Election boycott is
normally considered as a political slogan. The political aspect of the call is
clear. But how it is being implemented is not known to most people. Some might
think the activists of the revolutionary parties alone are implementing the
call. There is also a question as to why give this call if the parties cannot
provide an alternative immediately. Some others say, "can we succeed in this
call?"
The election boycott
program in Dandakaranya in the Assembly elections in December 2003 throws light
on more than one aspect. The various actions taken up by the People’s Liberation
Guerilla Army (then called the PGA) put the government in trouble. It is evident
that the government managed to complete the fiasco with the help of the police.
There is one
important aspect of this program. It showed that boycotting elections is not a
mere slogan but part of the ongoing People’s War. And it is only possible to
fully implement it through the People’s War. The erstwhile CPI (ML)[People’s
War] — now CPI(Maoist) — has been giving a call for election boycott since a
considerable time. The call became very popular in areas of its stronghold.
During the legal period the mass organizations in the towns also took up
extensive propaganda during the election boycott program. It invaribly gets a
good response from the masses. Street theatre, songs, apeeches on the issue
appeal to the masses as it is close to the truuth of what they see daily. As the
revolutionary movement grows, the program is implemented in a more serious
manner and form. Here is an example from DK, administratively the state of
Chathisgarh.
The central and the
state governments deployed 25 military helicopters, sixty companies of
paramilitary forces in addition to the thousands of civil, district, reserve and
special armed forces in Chathisgarh in view of elections on December 1st and 3rd
2003. The government started the ‘Suppression and Elimination’ campaign one
month before the elections.
The Party and the
then PGA realized the plans of the enemy and made the necessary preparations to
boycott the elections and advance the People’s War. In Maad division the mass
organizations like the CNM (cultural organisation), DKAMS (peasant organisation),
KAMS (women’s organisation) took up house-to-house propaganda. They released
pamphlets, banners, posters and did wall writings. There were few large public
meetings. In North Bastar one CNM unit, 4 DAKMS, 3 KAMS and 2 ABS (children’s
organisation) units participated in the propaganda activity in the Koyilbeda
area. In Keskal area ten propaganda teams and in Raoghat five teams worked
before the elections. They took the message of boycott of elections to the
masses. Totally 250 youth, men and women, participated in this. In south Bastar
pamphlets and wall writings were taken up. The propaganda went on for two months
in South and West Bastar. Meetings and rallies were conducted. Mass
organizations and the people were part of this political campaign.
Also a tactical
counter offensive started in the second week of November. The main, secondary
and the people’s militia forces of North, South, West and Maad divisions were
engaged in the program for three weeks.
The then PGA forces,
mainly the militia forces, were deployed on all the roads in these areas. The
forces were ready to combat the enemy a week before the polling. Sentries were
set up in every village. Signals were arranged. People were away from their
homes in order to avoid being a human shield for the enemy. In fact they got
their routine works done through guerilla methods. The enemy was forced into a
position of self-defense. Neither the polling personnel nor the police could
reach many of the polling centers.
None of the political
parties could come to the villages for election propaganda. They were confined
to roadside villages, those having police stations and the towns. Out of a total
of 77 polling centers in South Bastar police could not come to 47 centers. The
polling personnel could not reach 24 centers. They had to be air dropped by
military helicopters with the help of security from the BSF and the CRPF on the
ground.
Fifty-five centers
were totally captured by the revolutionary forces in the state of Chathisgarh
and the bourgeois media too acknowledged the fact. The call was implemented to
the maximum in the Maad division. Out of the 54 polling centers there was
absolutely no polling in 30 centers. The police managed to force a few votes in
the rest of the centers. In North Bastar division 79 villages in Koyilbeda area,
32 in Keskal area and 25 in Raoghat area boycotted the polls. The actual polling
was one to two per cent. But the enemy put the figure at 32 per cent.
The bourgeois media
reported that there were fifty incidents on 1st December and that the CRPF
forces faced lot of trouble from the Naxalites. This reveals the intensity of
the attacks. But in fact there were seventy armed incidents of attacks. The
earlier three weeks saw a total of nearly 60 armed attacks. It means that on an
average there were four incidents a day. Without such an extensive military
campaign of harassment of the enemy forces, the boycott campaign would not have
been as effective given the large para-military and other forces in the area.
Ambush
Ambush was an
important part of retaliating the police and beating back their offensive. It
made the police and the paramilitary forces extremely fearful.
