Lal Jhanda Dal ('Red Flag Group') was a communist organization in West Bengal, India. It was one of several Maoist splinter groups that was active in West Bengal as of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The group was led by Swadesh Mitra.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] Swadesh Mitra had been a leader of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in Calcutta, but formed part of an oppositional tendency (the 'State Bolshevik Core' or 'Surya Sen Group'). The Bolshevik Core tendency that Mitra belonged to had maintained contacts with the radicals in North Bengal (which launched the Naxalbari uprising).[10][11]

References

  1. Johari, J. C. Naxalite Politics in India. Delhi: Research Publications, 1972. p. 73
  2. Roy, Manabendra Nath. The Radical Humanist, Vol. 36. Maniben Kara, 1972. p. 27
  3. Jawaid, Sohail. The Naxalite Movement in India: Origin and Failure of the Maoist Revolutionary Strategy in West Bengal, 1967-1971. New Delhi: Associated Pub. House, 1979. p. 94
  4. Pandey, Sachchidanand. Naxal Violence: A Socio-Political Study. Delhi: Chanakya Publications, 1985. p. 68
  5. United Asia, Vol. 23. United Asia, 1971. p. 55
  6. Grover, Verinder. Party System and Political Parties. New Delhi: Deep & Deep, 1989. p. 464
  7. Singhvi, L. M., Subhash C. Kashyap, and J. P. Sharma. Indian Political Parties: Programmes, Promises, and Performances. Delhi: Research [Publications in Social Sciences, for] the Institute of Constitutional and Parliamentary Studies, 1971. p. 98
  8. Roy, Asish Kumar. The Spring Thunder and After: A Survey of the Maoist and Ultra-Leftist Movements in India, 1962-75. Calcutta: Minerva, 1975. p. 233
  9. The Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses Journal, Vol. 7. The Institute, 1974. p. 54
  10. Basu, Pradip. Towards Naxalbari (1953-1967): An Account of Inner-Party Ideological Struggle. Calcutta: Progressive Publishers, 2000. pp. 48, 83, 93
  11. Rao, M. S. A. Peasant and Backward Classes Movements. New Delhi: South Asia Books, 1979. p. 24
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