24 Karat Stealth Meet

Big Brother Congress has literally closed all its orifices to the communist menace that so threatens the internal–to an extent, external too–security and stability of India. Headed by an extra-constitutional Prime Minister and comprising mostly criminals, the UPA government itself poses a threat to the country.

Prakash Karat after taking over the reins of the Communist Party, has wasted no time. In what he thought would be a secret meeting with a terrorist leader, Baburam Bhattarai a Nepali Maoist eminence, Karat had not bargained for the Slimes, which reported the meeting. In its disco-style reportage, the Slimes says:

One of Nepal’s top Maoist leaders, Baburam Bhattarai, is being quietly chaperoned around here by Indian intelligence agencies, which recently organised a meeting between him and CPM general secretary Prakash Karat.

This is what our intelligence department, which has (had?) gained some acclaim recently, is up to: rolling out the red carpet to terrorists. Of course, I maybe just pumping more hot air into the rumour balloon–it is likely that the intelligence guys are not really involved. Returning to Karat, the Slimes gives us another piece of information why Karat chose Baburam. Apart from ideological sodality, the two also connect at another common level.

Although the meeting was facilitated by intelligence agencies, Karat and Bhattarai have a common link - they share their alma mater, Jawaharlal Nehru University.

So there you have: the desi madrassa that breeds Marxist terrorists who, post-indoctrination, occupy powerful positions in politics and the media and like parasites, feed on the plant that gives the sustenance they require. These white-collar do-gooders are more dangerous than the folk they recruit–whether these are the genuinely-wronged peasants who join the Naxal movement or the over enthusiastic college/university students. For those wondering why India lost its chance to draft a sensible policy with regard to Nepal, the answer probably lies somewhere inbetween–the covert (and overt) support from our Red Terrorists to their Nepalese bretheren and to the pressure they’ve repeatedly exerted on the UPA, specifically the Congress party to stay away from tackling Naxalism.

The guys at the Public Affairs Magazine wonder whether the current Nepal crisis will tread the same (disastrous) route as the IPKF. And caution in no small measure against such development.

But history seems to be repeating itself in Nepal, and as tragedy more than farce. The Nepal project seems bigger than anything we attempted in Sri Lanka, and is almost the size of Bangladesh’s creation in idea, although it is different in some respects. Regime change was never the idea behind our intervention in Sri Lanka, but it is coming into the Nepal calculus one way or another. A section of the government and the UPA want King Gyanendra’s monarchy dismantled, and a full republican system in place, while the army, and the realists in the administration, say to let things be.

The realists got prime minister Manmohan Singh to commit military aid against the Maoists, and to assure Nepal that India was keen to strengthen both the monarchy and multiparty democracy. But the idealists in the foreign office who hate the monarchy, and the ideologues in the Left, particularly the CPI-M, who love the Maoists more, have not entirely given up on their enterprise of regime change in Nepal.

The Karat-Bhattarai meeting exposes another shameful–if not deadly–face of the Left: that it is running a parallel government. The PA Magazine recognizes this very perceptively:

What we have is a very dangerous, Sri Lanka-like situation building up in Nepal. The CPI-M has no locus to interfere in the internal affairs of a foreign country, and it is not even a part of the government to make these contacts. Frankly, who is Prakash Karat to engage a section of Maoists, and who would be responsible if this produces new rumbles in the Indian Army? This is an extreme case of exercising power without responsibility.

And hammers more insight:

That the UPA is not a government in the real sense of the term is fairly evident, but this is now impinging on foreign relations. India appears a divided house abroad, and this is killing us. Everything that we aspire for will now be put on hold until foreign powers know who they are dealing with, and at what level of strength.

Divided house? How can a coalition that consists mostly of enemies who are unlikely to make peace ever with each other, come to agreement on any issue? We have hardcore criminals pitted against each other: Lalu bhai vs Paswan bhai, the DMK, which is content only to garner plum portfolios, the Congress, which only wants to pursue vendetta instead of governance, and the Left, which pretty much does as it pleases. The Parliament has therefore, in my eyes, become nothing better than a battlefield for organized gangwar: inside, words (sometimes microphones, paperweights, etc) become the weapons, and outside, in some remote village in UP or Bihar, these same gangs use real weapons.

What is interesting is Karat, according to the Slimes, had confirmed the meeting earlier:

When contacted, Karat confirmed the meeting, although he did not share details.

