Maoists condemn ‘fake surrender’, death of naxal leader in Chhattisgarh
RAIPUR: police atrocities, South Bastar Divisional Committee CPI
(Maoists) has stated via pamphlets that Bastar police was framing wrong
information of death of naxal leader Papa Rao due to snake bite.
Pamphlets were found strewn at roads in Sukma district on Tuesday.
Addressing the public, Maoists said that police have been making tall
claims of large number of rebels surrendered in past three months and
have got hold of 26 common men from weekly market at Pollampalli market
to label them as hardcore Maoists before public.
“Many other fake encounters were also propagated by police claiming
to have killed a rebel with reward of Rs 8 lakh on his head, who was
actually a farmer at Adlempalli. Moreover, there’s no truth in security
forces’ claim on death of Papa Rao or that our party was going weak,”
reads the note.
It further mentions that those fighting strongly against the system
and atrocities of police were being forced to weaken by police through
fake surrenders. Maoists further allege that forces, on the pretext of
search operations, visit villages and have raped and assaulted women and
girls in the past. Mentioning the recent encounter – on December 8 at
forests of Tetemadgu, Maoists said that the police had also made false
claims of killing 20 rebels who were transported on tractors to remote
villages for cremation. Soon after finding pamphlets from several parts
in Sukma district, police and security forces have become more vigilant
and have launched combing operations in the region.
Odisha human rights body seeks report on alleged police excesses on tribals
The Odisha Human Rights Commission (OHRC) has asked the State
government to explain the alleged police excess and neglecting of a
Dongria Kandhs, a particularly vulnerable tribal group residing in
Niyamgiri Hill Range in Kalahandi and Rayagada districts.
Police torture
They added: “Other frontline leader of NSS, Drika Kadraka, had
committed suicide after succumbing to police torture. The suicide note
found near the body says he was ending his life due to torture of
Muniguda police which was threatening to implicate in false naxalite
case.” The NSS said no action had so far not been taken against the
accused police offers. Mr. Kulusika also alleged: “Dongria Kandhas in
Niyamgiri are deprived of minimum welfare programmes such as education,
drinking water, health services and electricity. It is violation of
human rights if police torture us.” NSS members demanded thorough probe
into alleged police excess in Niyamgiri hill range.
Bijapur villagers recount widespread assaults by men in uniform
While filing an FIR against security personnel for rape this month,
Chhattisgarh police invoked for the first time in the state a clause
that became law two years ago after nationwide outrage over a fatal gang
rape in the capital forced politicians to act. Large-scale violence and
looting was reported between October 20 and 24, when 200 men in
uniforms undertook an anti-Maoist military operation in the villages of
Pegdapalli, Chinnagellur, Peddagellur, Burgicheru, and Gundam in Bijapur
district. The villages where the crimes have been reported lie 18 to 25
kilometres from the nearest road and a CRPF camp, a veritable outpost
of the Indian state in a region racked by a decade-long conflict which
has claimed nearly 8,000 lives.
The fear of violence and death stalks combatants and civilians alike.
It’s a sparsely populated area – with far-flung hamlets of mud, tiled
and thatched homes sprinkled amid tracts of jungle, freshly harvested
paddy fields, streams and low mountains – that the state describes as
Maoist-held territory it is currently trying to militarily reclaim.
Since no investigator or official has visited the villages so far, the
scale of the violence remains unknown. HT is reporting a partial account
of incidents based on some of the interviews it conducted in three
villages last week, assisted by a female Gondi translator. In
Peddagellur village, the aunt of a teen who reported being gang-raped
said, “Four of us were grazing our cows that morning when the force (a
generic term used by villagers to refer to police as well as
paramilitary personnel) arrived and started chasing us. There must have
been 15-20 men.”
Holding her head in her hands, she said, “They beat us severely, with
sticks and rifles. I was hit on my buttocks, thighs and legs. Our cows
were running. We fled scared, but they had surrounded her (the teen).
Later that day, Sodi Lakshmi and I found her. She was badly bruised and
swollen. Both of us brought her back home. I applied jungle medicine to
her body.” Fact-finding reports from three different groups of
activists, Adivasi Congressmen including the area’s legislators, and
Sarva Adivasi Samaj, an Adivasi civil society group who visited the area
in November contain additional accounts of violence. Over 15 women
reported to the teams that their lower clothing was lifted, and they
were threatened with sexual violence, including chilli being pushed into
their private parts.
Others said they were stripped and chased. Victims reported being
chased out of their homes, occupied by security forces. In some
instances, security men allegedly took off their clothes and told the
women they could come and sleep inside with them. Women said even those
holding infants were beaten and their hair pulled. Some children were
also beaten and their clothes removed. When women tried to intervene,
they were also beaten, they told the teams. Several villagers said the
personnel looted money ranging between Rs 500 and Rs 27,000 from their
homes. They also reported destruction of possessions like clothes,
bicycles and utensils, as well as looting of chickens and essentials
like rice, pulses and cooking oil, which the security men ate during the
days they stayed in the villages.
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