*The Jungle Justice Of The Trigger Happy*

Salwa Judum kills 19 people claiming they are *Naxals. The Naxals say they
were innocent villagers. **AJIT SAHI** walks 40km in the jungles of
Chhattisgarh to hunt the truth. Photographs by **VIJAY PANDEY*
 [image: Cover Story]

*Death becomes her* Singaram's Karam Kanni denies her husband, killed on
January 8, was a Naxal

MADKAM DEVA is a tribal, the sort characterised romantically in social
science schoolbooks and museum artifacts illustrative of India's remotest
jungle peoples. There is nothing charming though about the chilling tale of
a bloodbath he recalls staccato, walking barefoot as always in the sprawling
southern forests of Chhattisgarh, waving at the deep red blood clots
thickened on fallen leaves, still enough food in them for frenzied golden
ants two weeks after human gore was spilled here. Deva's blood would be
here, too, had he not ducked the machinegun fire in a nanosecond, leapt
behind the shrubbery like frightened deer, and bolted through the cascading
landscape.

"They made us stand in a line and ordered us to bow our heads," Deva says of
those terrifying moments between life and death. "I was the last and that
gave me just enough time to escape."

*WHAT HAPPENED: THE POLICE VERSION*

The Salwa Judum SPOs had intelligence that Naxals were to meet near Singaram

*The 84-strong SPO party patrolled the area without entering any village*

At 4pm, as they crossed Singaram, a group of Naxals opened gunfire on them

*The SPOs retaliated with heavy firing, and the encounter lasted 90 minutes*

15 of the "outer layer" of Naxals were killed. But the "hardcore" cadre
escaped. Rifles, grenades and other arms were recovered

*The SPOs left the bodies behind and returned with the collected weapons***

Four more proved lucky. But 19 others did not. A posse made largely of men
from the Salwa Judum (literally, Peace Gathering), the tribal militia raised
by the state as a quasi police force, killed 15 men and four women at this
spot on the afternoon of January 8, 2009, triggering a massive furor across
the state and worsening the battle lines between the armed Maoist
insurgents, popularly called the Naxals, and the state police.

Immediately, the police named the killings a huge — and rare — success in
their grim and often adverse battle against the Naxals who, for three
decades, have had a free run of some 15,000 sq km in Bastar, the traditional
name for the vast heavily forested tribal region that now encompasses five
districts in south Chhattisgarh. "Our fight to the finish has begun,"
Chhattisgarh Home Minister Nanki Ram Kanwar told TEHELKA in the state
capital, Raipur, this week. "We will soon reoccupy our lands that the Naxals
have controlled for decades."

That may be long in the coming, if at all. For now, the rebels have reacted
strongly, slamming the killings and vowing revenge in banners, pamphlets and
posters distributed across the region; calling successful general shutdowns;
blocking highways by digging up roads and cutting trees; and burning trucks.
A massive cry has gone up across the state's tribal region, among human
rights groups, and from the opposition Congress and Communist parties,
rejecting the police claims, alleging instead that those killed were
innocent villagers picked up forcibly from their homes, marched into the
woods, and shot in cold blood. "All the dead bodies were found lying
together, which wouldn't be the case if this was a genuine encounter," says
Manish Kunjum of the Communist Party of India (CPI), a three-term ex-MLA who
organised a massive protest rally of thousands of tribal people.

The state High Court has stepped in, too, demanding full facts from the
police, after some 20 relatives of those killed, reached by an NGO in their
remote villages, walked 70km and then bussed 500km to Chhattisgarh's
northern city of Bilaspur to file a petition before the Court seeking a
probe into the killings. Says Kopa Kunjum, a human rights activist with the
NGO Vanvasi Chetna Ashram, who walked two days to the remote villages to
bring these relatives to the city: "By all accounts, those killed did not
have weapons. This was a one-way shootout; only the police had the guns."
 [image: Cover Story]

