‘Maoist rebels used villagers as shields’

‘Maoist rebels used villagers as shields’

April 26, 2017
Wounded Indian security personnel are being treated in an army helicopter as they are airlifted to a hospital following an attack by Maoist rebels in Sukma district of Chhattisgargh state on Monday. — AFP
Wounded Indian security personnel are being treated in an army helicopter as they are airlifted to a hospital following an attack by Maoist rebels in Sukma district of Chhattisgargh state on Monday. — AFP

[caption id="attachment_140944" align="alignleft" width="225"]Wounded Indian security personnel are being treated in an army helicopter as they are airlifted to a hospital following an attack by Maoist rebels in Sukma district of Chhattisgargh state on Monday. — AFP Wounded Indian security personnel are being treated in an army helicopter as they are airlifted to a hospital following an attack by Maoist rebels in Sukma district of Chhattisgargh state on Monday. — AFP[/caption]

RAIPUR, India — Maoist rebels who killed 26 paramilitary troops in an ambush in central India used local villagers as human shields, a survivor said on Tuesday.

Sher Mohammed, a paramilitary soldier injured in Monday’s attack in Sukma district of Chhattisgarh state, said around 300 fighters attacked the troops as they provided security for the construction of a new road opposed by the Maoists.

“The Naxalites (Maoists) first sent villagers to track our location. Then we saw 100-150 villagers approaching us. They were not armed. How could we fire at them?” said Mohammed, who was part of the 99-member commando team.

“There must have been 300 Naxalites, all in black uniform. They started firing indiscriminately at us. They had rocket launchers, AK-47s,” he said from his hospital bed.

India’s Home Minister Rajnath Singh called the attack an “act of desperation” by the Maoists, who have long dominated thousands of square miles of central and eastern India.

However conflict expert Ajit Kumar Singh said the attack, which came just a month after a deadly ambush in the same location, was the result of a military intelligence failure.

“How come the movement of some 300 heavily armed people in a densely forested area went unnoticed? What are your intelligence operatives doing?” said Singh, a research fellow with the Delhi-based Institute of Conflict Management.

“Everyone knows there is danger all the time but the specific input was missing.”

India’s Maoists claim to be fighting for the land rights of marginalized tribal communities.

Their insurgency has claimed around 10,000 lives since it started in the 1960s, and is considered India’s most serious internal security threat.

While operating from their jungle bases, the Maoists often descend on villages to demand protection money and recruit young men and women to their ranks.

They also oppose efforts to build new roads and infrastructure in remote areas because it undermines their long-running campaign against India’s security forces.

Since his election in 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been seeking to stem the insurgency by earmarking development funds for revolt-hit areas and improving policing.

Singh said the movement had been weakened considerably by the government’s initiatives.

“They have been feeling cornered,” he said.

“When any militant outfit is in a desperate situation, they try to stage spectacular attacks to gain back prominence. And this is exactly what the Maoists have done this time.” — AFP


April 26, 2017
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