Security forces advance into Maoist-held Lalgarh | The Hindu
June 17, 2009, 10:50 pm
Filed under:
Indian Subcontinent | Tags:
Adivasi,
Bihar,
Binpur,
Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee,
Central Reserve Police Force,
Chhattisgarh,
Cobra Force,
CPI (M),
CPI-Maoist,
India,
Indian Home Minister,
Indian Prime Minister,
Inqilab Zindabad,
Jharkhand,
Lalgarh,
Malida,
Manmohan Singh,
Maoism Zindabad,
Maoist,
Maoist Cadres,
Nandigram,
Operation Lalgarh,
Orissa,
P. CHidambaram,
People's Committee Against Police Atrocities,
Pirakata,
Trinamool,
West Bengal,
West Midnapore
18 June 2009
Source: The Hindu
Lalgarh (West Bengal) (IANS): Advancing security forces lobbed tear gas shells and made a baton charge to break a ‘human wall’ put up by Maoist cadres, armed with bows and arrows and pickaxes, in this troubled zone as West Bengal’s Communist government launched a massive operation Thursday to free the region of left extremists.
Two rebels as well as a lensman accompanying the security forces were injured, eyewitnesses said. There was no police confirmation of the news.
A day after being prodded by the centre to reclaim this headquarters of Binpur 1 community development block in West Midnapore district, 200 km form state capital Kolkata, from the Maoists, the state police personnel, backed by the central forces, moved in from their base camp at nearby Pirakata for ‘Operation Lalgarh’.
However, soon after, the forces came up against a ‘human wall’ at Malida, as hundreds of tribals carrying traditional weapons like bows and arrows, shovels, pickaxes and canes blocked the way by felling big trees on the road as they shouted slogans like “Inqilab Zindabad” and “Maoism zindabad”.
Using (more…)
India’s Leaders Need to Look Closer to Home: The Assault on Mumbai – Tariq Ali
December 7, 2008, 11:47 am
Filed under:
Indian Subcontinent | Tags:
2002 Anti-Muslim Pogrom,
9/11,
Al-Qaeda,
CIA,
Deccan Mujahedeen,
Gujarat,
India,
Indian Muslims,
Indian Prime Minister,
Kashmir,
Lashkar-e-Taiba,
Manmohan Singh,
Narendra Modi,
Osama bin Laden,
Pakistan,
Terrorist

* * * * *
November 29, 2008
The terrorist assault on Mumbai’s five-star hotels was well planned, but did not require a great deal of logistic intelligence: all the targets were soft. The aim was to create mayhem by shining the spotlight on India and its problems and in that the terrorists were successful. The identity of the black-hooded group remains a mystery.
The Deccan Mujahedeen, which claimed the outrage in an e-mail press release, is certainly a new name probably chosen for this single act. But speculation is rife. A senior Indian naval officer has claimed that the attackers (more…)