Revolutionary Communist Council of India explained
The Revolutionary Communist Council of India was an armed political faction in India founded in 1962 by Ananta Singh[1] [2] which followed Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought.[3] The party was also called as Man Money Gun (MMG) Group.[4] In May 1970 state authorities claimed to have arrested some 60 militants of the group in the Jaduguda forest, alleging that the group had attacked a police station in the Ruam region near Jamshedpur.[5] [6] The Indian press noted that among the arrested was a 26-year old British woman, Mary Tyler.[3] [5] [6] The case became known as the Jaguguda Naxalite Conspiracy Case.[5] [6]
Notes and References
- Chaudhuri. Kalyan. 1977. Ananta Singh Case: CPI(M) on Trial. Economic and Political Weekly. 12. 41. 1731–1732. 4366000 . 0012-9976.
- Web site: Gupta. Saibal. 16 July 2015. Revealed: Inside story of the 1968-69 Calcutta robberies. 2021-04-08. The Times of India. en.
- Book: Brajdeo Narayan Prasad. Radicalism & Violence in Agrarian Structure: The Maoist Movement in Bihar. 2002. Manak Publications. 978-81-7827-034-0. 170.
- Web site: 2017-04-18. Top Maoist ideologue Narayan Sanyal passes away in Kolkata. 2021-08-17. Hindustan Times. en.
- Book: Subrata Kumar Mitra. Harihar Bhattacharyya. Politics And Governance In Indian States: Bihar, West Bengal And Tripura. 27 February 2018. World Scientific Publishing Company. 978-981-320-824-7. 191.
- Book: Sumanta Banerjee. India's Simmering Revolution: The Naxalite Uprising. 1984. Zed Books. 978-0-86232-037-9. 166.