Intelligence says Maoists sought maximum damage

May 28, 2013
maoNew Delhi: May 28: Intelligence inputs here suggest that Maoists’ politburo, the group’s highest decision-making body, had entrusted Left ideologue Katakam Sudarshan with the task of carrying out Saturday’s attack in Chhattisgarh to inflict the maximum damage on their target.

The plan to ambush a convoy of Congress leaders was conceived by the seven-member politburo.

Sudarshan is also a politburo member. The 60-year-old from Andhra Pradesh operates under the assumed name of Anand. He enjoys the support of Maoists in Andhra Pradesh, who reportedly rejoiced after the killings.

A meeting is suspected to have taken place sometime in February or March in the Abujmarh area of Chhattisgarh where he was asked to plan the attack during the Maoists’ tactical counter-offensive campaign, which stretches every year from March-end to mid-June, said intelligence sources. During these months, local tribals, used as “Jan Militia,” are unemployed due to lack agricultural work.

The CPI (Maoist) had raised the “Jan Militia,” a special battalion, which is a term used to describe a part-time member of the Maoist group in charge of a village-level militia.

Left-wing groups

The group of 100-150 armed cadres who carried out the attack had Darbha divisional committee head Surender among its immediate instructors as Sudarshan does not participate in combats, said government officers handling left-wing groups.

The other members of the politburo are Ganpati Nambala Keshav Rao alias Gaganna, Mallojula Venugopal alias Vivek alias Bhupati, Mishir Besra alias Bhaskar, Kishan Da alias Prashant Boss alias Nirbhay and Malla Raji Reddy alias Sathenna.

Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) officials, however, say the details of the perpetrators will emerge once the National Investigation Agency (NIA), which landed in Chhattisgarh on Monday, begins its probe.

Twenty-seven people, including Congress leaders Mahendra Karma, Pradesh Congress Committee chief Nand Kumar Patel, his son, and ex-MLA Uday Mudliyar were killed when their vehicles drove over mines, triggering blasts, in the Darbha area of Bastar district on Saturday. The wounded included former Union minister V C Shukla, who is undergoing treatment in Gurgaon.

The MHA and the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), the paramilitary force assisting the state in anti-Maoist operations, are still trying to ascertain why only Congress leaders were targeted.

Pradesh Congress Committee chief Nand Kumar Patel had never taken a hawkish stand against them.

Karma was a sworn enemy of the Maoists. He had raised “Salwa Judum,” a group of Maoist renegades the state was using to counter them.

After the MHA issued a notification, an NIA team led by Inspector General of Police Sanjiv Kumar Singh flew down to Raipur and went to Darbha to take over the investigation into the case from local police. The Darbha police had registered a case under various sections of the IPC, Arms Act, Explosive Act and Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act over the attack.

A six-member delegation led by the home secretary and accompanied by the director-general of the Intelligence Bureau will go to Chhattisgarh on Tuesday to review the anti-Maoist strategy. The Centre has also decided to send another 2,000 paramilitary personnel drawn from the CRPF and the Border Security Force to augment the 32,000 already present in the state to tackle the Maoists.

Assembly elections are due in Chhattisgarh this year-end. Hence, Chhattisgarh, ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party, has demanded more Central forces to combat the Maoist threat in the state.

The MHA on Monday issued an advisory to Andhra , Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, MP, Maharashtra, Odisha, UP and WB, asking them to check indiscriminate killings.

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News Network
June 17,2020

New Delhi, Jun 17: Police Surender Jeet Kaur, Assistant Commissioner of Delhi Police Surender Jeet Kaur, has held herself responsible for the death of her husband Charan Jeet Singh, who succumbed to Covid at a hospital in Delhi.

“My husband didn’t step out of the house when the lockdown started, but I went out daily because of my job… I will never be able to forgive myself,” Kaur on Tuesday, a day after losing her husband.

54-year-old Singh, a resident of Lajpat Nagar and a businessman, is survived by his wife and their 26-year-old son who lives in Canada.

Kaur, 57, ACP (Crimes Against Women) in the South-East district of the Delhi Police, is also ACP (Covid Cell) of the district. On May 20, five days after Kaur tested positive for the virus, her husband Singh tested positive, followed by the ACP’s 80-year-old father on May 24.

All of them had symptoms and while Kaur and Singh were admitted to Indraprastha Apollo hospital, her father was admitted to Max hospital in Saket. On May 26, Kaur returned home after recovering from the virus.

