Sunday, July 4, 2010
Maoists vow to avenge leader's death
Kolkata: The outlawed Communist Party of India-Maoist has called for a two-day strike across the country from Wednesday to protest the gunning down of their senior politburo member Cherukuri Rajkumar alias Azad, said top rebel leader Kishenji on Sunday.
Condemning the killing of Azad, at Adilabad in Andhra Pradesh by police on Friday, the leftwing party has decided to call a two-day 'Bharat Bandh', Koteshwar Rao alias Kishenji told IANS from an undisclosed location.
The top rebel leader, however, maintained that food and medicine supplies and emergency services like railways, ambulance and fire services have been exempted from the shutdown.
Kishenji, chief of the CPI-Maoists military wing Peoples' Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA), said Azad, a spokesperson of the party, and his companion were not victims of a gunbattle with police, but were killed after being arrested.
He said: "Azad was arrested from Nagpur along with another Maoist Sukdeb, and taken 150 km to Adilabad where both were shot dead."
According to Kishenji, "Azad was on his way to Dandakaranya to attend the CPI-Maoists' central committee meeting when he was caught by the police."
Kishenji said the top rebel leaders were to attend the party's central committee meeting to discuss developments in the context of Home Minister P. Chidambaram's recent communication to Swami Agnivesh on talks with the Maoists.
Criticising Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Chidambaram and Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister K. Rosaiah, Kishenji said, "It's apparent that the centre does not want talks because it is speaking of dialogue and yet killing our members."
A statement released by CPI-Maoists in Hyderabad said the group would avenge Azad's death. "Azad was murdered brutally by Intelligence Bureau of the Central government and Special Intelligence Bureau (SIB) of Andhra Pradesh with complete knowledge of Union Home Minister P Chidambaram," a statement issued by the CPI (Maoist) said.
All Naxal-affected districts, particularly those in Chhattisgarh and West Bengal, are on high alert after Azad's death. Intelligence agencies have warned that Naxals may target security forces and the railways over the next few days.
Source:ibnlive.in.com
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