Veteran Naxalite leader Azizul Haque dies at 83; end of era for Bengal’s radical politics

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Veteran Naxalite leader Azizul Haque dies at 83; end of era for Bengal's radical politics



A close associate of Charu Mazumdar and Kanai Chatterjee, Haque was among the few leaders who kept the flame of the Naxalbari uprising alive long after it was crushed by the state.He was expelled from the CPI(M) for endorsing Mazumdar’s radical line, later co-founding the CPI(ML)’s Second Central Committee with Nishith Bhattacharya after the latter’s death.Under their leadership, the faction tried to set up parallel revolutionary governments in parts of rural Bengal and Bihar during the late 1970s, before being expelled following a ceasefire accord with the West Bengal government.First arrested in the Parvathipuram conspiracy case in 1970 and was released in 1977.Haque spent nearly two decades in prison over his lifetime.His re-arrest in 1982 triggered outrage even within Bengal’s ruling Left Front, with jail ministers Debabrata Bandopadhyay and Jatin Chakraborty recommending his parole after visiting him behind bars.His book ‘Karagare Atharo Bochor’ (Eighteen Years in Jail) remains one of the most poignant firsthand accounts of Naxalite movement and ideological resilience in that era.Haque’s writings, including ‘Naxalbari: Tirish Bochor Aage ebong Pare’, continued to challenge establishment thinking even as he gradually moved away from hardline Naxalism in his later years.Notably, he supported the CPI(M)’s industrialisation drive in Singur in 2006, distancing himself from many of his former comrades who opposed land acquisition.”Leftism is to walk against the current,” he often said, and till the end, his pen remained active-contributing columns and essays to leading dailies and journals, always with a streak of rebellion.Azizul Haque’s death is not just the passing of a political veteran, it is the quiet extinguishing of one of the last flames of Bengal’s revolutionary Left.For many, July 21, 2025, will be remembered as the day a radical conscience bid farewell.



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