'Those who claim the police killed unarmed people must prove it. Why don't
the villagers give the bodies for autopsy?'
* NANKI RAM KANWAR *
Home Minister, Chhattisgarh
 [image: Cover Story]

'It is a false allegation that we killed innocents. They were hardcore
Naxals and they shot at us, drawing our fire'
* MADKAM MUDRAJ*
Ex-Naxal, now Salwa Judum SPO
 [image: Cover Story]

'Prima facie there may be contradictory testimonies, but I believe in the
end we will get a generally coherent story'
* ANKIT ANAND*
SDM in charge of probe

TESTIMONIES TEHELKA has gathered from extensive travels in the
Naxal-controlled territory over a week suggest that the police story might
be just that: a story. We extensively interviewed three of the five men who
claim they survived the bloodbath; the kin of eight of those killed; and
many villagers who claim they witnessed the Salwa Judum enter four villages
and abduct 24 people.
 [image: Cover Story]

'They kidnapped me from my village and made me walk all day. I ran when I
saw the man behind me shot dead'
* EMLA HUNGA*
Survivor, Danteshpura village
 [image: Cover Story]

'The police lie freely and falsely accuse people of being Naxals. How come
no policeman died if there was a crossfire?'
* MANISH KUNJUM*
CPI leader & ex-MLA
 [image: Cover Story]

'I walked two days to reach the villages and speak to the people there.
Their stories are true: this was a one-sided killing'
* KOPA KUNJUM*
Activist, Vanvasi Chetna Ashram

We walked four hours to the remote village of Singaram, from where four of
those killed were allegedly abducted, and spoke over two days with their
relatives and other witnesses. We spoke to them individually, grilling them
at length, checking especially to see if the truth indeed lay in the police
version — that a Naxal group fired on the Salwa Judum patrol, forcing it to
retaliate, and that the villagers' narrative was a false one thrust upon
them by the Naxals. Apart from the survivors, we took a dozen villagers to
the scene of the killings some three kilometres from Singaram, and heard
them describe their visits there the day after the killing to locate the
dead. Such testimonies largely corroborate each other.

On the other hand, there are discrepancies in the narratives of two
individuals TEHELKA spoke to from the police. One is Rahul Sharma, IPS, who
is the Superintendent of Police (SP) of Dantewada, the district in which
Singaram falls and which is one of the state's two most heavily Naxal
affected districts.Sharma directly planned the January 8 incursion into the
Singaram region, the deepest the police or its militias have ever gone in
the Naxal territory in Chhattisgarh. The second is Kichche Nanda, 27; the
plucky leader of the militia-police combine who claims his 84-men team ran
into the Naxals and killed them.

Importantly, though the survivors and the relatives of those killed
vehemently deny links with the Naxals, several others, including those who
allege that the Salwa Judum militia shot defenceless people in cold blood,
concede the police claim that at least a few of those killed were indeed the
"outer layer" of the Naxals or were closely linked to the Maoists. "It is
known that Sitakka alias Seetey worked with the Naxals," said a villager
requesting anonymity, referring to the woman killed who the police claim was
the leader of the group that was killed. "She had trained in providing
medical care to the Naxals."

Here's what the survivors of the gunfire and other villagers claim happened
on January 8, 2009. Around 9am, a group of 150 to 200 men wearing battle
fatigues and carrying guns entered a village named Danteshpura, and
immediately began ransacking its homes. Here, they abducted nine people,
including two women, and forced them to carry their backpacks. "They told us
they will take us to a police station 30km away and then let us go," says
Emla Hunga, one of the five survivors. "We believed them and started walking
with them." Of this group of nine, only Hunga survived the subsequent
massacre. His brother, who was also abducted, died.

Before noon, this party had reached another village named Korrusguda. Here,
they picked up a woman and eight men, including Madkam Deva, one of the five
who escaped the bloodbath and is quoted at the beginning of this report.
Deva was atop his granary near his hut when two men jumped him. These nine,
too, were made to carry backpacks. Finally, by 3pm, the abductors and their
hostages reached Singaram. Here, four more were caught, including Sitakka,
who the police say led the "Naxal group".

