Naxalism: An Underestimated Challenge Source: Mark The Truth
Ever since 2005, India has been witness to an average of 1,500 incidents of Naxal violence, resulting in the death of over 750 people i.e. five incidents of Naxal violence every day and sixty killings every month. Naxal movement is gaining momentum with the passing time.
Beyond the Chinese fantasy: Will India Disintegrate? Source: Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies
The recent proposition by a Chinese strategist that China should facilitate 'the disintegration of India' into some 30 smaller states, so as to decimate all challenges to its supremacy and establish a pax-Sinica in the Asia-Pacific region, may have been dismissed at official …
The Naxalite threatSource: Foreign Policy Association
Even as India struggles to defend itself from external terrorist organizations, the homegrown Naxalite movement continues to pose serious security concerns.
Naxalism in KeralaSource: Google
The naxalite movement in Kerala was inspired from the events that happened in Naxalbari village of West Bengal in 1967. In May 1967, there was an armed uprising of the peasants of Naxalbari under the leadership of Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal.
NAXALBARI (1967): The Naxalite movement in IndiaSource: Asia Media
The Naxalite movement takes its name from a peasant uprising which took place in May 1967 at Naxalbari – a place on the north-eastern tip of India situated in the state of West Bengal.
'Arrest won't end Naxal movement'Source: Mid Day
Poet, professor and Marxist critic, Varavara Rao has been the face of the Naxalite movement in Andhra Pradesh for almost four decades now. In an exclusive interview with Daipayan Halder, he spoke on Kobad Ghandy's arrest and the future of the Naxal movement
The teacher from KeralaSource: Business Standard
Badagara, Malabar, 13 January 1934
... I had just finished my speech at Badagara ...
China questions Dalai Lama's "disappointment" over talksSource: Times of India
Chinese foreign ministry struck to its stand on the question of Tibet and the Dalai Lama even as the Tibetan leader said he has lost
faith in a fruitful outcome of negotiations with the authorities in China.