Maoists in Madhya Pradesh jungles launch pamphlets, banners backing farmers’ stir

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BHOPAL: While septuagenarian farmer leader Jagjit Singh Dallewal continues his fast-unto-death at the Punjab-Haryana border despite his deteriorating health, Maoists in the dense forests of Madhya Pradesh 1200 km away have called for a march to Delhi to support the ongoing farmers’ stir.Security forces engaged in anti-Maoists operations in the thick jungles of eastern MP’s Balaghat district (one of the three Maoist-affected districts of the state) have recovered two-page pamphlets and a red banner left by the outlaws in the Rupjhar jungles.“The ongoing farmers’ stir is not just the agitation of farmers from Punjab and Haryana, but is actually the movement of every farmer in the country, who has already been destroyed or is on the verge of being ruined due to the anti-farmer policies of the Modi government,” read the pamphlets issued under the name of the banned CPI (Maoist’s) Maharashtra-Madhya Pradesh-Chhattisgarh Special Zonal Committee.“We appeal to people, farmers and labourers, besides allied organizations, environmentalists and intellectuals in the three states (Maharashtra, MP and Chhattisgarh) to support the ongoing farmers movement in all possible ways. We appeal to one and all to stage protests, demonstrations and road jams in cities and towns, resort to relay hunger strikes and also campaign on social media actively. If possible, march to Delhi and Punjab with the slogan, Shambhu aur Kanauri border Chalo,” the pamphlet read.Similar content was written on a red banner put up by the Maoists on a Pradhan Mantri Gramin Sadak Yojana sign board in the same Maoist infested jungles of Balaghat district.The development, which came to light on Monday, happened just a couple of days after a skirmish between a group of 10-12 armed Maoists cadres and the anti-Maoist operations force of the state police in the Lanji jungles of the same Balaghat district. A distance of around 50 km separates the two spots (place where the brief exchange of gunfire happened and the jungles where the pamphlets and banner were found) in the district, which neighbours Maoist-hit parts of Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra.



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