Death, Be Not Proud
The 10 minors and 8 adults killed and 4 hurt in Sakerguda on Jun 29, 2012
- Hapka Chhotu 12
- Kaka Parvati 16
- Kaka Rahul 15
- Sarke Ramala 16
- Hapka Mithu 15
- Korsa Bichem 15
- Irpa Suresh 16
- Kaka Sandhya 12
- Kaka Ramesh 15
- Madkam Deva 15
- Madkam Ramvilas 13
- Madkam Nagesh 13
- Madkam Mutta 29
- Irpa Narayan 29
- Madkam Ramesh 27
- Irpa Anil 20
- Kaka Samaiya 35
- Madvi Ayutu 35
- Kunjam Malla 40
- Madkam Suresh 23
- Irpa Gandhi 38
- Irpa Chinnaka 35
(Age of victims as recorded in their BPL, ration and voter ID cards).
People who have a nodding acquaintance with tribal communities know them to be poor liars. The more removed they are from urban civilisation, the more incapable they are of manufacturing the truth, often turning up at a police station to confess a crime after committing it. But a group of impoverished Gonds in Bijapur (Chhattisgarh), bordering Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra, were stripped of their innocence last week by Union home minister P. Chidambaram. He questioned their claim that security forces massacred 22 unarmed and innocent tribals at Korseguda, a village of 50-odd huts, barely three kilometres from the CRPF camp at Basaguda in the BJP-ruled state.
As day broke on June 29, police claims of a 바카라major breakthrough바카라 in the fight against deadly Maoists had been blown to smithereens: a dozen of those killed were less than 16 years of age; seven had just a 바카라criminal record바카라. Still, Chidambaram could barely conceal his sarcasm when he said he was 바카라deeply sorry바카라 but only 바카라if a completely innocent life was lost바카라. He had already complimented the CRPF on its courage and skill in conducting the operation. He went on to add that the force, 바카라under him바카라, had nothing to hide and, perhaps more importantly, nothing to fear. Although criticised for his 바카라premature articulation바카라, Chidambaram stuck his neck out again to say that the encounter was not only transparent but also justified.
Never at a loss for words, the home minister even kept a straight face when reminded of his cabinet colleague Union tribal affairs minister of the 바카라fake encounter바카라. While Deo went public with his dismay at the massacre, which he described as 바카라completely unacceptable바카라, Chidambaram remained defiant and stuck to his position. 바카라I share the anguish of my cabinet colleague,바카라 was all he was prepared to concede even as he ruled out ordering an inquiry. Law and order being a state subject, it was for the Chhattisgarh government to decide if an inquiry was indeed required. For the home ministry, the case was closed.
On his part, CRPF director-general K. Vijay Kumar was even more aggressive in defending the botched operation and the unconsciously high collateral damage. The CRPF, he said in an interview, was not 바카라a rag-tag and irresponsible militia바카라 even while reluctantly conceding the possibility that some innocent lives could have been lost. Bullets, he philosophised, were blind and did not discriminate on grounds of gender or age. It was a dark night, he claimed, and the CRPF contingent, led by a dig, was merely following standard operating procedure in firing to kill when they came under fire. The contrast could not be sharper. In the summer of 2010, in Srinagar, the CRPF bore the brunt of several hundred stone-pelting youth day after day, but mostly held their fire. Excessive collateral damage in Srinagar would have brought the government down, but in Bastar, the massacre was a blip that robbed nobody of sleep.
In both Raipur and in New Delhi, officials shrugged gravely and wondered what else could have been done 바카라in the dead and dark of the night바카라. It was not possible for them to see in the dark, they argued. But had they checked the almanac, they would have found that it was a moonlit night, not pitch dark. Moreover, the CRPF is now equipped with night vision devices and it바카라s unlikely they바카라d have been on a night operation without night vision binoculars. The excuse just does not wash.


