AWTW: A Call from India to "Stand by the Struggling Masses"

RDF India: "Resist the Indian government's war on the people! Stand by the struggling masses fighting for their land, life and livelihood!"

16 November 2009. A World to Win News Service. Following is a statement by the Revolutionary Democratic Front of India (rfindia.gmail. com).

The former U.S. President George W. Bush declared a "War on Terror" on the pretext of 9/11, and attacked Iraq and then Afghanistan so that U.S. imperialism could capture oil, gas and other natural resources in these foreign countries. The prime minister of India too made an open declaration of "war against terrorism" after 26/11. P. Chidambaram [The Home Minister in charge of "Operation Green Hunt"] too recently announced the government's decision to go on a military offensive adhering to the dictates of the U.S. This time the offensive was aimed at the people of this country, those who are among the most deprived and exploited. This is just to facilitate the handing over of the country's natural resources to the plunder and loot of foreign corporations, even though purported aim is to re-establish the sovereign rule of the Indian state in Maoist-influenced regions.

One of the main proponents of this war on people is [Prime Minister] Manmohan Singh, who was an economist with the World Bank controlled by U.S. imperialism before he joined active politics. Till the day he became finance minister of the UPA government [now led by Singh], P. Chidambaram was a member of the Board of Directors in Vedanta, the British mining multinational. He was also the lawyer of the notorious U.S. electricity corporation, Enron. Both Singh and Chidambaram have been die-hard advocates of foreign investment to the country, the two foremost agents of U.S. imperialism in the country. On 18 June 2006, the prime minister made a statement in the parliament, pronouncing that, "the environment for foreign investment is going to be severely affected if left-wing extremism continues to grow and expand in the mineral-rich regions of the country". The booty of this war declared by Manmohan Singh’s government on the people is going to be handed over to the imperialist countries, particularly to U.S. imperialism.

Borders within the country: Much like the U.S. government which sent 150,000 soldiers to occupy Iraq and 100,000 to Afghanistan, the Indian government too is sending its 100,000 troops to wage a war against in central and eastern parts of the country, with similar purposes in mind. Only that the target this time is our own people, in our own territory. It is as if the government has declared a part of this country to be a foreign land, and is now sending its armed forces to occupy it. In addition to the Indian army and the air force, tens of thousands of armed personnel from the police, CRPF, ITBP, IRB, Special Task Force, Rashtriya Rifles, etc. [various special forces and paramilitary police] are mobilized to take part in this full-scale war. The home ministry and the defence ministry are jointly overseeing this war under the command of high-ranked army officers. Army colonels and brigadiers are running Jungle Warfare Schools in Chhattisgarh, and are imparting training to the troops to confront the people. The notorious Rashtriya Rifles under the direct command of the Indian army, as well as the ITBP and BSF, raised for defending the borders of the country, are being redeployed by the central government for this military offensive. Air force helicopters are being requisitioned, including the "Garud" armoured helicopters. The government is outlaying more than Rs. 7,300 crores [about $1.5 billion] of hard-earned money of the working people for this war.

The government is preparing to take the help of intelligence input from U.S. defence satellites as well.  In Lalgarh too, which the home secretary has termed as the "laboratory of joint army operations", U.S. spy-satellites were used to scan Borpelia, Kantapahadi, Ramgarh and adjoining areas. In September 2009, the home minister Chidambaram went on a four-day state visit to the U.S. Just after his return from this trip, "Operation Green Hunt" was launched in the northern, southern and eastern parts of Bastar. At least 19 adivasi villagers were brutally murdered during this operation. It is worth noting that many teams of US security establishment secretly visited Chhattisgarh in order to assess the war preparations. The Indian government is also in constant consultation with the U.S. army officers who are commanding the imperialist war against Afghanistan and North-West Pakistan.

Corporate plunder for super-profits is the real motive behind this war: From the year 2001 onwards, there was a scramble among various state governments to outsmart one another in inviting foreign investors and comprador big business houses of the country to their respective states, and to conclude hundreds of agreements and Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs). In Jharkhand itself, more than 100 MoUs were signed by the state government with Mittal, Jindal, Tata, Rio Tinto and other foreign and Indian big corporations in the last nine years involving mining projects, steel and aluminium plants, electricity plants, dams, and so on. In Orissa too, companies like Vedanta, POSCO, Tata, Hindalco, Jindal and Mittal are eyeing the unexplored natural resources. The BJP [Hindu fundamentalist] government in Chhattisgarh has already concluded agreements with Essar, Tata, Rio Tinto and other such big corporations to set up Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in the mining sector. In these three states alone, agreements worth Rs. 873,896 crores [about $ 19 billion] of investment in various projects have been concluded till September 2009.