But did a quick volte face when he suddenly realized that this would be potentially damaging. Standard commie technique, as revealed by Arun Shourie in his book. So says Comrade Karat:

General Secretary Prakash Karat today described as “untrue” a media report saying that he had met Maoist leader from Nepal Babburam Bhattarai here.

The report that “I have met a Maoist leader from Nepal in a meeting arranged by the Indian security agencies is untrue,” Karat said in a statement here.

“No such meeting was held,” he said.

Expectedly, the Slimes has shot back

Stung by an embarrassing exposure of a clandestine meeting between Nepali Maoist leader Baburam Bhattarai and CPM chief Prakash Karat, the government and its Marxist ally were in the denial mode on Thursday. They claim that no such a meeting had taken place with the help of Indian intelligence agencies. The hush-hush meeting was reported by TOI on Wednesday. There was no reaction that day. On Thursday, however, in a terse three-line release, Karat said, “The report in the TOI that I have met a Maoist leader from Nepal in a meeting arranged by the Indian security agencies is untrue. No such meeting was held.”

Interestingly, it was Karat himself who had confirmed the meeting to TOI. A careful reading of his statement would also indicate that he is only denying the role of intelligence agencies in arranging the meeting, not the event itself.

This was exactly in line with the stand that Bhattarai took. According to agency reports from Kathmandu, the Maoist leader has denied that Indian agencies organised the meeting but didn’t deny the meeting itself. While they seem to be acting in concert, sources affirmed that the agencies, indeed, brokered the meeting.

And at the end of the same report, the Slimes reveals another disturbing news:

Their disclaimers now are easy to understand. There is an Interpol red corner notice against Bhattarai and he is expected to be arrested and turned in by Indian security agencies. If despite that, he is moving around here, and that too boldly enough to meet the boss of a top government ally, it is reasonable to believe that the agencies were winking at it all, if not colluding with Bhattarai.

Arun Shourie’s question once again resonates in my ears: are we serious about defending the country?

5 Comments

  1. Ur Father(not the one that sleeps with ur mum)
    Posted May 28, 2005 at 4:39 pm | Permalink

    hey dear amul baby,
    dont get out of that IISc AC room.stay right there.eat the ur holy shit urself.dont offer it in the internet.
    cool…

  2. Vikram
    Posted May 31, 2005 at 2:08 am | Permalink

    read this related stuff at a blog.

    “I have come across this interview of ‘Prachanda’, Nepal’s rebel leader and he says that his final challenge will be fighting Indian Army. It’s very clear from the interview that the Maoists in Nepal are blatantly anti-Indian. Please spare some moments and read this interview, which details nefarious designs of these Maoists.

    The link to this interview is as follows.
    http://rwor.org/a/v21/1040-049/1043/interv.htm

    Also in today’s Times of India, an article mentioned that Prakash Karat of CPM has secretly met Maoist leader Bhattarai in New Delhi. I think this is a very serious and disturbing event as Indian government officially considers Maoists as terrorists.

    This is very dangerous situation and it’s clear from Prachanda’s interview that communists have well crafted and strategized policy for take over of Nepal and it’s final challenge coming from Indian Army. It’s also clear that RIM (Revolutionary Internatlists Movement) an umbrella organization to which all communist parties are associated is providing logistics assistance at ground level and leftists media is providing good support to the Maoists insurgents, particularly blocking anything negative news of Maoists and portraying the King as the chief villain.

    If Nepal situations goes out of hand and Maoists indeed takes over Nepal and declares People’s Republic of Nepal and names their Army as People’s Liberation Army then surely their next target will be India. Prachanda makes clear that he will not be merely satisfied with planting red flag on Mount Everest but India will be his next move.

    I wonder what nationalists parties of India and nationalists people in media is doing to counter this serious threat. It’s astonoshing to know that so far there is no hue and cry about serious developements in Nepal especially after meeting of top Maoists leader with Prakash Karat of CPM. Major countries in world including India has termed maoists as terrorists and here Prakash Karat is secretly meeting a maoists in Delhi. It’s really shocking, so say the least.”

  3. Posted July 9, 2005 at 2:18 pm | Permalink

    All the above articles are foolish,you people need to
    read a lot bfore you say.

