• Home
  • Dissent
  • Forty Ninth Anniversary of Great Naxalbari Peasant Uprising

Forty Ninth Anniversary of Great Naxalbari Peasant Uprising

Naxalbari, a small town in the Darjeeling district, in north Bengal, was the epicentre of armed struggle against the betrayal of CPM and Bangla Congress, in 1967. These parties launched brutal repression killing eight women, two children and one man, on May 25, in Naxalbari, after which the movement spread across India. Its 49 th anniversary is being celebrated. Here’s a report.

The Allahabad-Kaushambi Committee of CPIML New Democracy shall observe the 49th anniversary of Great Naxalbari Armed Struggle by holding public meetings in Ghoorpur, on May 24, and Asrawal Khurd, on May 25, 2016, according to a press release.

The breakthrough of Naxalbari struggle, in Darjeeling district, was a result of long standing exploitation of landless and poor peasants in the country leading to extreme poverty, food crises, unemployment, loss of means of livelihood, indebtedness. It was basically a reaction to parliamentary political diversion by CPM and Bangla Congress, in 1967, which had won on the promise of returning their land, giving them means to earn, but had betrayed their cause after forming the government, it was informed.

Beginning on May 23, 1967, it spread to several states of India as the landless poor peasants organised in large numbers and revolted against big landlord oppression, burnt the debt deeds, harvested standing crops and clashed with landlords’ goons. It was their assertion to freedom from exploitation, deprivation and poverty, which is guaranteed only on paper in the Constitution of India, as rulers befool them by promising liberty through Lok Sabha and Vidhan Sabha elections, while the administrative and police machinery represses them and keeps them in a permanent state of deprivation and dependence, the release added.

In 1967, the CPM and Bangla Congress launched brutal repression killing eight women, two children and one man on May 25 in Naxalbari, after which the movement spread across the map of India.

Today, peasant masses are facing similar conditions of deprivation, indebtedness, hunger, unemployment, drought, usury, etc. and the state is bent on serving interests of foreign companies, big landlords, corporates, mafia, big contractors. Peasant economy is going down as input costs are high, land is mortgaged, while sale price is unprofitable and the government looks to serve MNC penetration in agriculture where they sell the inputs dear and buy the crop cheap leaving the peasantry in a perpetual state of loss.

The meeting shall be addressed by a number of party leaders and social activists to give a message of launching struggles for solution to peasant problems, rather than depend on parliamentary parties, according to the press release.

©DTNS

Pix from Net.

author avatar
Different Truths News Service
Different Truths Press Release

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Releated Posts

Education, Employment, and Empowerment of Women in India: From 1986 Onwards

Deblina and Debjani’s research shows that women are in better position than before, which was unimaginable even two or…

ByByDebjani Guha Dec 2, 2025

The Quiet Takeover: How 10 Million Bihar Women Became the State’s Real Powerhouse

Bihar’s silent revolution: Millions of Jeevika Didis are shattering patriarchy, seizing economic power, and rewriting destiny through Self-Help…

ByByRita Biswas Pandey Dec 1, 2025

Focus: The Role of Cultural Politics in the Environmental Debate

Rita questions, why do the environmental spotlight intensely target Diwali’s spike, overlooking the catastrophic, year-round pollution from industry…

ByByRita Biswas Pandey Oct 27, 2025

At a Crossroads: Navigating Nepal’s Financial Future

Rita opines that Nepal’s economy faces a defining moment, shaped by structural weaknesses, trade imbalances, political instability, and…

ByByRita Biswas Pandey Oct 13, 2025
error: Content is protected !!