Silver-spoon Maoist held
OUR BUREAU
New Delhi, Sept. 21: A Maoist politburo member, who studied in Doon School and Elphinstone College before he went underground with his wife, has been arrested in Delhi, sources said.
Khobad Ghandy, the 58-year-old member of the CPI (Maoist) politburo, was apparently arrested last night but police did not make any official announcement through the day. The politburo has 13 members, which puts Ghandy among the top 13 Maoist leaders in the country.
“I have no official information on this (the arrest),” said Delhi police public relations officer Rajan Bhagat.
But the sources said Ghandy, said to be in charge of the publication wing and of spreading the organisation’s influence in urban areas, had been produced before a magistrate who remanded him in judicial custody for 14 days.
Ghandy’s reported arrest swings the spotlight back to the early seventies when a generation of the brightest used to be drawn to extremist ideologies.
He was born into an affluent Parsi family that had a house famed for its antique furniture in Worli Sea Face in Mumbai, an ice-cream factory and a resort in Mahabaleswar. The young Ghandy went to public school and later to Elphinstone College in Mumbai.
He married Anuradha who hailed from a Konkan family that owned a coffee plantation. Anuradha died this year of cerebral malaria.
The couple disappeared from the mainstream years ago, friends recalled today. “They took care to destroy most of their photographs, even those from their younger days, as they did not want them to fall into the hands of the police. When Anuradha died, we could not find any photograph,” a friend said tonight.
The couple chose not to have any children because of the risks associated with their lives, the friend added. “He is the only one in our circle to have joined the Naxalites. Most others are now in the corporate sector or, of late, with NGOs,” the friend said.
The People’s Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR), a rights group, asked the government to confirm whether Ghandy had been arrested. “Given that many a Maoist leader in (the) recent past has been killed in custody, we urge the ministry of home affairs to confirm whether they have arrested the Maoist leader. And if they have, to produce him before a magistrate in order to ensure that he is not tortured or killed in fake encounter,” a statement said.
Security sources said the arrest could be the result of heightened activity by the government ahead of an expected crackdown on Naxalites in central and eastern India. Last month, a Maoist central military commission member was arrested.
The Centre is planning the joint operation in November after elections conclude in Maharashtra and Haryana where 200 companies of paramilitary forces are engaged in poll duty.
The above shows the frustration felt by the educated class who have some feelings left.The nexus between criminals, police and politicians angers us so much that many a time I too feel like taking up arms.
I understand the feeling of Khobad Ghandy.
It was another Gandhi (with a different spelling) who led India against the British to get us political independence.
I wonder, if this Ghandy will be able to give India economic independence from the vultures who call themselves politicians and leaders.
The British yoke was removed from our shoulders but the Indian yoke harnessed on us by our corrupt leaders will not be removed easily.
Gandhi was able to remove the British yoke by non-violent means because the Britsh were educated and cared for world opinion.
The Indian yoke, it seems, will require violence, to which the Maoist have wedded themselves.
Either way they will die.
It is better to kill some of the establishment than to die of hunger, they have decided.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
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