Whatever its , there is overwhelming evidence that Op Silgerh ended up as an exercise gone horribly wrong. Not only did it fail in its objective, it also ended up with too many loose ends. It had been in planning for 10 days, relying both on intelligence input and technology to track Maoist movements. The CRPF identified Silgerh, between Basaguda and Jagarmunda, as the place where the Maoists would be meeting. Then 800 armed men set out from three different camps at Basaguda, Jagarmunda and Chintalnar (see graphic) at night. The troops from Jagarmunda were ferried by chopper to an abandoned checkpost in the forest, from where they were to move on foot toward Silgerh.
By the CRPF바카라s own admission, the jawans from Basaguda and Chintalnar did not even reach Silgerh, or reached after daybreak. And when they did, they did not find the training camp they바카라d set out to bust. Despite all their tracking, the Maoists seemed to have given them the slip. Worse, the troops from Basaguda opened fire on a group of villagers at Sakerguda, barely three km from their camp. The two other encounters that night took place elsewhere and did not involve Op Silgerh men.
There were certainly no Maoists in Sakerguda that night, claims a survivor, Class 10 student Kaka Sarika. Talking to the BBC, she said, 바카라Villagers were sitting in the open, finalising details of an impending festival and discussing who could till the land, when the security forces surrounded us and started firing.바카라 Sarika herself tried to run for cover and claims that one of the jawans pinned her to the ground to protect her from the bullets flying overhead. But another jawan, she alleges, tried to misbehave with her. There were several young men and teens, she recalls, who lay writhing on the ground while jawans hurled obscenities at them and grilled them for information.
Village sarpanch Markam Lakshman was away on an errand and escaped the massacre. His absence from the village raises doubts about the 바카라midnight meeting바카라, which the Chhattisgarh government insists was being held to plan a 바카라big attack바카라 on the CRPF. The sarpanch also claims the villagers바카라 meeting was already scheduled and there was no question of Maoist presence.
The BBC correspondent at Raipur, Salman Ravi, told Outlook, 바카라When I visited the place, villagers complained that two of the dead bodies were dressed up in uniform and weapons before being photographed, to make them look like members of the Maoist armed squads.바카라 Ravi also found used cartridges fired from Insas rifles and AK-47 assault rifles strewn in the area.
That it was a plan gone awfully wrong was also evident in the photograph of the dead bodies laid on the ground. The still photo shows the dead as rather young, many of them clad in just vests and shorts, frail and poor바카라a far cry from dreaded 바카라enemies of the state바카라 waging war on the nation.
Civil rights activist Swami Agnivesh recalls that he began getting calls on his phone early on Friday morning, informing him of the massacre of the innocents. 바카라Let there be an independent investigation; either a judicial inquiry or an investigation by an sit,바카라 he demanded. But while neither New Delhi nor Raipur seemed in favour of an inquiry saying it would only demoralise the forces, former solicitor-general Soli Sorabjee said an independent inquiry could well vindicate the CRPF바카라s story.
If you see it in a larger context, the encounter could not have come at a worse time. Villagers at Sakerguda, Rajpet and Korseguda바카라a cluster of hamlets, collectively the Korseguda panchayat바카라were first evacuated by security forces in 2008, in the wake of the Salwa Judum 바카라experiment바카라, and allowed to return a year later. The situation was improving gradually and a proactive district magistrate had succeeded in instilling confidence in the people. The unnecessary encounter appears to have set the clock back. It would now take several years before their confidence is restored, say villagers in the area. A newspaper headline summed up the growing public scepticism바카라바카라Top Naxals are two 15-yr-old toppers바카라. Two of the boys, Nagesh and Ramvilas, were among the three students selected by their school to visit Visakhapatnam in January this year. Here, they got their first glimpse of the sea and ships, inspiring the awed duo to dream of becoming mariners. India바카라s 바카라biggest Maoist encounter바카라 brought that dream to a brutal end.
