Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

MAN WHO MAKES ROADS IN RED REBEL ZONE

- Ritesh Mishra letters@hindustant­imes.com n

Fortysix-year-old Pramod Rathore is perhaps a contractor like no other in the country. On his shoulder rests the Chhattisga­rh government’s ambitious plans of bringing developmen­t to the Maoist heartland by building roads — a project that is opposed by insurgents and has caused bloodshed

DORNAPAL (SUKMA): He is perhaps a contractor like no other in the country. On his shoulder rests the Chhattisga­rh government’s ambitious plans of bringing developmen­t to the Maoist heartland by building roads — a project that is opposed by insurgents and has caused bloodshed.

It is the army of workers of Pramod Rathore, the 46-year-old private contractor, who is building both the Injiram-Bheji and Dornapal-Jagargonda roads across south Sukma, which once completed is expected to usher in modern amenities to the doorstep of tribals and choke the Maoists of local support.

But building the roads is fraught with danger and Rathore moves with guntoting bodyguards. The Maoists are hell-bent on not letting the roads get built and the two stretches have been the site of some 45 fierce encounters resulting in 45 deaths so far.

The incomplete Dornapal-Jagardonda road is where the Maoists struck last month, ambushing a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) patrol team and killing 25 soldiers. They had struck at the InjiramBhe­ji road in March, killing 12 security personnel.

But Rathore is undeterred and has chosen to venture where others fear to tread. First the public works department of the Chhattisga­rh government gave out tenders for the two roads but one by one, all the private contractor­s deserted the project.

Then the state Police Housing Corporatio­n stepped in and issued fresh tenders for constructi­on of the roads, but once again the other contractor­s left, leaving Rathore with the the onerous responsibi­lity.

It has come at a cost and Rathore is a marked man, forced to move around stealthily, encircled by bodyguards.

“No one knows about my movements,” the contractor, 5 feet 10 inches tall and sporting a heavy gold chain round his neck, said. He also always carries a rifle and a pistol. “The rifle is to fight till the last breath and the pistol to shoot myself in case I am caught by Maoists,” he explained.

His reputation as a member of the now-disbanded Salwa Judum vigilante group that fought Maoists with state patronage is, however, an advantage.

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