RAIPUR, India: Two leaders of India’s ruling Congress party in Chhattisgarh state were killed along with 14 others in an attack by Maoist rebels in eastern India on Saturday, police said.
Twenty-five others were injured, among them senior Congress leader and former Union minister V.C. Shukla and Congress legislator Kawasai Lakma.
The suspected rebels also took away a local party leader, Nand Kumar Patel, and his son, an Associated Press report said, quoting police.
R. K. Vij, a top state police officer, said the politicians and supporters were traveling on a convoy of cars when rebels set off a land mine and opened fire at them in the Sukma area, about 215 miles (345 kilometers) south of Raipur, the capital of Chhattisgarh.
Five police officers were among those killed in the attack. Other victims were party supporters.
“We are devastated,” said Congress party president Sonia Gandhi, who denounced what she called a “dastardly attack” on the country’s democratic values.
Karma is known as the founder the controversial anti-rebel Salwa Judum militia, which had to be reined in after it was accused of atrocities against tribals — indigenous people at the bottom of India’s rigid social ladder.
The wounded Congress party members were taken to a local hospital, police said.
The convoy of Congress members who were returning to the state capital after taking part in a party rally when they were ambushed. Press Trust of India news agency said the attackers blocked the road by felling trees.
Vij said the suspected rebels triggered a land mine blast that blew up one of the cars in the convoy. The attackers then fired at the convoy before fleeing.
Police recovered 16 bodies from the scene, and 25 wounded people were hospitalized, Vij said.
The Congress party is the main opposition party in the state.
The rebels, known as Naxalites, have been fighting the central government for more than four decades, demanding land and jobs for tenant farmers and the poor. They take their name from the West Bengal village of Naxalbari where the movement began in 1967. The fighters were inspired by Chinese Communist revolutionary leader Mao Zedong and have drawn support from displaced tribal populations opposed to corporate exploitation and official corruption.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has called the rebels India’s biggest internal security threat. They are now present in 20 of India’s 28 states and have thousands of fighters, according to the Home Ministry.
In 2010, Maoist rebels killed 27 paramilitary troops in an ambush in a dense forest in the Narayanpur district of Chhattisgarh state.
Indian rebels kill Congress leader, severely injure Shukla
Indian rebels kill Congress leader, severely injure Shukla