On the 28th October
2003, the CRPF forces coming in three gipsy vehicles on the Narayanpur-Anthagadh
road in North Bastar division were ambushed. Three of them died on the spot and
the deputy Comandant died in a super speciality hospital in Delhi later. There
was a casualty on the side of the Naxalites also. Comrade Raju (Kunjami Ithu), a
member of the North Sub Zonal Command was martyred in this incident.
Sixty militia members
from ten villages in South Bastar came together to take up harassment actions on
5th November. On the 11th 153 militia members, out of whom 60 were women took up
actions to harass the enemy. These went on for twenty minutes. None of the CRPF
forces in the camp near the station dared to come out. They hid inside, threw
two to three grenades, a mortar shell and hundreds of bullets in a down
position.
In the second week of
November, the PGA burnt the Tata Sumo of an independent candidate Korsa Suklu,
in Naimed in West Bastar. On the 12th, 4 vehicles, 3 road rollers, a finisher
machine and a tourist bus were set on fire. In the National Park area of West
Bastar, people and the militia remanded the polling personnel, burnt their
motorcycles and punished them. The militia assassinated one police of the
Special Armed Force in Gangulur in West Bastar.
On 14th November, the
militia burnt four tractors bringing supplies to the police in Kunta area in
South Bastar and seized the supplies. It attacked a CRPF company of 70 near
Gorkha village. The PGA stopped the bus to Bejji and the vehicles to shandies
from 15th November. It also checked the carts coming to the shanties and seized
the supplies. The police were forced to get their supplies by foot. The
Commandant of the 139th battalion of the CRPF decided to come to Bejji to
discuss the problem of supplies. Before he came 45 CRPF jawans were clearing the
road and were moving towards Vinjaram. Another CRPF squad was clearing the road
from the side of Kunta. The former batch met with an attack near Onder village 4
kms from Bejji on the 23rd of November. Three CRPF men were seriously injured in
this attack and the rest escaped from the killing zone. The PGA made another
attack on the ambulance taking these injured police near Uped village. One
injured died in this incident and the rest fled despite their injuries. Later
the militia burnt the van. This disturbed the CRPF tremendously. On the same day
militia made an attack with burmars (country guns) on police going on a
motorcycle near Pamed. The militia ambushed 60 CRPF personnel returning to
Basagudem after combing near Lingagiri.
Supplies were seized
from bullock carts coming from Chinthalnar to Jegurogonda in South Bastar. They
also fired on the police. The police had to take the supplies under the cover of
constant firing and throwing shells. Some of the carts were destroyed in this
incident. In the same area the secondary force of the PGA fired on a patrolling
batch of thirty-two personnel on the 26th. Totally 13 clamors were fired in
which the Assistant Commandant was seriously injured. A Congress jeep, the
nursery of the forest department and the CPM office in Chota Bethiya were
destroyed.
One CRPF platoon
commander and a jawan were injured in an ambush done by two members on 16th
November in Jeerantharayi of Koyilbeda in North Bastar. This stopped them from
patrolling for the next three days. Totally 1200 militia members participated in
the retaliatory actions related to the election boycott.
Three squads of the
PGA attacked a large force of 250 police with heavy supplies and vehicles near
the interior Ranibeda village in Maad division.
Modugapalli ambush
On 29th November the
state SC, ST commissioner of Cabinet rank, Rajendra Pamboy was attacked near
Modugapalli on the Bijapur-Bhopalapatnam road. Six police and the jeep driver
died on the spot of which one was an assistant commandant. In this ambush the
PGA also seized one AK 47, 5 SLRs, 2 grenades and 340 bullets. The police,
coming in civil dress after this batch, were too afraid to fire and escaped in
the guise of being ordinary people.
On the same day there
was an attack on the CRPF forces in Kakirel of Gangulur area in West Bastar. As
a result the polling personnel did not go to 6 centers.
On the 30th, the
militia attacked with clamors on a 40 member CRPF force coming in parallel
formation as protection to the polling personnel. The CRPF with modern weapons
fled with fear. The Militia seized the polling material. There was no polling in
this center. So the police came for retaliation on the 3rd December for a second
time. The people did not bother to vote despite threats. So the police
themselves finished the job. As they were returning they were attacked with 7
clamors at 9 in the night. The police scattered and could meet only late in the
night in the forest. They again started at 2 in the morning. As they were
reaching Basagudem they were again attacked with clamors. It was the militia.
