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Missing CoBRA commando`s picture surfaces amid efforts for his safe release from Naxals
Inspector-General of Police (Bastar Range) Sundarraj P said, `We are closely monitoring the situation. All best possible efforts are being made to secure the safe return of the jawan`.
Highlights
- Missing CoBRA commando's picture has surfaced amid efforts for his safe release from Naxals
- In the viral photograph, the commando can be seen sitting in a hut alone without any Naxal in the frame.
Bijapur: A photograph of Rakeshwar Singh Manhas sitting in a hut, purportedly released by the Naxals, has now surfaced on social media platforms amid ongoing efforts for his safe release.
It may be noted that CoBRA commando is believed to have been abducted by the Naxals after the fierce gun battle in the Bastar region of Chhattisgarh on April 3 in which 22 security personnel lost their lives.
In this photograph, which has become viral now, the commando can be seen sitting in a hut alone without any Naxal in the frame.
When asked about this photograph, Inspector General of Police (Bastar Range) Sundarraj P said, "We are closely monitoring the situation. All best possible efforts are being made to secure the safe return of the jawan".
On Tuesday, the outlawed CPI (Maoist) had issued a statement in Hindi saying its cadres had abducted the CoBRA commando from the site of the ambush and demanded that the Chhattisgarh government appoint interlocutors to ensure his safe release.
The state government has so far not reacted to the demand raised by the Maoists.
In the statement, which was issued in the name of Vikalp, spokesperson of the Dandakaranya Special Zonal Committee (DKSZC) of Maoists, Naxals had also said that Manhas will be released after the government names mediators.
"He will remain safe in our captivity till then," it had said. The Maoists, however, had not raised any formal demands for the release of the commando. Police had said the authenticity of the statement was being verified.
In a bid to obtain leads on the whereabouts of Manhas, police are carrying out searches and also contacting local villagers, social organisations, public representatives and journalists, an officer had said on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, tribal activist Soni Sori has left for the encounter site on Wednesday to appeal to Naxals to release the abducted jawan. Manhas was part of a squad that had gone for an anti-Naxal operation in the jungles on the Bijapur and Sukma border on the night of April 2, hours before the deadly ambush.
On Saturday, the gunfight broke out between security forces and ultras between Tekalguda and Jonaguda villages in which 22 troopers were killed and 31 others injured.
Out of the 22, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) lost eight personnel, including seven CoBRA commandos and one jawan of its 'Bastariya' battalion, eight from the DRG and six from the Special Task Force.