  4. Ashok Bhagat
    Posted September 9, 2005 at 3:09 am | Permalink

    Dear Sir:

    This is apropos the recent statement of Mr. Prakash Karat that China is not a threat to India.

    I believe that Mr. Karat is a reasonable man but he is blinded by his ideology. In Asia, if any country that will try to prevent India from rising it will be China. Right from the 1948 various actions of the Chinese government speak about it. They have fully understood the geopolitics of South Asia.The Chinese are doing what is in their best national interest while we are following the party and personal line and not the national line.

    It is quite appropriate for USA if they is trying to use India’s potential as a counterweight to China. What we have to see is that how far that is serving India’s national interest. Moreover, we should always remember in 1962 it was USA which came to the aid of India while our old friend Soviet Union under Nikita Khrushchev gave china an open hand secretly in return for support in Cuba

    It is sad that smart and educated people like Prakash Karat are blinded by ideology, and they are at the helm. God bless India.

    Sincerely/Ashok K. Bhagat
    9007 Regal Point
    Richmond, TX 77469. USA
    ashok1198@yahoo.com

  5. Posted December 21, 2005 at 3:47 am | Permalink

    I would like to respond Sandeep’s comments about Mr. Pakash Karat, though old.

    1. You cannot bury your enemies just because they are in touch with Nepali Maoists. In fact there are people in United States who are in close touch with Nepali Maoists. Even if point that out , no one is going to arrest them and send them Jail. Just read Monthly review, edited by US professors like John Bellamy Foster, which published two articles in support of Nepali Maoists : one was written by a leading maoist leader from Nepal.

    2. I would like to remind you Sandeep that , in 1965 people kerala has selected 24 people contested from jail , as their MLAs , while govt of India considered them (these 24 people ) as Chineese spies. Therefore people will not normally share views of elites who want to quickly align with mighty empire : US.

    3. There exists clear differences between CPIM and maoists. CPI M has been main target of violance od some maoist in India. Those CPIM cadres killed by maoists include Azhikodan Raghavan , state secretary of CPM Kerala Unit during 70s.

    4. CPIM has recently published two articles which clarifies their stand vis a vis Maoist movements. One by Biman Basu appeared in poeple’s democracy and another by Sitaram Yechury appeared in ‘Marxist’.

    5. Prakash Karat has written a book against Maoism and naxalism several decades back.

    6. CPIM has always reiterated that Maoism has nothing to do with thouhts of Mao Ze Thung. But just selective misuse of his tactics which he succesfyly aplied in 30s and 40s in China.

    7. Prakash is a great and admirable individual loved and respected by many. Those who spit liying onthe ground will get it on his own face.

    8. Marxism attracts many poeple even now, as it is live with its enormous streams . It has a great intellectual charm. Thousands of people can be found exchanging views on it in internet. Hundreds of websites, new and new publishers,writers, professors like Lukas, Althusar, Teri Eageleton, Althuser. Many many great intellectuals contrubuted to it even when their life was at threat : Rosa Luxumburg , who took a Phd in econmics in 1920s got murdered in streets by German police, Christapher Caudwel who lived just few decades and made contributions from philosophy to modern science died during spanish civil war in 30 ies.

    9. Marxism is serious for many . Therefore Sandeep take it as a challenge to have intellectual discource, rather than abuse

    .That is all.

4 Trackbacks

  1. By varnam on May 27, 2005 at 10:36 pm

    Communist meets Terrorist

    The General Secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), a Mallu by the name of Prakash Karat has met with a terrorist leader from Nepal. According to the Times of India, this meeting was arranged by Indian Intelligence Agencies….

  2. By varnam on June 1, 2005 at 7:36 pm

    Malayalees in power

    There are many bloggers who take potshots at us Mallus. We don’t like to name names, so instead, we will provide a hyperlink. But guess what. Quietly, the Malayalee takes over The roll call is a veritable who’s who in…

  3. [...] the libertarians about his secretive meetings with Nepali Terrorists wasn’t enough, here’s one more to add to Karat’s woes (Not that he cares) I saved the b [...]

  4. By Communist Terror on January 18, 2006 at 7:13 am

    the indefinite curfew and ban on demonstrations imposed by the government on Monday night. The opposition party being mentioned here is the CPI(M) and the Dilli daur refers to the Karat - Bhattari meeting. Sandeep has a post covering thePrakash Karat - Baburam Bhattarai meet in depth.

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