The peasants who are largely dependent on land, forests and rivers for their livelihood, particularly the adivasis, have refused to give up their resources for corporate plunder. They have organized themselves against forcible land-acquisition for these big projects. The Maoists too, who have been fighting against the ruling classes to carry out a revolutionary transformation of the present exploitative system and for the liberation of the oppressed masses, have built up a strong resistance against these anti-people projects.

The Maoist movement has successfully organized the masses to fight for the scrapping of these agreements and MoUs, to resist the incursion of the corporates, and to establish people's revolutionary power that guarantees the rights of the masses over land and natural resources in many of these regions.

The government intensified its onslaught on the people soon after the agreements and MoUs were concluded, and the adivasis in particular subsequently became the targets of state terror. The unleashing of Salwa Judum [state-organized local militia] in Chhattisgarh left hundreds of adivasis dead, raped and maimed, thousands of houses burnt, and more than seven hundred villages displaced. Children were decapitated, dead bodies of adivasi villagers were mutilated and hung from trees, rape was used as a means of state repression.  Around 300,000 adivasis were forced to leave their villages, of which more than fifty thousand were forcibly kept in Salwa Judum camps. The first of these police camps were financed by Essar. In the Singhbhum region of Jharkhand which attracted the largest amount of agreements for corporate investment, a reign of state terror was established through "Nagarik Suraksha Samiti". The "Tritiya Prastuti Committee" was used in Balumath in order to crush the resistance against the setting up of a power plant by the Abhijit Group of Companies. In Orissa too, the so-called "Shanti-Sena" which complimented the mercenary goons of the corporations, was created to attack the people's resistance.

The resistance of the people and the revolutionary movement has resiliently withstood the combined attacks of the police, paramilitary and the vigilante gangs, and defended the people's rights over land and natural resources. Imperialist forces, particularly U.S. imperialism and its "strategic partner" the Indian government, have therefore launched this fresh military offensive on the people in these regions, with motives similar to those with which the U.S. imperialists went to war in Iraq and Afghanistan to subjugate and plunder the mineral and natural resources of these countries.

The only way forward is to Establish People's Power: The people's struggle for rights over their land, forests and natural resources has been continuing ever since the feudal and colonial forces have tried to dispossess them through the use of force or the "rule of law". Ever since the imposition of the Forest Act by British colonialism, whereby the rights of the adivasis to their forests and land was taken away, many glorious rebellions challenged the might of British India. The adivasi Ulugulan under the leadership of Birsa Munda in Jharkhand, Bhumkal Vidroh in Bastar led by Gundadhar, the Ghumeswar rebellion in Orissa, etc., all were aimed at defending the rights of the people over land and forests. During the Naxalbari movement [the 1960s peasant rebellion in West Bengal that gave rise to the Maoist movement in India], too, the oppressed masses fought for their rights over land, and to establish people's revolutionary power by overthrowing the feudal social order. The masses of this country in general and the adivasis in particular have a history of waging persistent and uncompromising struggles against the exploitation and oppression of the ruling classes.

Even today the masses of the entire country, led by the people's movements in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa and West Bengal etc., are marching forward, holding high the banner of revolutionary class struggle and defeating the fascist attacks of the reactionary rulers one after another. Be it Operation Green Hunt or Operation Siddhartha, Salwa Judum or Harmad Vahini, Ranveer  Sena, Sunlight Sena, C-60, Black Hundreds, Sendra, Grey Hounds, CRPF or CoBRA, the fighting masses of the country have time and again stood up to ensure befitting response to the combined repression of the feudal, comprador big bourgeois and imperialist forces.

