Maoist leader remanded in police custody
October 18th, 2009 - 6:28 pm ICT by IANS ( 1 comment )Kolkata, Oct 18 (IANS) A West Bengal court Sunday ordered four-day police custody for People’s Committee against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) chief Chhatradhar Mahato in a murder case in the state’s Lalgarh region, police said.
“Mahato was produced in the Jhargram sub-divisional court in connection with a murder case in Lalgarh region of West Midnapore district. He was remanded in police custody for four days,” a senior police officer said.
“He will be produced in the court again Oct 21,” he said.
According to sources, Mahato would be further interrogated and his handwriting verified by police.
Earlier, Jhargram sub-divisional court remanded Mahato in judicial custody for 14 days Oct 10.
The court ordered that Mahato be kept in judicial custody till Oct 23, turning down the appeal of the state Criminal Investigation Department (CID) which had sought 15 days of police remand for the tribal leader.
Mahato, who has been spearheading a movement against alleged police excesses in Lalgarh, was arrested Sep 26.
- Mahato gets 14 day judicial custody - Oct 10, 2009
- Pro-Maoist sent to judicial custody for 14 days - Sep 05, 2010
- Mahato slapped with fresh charge of helping Maoists - Nov 18, 2009
- Jailed pro-Maoist leader to contest Bengal polls - Apr 19, 2011
- Kolkata duo gets 14-day police remand in Lalgarh case - Oct 06, 2009
- Pro-Maoist group's spokesperson sent to police custody - Sep 09, 2010
- Chhattradhar Mahato's police custody extended till Oct 10 - Oct 07, 2009
- Court allows jailed Maoist to contest polls - Apr 06, 2011
- CBI takes train sabotage prime accused to West Bengal - Jun 21, 2010
- Pro-Maoist leader makes things tough for CPI-M - May 06, 2011
- Gyaneshwari train derailment accused wants to confess - Jun 28, 2010
- Maoist arrested in Bengal - Feb 12, 2011
- Two Maoist rebels arrested in West Bengal - Sep 10, 2010
- Third arrest in Gyaneshwari train accident case (Second Lead) - Jun 15, 2010
- Tribal leader Chhattradhar Mahato's police custody extended - Oct 01, 2009
Tags: atrocities, criminal investigation department, criminal investigation department cid, divisional court, handwriting, judicial custody, maoist, midnapore district, murder case, police custody, police excesses, police officer, police remand, s committee, tribal leader, west bengal
October 19th, 2009 at 12:34 am
AT Lalgarh in Midnapore west, where the Trinamuli-‘Maoist’ depredations including gruesome killings and abductions have continued apace, joint forces ops or not, a thin, bright, streak of glow lit up the political scenario in the laterite zone late into the night of September 18, 2009. It was an example of an illumined class struggle all the way.
A large gang of Trinamulis and ‘Maoist’ criminals chose to attack the Dasbandh village to the north of Ramgarh in the Lalgarh locale. The hamlet is principally inhabited in by goalas of the ancient line of caste of cattle herders. Recent times had seen the villagers choose to grit their teeth and — boldly refuse to cooperate with either the Chhatradhar Mahato-led right reactionary Trinamulis or the left sectarian and the heavily-armed, ‘Maoist’ gangsters.
Devoid of shelter, the ‘Maoist’ goons issued a threat earlier in the day that representatives of the goala community including the Mondol or the village headman must be present from Dasbandh village at the next ‘squad meeting’ of the ‘Maoists.’ None of the rural folk of the village heeded the notice.
As an act of avenging their wrath as well as a fulfilment of a step towards ‘teaching the goalas a good lesson,’ 20-odd armed ‘Maoists’ entered the village and knocked on the door of Luba Mondol and his son Dhanu Mondal – neither of whom were in their hutment but had chosen to go to the deep of the jungles to collect firewood as is the custom in the jangal mahal, to avoid the fierce daylight heat.
THE RESISTANCE
As soon as the killers knocked down the flimsy piece of slattened plank that passed off as the ‘door’ of the hut, the two women remaining inside woke up from their sleep, thought for a while and rushed out with swinging large dahs with which they split open dry coconuts. The bravura of the attackers vanished – and they ran, and ran. The room to flee had by then closed up.
For, by that time the entire village had woken up at the ruckus and hundreds of goalas came streaming out of their hutments with whatever they could lay their hands on. At close quarters the sten guns that the attackers carried was of little use as body conduct range developed and the beatings began. At the end of the heroic resistance, three of the attackers lay dead, while the ‘rearguard’ of the ‘Maoist’ squad managed to drag away two more bodies. A dozen-odd villagers were critically injured and had since been removed to district hospitals.
The forests throbbed with the cheering that arose from the throats of the relieved villagers. A new chapter of resistance to known criminals and hardened killers has perhaps started in the form of mass resistance in the forest range in western Bengal.
It should be added that the entire village is a stronghold of the CPI(M), and the rural folk knew that despite the strong, if disoriented, presence of the joint forces in the vastness that is the jangal mahal, 12 CPI(M) workers and sympathisers had been killed in the vicinity over the past two weeks. Among those killed very recently had been the school teacher Comrade Kartick Mahato, and CPI(M) workers, Comrades Krishna Kundu and Sambhu Mahato. That did not deter them from putting the class enemy on the run.
In a related development, the joint forces uncovered a ‘sleeper cell’ of the ‘Maoist’ goons in the household of a well-known physician of Kantapahari named Jatin Pratihar. Jatin would provide food, shelter, and funds to the top brass of the ‘Maoist’ killers in the shelter which was in the shape of a well-appointed air-cooled ‘cellar’ below the ground level under his palatial residential building. And perhaps it was this place that facilitated the ‘Maoists’ to operate their electronic NetCom through which they interacted with one another and also kept a cosy touch with the bourgeois media.
Jatin’s wife Sulekha, also in police custody as we write this, has been a senior worker of the local unit of the ICDS and there, at the work place, she would use threats to make the women workers pay up regularly for the ‘incidental expenditures’ incurred by the ‘guests’ who would come and go, to and from the Pratihar ‘cell.’ Two other ‘Maoist’ hooligans were arrested from the Pratihar house, the police tell us, as we file this report.