Tribal youth take up patrolling to check Naxal violence

Chhattisgarh has witnessed protests against Naxals a number of times in the past fighting Maoist menace for over three decades now.

May 06, 2016 12:27 pm | Updated October 18, 2016 02:40 pm IST - Raipur

In a bold initiative, the tribals of a village panchayat in Chhattisgarh’s worst insurgency-hit Sukma district have decided to oppose Naxal atrocities carried out in the name of people’s movement and device their own efforts to prevent violence by the ultras.

Armed with bow and arrows and other traditional weapons, youth in the area can be seen patrolling the peripheral areas of their villages throughout the night to ban the entry of rebels.

The practice started two months ago in Kumakoleng and Nama villages that are under Kumakoleng gram panchayat, located about 22 kms from Tongpal police station on the National Highway- 30 which connects Jagdalpur to Sukma,

“We were disturbed with the Maoists’ act of obstructing development which had resulted lack of power supply and no proper road connectivity in our villages. In the name of police informers, innocent villagers have been killed,” Aayta Karma, a resident of Nama village, said.

“Braving Naxal threats, the youth from these two villages have decided not to allow anymore violence in the area. Now we want development and peace,” Karma added.

The Kanger Area Committee of the outlawed CPI (Maoist) looks after the Maoists’ activities in Kumakoleng, which lies on the bordering region of Chhattisgarh-Odisha, around 400 kms from the state capital Raipur.

This committee has been instrumental in executing several major naxal activities in the region, including the 2013 Jiram valley attack in which Congress leaders were killed.

The distance between the Kumakoleng and Nama villages, with a population of 500-550, is about 1.5 kms.

A group of 60-65 men from the two villages carry out night patrolling to prohibit entry of Naxals in their areas.

“All the youth have been assigned with a responsibility. They are deployed randomly at several locations in and around villages,” Karma said.

Ruling out that the initiative may take an ugly turn in future, another villager, on condition of anonymity, said, .

“We just want peace in our village and don’t want to enter in any violent clash with Maoists.”

“While patrolling, youth come face-to-face with Naxals twice, but on both the occasions the ultras fled after facing strong opposition from us,” he said.

Meanwhile, police said similar initiatives against Naxals have also been reported from other places in Sukma.

“Villagers from Kumakoleng have requested us to set up a police camp in their area which is quite in the interior. We have assured them to think over it. As of now, we have stepped up patrolling in the region to ensure security to them,” Sukma Additional Superintendent of Police Santosh Singh told PTI .

The villagers had also demanded the district administration to provide better road connectivity which is also being considered, Singh said.

People not only from these two villages, but from other remote patches of Sukma have also sought police camps in their region, expressing their willingness to get rid of the Maoists who had done nothing for them expect obstructing development work, the ASP said.

“Everyone has the right to protest against atrocities and violence in a democracy,” he said, about the initiative in Kumakoleng.

Fighting the Maoist menace for over three decades, Chhattisgarh has witnessed protests against Naxals by the tribal populace a number a times in the past.

An anti-Maoist civil militia - Salwa Judum (meaning peaceful gathering for a hunt in ‘Gondi’ language) involving local people was launched in 2005 in the Bastar region.

However, it was disarmed and disbanded in the state following a court order declaring the deployment of tribal youth as special police officers in the fight against Maoist insurgency as illegal and unconstitutional.

Several rallies by schools children and the victims of Naxal violence were also held in the past couple of years in Bastar as a mark of protest against Maoists.

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