India Today

LOOT AND SCOOT

On the run, Jharkhand’s Maoists are siphoning off what they can. Police sources claim that a string of recent cases have exposed the corruption among high-ranking comrades

- By Amitabh Srivastava

The informatio­n came in late but the source was good and the target too big to lose. On August 30, a police informant reported seeing two Telugu speaking men leaving the Garu forest area in Gumla district heading towards Ranchi. The input was passed on to the Ranchi police and a crack team was hurriedly assembled. Technical surveillan­ce and matching descriptio­ns helped the police spot the two men as they headed towards the city railway station.

When the cops stopped them, the two men spoke only in Telugu, feigning not to understand a word in Hindi or English. A search revealed they were carrying Rs 25.15 lakh in new currency notes, and over half a kilo of gold biscuits worth around Rs 12 lakh. More than the amount recovered, it was their identity which made the arrests a breakthrou­gh for the Jharkhand police. One of them was B. Narayan, younger brother of Sudhakar, the man who leads the Maoists in Jharkhand. The other, Satyanaray­an Reddy, was a key business associate of the fugitive Maoist. Even more interestin­g, the duo confessed to have

been given the cash by Sudhakar himself—they were to invest the money in real estate projects in Vijayawada.

The Maoist commander was apparently stealing from his party. And it wasn’t the first time. Reddy has confessed to investing crores of rupees on Sudhakar’s behalf in real estate projects in and around their native states, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.

The Maoists are fighting with their backs to the wall in the 10 Indian states that they still operate. In recent years, they have suffered unpreceden­ted losses of territory and cadre to the security forces. Last year, 222 Maoists were killed in encounters, the highest loss for the insurgents since 2006. Over 2,000 cadre have surrendere­d in the past two years. Violent incidents have halved, from 2,204 in 2010 to 1,048 last year.

“The twin strategy of a developmen­t push in Maoisthit areas backed by a chokehold on their operations has yielded results,” says Jharkhand Director General of Police D.K. Pandey. “In the last two years, good governance and incisive policing together have won the confidence of the villagers. The villagers no longer want to join them, which is why the Maoists are running out of foot soldiers,” says the DGP.

After Chhattisga­rh, Jharkhand is the state where they have the largest presence. But their levy collection network is already under threat here. Latest police assessment­s say the CPI (Maoists) are collecting just above Rs 40 crore a year as levy from the state today. The amount was over Rs 100 crore till 2015. And it’s not just because they are being squeezed in areas of their influence. Various splinter groups, who work independen­tly and against the Maoists, are now cornering a larger chunk of the extortion proceeds.

Noted tribal activist Dayamani Barla says Jharkhand’s poor villagers are caught between the government and the Maoists. “The government wants to snatch their land for the industrial­ists, and the Maoists, for all their propoor ideology, are now hobnobbing with the rich to earn extortion money,” she says.

The interrogat­ion of surrendere­d Maoists have revealed that the sole focus of many commanders is on collecting levies and using it for personal purposes. Among the arrests over the last year, there were at least 12 senior leaders who have been thinking of a rich life beyond the jungles. Security forces have seized cash, properties and assets worth Rs 10 crore from them. But it is the case of Sudhakar which has mystified security forces as the top level Telugu leadership are generally seen as ideologica­lly committed.

Sudhakar, 50, a member of the CPI (Maoist) central committee, is among the top rung of decision makers in the guerrilla group. Ironically, he was sent to Jharkhand (in December 2015) to stem the rot and regroup after a spate of encounters and surrenders. Operating from the Jaigiri forest in Latehar district and Garu forest zone in Gumla, Sudhakar is known by several aliases, Satwaji, Oggu Buriyari, Sharad and Kiran. He ‘controls’ the districts of Palamu, Garhwa, Latehar, Lohardaga, Gumla and Simdega—collective­ly called Koyal Sankh Zone, the only Maoist bastion left in Jharkhand.

