Strands of similarity in Azad, Kishenji killings
November 26th, 2011 - 1:59 pm ICT by IANS
Kolkata, Nov 26 (IANS) There is a time gap of almost 17 months between the violent deaths of top Maoist leaders Cherukuri Rajkumar alias Azad and M. Koteshwar Rao alias Kishenji. Yet there are distinct similarities between the two incidents.
Both Azad and Kishenji hailed from Andhra Pradesh and were members of the outlawed Communist Party of India-Maoist politburo, the banned outfit’s top policy-making body. While Azad was the party’s national spokesman, Kishenji performed that role in West Bengal till he was injured in a shootout last year.
Azad, along with a journalist Hem Chandra Pandey, was killed by the police in Adilabad district of Andhra Pradesh on the night of July 1/2, 2010.
Police claimed he died in a gunfight, but human rights groups have refused to buy the theory. Instead they alleged police arrested Azad along with Pandey in Maharashtra’s Nagpur, brought them to Adilabad forests and murdered them in cold blood.
In West Bengal, Kishenji’s bullet-riddled body was shown to journalists in Burishole village of West Midnapore district Thursday night by security agencies who claimed he died after a 30-minute gunfight with the central paramilitary troopers and state armed police personnel.
However, the Maoists and human rights groups have dismissed the gunfight theory.
Akash, a member of the CPI-Maoist’s West Bengal committee, said people saw Kishenji getting caught.
“He was arrested and then gunned down in cold blood. It was a fake encounter”.
Telugu revolutionary poet and Maoist sympathiser P. Varvara Rao Friday alleged that top rebel leader Kishenji was “tortured” and then “murdered” in police custody in West Bengal.
Human rights organization Association for Protection of Democratic Rights president Sachchidananda Banerjee told IANS: “From our long experience with the functioning of the police, we are sanguine that it was a fake encounter”.
Again Azad was killed at a time when the central government and the CPI-Maoist were contemplating the broad outline of a possible ceasefire to facilitate talks. Azad was actively involved in efforts to create an atmosphere conducive to talks with the central government
Kishenji was killed when the state government appointed interlocutors were carrying on talks with the state Maoist leadership to pave the way for a formal dialogue with the Mamata Banerjee government.
Though Kishenji was not directly associated with the talks so far, political circles feel the state Maoist leadership would not have held a round of discussions with the interlocutors without his nod, as he was the overall in-charge of the regimented party’s operations in West Bengal.
Azad’s killing had seen chances of talks between the guerrilla outfit and the government evaporate into thin air. And there are already reports, though unconfirmed, that the Maoist central committee has resolved never to hold talks with the authorities.
But one of the interlocutors, Bandi Mukti Committee member Choton Das, said the backdrop for the two killings were entirely different.
“Azad was an envoy. Its true that peace talks are on in West Bengal. But Kishenji has not featured in the talks. We have spoken to Akash. And the Maoists have already withdrawn their ceasefire offer,” Das told IANS.
(Sirshendu Panth can be contacted at s.panth@ians.in)
- Kishenji eliminated in Didi's regime - an irony? (West Bengal Newsletter) - Nov 27, 2011
- Mamata condemns manner in which Azad was killed - Aug 09, 2010
- CPI-Maoist calls shutdown to protest Kishenji killing - Nov 27, 2011
- Kisheji 'tortured and killed', says CPI-Maoist - Nov 25, 2011
- Security tightened ahead of Maoists' two-day shutdown - Jul 06, 2010
- Bengal interlocutors step aside from peace process - Nov 28, 2011
- Congress MP, hundreds attend Kishenji cremation - Nov 27, 2011
- Maoists call for 48-hour 'all India shutdown' over Azad's death - Jul 04, 2010
- Stop operation, we will hold arms for a month: Maoists - Oct 04, 2011
- CBI begins probe into Maoist leader Azad's killing - May 24, 2011
- Agnivesh proposes 72-hour ceasefire with Maoists - Aug 18, 2010
- Elimination of Kishenji not planned, just happened: Mamata - Mar 09, 2012
- Maoist sympathiser demands judicial probe into Azad's killing - Aug 27, 2010
- Top Maoist leader Azad killed in Andhra Pradesh (Second Lead) - Jul 02, 2010
- Post Kishenji, security forces hunt for Maoists (Roundup) - Nov 25, 2011
Tags: armed police, cold blood, communist party of india, democratic rights, distinct similarities, human rights groups, human rights organization, maoist, maoists, midnapore district, nagpur, national spokesman, police custody, rebel leader, revolutionary poet, security agencies, time gap, varvara, violent deaths, west bengal