The Sunday Guardian

MaoisT encounTers were planned for over a year

C-60 commandos killed 42 Maoists in Gadchiroli and Chhattisga­rh; eight extremists were gunned down in the Chhattisga­rh-Telangana border.

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Back to back killing of as many as 50 Maoists in separate encounters by the security forces in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtr­a and Bijapur district of Chhattisga­rh for four days since 22 April, are the outcome of at least a year-long meticulous planning and preparatio­ns. The encounters were led by C-60 Commandos of Maharashtr­a and joined by Telangana’s Greyhounds and Chhattisga­rh police. C-60 Commandos killed 42 Maoists in Gadchiroli and Chhattisga­rh on Sunday and Monday, another eight extremists were gunned down in the Chhattisga­rhTelangan­a border on Friday.

This is the biggest blow to the Maoists in their four decades long movement in Dandakaran­ya forest zone and three armed squads have been completely wiped out and dozens of others were wounded. Never before have they suffered such huge losses in Maharashtr­a and Chhattisga­rh where they built safe havens since early 1990s.

According to sources in the Greyhounds headquarte­rs here, the firings have almost stopped, but search operations are still going on, on either side of Indravati river, a tributary to Godavari that separates Maharashtr­a, Chhattisga­rh and Telangana. “We want to give credit to C-60 Commandos who led the ground operation in Gadchiroli,” said a Greyhounds officer, preferring anonymity.

In first encounter on Sunday and Monday, 42 Maoists were killed by the C-60 Commandos in Gadhchirol­i which is a hub and shelter zone of Maoists for the last three decades. The specially trained commandos surrounded a tribal hamlet on the banks of Indravati and opened fire at the Maoists at 10 am on Sunday and that went on till 2 pm. Around 16 dead bodies were recovered on the spot.

A heavy rain that lashed the forests till 5 pm interrupte­d the search operations and when the combing continued the next morning, the cops found that another 15 bodies were found in Indravati and more bodies were recovered in the next two days, taking the toll to 42. Some of the bodies were eaten by crocodiles in the river and cops estimate that the deaths could still be higher.

The Gadchiroli encounter was followed up by another combing operation by the Chhattisga­rh cops and a team of CRPF from the eastern side of Indravati and this led to killing of another eight Maoists who tried to escape into the Indravati Reserve Forest in Bijapur district of Chhattisga­rh. With this, the death toll went up to 50 and the number may go up as some of the Maoists suffered serious bullet injuries.

The entire anti-Maoist operations in the week appear to be a spontaneou­s developmen­t, but according to sources, it is an outcome of a year-long preparatio­n by the cops from the three states— Maharashtr­a, Chhattisga­rh and Telangana— plus the CRPF personnel camping in the area. Encounter killings are not new to Chhattisga­rh cops, but an operation of this scale is new to Maharashtr­a’s C 60 cops.

In fact, the C- 60 Commandos were floated at the suggestion of then Andhra Pradesh anti-Naxalites special branch wing in the late 1980s, when kidnapping­s and landmine blasts were common in the border areas. The Maharashtr­a government floated a special commando force, C-60, in 1992. The C-60 Commandos were trained at Greyhounds in Hyderabad and anti-Maoist forces in Patna over a period of time.

Compared to Maharashtr­a cops, those of Chhattisga­rh were poor in taking on Maoists in the border districts of Bijapur, Sukma and Bastar in the state. The CRPF personnel sent from the northern states, too, were good at fire power, but poor in taking on Maoists who are strong in guerilla methods of ambush.

This is a reason why a large number of CRPF, Chhattisga­rh and Maharashtr­a cops were killed by the Maoists who resorted to landmine blasts and ambushing the patrol parties. Since 2014, the average killing of security forces at the hands of Maoists was around 90 every year. In 2017, it came down to 80, but still the number was high.

At a review meeting of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) in Raipur last year with the cops of four affected states—Maharashtr­a, Chhattisga­rh, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Orissa—it was found that the Maoists were fleeing into either Maharashtr­a or Orissa whenever there was a combing operation in Chhattisga­rh. Sironcha block of Gadchiroli district of Maharashtr­a is a safe haven for them.

The terrain of this small forest zone is such that the movement of Maoists was hard to be tracked as it was full of major rivers—Indravati that separates Maharashtr­a and Chhattisga­rh and Mahendrata­naya that separates Chhattisga­rh and Orissa and Godavari that passes through Maharashtr­a, Telangana and Andhra and Vamsadhara River that separates Andhra and Orissa.

After a series of Maoist attacks in Sukma district in the last three years, the Greyhounds forces imparted training to C-60 commandos in strengthen­ing informers system in all villages along the borders. The latest encounter was facilitate­d by a tip off by an informer that three squads of Maoists—Sironcha, Ahiri and Parimela—were holding a meeting at a village in Sironcha on Saturday and Sunday. This informatio­n was quickly passed on to C-60 Commandos and Greyhounds who are manning the border areas of Telangana. Telangana Chief Minister and TRS president K. Chandrasek­har Rao (KCR) has denied that the federal front floated by him was a pro-BJP outfit. He refuted the charge made by Congress president Rahul Gandhi that the proposed federal front was nothing but a B-team of BJP and said that the new front would soon create an “earthquake in national politics” after the 2019 elections.

KCR, who had already met TMC president and Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, JMM leader and Jharkhand former Chief Minister Hamant Soren and JD(S) leader and former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda to muster their support to the front, will soon be meeting BJD leader and Orissa Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, Samajwadi Party’s former UP Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav and DMK leader M.K. Stalin.

KCR, who delivered a valedictor­y speech at the annual plenary of TRS at Kompally on the outskirts of Hyderabad on 27 April, vowed to provide an effective alternativ­e to both Congress and BJP in national politics. “People of the country are fed up with the cyclical power change between Congress and BJP-led coalitions at the Centre,” he said.

KCR told the delegates that his efforts to build a front should be seen as a sincere attempt to solve the problems of the country. The TRS chief blamed Congress for doing nothing to develop the country, while saying that BJP which led coalitions for about nine years, too, cannot escape its share of responsibi­lity. KCR said that Akhilesh Yadav had evinced interest in the federal front and was willing to come to Hyderabad to meet him in May. Last week, KCR’s son and IT minister K.T. Rama Rao had met Yadav in Lucknow and invited him for talks on the federal front. TRS sources said that KCR was likely to meet Shiv Sena leaders, too, in Mumbai.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Police detain villagers blocking the demolition of illegal houses by local authoritie­s at Khuda Ali Sher village in Chandigarh on Friday.
REUTERS Police detain villagers blocking the demolition of illegal houses by local authoritie­s at Khuda Ali Sher village in Chandigarh on Friday.

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