An officer and a gentleman: Cop saves Maoist he shot
The officer first shot at him and then saved his life. Hit by a bullet, Somaru, a Maoist commander, owes his life to an IPS officer who had engaged him in a fierce gun battle last week in the dense forests of Chhattisgarh’s Bastar.
“Saheb saved my life,” says Somaru, referring to Dantewada’s additional superintendent of police Abhishek Pallav, as he recovers at a hospital.
Somara, who has a bounty of ₹1 lakh, was hit in the abdomen by a bullet on March 18 during the seven-hour long encounter that left five Maoists and two policemen dead.
As he lay writhing in pain and bleeding profusely, life was rapidly ebbing when Pallav, a doctorturned-policeman, came to the rescue.
“Time was the key: he was losing blood profusely. Being a trained doctor I could not have looked the other way,” Pallav said.
Before joining the IPS in 2013, Pallav from Begusarai in Bihar was a practicising doctor, having done his MD from AIIIMS in 2009. Though a bit rusty, he had not forgotten his skills. Even as the gun battle raged, he bandaged the wounded Somaru, gave him painkiller injections and then sent him off to the nearest hospital in an ambulance.
“If he had bled for a few more minutes, he would have been dead,” says Pallav.
But sending Somaru to the hospital was easier said than done. Bullets were flying and a policeman already lay dead, making the security personnel bay for blood. They wanted Somaru dead.
“Though a fugitive, he is an Indian citizen. He deserved treatment,” says Pallav. He reasoned with his men and they finally relented to let Somaru be taken to the hospital.
Pallav’s act has earned him fulsome praise from his higher-ups — and yielded valuable intelligence on the Maoists.
“What the officer has done is a brilliant example of how rules of engagement should be followed,” said DM Awasthi, the special director general of Chhattisgarh police. Often accused of excesses during their anti-Maoist operations, Pallav’s humanitarian act could be a potential PR masterstroke. Saving Somaru was also a good idea since he is a treasure trove of information on the Maoists. Police say a grateful Somaru is now singing like a canary and divulging secrets.
It was a tip-off that had led the police to the remote village of Chirmur across the river Malangir on that day. As the team approached, the Maoists opened fire and the police retaliated. More than 2,700 rounds were fired with Pallav firing no less than 23 rounds. The battle over, Somaru is receiving treatment under judicial custody.
Pallav went to see him at the hospital the other day. Somaru was all smiles, signalling that the officer’s heroism had left no room for enmity between the two.