Talk:Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Second Central Committee
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References
editPlease note that in previous versions, two additional independent sources were included: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Communist_Party_of_India_(Marxist%E2%80%93Leninist)_Second_Central_Committee&oldid=400243622#cite_ref-1 --Soman (talk) 11:59, 2 June 2020 (UTC)
- In early 1980s, CPI(ML) 2nd CC led action in Nadia District, but suffered set-back when key leaders were arrested.[1]
- Nishit Bhattacharya, Azizul Haque and Romen Saha, all intellectuals, formed CPI(ML) 2nd CC in late 1970s, as a split from CPI(ML) Mahadev Mukherjee.[2]
- With some rewordings, material from this ref can be developed: - "Mahadev Mukherjee assumed the post of the Secretary General of the pro-Lin, pro-CM stream, and organised the Second Party Congress of CPI (M-L) at Kamalpur, a rural bastion of revolutionary peasant guerrillas situated on the Hooghly-Burdwan district frontiers. The Presidency JPC under Nishith-da’s leadership extended its support to the Congress." - "Though the reconstituted Central Committee led a few peasant struggles here and there and organised some sporadic rifle snatchings in Nadia, Hooghly and Burdwan, it could not develop the tempo of the movement." - "By the middle of the 1970s, even the last flickers of armed struggle had burnt out." - "[the explusion of Mahadev Mukherjee] resulted in the formation of the Second Central Committee of CPI (M-L) in 1978. Nishith-da was the new General Secretary." - "Without entering into unnecessary discords with other CPI (M-L) groups over petty tactical issues, Nishith-da sought to resolve certain ideological questions, the major ones being the idea of new era, nature of the Three World Theory, political implication of Com. CM’s line of class enemy annihilation, etc. It was under his direction that the Second Central Committee, unlike other CPI (M-L) factions, branded post-Mao China as a social imperialist country." - "From 1978 to 1982—in these four years, under Nishith-da’s competent command, CPI (M-L) realised great victories. West Bengal, Bihar and a few pockets in Uttar Pradesh lived through a higher phase of revolutionary activism and pro-people advance. Instead of taking refuge in forest areas or mountains, Second CC cadres worked in plane lands and won over the poorest section of the peasantry. The People’s Army and the revolutionary committees emerged as sources of true people’s governance against the impositions of the state apparatus. The revolutionary committees ran parallel administrative systems in the villages. Redistribution of farmlands, confiscation and distribution of food grains and other possessions of wealthy landlords and setting up of prices of crops through people’s committees were notable accomplishments Second CC leadership. Moreover, proper implementation of the line of annihilation gave the toiling masses the taste of freedom. The Central Committee creatively developed the revolutionary essence of Com. CM’s political line and launched a principled battle against right and left opportunism." - "At the extended Central Committee meeting held on May 25, 1982 in Siwan district of Bihar, when the Party came to the verge of a 50-50 split, Nishith-da, to prevent the organisation from further dismemberment, resigned from his post. While returning to his shelter in Bhagalpur, on May 28, 1982, he and six of his comrades were suddenly caught by the police who had been tipped off by some unknown men. With this arrest, the second major phase of revolutionary communist movement in India came to a close."[3]
- Evidence of remnants of the party remaining active in north Bengal 2004-2005 https://www.telegraphindia.com/states/west-bengal/bandh-to-remember-martyr/cid/872922 https://www.telegraphindia.com/states/west-bengal/briefs-23-04-2004/cid/759022
References
- ^ Naxalbari is Not Just the Name of a Village!: Twenty-five Years of the Naxalite Movement. Chandan Roy. 1996. p. 57.
- ^ Sudeep Chakravarti; Sudeep (2 March 2010). Red Sun: Travels in Naxalite Country. Penguin Books India. p. 242. ISBN 978-0-14-306653-8.
- ^ Kafila Online. online/2015/03/20/remembering-nishith-bhattacharya-unsung-revolutionary-hero-basu-acharya/ REMEMBERING NISHITH BHATTACHARYA, UNSUNG REVOLUTIONARY HERO: BASU ACHARYA