The Indian government must stop this war waged against the people of central and eastern India, and must immediately and unconditionally withdraw its armed forces from these regions. All the MoUs and agreements with foreign multinationals and Indian corporations for the plunder of natural resources of the people must be scrapped, and the land forcibly acquired for such projects must be restored to their rightful owners. In addition, the rights of the people over land and forests must be acknowledged. Otherwise, the people of this country will rise up against this war waged on them by the central and state governments, and fight a resolute struggle for establishing people's sovereign power over their resources, their sources of life and livelihood. This struggle will not cease until the dream of a truly People's Democratic India, visualized by Bhagat Singh and thousands of martyred revolutionaries, is turned into a reality

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    Associated Press writes about how serious the people's war in India is becoming. There was a number of pictures too of which, their discriptions are at the end of the article

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    Communist rebels gain strength in rural India

    By KIM GAMEL
    The Associated Press
    Sunday, December 6, 2009; 12:29 AM

    JAGDALPUR, India -- All over the countryside in central India, red monuments topped with hammer and sickle symbols announce that this is Maoist land. And these days, nobody could forget it.

    A string of recent attacks by communist rebels points to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong and long seen as outdated. In response, the Indian government has announced plans to deploy more than 70,000 paramilitary and police forces, in a spring offensive that activists criticize as too little, too late.

    The communists are tapping into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor, particularly in the rural areas where most people live. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the richest states now have incomes five times higher than the poorest states, according to the World Bank.
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    "There is frustration and since there is frustration and poverty, many people join the Maoists," said tea house owner Alok Sood, sitting cross-legged on a wooden bench as customers drank sweet tea and coffee.

    Sood, a 36-year-old father of two, broke down in tears as he remembered a market attack by the rebels that forced him to close his former store last year. He spent months struggling to eke out a living selling firecrackers and doing odd jobs before a local politician helped him open his roadside cafe.

    Communist rebels have ambushed police, destroyed schools and abducted government officials. They blew up a key train track in Jharkand state on Nov. 19. In October, they commandeered a New Delhi-bound express train in West Bengal for several hours and ambushed a police patrol elsewhere, killing at least 17 troops.

    The resurgence of the Maoists has led to nationwide soul-searching as critics blame the government for neglecting rural areas for decades, essentially cutting them off from the rapid economic growth that followed the opening of the Indian economy in the early 1990s. Analysts say the Maoists are filling a vacuum left by the failure of the world's largest democracy in vast sections of the nation of 1.2 billion people.

    "The (Maoist) infestation of the central part of India has to a large extent been enabled by high levels of exploitation and corruption," said C. Uday Bhaskar, former director of India's Institute of Defense Studies and Analyses. "It's inadequate governance, and where governance is being made available it lacks integrity."

    More than 2,000 Indian security forces and civilians have been killed in communist rebel violence since 2005, according to statistics compiled by the New Delhi-based Institute for Conflict Management.

    The Naxalite movement, which was formed in 1967, began as a network of extremist ideologues and youthful recruits in the village of Naxalbari outside Calcutta. Two of the main factions merged in 2004 to form the Communist Party of India (Maoist).

    Maoists are now present in 20 of India's 28 states, with the bulk of the estimated 10,000-20,000 fighters concentrated in a so-called "Red Corridor" that runs through the dense, mineral-rich forest belt from the Nepal border to the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. Police also allege the group gets support from left-wing sympathizers in Nepal, China and Sri Lanka.

    The government has called the Maoists its most serious internal security threat and announced plans to fight back with "Operation Green Hunt," which is expected to begin in March. The plan is to send troops into former no-go zones deep in the forest, rid them of militants, then build schools, hospitals and other infrastructure. Newspaper ads show pictures of victims of Maoist violence and urge Indians to turn against them.

    "The Maoists are becoming bolder," said Inspector Suresh Dhruva, a 38-year-old police officer in the rebel stronghold of Chhatisgarh. Chhatisgarh's Counterterrorism and Jungle Warfare College near Kanker has put more than 11,000 troops through a rigorous combat training course where they shimmy down ropes and practice firing at targets from the backs of motorcycles.

    "They have increased their numbers and so have we," said Dhruva. "Earlier we trained for law and order. Now we are learning how to fight like guerrillas."

    But activists warn that civilians are likely to suffer the most in any military action.

    "Local people are at risk of being caught in the middle of the fighting - killed, wounded, abducted, forced to take sides and then risk retribution," said Meenakshi Ganguly, senior South Asia researcher for the New York-based Human Rights Watch.