Twenty-year-old Sarita, the first woman from the village to be pursuing a professional course in BSc (Nursing) in Jagdalpur, 220 km away, lost her brother, Kaka Samaiya, in the encounter. 바카라First they kill us,바카라 she says, 바카라then tell us we are Naxals. Search the entire village and see if you can find even a single weapon. Can바카라t they at least say sorry?바카라
Other goof-ups added to the mess. For instance, the district police admitted to have cremated one of the dead while handing over the remaining bodies to the villagers. The official explanation as offered by SP Prashant Agarwal was that the deceased was an outsider, identified as one Kirpa Somlu. It did nothing to redeem the battered image of the authorities.
And even as truth became a casualty, an aggressive BJP government in Chhattisgarh accused jholawalas and the Congress state unit of 바카라demoralising바카라 security forces by describing the encounter as 바카라fake바카라. Contradictions within the Congress, said BJP spokesman Prakash Javadekar, were adversely affecting the fight against Maoists.
With assembly elections in the state due next year, politics has inevitably dogged the controversy. The Chhattisgarh unit of the Congress, which has already condemned the 바카라fake encounter바카라, is not amused with Chidambaram바카라s public support for the CRPF operation. With 32 per cent of the state바카라s population being tribals, says Congress MLA Kawasi Lakhma, the Congress stands isolated in the state, partly due to the home minister바카라s public endorsement of security forces. This is not the only instance of innocent tribals in the state getting killed, arrested, detained and tortured or harassed, they say. To make matters worse, New Delhi has been singularly unsympathetic.
What does appear plausible is that the CRPF company made a genuine mistake at Sakerguda. It had information of a Maoist meeting and once it came across a congregation close to midnight, it used its overwhelming firepower to shoot its way through. But admitting mistakes is not in the DNA of our security forces or the government. And when it involves the lives of some poor and innocent tribals, why bother?


Maoists? Bodies of the minors killed in Korseguda. (Photograph by Suresh Rawal)
Grain, Chaff & The Truth
A few unanswered questions...
- Police claim: The encounter took place past midnight. CRPF sources claim to have started off on foot from their camp at Basaguda, barely three km away from the encounter spot, at 9 pm on June 28.
Counterclaim: Villagers ask if very fit CRPF men require three hours or more to traverse 3 km. They say some of the villagers were killed at 6 am. - Police claim: Maoists, who had managed to escape after firing at troops, were holding a midnight meeting
Counterclaim: The troops from Basaguda were headed for Silgerh, 12 km away, where the Maoists were allegedly meeting. Would the Maoists have relocated to Sakerguda, three km from the CRPF camp, and invited an encounter? Villagers claim they were meeting to finalise details of an impending festival and decide who바카라d till the plots abandoned by people who had moved away from the village. - Police claim: It was a dark night; it was difficult to see
Counterclaim: June 28 was a moonlit night, according to the almanac. The CRPF forces are also armed with night vision binoculars. The excuse doesn바카라t wash. - Police claim: Seven of the dead were Maoists
Counterclaim: As many as 22 people were killed that night, 18 of them at Sakerguda. The rest were killed in two other encounters elsewhere in the district. Officials claim seven of them had 바카라police or criminal records바카라. The majority, by implication, were innocent. Villagers say all were innocent, lived in the village and had BPL, ration cards or voter ID cards. - Police claim: We too sustained injuries. Six CRPF jawans were injured.
Counterclaim: Two of the jawans were injured when they slipped and fell to the ground. Two others wounded by pellets. The remaining two sustained bullet injuries. Villagers claim they were shot by troops which had surrounded the villagers. - Police claim: A proper post-mortem was conducted
Counterclaim: A team of three doctors바카라an orthopaedist, a child specialist and an MBBS doctor바카라conducted post-mortem in the open. They identified the entry and exit points of bullets, most of them above the waist, photographed the bodies and allowed them to be cremated.
By Yashwant Dhote in Raipur with Uttam Sengupta in New Delhi