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Introduction :-
Just a few years back there was a time when Maoists used to run parallel administration in these areas but with the help of the civil administration we established security camps.Five camps were established in Parasnath (Dholkatta, Maniadih, mb01, mb02 and mb03), four camps in Gumla (Zori, Jamti, Banalat and Kurumgarh), one camp at Chainpur in Lohardaga, two camps in Palamau (Tal and Kukukalan) two camps in Bokaro (Chatro Chatti and Jageshwar Bihar) one camp in Gudari at Chaibasa and three camps in Latehar (Kumandi, Serendag and Chaupat).
Jharkhand is blessed with iron ore, manganese, coal, limestone, graphite, quartzite, asbestos, lead, zinc, copper, and some gold, among others. It supplies to the region electricity from thermal and hydroelectric plants. But there has always been a discrepancy between generating wealth and its application.
The Jharkhand region received minimal development funds from undivided Bihar based on a time-honoured presumption: tribals live there, and they need little. Resettlement and rehabilitation issues were—and continue to remain—poor on delivery,
The area’s displaced tribals were gradually organized by a tribal rights and right-to-statehood organization, Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), which also took on exploitation by a concert of contractors, moneylenders and public servants. Bihar’s response was to send a large team of armed police, which intimidated and arrested at will. To protest, an estimated 3,000 tribals gathered in September 1980 in Gua, a mining-belt town near Saranda forests to the state’s south, for a public meeting.
There was an altercation with police. The police fired; the tribals fought back with bows and arrows. Three tribals and four policemen died; human rights activists place the number of tribal deaths at 100. Both groups took their wounded to Gua Mines Hospital, where the tribals were made to deposit their bows and arrows before the hospital took in their injured. Then the police opened fire on the now unarmed tribals, killing several more.
The police, thereafter, went on a rampage in nearby villages, in much the same way as some of their colleagues in Chhattisgarh: looting and destroying homes; molesting and killing as much for revenge as suspicion of collusion with rebels. JMM leader Guruji—Soren—became a bulwark for key tribal leaders, who led movements in Saranda to prevent the illegal felling of trees such as sal and teak. As resentment peaked through the 1980s and 1990s, leaders sought allies with greater firepower: the Maoists—through the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC), the key rebel entity in undivided Bihar.
This alliance of expediency has since matured. Saranda is a Maoist area of operation and sanctuary. MCC has merged into the Communist Party of India (Maoist), the presiding conglomerate. Besides attacks against police and paramilitary, looting weaponry and imposing levies on small to big businesses to fund the rebellion, Maoists have also carried out spectacular strikes
The Laws made by Government over the time :-
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