Note: Note: A lot of their supporters, sympathisers are active on the
net...prattling about the non-exixstent  Hindutva threat while they build up
destructive left front tentacles all over India.
*Maoist menace spreads to urban areas
*17 Feb 2008, 0000 hrs IST,Mateen Hafeez,TNN



http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Maoist_menace_spreads_to_urban_areas_/articleshow/2788490.cms

   
 Naxals are no longer confined to jungles. Recent Naxal attacks on our
cities point towards a greater danger lurching in the neighbourhood (TOI
Photo)
MUMBAI: The Maoist menace is no longer confined to the jungles. Last year,
India's financial capital got a Naxal scare. With the arrest of a few
activists in August, the anti-terrorism squad (ATS) of Maharashtra police
claimed to have busted a Maoist think tank, which was trying to indoctrinate
and recruit people, and collecting funds for the organisation.

Police believe that the Maoists are slowly and quietly making a base in the
city. The police also suspect that the rebels might have some dangerous
plans for the city. These fears stem from the fact that during the arrests
of the suspected Maoists last year, the police recovered some detonators, a
hand grenade, two firearms and 20 gelatin sticks.

According to police sources, Maoists have also articulated a new strategy to
target urban centres in India, drawing up "guidelines for working in towns
and cities", and for the revival of a mobilisation effort targeting students
and the urban unemployed. In 2006, Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil told
the Lok Sabha that Maoists were planning to target important installations
in major cities, including Mumbai.

But, there is no immediate threat. "There is no armed activity in Mumbai at
the moment and the Maoists have kept their activities limited to propagating
their ideology, setting up secret cells for frontal organisations and
recruiting people,'' says a police sources, speaking on the condition of
anonymity. The Maoists are trying to spread their movement among trade and
labour unions, poor people and students.

According to police sources, there are some 75 Maoists in Mumbai. Most of
them are not active members of the banned CPI (Maoist), but they sympathise
with the leftist group's cause. "We have come across several such people and
are in the process of identifying them and preparing dossiers on them," says
an officer involved in the investigation.

The police believe that the Maoists come to Mumbai to regroup. "They are
using Mumbai as a place of rest, planning and recruitment. The guerrillas
who get injured in encounters with the police are sent to Naxal dens in
Mumbai for treatment, education and relaxation," says the officer.

Apprehending a major problem cropping up sometime soon, the ATS is getting
inputs from the Special Branch and the State Intelligence Department (SID)
about the Maoists and keeping an eye on some people. "Over half a dozen
lawyers are on our radar but we cannot arrest them if there is no evidence
against them," says an ATS officer.

While Mumbai may be safe for the moment, sources claim that the Maoists
definitely have plans to take their war to other urban centres. The rebels,
the sources add, have plans to strike in the industrial belts of
Bhilai-Ranchi-Dhanbad-Calcutta and Mumbai-Pune-Surat-Ahmedabad to take their
battle into the heart of India.

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