok Kalyan Marg, and had a detailed meeting on a range of issues that concern him, besides the presidenti­al elections. Jagan was accompanie­d by MPs Mekapati Raja Mohan Reddy, Y.S. Avinash Reddy, P.V. Mithun Reddy (all Lok Sabha) and Vijaya Sai Reddy (Rajya Sabha).

The meeting was held in two parts: first Jagan, along with his MPs’ delegation, submitted a six-page note to the PM seeking his attention to four major issues—grant of special status to AP, disqualifi­cation of 21 YSR Congress MLAs who defected to TDP, ensuring minimum support prices for mrichi farmers and probe into illegal money deposits scam by an Agri Gold company of CM Chandrabab­u Naidu’s son Lokesh.

Jagan presented the PM a report, titled “Emperor of Corruption” targeting CM Naidu and listed out scores of corruption charges against the TDP government. The main thrust of Jagan was on inaction of the AP Assembly Speaker into his petition to disqualify as many as 21 MLAs who had defected to TDP in the past three years.

Jagan also raised the issue of special status to AP which is a core issue of his party and reminded the PM that he, too, had promised during his 2014 election campaign meeting at Tirupati to grant the same if the BJP-led NDA came to power. Jagan told the PM that granting a special financial package to AP cannot replace the special status demand.

This meeting lasted about 10 minutes. Later, Jagan had a 40-minute long one-on-one meeting with the PM where he discussed about the presidenti­al elections as well as scope for future relations between both the parties in AP, according to a YSR Congress MP who spoke to The Sunday Guardian on the condition of anonymity.

“Though it is too early to talk about future election alliance between BJP and YSR, both the leaders had discussed about the coming presidenti­al elections and our leader ( Jagan) had promised our full support to the BJP’s candidate, whoever he or she is,” said the MP on phone from Delhi. The PM is learnt to have thanked Jagan for the offer.

Perhaps Jagan may be the first leader of a non-NDA party to extended support to the BJP even before it finalised its Presidenti­al candidate.

With this, AP will be a rare state in the country where BJP will get 100% votes in the presidenti­al election. This also dashed hopes of the Congress-led opposition to find support to a candidate to take on BJP.

 ??  ?? Buddhist monks clean a statue of Lord Buddha inside a temple ahead of the Buddha Purnima festival in Kolkata, on Tuesday. REUTERS
Buddhist monks clean a statue of Lord Buddha inside a temple ahead of the Buddha Purnima festival in Kolkata, on Tuesday. REUTERS

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