Sanjha Morcha

Tracking what leaders say after Maoist attacks

Maoist violence has been the biggest killer of India’s security forces, according to casualty figures from the last 10 years. After each attack, there is a standard response from leaders at the Centre and states, irrespective of which party is in power. Soon after Maoists killed 25 CRPF jawans in Chhattisgarh’s Sukma on Monday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi termed it a “cowardly and deplorable” act. Union home minister Rajnath Singh tweeted that he was “extremely pained” to hear about the deaths. After every attack, there is condemnation, condolences are conveyed, and strongest action is promised. Here’s a history of statements made by politicians over more than a decade of Maoist attacks on the police, central armed police forces and civilians.

CRPF says bodies of slain jawans were not mutilated by Maoists

AFTERMATH Government sends NIA chief Sharad Kumar to Sukma, triggering speculation of agency taking over investigation

NEW DELHI: A two-member team of home ministry’s senior security advisor K Vijay Kumar and acting CRPF chief Sudeep Lakhtakia told the government on Thursday that there was no evidence that the bodies of the CRPF personnel killed in a Maoist attack in Chhattisgarh on Monday were mutilated.

PTI FILEA guard of honour for martyred CRPF personnel at Patna airport on Tuesday.

The government also dispatched National Investigation Agency (NIA) chief Sharad Kumar to Sukma — where an ambush by the militants claimed the lives of 25 troopers — possibly paving way for an investigation to be handed over to the National Investigation Agency.

“I can, with all authority at my command, say that none of the dead bodies of the CRPF personnel were found to mutilated. We checked with the doctors also who conducted postmortem of the dead bodies,” said Sudeep Lakhtakia after meeting Union home secretary Rajiv Mehrishi to give his preliminary report on the incident.

Maoists, too, have condemned the media reports alleging mutilation of the bodies. “We have not mutilated any body and the latest attack was in continuity of the killing of 11 CRPF jawans in Sukma’s Bhejji area,” said Vikalp, spokesperson of CPI (M) Dandakaranya Special Zonal Committee of CPI (Maoist) in an audio clip purportedly released by the party. A senior home ministry official said it is likely that the NIA will be pressed into service to probe the attack.

“Earlier too we have given probes into Maoist attacks to the NIA. It can be done again for speedy identification of the perpetrators of the attack in order to bring them to justice,” said the official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The home ministry will receive the final report on the Sukma attack from the CRPF within a week’s time.

K Vijay Kumar, who along with Sudeep Lakhtakia returned to the national capital on Thursday morning after spending two days at ground-zero, said the CRPF personnel deployed there were showing signs of fatigue.

“Initial examination suggests that the CRPF personnel retaliated the attack in equal amount. It was not a one-sided exchange of fire but most of the personnel have been deployed there for more than three years. The deployment in Sukma is highly stressful, which ultimately leads to lack of motivation and possibility of non-adherence to standard-operating-procedure. But again, this is my preliminary opinion,” said K Vijay Kumar.

According to government figures, 2017 has seen 32 Maoists killed while the CRPF has lost 38 personnel in Chhattisgarh.

The central government has been trying to boost the morale of the forces by providing them necessary infrastructure and logistics for anti-Maoist operations, Kumar and Lakhtakia said. Around 45,000 central paramilitary personnel and 20,000 state policemen have been deployed in Bastar region, which saw the maximum Maoist violence in Chhattisgarh.