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Any link Nepali Maoist?

   I wonder if these indian communist have 08-May-02 nepalipan
     here are some news about maoist link of 08-May-02 ananta


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nepalipan Posted on 08-May-02 11:53 AM

I wonder if these indian communist have any connection with Nepali maobadi?

thanks

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/south_asia/newsid_1975000/1975583.stm
ananta Posted on 08-May-02 12:10 PM

here are some news about maoist link of some indian rebels, if u are interested u can read this:
In a bid to overcome their perennial financial crunch, the Maoists in Nepal are gradually compromising on the ideological front and assisting jihadis operating in the madrasas of western Uttar Pradesh to use the Terai as a transit area to enter Bangladesh via the narrow Siliguri corridor.

According to recent intelligence inputs, the Maoists are undergoing the same travails that any anti-state militant group operating within the political economy of violence faces. Their financial situation, in particular, has been deteriorating and inconsistent flow of money as well as arms has hindered their efforts to carry out major operations against the Royal Nepal Army.
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The Maoists charge these fundamentalists to help ship across their fresh recruits. In return, they are given cash, arms, and ammunition. All these are scarce for the Maoists. All the Nepalese Maoists have to do is to shift groups of jihadi recruits from one camp to the other across the breadth of Nepal and usher them into the 20-odd kilometres of the Siliguri corridor. From here, the fundamentalists enter Bangladesh with the help of dozens of Islamic supporters in Assam and West Bengal.

This operation has opened new financial avenues for the Maoists but has also deepened fissures between the Maoist ideologues and their military leadership. The differences are reflected in the tussle between Prachanda, the much-feared Maoist military leader, and Baburam Bhattarai, a Ph.D. from Jawaharlal Nehru University and the principal formulator of the Maoist political ideology.
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Links have also emerged between the Maoists and the United Liberation Front for Assam (ULFA). The two have apparently set up common training camps in Nepal with the Maoists trying to organise themselves along ULFA lines. This newfound bonhomie has also come as a lifeline for the ULFA that was squeezed out of its camps in Bhutan due to cooperation between the Bhutanese army and Indian Army. Now, sources say, they have found fresh training grounds. As a quid pro quo, the Maoists are also able to bank on the ULFA for cash resources in emergencies.
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for full report, please read:http://www.indiareacts.com/archivefeatures/nat2.asp?recno=37&ctg=defence
research paper of anju susan alex researcher in jawahar lal nehru univ:http://www.ipcs.org/nmt/milgroups/maoist-nep.html