Kaur said, “I last spoke to my husband on May 22 night, when we were both admitted in the hospital in different wards. The doctor called me and said that my husband needs to be put on ventilator support. I had a video call with my husband. He was breathless and told me that his oxygen level was dropping. He showed me the monitor, the doctors in the room, and then said he was having trouble speaking and that he would send me WhatsApp messages.”

A day after he passed away, Kaur recalled the messages that Singh sent her just before being put on ventilator support. “He started sending me details of our finances, accounts… I told him to stop and asked him why he was telling me all this. He said I needed to know… Maybe he feared he wouldn’t come back. I prayed every day, at temples, mosques, churches and gurdwaras for him. I am devastated that he’s gone. We were to move to Canada to live with our son in 2023 after my retirement. We had so many plans.”

Kaur’s brother Maninder Ahluwalia said the hospital tried plasma therapy but Singh didn’t respond to the treatment. “He had diabetes and high BP, but those were always under control. We were hopeful,” he said.

The couple’s son joined on video call from Canada to watch his father’s last journey from the ambulance to the entrance of the crematorium. “My son couldn’t attend his father’s last rites because there are no flights… It’s so unfortunate,” said Kaur.

Friends and family remember Singh as a “jolly, disciplined and brave man”, while Kaur said he was the “perfect partner”. She said, “When I was an SHO-rank officer, I would work for 36 hours straight some days, and he would handle the house and our son who was growing up. I would miss family functions and important occasions but he would always go and make up for my absence. I was able to do this job for decades because of his support.”

On Tuesday afternoon, Singh was cremated in the presence of close family and members of the police fraternity. “The DCP and the Joint CP called me daily to enquire about my husband, other police officers too. I am grateful for their support. They didn’t let me feel alone for a single day,” said Kaur.

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Agencies
January 14,2020

Aligarh, Jan 14: Uttar Pradesh Minister Raghuraj Singh has courted a major controversy after he said that people who raise slogans against Prime Minster Narendra Modi and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath "would be buried alive".

The minister said this on Sunday while addressing a rally in Aligarh to muster support for the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) 2019.

"If you raise slogans against Prime Minister Narendra Modi or Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, I will bury you alive," he threatened.

He was apparently referring to protests held by students of Aligarh Muslim University against the CAA during which they allegedly raised slogans against the Prime Minister and the chief minister.

The minister further said: "These one per cent people are opposing the CAA. They stay in India, eat up our taxes and then raise 'murdabad' slogans against the leaders. This country belongs to people of all faiths, but slogan shouting against the Prime Minister or chief minister is unacceptable."

He also launched an attack on India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. "What was Nehru's caste? He did not have a 'khaandan'," he claimed.

Raghuraj Singh is minister of state in the labour ministry in Uttar Pradesh.

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Sharief
 - 
Wednesday, 15 Jan 2020

All will be burried alive including you.

Oh coward, do not bark with your majority stupids and illeterates.

Face 1 to 1.

 

You will know the result

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Agencies
April 24,2020

New Delhi, Apr 24: The Jamia Coordination Committee (JCC) on Friday accused Delhi Police of framing two of its members - Meeran Haider, Safoora Zargar, along with student leader Umar Khalid, as part of "an imaginary conspiracy behind the recent North East Delhi riots".

While Haider was arrested on April 2, Zargar was taken in custody on April 10 for their alleged involvement in fuelling the riots.

"These arrests by the police have little ground, and the charges seem to have no rhyme or reason. Safoora was even granted bail in the case she was initially arrested in, following which she was arrested and had heavier charges placed against her," the JCC said in a statement.

Meeran, Safoora and Umar have been charged under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), which allows curbing of fundamental rights in order to protect the sovereignty of India. The JCC, however, claimed that in this case, the Act is being used to suppress their voices.

"This Act has been used against many activists working to protect constitutional morality, a list which now includes members of the JCC, a wholly constitutionalist collective of students and alumni," the JCC said, defending its members.

JCC maintained it had no role in Delhi riots, but apprehended that more people will be arrested by the Delhi Police as part of its conspiracy against students and protestors.

"It is almost certain that more protesters will be framed and arrested in the conspiracy invented by the Delhi Police. JCC reiterates that it played no part in the riots, and this fact will be proved before any court of law," it said in a statement.

It also demanded political parties, and university administration take a stand for the two accused JCC members and student leader Umar Khalid.

The JCC came into existence after a violent face-off between Delhi Police and unruly anti-CAA protestors left Jamia Millia Islamia vandalised. It was after this, that a group of students from the Jamia Millia formed it to decide upon the future course of actions in protest against the CAA and the police action.

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