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  2. Bastar: The Naxal Story - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bastar:_The_Naxal_Story

    The film was announced in June 2023, along with the title of the film, it's based on the Naxalite–Maoist insurgency in the Bastar district of Chhattisgarh and the April 2010 Maoist attack in Dantewada. [7] Bastar was theatrically released on 15 March 2024. [8] The film received negative reviews from critics and was a major box office bomb. [9]

  3. Naxalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naxalism

    However, Shobha Mandi, a former member who later quit the organisation, wrote in her book Ek Maowadi Ki Diary that she was repeatedly raped and assaulted by her fellow commanders for more than seven years since she wanted to quit. She also claimed that wife-swapping and adultery are the common amongst the Maoists. [42]

  4. Mahendra Karma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahendra_Karma

    He represented the Dantewada constituency. The congress again lost the 2008 assembly elections when BJP swept 10 out of the 11 seats in Bastar. [9] He had secured 158,520 votes (35.19%). In the region, he was known as "Bastar Tiger"-for making a tough stand against the regional Maoist insurgency. [7] [10] [11]

  5. Walking with the Comrades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking_with_the_Comrades

    The book covers her time in 2010 spent living with Naxalite communist guerillas deep within the forests of rural Chhattisgarh. [1] She argues that India's counter-insurgency, known as Operation Green Hunt , is a front for mining corporations to clear away tribal people, and to make profits exploit India's natural resources.

  6. Rahul Pandita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rahul_Pandita

    Pandita is the author of three best-selling and critically-acclaimed books: "Our Moon has Blood Clots: A memoir of a lost home in Kashmir" (Penguin Random House, 2013); "Hello, Bastar: The untold story of India's Maoist movement" (Westland, 2011), and "The Lover Boy of Bahawalpur: How the Pulwama case was cracked (Juggernaut, 2021).

  7. Communist Party of India (Maoist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_Party_of_India...

    The Maoists had structured "medical units" in the villages of Bastar, [67] and the CPI (Maoist) operates "mobile medical units." [53]: 101 Rahul Pandita writes: "In the field of health as well, the Maoists often fill in large gaps left by the state. Their mobile medical units cover large distances to offer primary health care to tribals....

  8. Historic Eight Documents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_Eight_Documents

    [1] [2] They laid down the idea that the Indian State was a bourgeois institution and that the main Indian communist parties had embraced revisionism by agreeing to operate within the framework of the Constitution of India. [2] They urged a Maoist protracted people's war to overthrow the Indian State. [3]

  9. Madvi Hidma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madvi_Hidma

    He is also known as Hidmalu alias Santosh and is the face of Maoist in Bastar. After completion of education up to class 10, he joined the Party and became a master strategist of military operation and guerrilla warfare. [4] [5] Hidma was arrested in 2016 along with six other alleged naxals, at the time he was considered a low-level participant ...