Security forces killed 14 Maoists in a firefight in eastern India yesterday, police said, marking the latest bloodshed in a long conflict in which the rebels have been battling to overthrow the government.
It was the single biggest rebel death toll in Orissa State from one incident and came amid an intense anti-Maoist campaign in the area conducted over the past month, police said.
“Fourteen rebels, including one woman cadre, were killed. We are awaiting further information,” Orissa State Police director-general Prakash Mishra said.
There were no immediate reports of casualties among security forces, Mishra added.
The Maoists have grown from a rag-tag band of ideologues into a potent insurgent force, creating a so-called “Red Corridor” that stretches throughout central and eastern India.
Yesterday’s battle occurred in the Padia forest area of mineral-rich, but impoverished Orissa State about 650km southwest of state capital Bhubaneswar.
The security forces, acting on a tip-off, were conducting a sweep of the area for rebels when they came across the Maoist camp,
police said, adding authorities now were looking for more insurgents in the area.
The area where the battle took place was close to rebel-hit Chhattisgarh state. Police said a cache of explosives, arms and ammunition and Maoist literature was seized from the camp site.
Local media reported the rebel group camping in the forest was suspected of involvement in a May 25 ambush by Maoists of a convoy of Congress leaders in neighboring Chhattisgarh state.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the Maoists as the country’s most serious internal security threat and there are frequent outbreaks of violence in areas in which the rebels are present.
Maoist rebels have been fighting in the forests and rural areas for what they say are the rights of tribal people, who have some of India’s highest rates of illiteracy and poverty, and landless farmers for decades. They demand land and jobs for the poor, and want to establish a communist society by toppling India’s “semi-colonial, semi-feudal” form of rule.
Critics believe better governance and development is the solution to stemming the violence.
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