*WHAT HAPPENED: SURVIVORS' TALES*

150-200 SPOs entered four villages, looted them, and abducted 24 people

*The hostages were forced to carry backpacks and walk over 15km*

Just outside Singaram, the SPOs forced seven men to wear shirts and trousers

*Marched ahead, 4 women were heard screaming until gunshots rang out*

15 men were lined up and shot at. 14 died but one, Madkam Deva, escaped

*The five remaining men were made to walk again with backpacks. Four of them
escaped as one was shot dead***

Shortly after leaving Singaram, the party stopped by a forest stream three
kilometres ahead. "They asked us to rest here, saying they will give us
food," recalls Hunga. But that was not to be. Instead, the militia opened
the backpacks and took out shirts and trousers. They forced seven men to
discard their lungis, the tribal people's wraparound, and wear trousers.
They were also forced to wear shirts over their vests. One man was forced to
wear a battle fatigue. The militia then divided the hostages in three
groups. Fifteen men, including Deva, were moved away in one direction. Four
women, one of whom was taken hostage moments ago as she was walking past,
were taken to another corner. Hunga and four others were forced to stay by
the stream.
 [image: Cover Story]

*Grief-stricken* Villagers who retrieved the bodies the next day said the
women were half-naked
*Photo:* FILE PICTURES

"We heard the women scream, then gunshots, then silence," Deva recalls.
Between the gunshots and the screams, he saw the abductors go into batches
towards where the women were taken. Says Emla Harma, still sitting by the
stream, who later escaped: "The women cried out for their mothers a long
time."

THESE TESTIMONIES, and those of the villagers' who fetched the dead the next
day and claim the women's bodies were partially or fully naked, have brought
the allegation that the women were raped before they were killed. Some of
the pictures of the dead bodies taken by journalists from nearby towns of
Andhra Pradesh, who visited the scene of the killings a day later, indeed
showed the women's clothes disheveled, even in a state of undress.

After the women were killed, the 15 men were lined up between the trees.
Soon, bullets were flying around. Fourteen died instantly. Deva alone
escaped. That left the party of five men, still by the stream, stricken with
fear. The abductors now forced these five men to lift the backpacks and
start walking again in a file. Harma led the queue. Hunga was number four.
"Suddenly, one of the gunmen stepped to a side and opened fire," says Hunga.
"I turned and saw blood gushing from the man behind me." In a flash, the
other four threw the backpacks and darted in the forest, surviving the hail
of bullets chasing after.
 [image: Cover Story]

*Innocent or Naxal?* Police claim Sitakka was the ring leader of the group
killed on January 8

The five survivors reached their respective villages late at night and
shared their harrowing tales. By then, Dantewada's SP, Sharma, had gone
public with the claim that his men had killed 15 Naxals in an encounter near
Singaram. The next morning, scores of villagers descended on the scene of
the killings. So did the journalists from Andhra Pradesh, who extensively
took pictures of the dead and went back to write the first stories
questioning the police claim of an "encounter". Sharma told TEHELKA the
police had seized 10 backpacks, five rifles, five hand grenades, two 2-inch
country-made mortars, 6kg gelatin, and some "bomb-making material". These
were presented before the media at a police station the next day.

Survivors Hunga and Deva had recognised up to four of the men in the Salwa
Judum. They are called Special Police Officers (SPOs). The survivors say
these four SPOs are tribal people from other villagers, and once worked with
the Naxals but later crossed over to the Salwa Judum. They include Madkam
Mudraj, who confirmed to TEHELKA he was indeed once a child Naxal soldier
but was now an SPO and had played a key role in the January 8 killings.
 [image: Cover Story]

*Lucky survivors* Four of the five men who survived the hail of bullets
revisit the scene of the killings

The police, on the other hand, claim that this party of Salwa Judum SPO and
some regular policemen had been patrolling the region since the night of
January 6. "We were walking in two groups apart by 500m when the Naxals saw
one group and started firing at it," says Nanda, who led the patrol. The
Naxals, he says, were in the middle of the two groups of SPOs and this made
them sitting ducks. But there are discrepancies:

*•* Sharma says the group had 54 SPOs and 30 policemen. Nanda says they were
74 SPOs and five policemen with four others.