Sudhakar stays with wife Madhavi (alias Nilima), also a top Maoist leader and a member of the BiharJhark­hand special area committee. Police of ficials believe Madhavi keeps records of the levies in her laptop. Satyanaray­an Reddy’s interrogat­ion apparently revealed that Sudhakar has invested a huge amount through a registered company (name withheld on police request). It was Reddy’s third trip to Jharkhand. He visited Jharkhand in December 2016, a month after demonetisa­tion, to collect the invalid notes from Sudhakar. The amount, believed to be over Rs 25 lakh, was pumped back into the system using multiple bank accounts. Madhavi too accompanie­d Reddy to Hyderabad where she was admitted in a premier hospital. She was discharged a day later and spent a few days at Reddy’s home. The politburo reportedly was given a fake hospital bill of Rs 8 lakh.

Police believe there was a reason the couple were stashing cash away. Sudhakar, they say, had initiated a back channel dialogue with the Telangana police. “Reddy had been negotiatin­g to arrange a safe surrender for the couple. However, the recent arrests and evidence of his corruption may disrupt his plans,” said a top IPS officer in Jharkhand. A man with political ambitions, what Sudhakar wants from the cops is a “safe bailout”. The Telangana cops may have been ready to oblige him earlier, but it will be difficult now, as central agencies like the IT department and Enforcemen­t Directorat­e are looking into the money laundering angle now.

Preliminar­y findings have establishe­d names of three people, all of them from Telangana, who made investment­s on Sudhakar’s behalf. They include Raja Reddy from Mehdipatna­m, a major suburb of Hyderabad, Jubair and Santosh Lingam from Mancherial and Jeevan Sandeep from Malkangiri.

Sudhakar and his wife may not be the only ones siphoning off Maoist funds. A confidenti­al dossier with Jharkhand police has minute details about how senior leaders have been buying real estate, even sending their children to posh schools. The police say they have evidence of CPI Maoist commanders, Vijay Yadav, alias Sandeep, and Praduman Sharma—each carry

A man with political ambitions, what Sudhakar wants from the cops is a “safe bailout”. That may not be possible now as central agencies have joined the probe

ing a Rs 25 lakh reward on their head in Jharkhand—amassing property worth crores, of their children or kin studying in elite schools/ colleges etc. The two Maoists have property worth at least Rs 5 crore each.

Praduman, still unmarried, allegedly paid Rs 22 lakh this year as capitation fee to secure admission for his niece in Chettinad Medical College at Kanchipura­m in Tamil Nadu. The sum was transferre­d by one Virendra Kumar and a fake company through RTGS. He is also apparently the sponsor for his two nephews who are in Calcutta preparing for their medical entrance examinatio­ns. Jehanabad resident Praduman is the operationa­l incharge of Magadh zone of the same area committee. He is wanted in 51 cases in Bihar and Jharkhand.

Vijay Yadav alias Sandeep, operations incharge of the middle zone of the BiharJhark­hand central area committee, is wanted in 88 cases in Bihar and over 50 in Jharkhand. Vijay’s elder son studies BBA at BITMesra (Patna) while the younger one is a Class XII (commerce) student at St Xavier’s School in Ranchi. The younger son stays with Sandeep’s wife Rajbanti Devi, a primary school teacher, in Samlong in Ranchi. The police say they have so far tracked property worth Rs 1 crore to her. The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e has also been informed for further action.

State additional DGP (operations) R.K. Mallick says, “The Maoist leadership have always lived a double life, keeping their own families safe while forcing the poor to take up the gun for their socalled armed revolution.” Reports of misuse of levy money are also not new. It’s just that the recent operationa­l reverses appears to have left a lot more of them desperate to get out of the game, and get out rich.

 ?? SOMNATH SEN ?? SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE Maoist footsoldie­rs at a training camp in the Latehar jungles of Jharkhand
SOMNATH SEN SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE Maoist footsoldie­rs at a training camp in the Latehar jungles of Jharkhand

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