Monday, September 27, 2010

After Maoists set 48-hr deadline, C'garh Home minister hints govt in talks with the rebels-27/09/2010

27/09/2010

After Maoists set 48-hr deadline, C'garh Home minister hints govt in talks with the rebels

(BHAI MERE! NIRDOSHON KO MARR KER AAPLOG KYA KAROGE? YEH KISI BHI SAMASYA KA SAMADHAN NAHIN HAI.INKE PARIWAR KE LOGON KE SUNOO AUR UNKE BARRE MEIN SOCCHO,INN LOGON NE TUMHARA KYA BIGAADA HAI???)! UNHEIN CHOODD DO AUR SARKAR SE SSEEDHI BATCHEET KARO??? PATRAKARON SE YA SOCIAL ACTIVISTS SE BAATCHEET KER KE AAPNI BATEIN RAKHEIN.HUR SAMASYAON KA SAMADHAN HO SAKTA HAI,AAPHAARAN YA HATYA KER BLACKMAIL KERNE YA DAWAAB BANANE SE BEHTAAR HAI SHAANTIPURN TAREEKE SE AAPNI BAAT PAHUNCHAYEIN,ABHI VAHAN ELECTION KA WAQT HAI AAPNI BATEIN LOKTAANTRIK TAREEKE SE BHI KAH SAKTE HEIN,KISSI KE GALAT NEEYAT AUR SUJHAV MANKER GALAT TAREEKA NA MANEIN AUR HEENSA KE BAJAI SHAANTI SE BAATCHEET KAREIN. NUJHE POORA YAKEEN HAI,ISSS BAR AAP LOGON KI BATEIN SUNIYEEE JAYEEGI...RAJYA AUR KENDRA SARKAR DWARA!!ITS MY APEAL TO ALL OF THEM WHO ARE CHOOSEN VIOLENT MEANS...PLZ LEAVE IT!!!,,,VIBHA)



Raipur: Amid continuing uncertainty over the fate of five policemen and a woman abducted by Maoists in Bastar, Chhattisgarh Home Minister Nankiram Kanwar on Monday said “some talks were on with the help of the Andhra Pradesh government and others” to secure the release of security personnel who are in custody of Naxals since September 19.

"Let us hope for some good results," he told newsmen at Ambikapur in Sarguja district where ruling party leaders are busy campaigning for an Assembly by-election in Bhatgaon constituency which goes to polls on October 1. "We are considering all aspects," Kanwar said without elaborating further.

Senior civil and police officials are tight-lipped over the Home minister's hint on the said talks. Besides, there is no independent confirmation so far whether feelers had already established contact with abductors, who have set a 48-hour deadline for accepting their demands.

Meanwhile Naxal ideologue, revolutionary writer and poet Varavara Rao has appealed to the Maoists to release the abducted policemen on humanitarian grounds saying all of them belonged to very poor families. The Opposition Congress demanded an all-party meeting to discuss the issue saying it was a 'sensitive matter' which has to be dealt with carefully.

Seven policemen had gone missing in the afternoon of September 19 between Bhopalpattanam and Badrakali ? a hyper sensitive area in the Naxal-affected Bijapur district. Later, bodies of two constables and a special police officer (SPO) were found in the forests of Depla few days later while there were no clues about the other missing policemen.

After a week-long silence, Maoists dropped handwritten leaflets near Cherpalli village at Bhopalpattanam late Sunday evening, setting a 48-hour deadline for accepting their demands, including stopping Operation Green Hunt, releasing villagers arrested by the police, a judicial probe into fake encounters and starting peace talks.

Assistant sub-inspector Sukhram Bhagat, constables B Toppo, Narendra Bhosle and Subhash Ratre were believed to be in the custody of the rebels. It is now suspected that another constable Dularam Sodi ? who went missing on September 13 while on his way for treatment ? and a woman Kusum Jyoti, a relative of a slain SPO, were also in Naxal captivity.

Bijapur district superintendent of police RN Das said the police was doing its best to track down the Maoists, who are said to be shifting their hostages from one place to another in the dense forests on the state's border with neighbouring Andhra Pradesh. Search operations in the forests have been stepped up for rescuing the abducted policemen.

Meanwhile, family members of all abducted policemen have appealed to the Maoists to release them, assuring them that all of them would quit the police force when released. Family members and children of few abducted policemen have travelled all the way from Jashpur district in North Chhattisgarh to district headquarters at Bijapur, where they are camping for the last one week.

Kanwar also said he has directed senior police officers to verify the letter of demand received from Naxals since it reached the government through the local on media on Sunday.

"They have set a deadline of 48 hours for the state government to comply with their demands," the minister said. "The deadline given is not sufficient, as the decision of calling back paramilitary forces from Naxal areas and releasing of Naxals from jails cannot be taken in hurry," Kanwar said, adding the government was thinking over the demands.

The deadline ends tomorrow night. He said the state government never blocked negotiations with Naxals but talks can never be held until they stop violence.

Source: The Indian Express

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