Naxal terror
Terror activities in India have increased by 70 per cent during 2012-2013 with the number of deaths rising from 238 to 404, most of which were caused by Naxals, according to the report Global Terrorism Index 2014, prepared by Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP). The number of attacks also increased with 55 more incidents in 2013 than in 2012. “Terrorism increased by 70 per cent in India from 2012 to 2013, with the number of deaths increasing from 238 to 404,” it said. However, the majority of terrorist attacks in India have low casualties. In 2013, around 70 per cent of attacks were non-lethal. There were attacks by 43 terrorist groups who can be categorised into three categories – Islamists, separatists and communists. “Communist terrorist groups (Naxals) are by far the most frequent perpetrators and the main cause of deaths in India. Three Maoist communist groups claimed responsibility for 192 deaths in 2013, which was nearly half of all deaths from terrorism in India. “Police are overwhelmingly the biggest targets of Maoists, accounting for half of all deaths and injuries. This is mainly through armed assaults, which killed 85, and bombings and explosions, which killed 43,” it said. Kidnapping is also a common tactic of Maoists where it is often used as political tool to force the governments to release prisoners. IEP, which has offices in Sydney, New York, and Oxford, works with a wide range of partners internationally and collaborates with intergovernmental organisations on measuring and communicating the economic value of peace. The Index said generally, the dispute with Pakistan over Jammu and Kashmir is the source of terrorism. In 2013 three militants groups were responsible for around 15 per cent of deaths. This includes Pakistan-based Hizbul Mujahideen, the only group in India to use suicide tactics in 2013. In September, al Qaeda announced a presence in India, hoping to unite other Islamist groups, the Index said. The northeast has seen continual ethno-political unrest from ethnic secessionist movements in the past three decades. Separatist groups including in Assam and Meghalaya were responsible for 16 per cent of deaths. The shift is an indicator that the terror is not only confined to Jammu and Kashmir but it is on the rise in Maoist states which is an alarming trend.