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Thursday, August 7, 2008

3 ways to stay united

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WITH NO end in sight to the Amarnath agitation that has claimed 15 lives in 37 days, leaders of India's diverse political parties agreed on peace and dialogue at a meeting convened by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
The government - which made it clear there was no question of removing J&K Governor N.N. Vohra as demanded by the BJP - agreed to suggestions that Amarnath pilgrims get the facilities they need.
Leaders of 38 political parties from across the political spectrum and all regions, including the PDP, the National Conference and the AIADMK were present.
"The meeting suggested immediate initiation of a dialogue that would facilitate the suspension of the agitation and its peacefu1resolution," announced Pranab Mukherjee, external affairs minister and the government's political strategist.
Lila Karan Sharma, convenor of the Shri Amarnath Yatra Sangarsh Samiti that is leading the agitation, said he was ready to talk to an all-party panel. "We are not shying away from talks... but these should be meaningful and result-oriented," he said.
"Whether Vohra is recalled or not is of no concern to me," Sharma added over the telephone from Jammu, scaling down from the group's earlier position.
Home Minister Shivraj Patil said the dialogue process would start immediately at the level of the governor or a central minister.
Violence flared in Jammu after the state government reversed its decision to give the Amarnath Shrine Board possession of a 100-acre plot of forest land to construct pre-fabricated huts for better facilities to the pilgrims for two months every year The PM spoke last, and came up with the idea of a joint appeal to douse the passions. Arun Jaitley of the BJP, which has been sympathetic to the cause of the agitators, said it was a "good beginning".
The only confrontation was outside 7, Race Course Road when Uma Bharti and her supporters, miffed at being not invited, tried to gatecrash.
With Shekhar lyer and Aurangzeb Naqshbandi


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Friday, June 6, 2008

Top Naxal leaders now have faces

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They are two of India's most wanted and between them they command up to 20,000 trained Maoist guerrillas with a presence in nearly 200 districts of the country.

For years Ganapathi, the general secretary of the feared Communist Party of India (Maoist) and his deputy Kishenda, a politburo member, were faceless. Today, Hindustan Times brings them to the public for the first time (see box).


The Maoists, described by PM Manmohan Singh as the country's single biggest security challenge, are accused of hundreds of knings, kidnapping and looting in the vast swathes they control. Home Ministry says they were responsible for the killing of 418 civilians and 214 security personnel in 2007. In 2006, the numbers were 501 and 133 respectively.

Ganapathi and Kishenda have been living secret lives for decades, though not always in the huge expanse of jungles under their complete control. Police in different states have had inputs about having spotted them in Cochin, Rourkela, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Raipur.

The security agencies acquired the photographs of the two six months ago either through a mole in the Naxal hierarchy or from a seized computer disk from a hideout in Bastar forests. The nearly 40,000 sq km expanse of forests on Chhatisgarh's border with Orissa and Andhra Pradesh is home for most number of Maoists an estimated 10,000.

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