    Few troops other than traffic cops were visible on the streets during a recent visit to Chhatisgarh, where women in colorful saris bathe in ponds and children go without shoes. Many residents lack running water and electricity.

    Several locals said they had not heard of the impending offensive. Others expressed fear that civilians would be caught in the crossfire because of the difficulty of distinguishing ordinary villagers from rebel sympathizers. Some elders urged villagers to get ID cards for protection despite government reassurances that was not necessary.

    The relationship between the Maoists and residents is complex as villagers face extortion and warnings of violence if they don't support the cause. Rebels have even demanded a share of development money, destroying schools in retaliation for failure to pay.

    At one targeted school in Iragaon - about 10 miles (20 kilometers) down a dirt road in the rebel stronghold of Dantewada district - schoolchildren in blue and white uniforms collect water from a well and sweep the dirt courtyard after class while police stand guard on the rooftop. The police moved in after the rebels destroyed the main compound, forcing the students to cram into nearby buildings.

    In the past, India's central government largely left the fight against the Maoists to individual states, a decision that brought little success. In the last major state push, Chhattisgarh backed an anti-Naxal militia called the Salwa Judum, which was accused of atrocities against tribals - indigenous people at the bottom of India's rigid social ladder. The militia has since been reined in.

    "The only way that this can be addressed is through peace talks," said Nandini Sundar, a member of the Citizens Initiative for Peace in New Delhi. "It has to be addressed by talking about the basic issues that concern people, like malnutrition. You can't address it by sending in the paramilitary - that's just going to help the Maoists grow."

    Officials say the rebels also are increasingly turning to drug sales to finance their operations, indicating a higher level of organization. Police, acting on a tip, recently seized six tons of marijuana hidden under a layer of tumeric and onions in two trucks in the small town of Keshkal. The green bags stuffed with marijuana leaves were piled on the roof of a two-story police station, next to officers sleeping on mats and undershirts strung up to dry.

    "For the Maoists this is a battle of survival," said Ajai Sahni, the executive director of the Institute for Conflict Management. "If they come under further pressure, they will use whatever tactics are necessary to disperse the state forces."

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    Texts about the slide show:

    This Nov. 9, 2009 photograph shows soldiers being trained at the Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare school in Kanker, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 9, 2009 photograph shows soldiers being trained at the Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare school in Kanker, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 10, 2009 photograph shows children at a school at a Salwa Judum, or purification hunt camp in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 10, 2009 photograph shows children at a school at a Salwa Judum, or purification hunt camp in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows a village fair in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows a village fair in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 11, 2009 photo shows a policemen conducting anti-mining operations in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 11, 2009 photo shows a policemen conducting anti-mining operations in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 11, 2009 photo shows a policemen standing next to 6 tons of marijuana at a police station at Keshkal in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. Officials say the rebels also are increasingly turning to drug sales to finance their operations, indicating a higher level of organization. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 11, 2009 photo shows a policemen standing next to 6 tons of marijuana at a police station at Keshkal in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. Officials say the rebels also are increasingly turning to drug sales to finance their operations, indicating a higher level of organization. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows a police bunker, top right, as children study at a school at Eragaon in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows a police bunker, top right, as children study at a school at Eragaon in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows Alok Sood, right, with his wife Shiela, center, at his roadside restaurant in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows Alok Sood, right, with his wife Shiela, center, at his roadside restaurant in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 10, 2009 photograph shows a village fair in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 10, 2009 photograph shows a village fair in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows special police officers walking at a Salwa Judum, or purification hunt camp in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 10, 2009 photo shows special police officers walking at a Salwa Judum, or purification hunt camp in Dantewada, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)

    This Nov. 9, 2009 photo shows a soldier being trained at the Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare school in Kanker, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi)
    This Nov. 9, 2009 photo shows a soldier being trained at the Counter Terrorism and Jungle Warfare school in Kanker, India. In recent months, communist rebels have staged a series of increasingly brazen attacks, ambushing police, destroying schools and abducting government officials, pointing to the comeback of an extreme leftist movement inspired by Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong. As breakneck development pushes parts of India far ahead of others, the rebels have managed to tap into a deep dissatisfaction over the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result, the Maoist movement is strengthening. (AP Photo/Mustafa Quraishi) (Mustafa Quraishi - AP)