Gompad (Chhattisgarh): Muchaki Lakma walked anxiously into the thatch-shelter where we were all assembled, guided by his 12-year-old son, Sukda. He had just returned from Durma, a village some four kilometres away. When he began talking about the August 6 encounter in which the Chhattisgarh police claim to have killed 15 “Maoists”, he broke down and wept inconsolably.
Speaking to a group of rights activists and journalists, he described how his 17-year-old son Muchaki Hidma was gunned down by the police that day along with 14 others at Nulkatong. Hidma was the sole support for the family and now he is gone.
Lakma, a blind man who is dependent on his 12-year-old son for mobility and who is still coming to terms with the death of his elder son, was one of the many who were forced out of their homes by the security forces when they came to know of the anticipated visit of our fact-finding team. Nulkatong’s residents were forced to vacate their homes and told to stay away for three days.
Many of the villagers like Lakma went to Durma, walking for hours through the forest in the incessant drizzle, barely a few days after their kin were gunned down. According to the villagers of Gompad and Nulkatong, they were warned not to speak with the media or to rights groups.
A fact-finding team of 16 people representing various rights organisations – CDRO, Civil Liberties Committees of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, WSS, PUDR – and journalists visited Gompad and Nulkatong in Chhattisgarh where 15 adivasis were gunned down by the security forces on the morning of August 6, 2018. One of the objectives of the visit was to gather first hand accounts of what exactly had transpired. A PIL in the matter has already been filed by Narayan Rao of the Telangana Civil Liberties Committee and is coming up for hearing in the Supreme Court on August 29.
When the team reached Gompad on the evening of August 18, there was a blanket of fear and silence over the village. On the 19th morning, the victims’ families and survivors were requested to gather at the anganwadi shed to meet the team. Overcoming their initial hesitation, one by one, the victims’ kin and survivors began to come.
According to the villagers, on August 4, a large contingent of security personnel arrived at the village. As is the practice in most of these villages, all the able-bodied men left the village for the khetas – makeshift shelters near their fields – or to their relatives in nearby villages. Some of them went to Nulkatong to their relatives, where they ate and went to the kheta near the fields to sleep. Other than Gompad, villagers from Velpocha, Etegatta and Kindrelpad were also at the kheta near Nulkatong that day.
Some of them from Gompad came back on August 5 only to find that the security forces were still around and so went back to the kheta. On August 6, at day-break, around 6 am, the security men surrounded the kheta near Nulkatong where some 30 adivasis were sleeping and began to fire, the villagers say.
Soyam Chandra, aged 21, tried to identify himself as a panchayat member but got shot anyway. As people began to run helter-skelter, Kadti Aitha, a 12-year-old boy, got shot and his father, Kadti Sukka, got wounded on his leg as a bullet grazed him. Aitha along with Soyam Sita, Kadti Aima, Madvi Nanda from Gompad, Sodi Prabhu, Madkam Tiku, Tati Hunga, Muchaki Hidma, Muchaki Deva, Muchaki Muka of Nulkatong, Vanjam Hunga of Velpocha, Madi Hunga of Kindermal and Madvi Bama of Etigatta all fell to the bullets. Of these, some six victims were minors, according to their families.
Kadti Aitha, the 12-year-old, was studying in class three at the Konta government school. Poignantly, the villagers have placed his school bag on his grave. These villages have no access to school, or medical facilities. The villages are not connected by even a tractor track. In the monsoon, even the few tractor tracks become impossible to negotiate. For everything they have to walk some 20 km to Konta through the forest.
In Nulkatong, there are five bore-wells but only one works. The anganwadi worker comes every Thursday, and sometimes stays for a week. A school that was started in 2002-03 shut down in 2007-08. In 2006, the Salwa Judum burnt down all the houses and Muchaki Boti died. Now his son, Muka, was shot dead in this incident.
The villagers narrate a familiar story of the security forces entering the villages and as the men run away, taking over empty houses, cooking and consuming rice, poultry and goats belonging to the villagers, and causing terror with their abusive behaviour. During the Salwa Judum times, entire families would leave their homes, only to find all their food and poultry consumed and houses set on fire. To be caught by the Judum men would mean sure death.