The police were baffled with these three consecutive attacks. In a fit of
madness, they fired on the people doing harvest work and beat them.
An assistant
commandant of the CISF died in an attack Gangulur in West Bastar on the 30th. In
North Bastar the militia destroyed Kanhar Pulia in Koyilbed area. On 1st
December the police were attacked in Godagatam near a bridge. They were also
attacked near bechagatam on the 30th.
Militia from fifteen
villages came together to attack the police in Kakanar area. They did reccy and
collected information about the enemy. Though they could not create serious
losses to the enemy physically they were successful in lowering their morale.
On 1st December the
militia attacked with clamors and landmines the Morupalli polling center in
Jegurogonda area. There were 50 CRPF personnel in this center. So they had to
return. Sixty militia members attacked the police going in a jeep in the Kunta
area in which two police were injured. A temporary helipad in Kishtaram was also
attacked. A 35-member batch of the 139th battalion of the CRPF was attacked with
13 mines near Peeluru in the Parsagada police station area. A company commander
and three police were injured. There was also an attack in the National Park
area.
In North Bastar, the
enemy camped in the school buildings in Arora, Sandham, Dobri and Kouteda
villages of the Koyilbeda area. They were attacked. A helipad in Vruthalayi was
also attacked. There was firing on the polling center in Kiskoddo village. In
Rekabatti village the enemy had to retreat with auto fire when they were
attacked with clamors.
On 2nd December two
militia batches attacked one police batch returning from polling in Jegurogonda
area in between Darbha and Vehire villages. The CRPF personnel fired hundreds of
bullets and more than ten grenades. They could not reach Jegurogonda before
evening. Another batch was attacked along the bank of the Thalper near Dharmaram
with clamors, burmars and pig bombs.
On 3rd December the
government once again tried to force the people to vote. But the offensive was
fiercer. The police going to Usur town were attacked near Galgam in two
different places. A group of militia seized the polling material. Despite a
large number police, they could not counter the attack.
In one incident the
militia arranged mines and put posters on it. The police coming with dogs
stopped on seeing these mines. After a while they saw the militia trying to
blast the mines. They were very much afraid and ran for cover, shouting. After
the militia left, the police went near the mine and thanked the mine and god for
not attacking them.
In Pujari, Kanker,
the police were doing patrolling around the village. Taking this chance the
militia seized the polling material and retreated. The concerned police were
suspended for improper functioning. The police going to Cherla were also
attacked.
In Peda Korma of West
bastar the CRPF were returning with votes they themselves put in the machine. A
45-member militia team attacked them with mines and burmars. The police threw 2
inch mortar shells and grenades with launchers. Another militia batch seized the
jeep bringing supplies to this police batch near Paded village and blasted it
after taking the material. In another incident in Merthur area the CRPF police
had to leave their motorcycles. The people later burnt them. There was an attack
near Cheemalapenta also.
Kodepal ambush
The BJP candidate
Rajaram Thodam met with a landmine blast in Bijapur. Two local leaders died on
the spot and Rajaram had a narrow escape.
In Kursukoddi of
North Bastar the authorities sent the CRPF and the BSF convincing them that they
"have to go for the sake of it. But do not stay for a long time. Return
whether you get one or two votes". The police batch saw the reccy team. So
the team immediately threw crackers. The officers heard the sounds in the
walkie-talkie set and thought it was an attack of the PGA. They ordered a
retreat! Such incidents were seen in a few other places also. The militia laid
dummy mines with iron pieces over the roads in 100 places over the state.
Thirteen bridges were partially destroyed.
In another incident,
the CRPF personnel were stopped from crossing the river Indravathi. There was a
harassment action on the Kohakametta police station in Maad division. Two more
helipads in Chathisgarh were attacked.
On the whole 20
policemen died and 21 were injured in this campaign. Six weapons – one AK, 4
SLRs, one 9mm pistol and 2 grenades were seized.
The above countless
incidents exposed the fakeness of elections of the ‘largest democracy’ of the
world. It showed the enthusiastic participation of the masses in the boycott of
elections that means the people of the region no longer want their ‘democracy’.
Politically, this
program of election boycott in Dandakaranya took the People’s War one step
forward. It instilled confidence in the masses that they can counter the enemy
forces however much their number and however modern their weapons may be. It
once again revealed the importance of mass base in a revolutionary movement. The
program was exemplary.
Yes. The enemy is a
paper tiger, when faced by an aroused mass ready to launch a people’s war.
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