Maoists propose three-month truce ahead of talks
By IANSTuesday, August 17, 2010
KOLKATA - Two days after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh asked Maoists to come for talks, the guerrillas announced they were ready for a dialogue if a three-month ceasefire was announced by both sides.
The outlawed Communist Party of India-Maoist also proposed social activist Swami Agnivesh or Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee as the possible mediators between the government and the rebels.
The announcement was made in an audio tape sent out to select media houses here by Maoist leader Koteshwar Rao alias Kishanji, who only months ago had been rumoured to be seriously wounded or even dead.
The West Bengal-based Kishanji, who in recent years has emerged as the public face of the CPI-Maoist, referred to Manmohan Singh’s Independence Day address Sunday calling upon the Maoists to talk to the government.
“The President (Pratibha Patil) and the prime minister have appealed to the Maoists to abjure violence and come for talks,” Kishanji said. “We would like to make it clear that we are not in favour of violence. On the contrary, it is the government which has forced us to take up arms,” the CPI-Maoist politburo member said.
The Maoist leader, however, insisted the ceasefire should be a bilateral move by both the government and the rebels.
He said the Maoists had got information that the government could ask Railway Minister and Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee to be the go-between for the talks. “If she doesn’t have any problems to mediate, we are game”.
Tuesday’s dramatic announcement follows repeated savage attacks by the Maoists on security forces mainly in central India, resulting in a nationwide crackdown by police and paramilitary forces.
The prime minister had devoted considerable part of his Sunday’s speech from the Red Fort to the Maoist issue, but made it clear that the government was determined to overcome the rebel challenge.
The CPI-Maoist commands hundreds of fighters armed with an array of weapons and are known to have been linked with Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tiger guerrillas in the past.
The Maoist movement erupted in India in May, 1967, in a West Bengal village called Naxalbari, earning the terminology Naxalites for the guerrillas.