*• *Sharma says the "police party generated intelligence at village
Danteshpura that a large quantity of ration had moved towards Singaram
village". But Nanda said his party did not enter any of the villages or talk
to anyone there.

*• *Sharma says three men received body injuries. But, when pressed, Nanda
said one man was injured on his palm, while the other two "fainted because
they were shooting on hungry stomachs". Within a week, the one with the palm
injury had returned to work.

*•* Sharma admits the arms recovered are old but says that's because the
"hardcore" Naxals, who use sophisticated guns, had run away quickly leaving
behind only the "outer layer". But Nanda says the encounter lasted 90
minutes with massive firing from both sides.
 [image: Cover Story]

*Protected protector* Police stations fortified themselves further as Naxals
vowed vengeance

*• *Inexplicably, Nanda, who had an AK47, only fired 15 rounds in 90
minutes. He says he didn't need to shoot more as "I shoot only if I can see
a person". Yet he couldn't say if he killed anyone.

So, how come not a single SPO died or even received gunshots? Why did the
SPOs, who numbered over 80, not carry with them the 15 dead bodies they
claim to have counted on the spot? Why don't the police carry out tests on
the body of Sitakka, which lies buried in Singaram, to establish if she was
raped?

For now, Ankit Anand, an IAS officer in his first posting at Dantewada as a
sub-divisional magistrate, is holding a "magisterial inquiry". He has
visited Singaram and recorded 24 statements, both from the villagers and the
police-SPOs. His mandate is to establish (a) whether the police had
"sufficient reason" to believe they were Naxals and (b) whether the police
had "sufficient chance" to catch them without killing them. He says he has
found "different points of view" in the testimonies. "Prima facie we may
feel that they are contradictory," he says, "but in the end, we will get a
story that is generally coherent." Just how?

 *From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 5, Dated Feb 07, 2009*

  http://www.tehelka.com/story_main41.asp?filename=Ne070209coverstory.asp
    *Related Stories*


  •

*The Jungle Justice Of The Trigger
Happy*<http://www.tehelka.com/story_main41.asp?filename=Ne070209coverstory.asp>
Salwa Judum kills 19 people claiming they are Naxals. The Naxals say they
were innocent villagers. *AJIT SAHI* walks 40km in the jungles of
Chhattisgarh to hunt the truth. Photographs by *VIJAY PANDEY*
  •

*'Violence will go up. This is total
war'*<http://www.tehelka.com/story_main41.asp?filename=Ne070209violence_will.asp>
Dantewada, the hotbed of Naxal insurgency in south Chhattisgarh, has seen 20
police chiefs in as many years, each Indian Police Service (IPS) officer
averaging three-to-four months in the job before scrambling to safer
postings. But when he gets posted out, as he hopes, in May this year,
34-year-old IPS officer *Rahul Sharma* will have completed a full two-year
term here, the second-longest by any Superintendent of Police (SP) in the
district. Currently in the thick of controversy over the January 8, 2009
killings of alleged Naxals (see main story) and facing the violent backlash
from the Naxals, Sharma, the highest-ranking police officer leading the
boots on the ground in the region, spoke to *AJIT SAHI* this week in
Dantewada on his counterinsurgency ops against the Naxals and defended the
killings:
  •

*When Brother Fights Brother
*<http://www.tehelka.com/story_main41.asp?filename=Ne070209when_brother.asp>
The January 8 killings threaten to spiral the violence and doom millions to
a deeper hopelessness in south Bastar, *AJIT SAHI** *reports

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