Baccha Prasad Singh

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Baccha Prasad Singh

Baccha Prasad Singh alias Balraj alias Arvind is an Indian Maoist politician and Politburo member of Communist Party of India (Maoist)

Singh hails from Chapra district in the Indian state of Bihar. He is a science student of Patna University and had participated in Jayaprakash Narayan’s Civil liberty movement in the mid 70's before joining the Naxal movement. Singh had been active in the CPI (Maoist) since 1992. He became Party's regional commander of Chhapra Siwan area.[1][2] Thereafter Singh became the member of Central Committee and Politburo. He was active to form mass organisations through a secret fraction committee, which comprised Maoist cadres within the mass outfit.[3] Singh was arrested on 8 February 2010 in Naubasta area, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh in a top-secret operation by Special Task Force (STF) of Uttar Pradesh Police. Another Maoist leader and intellectual Banshidhar alias Chintan were arrested along with him.[4][5][6] Singh's wife Asha is also a Maoist activist. Asha was arrested when she came to meet their son in Gorakhpur.[7]

The Naxal Movement

Map of Naxalite movement throughout India

The Naxal Movement began in the spring of 1967 with the Naxalbari Uprising. The name, Naxalbari, comes from the village of the original revolt, which was a movement of peasants and communist leaders against the oppressive state. The revolt began after a physical conflict between a landlord and a peasant over a financial dispute. India had gained its independence from Britain during this time period, but they still held many of the traditional colonial practices still in effect. Landlords were rewarded with land as a result of them collecting taxes, and then would rent the land to the peasants for half of their yield. This made it very difficult to own land, as well as expensive to rent or have access to. It was shown in the 1971 census that a majority of the land in India was owned by the top 4% of people, and that 60% of the population did not own land at all.[8] This revolt inspired many others, and as a result it spread to less developed rural areas in Southern and Eastern India such as Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana. This movement is considered to be a far left communist movement with strong relation to Maoism. This was one of the first movements that Baccha Prasad Singh became a part of, and further inspired him to continue political activism. The Naxal movement still continues into the modern day, as many involved continue to fight for land rights in the 21st century.[9]

Communist Party of India (Maoist)

Activism in Prison System

References

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