Chhattisgarh attack consequence of Green Hunt: Maoist leader

Gopal, a top Maoist leader, said the Dantewada attack was a "direct consequence" of the government`s Operation Green Hunt offensive.

Zeenews Bureau

New Delhi: On the day Maoist guerrillas carried out the worst massacre of security personnel by trapping and slaughtering 75 men in the dense forests of Chhattisgarh, Gopal, a top Maoist leader, said the attack was a "direct consequence" of the government`s Operation Green Hunt offensive.

"The attack in Chhatisgarh and the earlier one in Orissa is a direct consequence of the Central Government persisting with Operation Green Hunt," Gopal, `area commander` of Bihar-Jharkahnd-northern Chhatisgarh, told BBC`s Hindi Service in an interview.

"There has been no impact of Operation Green Hunt (paramilitary offensive against Maoists in five states) on our cadres. We have become more alert since then. We believe that the time to engage in direct battle with the Central Government has now come. There is a new revolutionary zeal in our cadres," he added.

"We have been surrounded by paramilitary battalions. They are setting fire to the forests and making adivasis (tribals) flee. In this situation, we have no other alternative (but to stage attacks).

"We were prepared to talk to the government. Chidambaram Sahab wanted a 72-hour ceasefire but our leader Kishenji offered a 72-day ceasefire. But we wanted an end to Operation Green Hunt and release of our leaders held in various jails to create the right environment for talks. But Chidambaram refused," he said.
’Kishenji is unhurt and alive’

Maoists today claimed for the first time that their top leader Kishenji was alive and well.

"Not a single state committee, central committee or polit
bureau member were killed or injured in the encounter with
joint forces in Lalgarh on March 24," the Maoists said in a
fax to PTI here.

"On March 24, police attacked innocent people in villages
at Lakhanpur, Salboni, Goaltore and Lalgarh area. Innocent
people were killed in the incident, but not a single state
committee, central committee or polit bureau member was killed
or injured," the fax sent by the Orissa state committee of
Maoists said.

The police and the government were trying to project that
Kishenji was killed in the March 24 encounter at Hatiloth
forest, it claimed.

"By doing so they want to demoralise the people, but they
cannot stop the people`s movement," it said.

-Agencies inputs

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