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73 killed as Maoists ambush CRPF team

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RAIPUR: Outside the surgical intensive care unit (ICU) on the third floor of Ramakrishna Hospital, a father quietly waits for his son to be battle-fit again and go back to the jungles of Dantewada in south Chhattisgarh.

"What happens in your life is pre-destined. What has to happen will happen. You cannot run away from your duty. A job is a job," says Ram Samose Singh, whose son Ramesh Kumar Singh, a jawan with CRPF's 62 battalion, was critically wounded in the chest when Maoists ambushed their company on Tuesday.

Ram Samose lives in Gahasand village in eastern UP's Gorakhpur district. He also works in a jute mill nearby. Ramesh is the youngest among his four children, including a daughter. He is also the brightest. He wanted to earn a post-graduate degree in geography, the subject he loved. But when was selected to join CRPF, he couldn't refuse. He didn't even complete his BA, he says. Ramesh's older sibling, employed in the Uttar Pradesh PAC, says his brother was also a fine high jumper. He could have achieved much more in life. "But what you become is also conditioned by what your financial condition," he says.

Ram Samose came to know about the morning ambush that left 76 jawans dead watching television around 7pm. "When I saw it was his battalion, I was worried. But I was more concerned about how his mother will react. She knows that he works in high risk areas. And she worries a lot," says the father.

That's why Ram Samose did not bring his wife along to the hospital. Ramesh's mother knows that he is hurt. In fact, she spoke with him on mobile phone a day back. But she doesn't know the extent of his injuries and that he has been seriously injured in the chest area. A doctor treating him says strong medicines have helped him stabilize. But she also says one has to wait and watch how the open wounds react in the next few days. But Singh is happy he is getting good treatment. "I was more relieved than happy when I first saw him at the hospital," he says.
 
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We have the problem in West Bengal also.
I am sure they are getting help financially from outside and inside.
Peoples like Arundhati Roy, Aparna sen , Kabir Suman should be arrested.

They should not be arrested, but they must be hanged.

Yes, Exactly. Our so called intellectuals are one pathetics lot. They scream only when terrorists are killed. Deafening silence when 100s of innocents are killed by terrorists. They need to be deported to Cuba !!

es brother you are right they should be hanged

:disagree: Not only are you espousing the execution of innocent individuals. Your opinions go against the concept of free speech enshrined in the constitution. Total losers.
 
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:disagree: Not only are you espousing the execution of innocent individuals. Your opinions go against the concept of free speech enshrined in the constitution. Total losers.

But brother these guys are supporting terrorism.Brother think about the families of the JAWANS.What a loss for them.
 
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12/04/2010
Air Force fears collateral damage in fighting Maoists
Allahabad: Asserting that it was always ready to face any challenge to the country's internal security, the Air Force on Monday said any decision on use of air power to tackle the Naxals must follow a clear strategy to minimise collateral damage.

At the same time, he said his personal view was that the armed forces were not required to fight the Maoists.

"We have the capability to conduct strikes with utmost precision. However, it must be understood that if a 250 kg bomb is dropped at a spot, its impact will be in a radius of at least 800 metres and that may affect many people who may not themselves be insurgents", Air Chief Marshal P V Naik told reporters here.

"If at all a situation arises where the use of Air Force becomes inevitable, there has to be a clarity on the magnitude of the force we are supposed to use so that the collateral damage is minimum.

"After all, we are dealing with our own people in our own territory", the IAF chief said. Replying to a query, he said, "So far we have not been approached by the Home Ministry for any type of help in combating Naxalites".

To another question, the Air Chief Marshal pointed to an interview to a news channel during which he had said that armed forces were not yet needed to fight Naxals. "I personally still hold the view," he said. "We would, however, like to add that even though not involved in active combat, the Indian Air Force has done its bit by conducting reconnaissance of Naxal-infested areas and sharing the inputs with the governments concerned", he said.

He, however, replied in the negative when asked whether the IAF had provided the Chattisgarh government with any inputs prior to the Dantewada massacre and, said, "We had deployed UAVs in the tribal state a couple of years ago and provided inputs at that time.

"Those inputs could not have been of use at this time as at present we are not conducting any reconnaissance in that region," he said.

"It also needs to be understood that the reconnaissance by our UAVs will have some limitations. It can give information about a number of people gathering at a spot but it cannot tell you whether it is a group of armed insurgents or ordinary tribals and villagers.

"Moreover, aerial survey may not be possible in dense jungles as the devices cannot see through a canopy of trees, bushes and shrubs", the IAF chief said.

Asked about media reports of the possibility of intelligence leak which could have resulted in Dantewada massacre, Naik said, "I am neither aware of such reports nor do I have any idea of leaks".

To a question about the situation in India's neighbourhood, he said, "We are not involved in an arms race. We upgrade ourselves with regard to what are the needs of our country and not what type of weapons Pakistan or China are acquiring".

Naik was in the city to inaugurate a four-day Station Commanders' Conference being held at the Central Air Command headquarters here in which commanders from units located in Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Uttarakhand and Bihar are taking part.

Indian Express
 
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12/04/2010
The CRPF officer who killed many Naxals before he was hacked to deathDantewada (Chhattisgarh): An injured Satyavan Singh Yadav — the deputy commandant leading the CRPF team that was ambushed by Maoists in Dantewada last week — managed to kill some of the attackers before he was hacked to death, sources in the Chhattisgarh police said on Sunday.

Quoting the post-mortem reports of the 76 policemen killed in the attack and accounts of some of the survivors, the sources said Yadav opened a burst of fire on a group of Naxalites who came to loot the weapons and ammunition. This group was firing at the injured security personnel from close range when Yadav shot back with his AK-47 and killed some of them. The enraged Maoists then reportedly attacked Yadav with sharp weapons, like an axe, and killed him.
Eight Naxalites are reported to have been killed in the attack, and sources said most of them were gunned down by Yadav. "The post-mortem report has indicated deep injuries with sharp weapons like an axe. It seems he was involved in a close physical combat with the Naxalites," said a police official.
He said the nature of injuries on the bodies of the other dead policemen indicate that some of the others also got into a close physical fight with the Naxalites.

"Some of them were shot from close range. It is possible that some of the injured policemen tried to engage the Naxalites physically once they came to loot the weapons and ammunition," said the official.

Sources said about 25 policemen had died only of bullet injuries. The rest had sustained multiple wounds, including bullet and fire injuries.

Yadav, who had done a stint with the Special Protection Group (SPG) that guards the prime ministers and their families, was known to be a very tough policeman. One of his former colleagues from the SPG, who is from a different central police organisation, described him as one of the toughest guys in the force.

"He was very very good, one of the best amongst us. The Naxalites could not have overpowered him physically. His death has come as a big shock," he said, requesting anonymity.

Sources said because of the paucity of time and the large number of bodies involved, a detailed post-mortem report has not been possible.

"The doctors have been able to examine only the open and major wounds. There was no time to go into a detailed examination of every structure of the body, because of which only limited conclusions can be drawn about the possible events on that day," said a source. A detailed analysis of the post-mortem report was still being conducted.

Meanwhile, former BSF DG E N Rammohan, who has been asked by the Home Ministry to conduct an inquiry into the incident, is arriving in Raipur tomorrow to begin the probe. Rammohan has been asked to submit his report within 15 days.

Source: Indian Express

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