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Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Features   来源:Business  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:She said children were genuinely excited about writing a poem during one of her on-site events.

She said children were genuinely excited about writing a poem during one of her on-site events.

A decade ago, the state's police were seen as weak, according to Mr Ganapathy."Today, precise state-led strikes, backed by central paramilitary forces, have changed the game. While paramilitary held the ground, state forces gathered intelligence and launched targeted operations. It was clear role delineation and coordination," he said.

Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

Mr Ganapathy adds that access to mobile phones, social media, roads and connectivity have made people more aware and less inclined to support an armed underground movement."People have become aspirational, mobile phones and social media have become widespread and people are exposed to the outside world. Maoists also cannot operate in hiding in remote jungles while being out of sync with new social realities."Without mass support, no insurgency can survive," he says.

Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

A former Maoist sympathiser, who did not want to be named, pointed to a deeper flaw behind the movement's collapse: a political disconnect."They delivered real change - social justice in Telangana, uniting tribespeople in Chhattisgarh - but failed to forge it into a cohesive political force," he said.

Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

At the heart of the failure, he argued, was a dated revolutionary vision: building isolated "liberated zones" beyond the state's reach and "a theory to strike the state through a protracted people's war".

"These pockets work only until the state pushes back. Then the zones collapse, and thousands die. It's time to ask - can a revolution really be led from cut-off forestlands in today's India?"due to police concerns about safety.

Other Kneecap gigs scheduled this summer - including at the Eden Project in Cornwall and Plymouth Pavilions - were cancelled after footage from a 2023 gig appeared to show a band member saying: "The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP."The Belfast trio has since

Sir David Amess and Jo Cox.Now, 2000trees festival has confirmed it has no plans to remove Kneecap from its line-up.

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