Now only the men leave, but the security personnel still intrude and consume whatever the house-holds have while threatening the families. As a young man told us in frustration, “The earlier state police force was much better. The SPO and DRG that have come up now kill, torture ruthlessly and indiscriminately. They also target anyone – students, farmers, social workers … anyone.”
The victims’ kin told us that they heard gunshots in the morning and rushed to the kheta where their people were sleeping. The security men shooed them away and refused to allow them near the bodies.
The Hindustan Times quoted the special director general (anti-Naxal operations) D.M. Awasthi, as saying, “The encounter started at around 6.30 am when a team of District Reserve Guard (DRG), Special Task Force (STF), Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) conducted the operation following a a specific intelligence input about the Maoist camp in Nalktong village in South Sukma.”
The families went to the Konta hospital where they were told that the bodies were taken to Sukma for post-mortem. After the post-mortem, the bodies were brought up to Bonda and left there. The families were left to find ways of getting the bodies back to their villages.
Gompad village has been a repeat target of the Salwa Judum and now DRG/SPOs. Sodi Sambo’s case is from the same village. Sambo no longer lives there. Madkam Hidme whose body was exhumed for re-post-mortem under Chhattisgarh high court orders, was also from Gompad. Much like the 2009 Singaram village “encounter” in which 13 bodies were subjected to post-mortem under court orders, Hidme’s case also has not come up for hearing for unknown reasons, even after the court-ordered post-mortems were done.
Soni Sori, the social activist, who was at Nulkatong during the fact-finding team’s visit, expressed distress at the repeated assaults and brutalisation of her community and the diminishing hope for justice.
Sori had conducted a tiranga yatra last year, taking the message of the constitution and the tricolour to these villages. However, she was taken aback this time when Madkam Hidme’s mother, Lakshmi, handed her back a neatly folded flag, saying that it has failed to protect her people and to provide justice.
courtesy : thewire.in
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London, Nov 22: A bomb disposal squad deployed as a “precaution” to the South Terminal of Gatwick Airport concluded an investigation into a "security incident" on Friday after making a “suspect package” safe.
The South Terminal of Gatwick Airport, the UK's second busiest airport after Heathrow, which was briefly shut owing to the incident reopened following the incident.
The Gatwick is around 45 km south of London.
Two people detained during the enquiries have since been allowed to continue their journey as the airport was opened.
“Police have concluded their investigation into a report of a suspect package at Gatwick Airport. Officers from the EOD (Explosive Ordnance Disposal) team made the package safe, and the airport has been handed back to its operator,” Sussex Police said in an updated statement.
“Two people detained while enquiries were ongoing have subsequently been allowed to continue their journeys. There will remain an increased police presence in the area to assist with passengers accessing the South Terminal for onward travel,” the statement added.
Earlier on Friday, the incident caused severe disruption at the busy airport’s South Terminal, while the North Terminal of Gatwick Airport remained unaffected.
“Police were called to the South Terminal at Gatwick Airport at 8.20 am on Friday (November 22) following the discovery of a suspected prohibited item in luggage,” a Sussex Police statement said.
“To ensure the safety of the public, staff and other airport users, a security cordon has been put in place whilst the matter is dealt with. As a precaution, an EOD (Explosive Ordnance Disposal) team is being deployed to the airport. This is causing significant disruption and some roads around the South Terminal have been closed. We’d advise the public to avoid the area where possible,” it said.
Footage on social media taken outside the airport showed crowds of frustrated travellers being moved away from the terminal building.
Gatwick said it was working hard to resolve the issue.
“A large part of the South Terminal has been evacuated as a precaution while we continue to investigate a security incident," the airport said in a social media post.
“Passengers will not be able to enter the South Terminal while this is ongoing. The safety and security of our passengers and staff remain our top priority. We are working hard to resolve the issue as quickly as possible.”
Train and bus services that serve the airport were also impacted while the police carried out their inquiries.
In an unrelated incident in south London on Friday morning, the US Embassy area in Nine Elms by the River Thames was the scene of a controlled explosion by Scotland Yard dealing with what they believe may have been a “hoax device”.
“We can confirm the 'loud bang' reported in the area a short time ago was a controlled explosion carried out by officers,” the Metropolitan Police said in a post on X.
“Initial indications are that the item was a hoax device. An investigation will now follow. Some cordons will remain in place for the time being but the majority of the police response will now be stood down,” it added.