http://www.indianexpress.com/news/ghandy-confirms-nepal-link-tells-cops-made-4-trips-met-top-maoist-leaders/573620/0

<http://www.indianexpress.com/news/ghandy-confirms-nepal-link-tells-cops-made-4-trips-met-top-maoist-leaders/573620/0>Ghandy
confirms Nepal link, made 4 trips, met top Maoist leaders
*Maneesh Chhibber* Posted online: Sunday , Jan 31, 2010 at 1005 hrs

*New Delhi : *THE interrogation of top Naxal ideologue Kobad Ghandy,
currently in custody of Delhi Police’s Special Cell, has revealed the close
ties the Maoist leadership has developed with their counterparts in Nepal.

The issue of whether Indian and Nepali Maoists are in touch and working in
tandem has been a subject of intense speculation for the last many years,
but Ghandy’s statement provides an insight into how the two sides have gone
about building confidence.

The Sunday Express got exclusive access to the 63-year-old’s secret
interrogation report as well as the disclosure statement he made in the
presence of witnesses to senior Delhi Police and intelligence officers.
Asked about the “confessions” made by Ghandy in his statement, his lawyer
Rajesh Tyagi said: “It has been forcibly extracted.”

Arrested on September 20, 2009, Ghandy has been booked under various
sections of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Amendment Act, 2008.

In his statement, Ghandy talks of four visits he made to Nepal along with
some other top CPI (Maoist) leaders, including Kishenji, between 2002 and
2006. Ghandy also refers to a visit in 2002 by two persons from the
Philippines, who provided arms training to CPI (Maoist) cadre in jungle
warfare and handling of explosives.

A member of the powerful Central Committee and Politburo of the CPI
(Maoist), Ghandy has also revealed details of a 12-day meeting held in
November 2007 in a Jharkhand forest, attended by all top Naxal leaders,
where resolutions were passed to “create large-scale violence throughout
India”, target VIPs, kill police personnel including those belonging to
special forces like the Greyhounds, and to “lead a mass movement in and
around Lalgarh, Purulia, Bankura”.

The November 2, 2008, attack on West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb
Bhattacharjee and then Union steel minister Ram Vilas Paswan in West
Midnapore, that narrowly missed them but left six policemen seriously
injured, was a result of the same meeting.

Sources said last week a team of the West Bengal Police questioned Ghandy at
Tihar Jail in Delhi in connection with the attack.

Talking of the Nepal connection in his statement, Ghandy says that in 2003,
he held meetings with Central Committee members of the Communist Party of
Nepal (Maoist). He names one Vasant alias Ashok of the Communist Party of
Nepal (Maoist) as the leader with whom he held detailed talks about a
possible collaboration.

Another important functionary that Ghandy met and interacted with was
Prashant alias Partho, who was one of the three representatives during the
talks held by Nepali Maoists with the Nepal government.

The first time, in 2002, Ghandy says, he visited Nepal through the Gorakhpur
(UP) border along with one Subramanium alias Sukant. This visit reportedly
lasted one week and was held at the invitation of the Nepal Maoists, who
wanted their Indian counterparts’ help to organise themselves.

In 2006, Ghandy says he again visited Nepal, this time at the invitation of
the People’s Liberation Army of Nepal (PLA). Elusive Naxal leader Mallojula
Koteshwara Rao alias Kishenji reportedly accompanied him on the trip.

On all these visits, the Maoists discussed strategies to attack the
establishment and to overthrow their respective governments.

The plan to attack Bhattacharjee was reportedly among those finalised at a
joint meeting of the Central Committee and Politburo held for 12 days in
November 2007 in Saranda forest in Jharkhand, “one day bus/jeep drive from
Ranchi”.

According to Ghandy’s statement, of the 26 Naxal leaders who attended the
meeting, the important ones were Muppala Laxmana Rao alias Ganapathi
(general secretary), Prashant Bose alias Kishan Da (incharge of Bihar and
Jharkhand), Nambala Keshava Rao alias Prakash alias Gangana, Amitabh Bagchi
alias Sumeet, Kishenji and Cherukuri Raja Kumar alias Parimal.

Among the resolutions passed, he says, was a decision to attack the Nalco
unit at Damanjodi (Orissa), apart from attacks on police personnel, a plan
to organise mass movements in Lalgarh and nearby areas, targeting important
local CPM leaders, and looting of banks in Riga, Sitamarhi (Bihar).

The leadership also finalised a 15-page “technical circular” to the cadre to
evade arrest. Ghandy tells interrogators he had 12 aliases that he used to
hoodwink police and anti-Naxal forces.

Under these various aliases, Ghandy says, he had written articles for
Kolkata-based English publication Voice of Vanguard as well as several
books, including World Economic Crisis-Capitalism in Coma that was published
by Radical Publication in Kolkata and Philosophy Made Simple published in
Mumbai by a professor of St Xaviers College. He wrote some of these articles
under own name Kobad.

Ghandy also provides names of leaders, organisations working as fronts for
the Maoists in India, saying they enjoy a fair degree of independence but
are sometimes given “suggestions” by the CPI (Maoist) leadership. He also
gives details of safe houses maintained in states such as Andhra Pradesh,
Delhi, Karnataka, Bihar and Orissa.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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