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Ambush hits Indian politicians

May 26, 2013

Suspected Maoist rebels, perhaps numbering as many as 200, have attacked a convoy carrying local leaders and supporters of the Congress party. At least 23 people were killed and 32 wounded in a landmine and gun attack.

https://p.dw.com/p/18e43
In this Saturday, May 25, 2013 photo, unidentified relatives of an injured of a rebel attack cry outside a government hospital in Raipur, India. About 200 suspected Maoist rebels set off a land mine and opened fire on a convoy of cars carrying local leaders and supporters of India's ruling Congress party in the country's east, killing at least 28 people and wounding 24 others, police said. (AP Photo)
Indien Rebellen töten 17 MenschenImage: picture alliance/AP

Police said some 200 people, believed to be Maoist rebels, took part in the ambush on Saturday in India's central state of Chhattisgarh. The attackers blocked a road to halt a convoy, detonated a landmine at the point of the ambush, and then opened fire before fleeing. The convoy was on its way back from a party rally.

"The total number of dead now stands at 23. We can also confirm that 32 people are injured, most of them seriously," state police director general Ramniwas, who goes by one name, told news agency AFP.

Fifteen party leaders and workers were among the dead, police said, including Chhattisgarh Congress chief Nand Kumal Patel and his son Dinesh.

Police also identified Mahendra Karma, a Congress leader in the state, as one of those killed in the attack. He had founded a local militia seeking to combat Maoists, an organization that was later scaled back amid claims of mistreatment.

The Congress party is the main opposition group in Chhattisgarh and a key player at the federal level as well.

"We are devastated," said Congress party president Sonia Gandhi, calling the ambush a "dastardly attack" on India's democratic values.

Gandhi was speaking after an emergency meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who pledged all "necessary aid" to the regional chief minister, Raan Singh, after the attack.

"Government will take firm action against the perpetrators of violence of any kind," Singh's statement said. The prime minister last month called the rebels India's greatest internal security challenge.

Maoist rebels in India say they are fighting for the rights of tribal people and landless farmers. The Indian Home Ministry estimates that they are active in 20 of 28 states with thousands of fighters across the country.

ccp, msh/mz (AFP, AP, dpa)