Nari Mukti Sangh

[4] Presently, the Nari Mukti Sangh (NMS) draws considerable membership from the states of Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Delhi.

[2] The organisation is influenced from "(scientific) Marxism, Leninism and Maoism", and "believes that national problems can be solved through people's struggle and on the basis of independence, democracy, equality, women's liberation and socialism.

"[5] The NMS describes India as a "semi-feudal" country,[3] and avers that "without a radical transformation of the state, women liberation is not possible.

"[6] The organisation strives to generate "space to women’s voice" and motivates them to partake in "economic, political and social activity and decision making processes.

[1] Shoma Sen writes, "Picketing at health centres where there are no doctors, at schools where teachers are absent, fighting for equitable distribution of food grains, for better wages and better remunerative prices, for equal wages for equal work between men and women, these tribal women’s organizations [Nari Mukti Sangh and Krantikari Adivasi Mahila Sangathan] are democratizing the processes of women’s political, social and economic activities, thus making development and democracy more meaningful to them.