A tribal family has suffered grave injury for sheltering a group of armed
men from the rain for only a short time. The Mahji family's woes add to a
catalogue of incidents where police high-handedness has led to the suffering
of innocent villagers caught between the police and the naxals.



It was a stormy night and Mr Suresh Kumuti Majhi was about to go to bed.
There was a knock on the door. Suresh was startled to find seven armed
persons requesting shelter until the rains stopped. Left with no option, he
allowed them inside and when the rains subsided, the armed men disappeared
in the darkness.



A few hours later 80 policemen armed to the teeth surrounded his house and
began questioning Suresh about the persons who had taken shelter.



Terrified, the entire Majhi family pleaded with the policemen that they had
only given shelter to the armed persons for a few minutes and were unaware
as to who they were or where they had disappeared.


The policemen refused to believe their version and searched their houses
thoroughly, finally driving away with Mr Suresh Majhi.




Later in the morning a battered and bruised Suresh was handed over to the
Mohona police station . The next day, the wife of Suresh lodged an FIR at
the Adava Police Station stating that she and her brother-in-law were beaten
up by the police and that during the search operation the policemen had
taken away Rs 10,000 and a mobile set from the house.



The local sarpanch and a few other persons also accompanied the lady to the
police station and wanted to know the reason behind the police
high-handedness.



The sarpanch asked the police what a poor tribal was supposed to do when
people with guns come and ask for shelter for a few moments? The Adava IIC
Mr Narvat Kiro pacified the locals, saying that they were in no way
involved. It was the Kandhamal police who had whisked away Mr Suresh Majhi
from his house and handed him over to his police station, the IIC said.



"In future, such incidents will not occur and the policemen from the
neighbouring districts will be requested not to misbehave or beat up locals
without any reason," said apologetic policemen of Adava and Mohona area.



Suresh was released and taken to Berhampur Hospital for treatment.



Such ghastly incidents of police high-handedness, causing great harm to
innocent tribals living in remote villages, may come as a shock to
urbanites, but for the villagers in naxal-infested districts it is a rather
routine phenomenon. The continual cry of the tribals: "We are sandwiched
between the police and the naxals".



The incident took place last week, just at the time when DGP Mr Manmohan
Praharaj was claiming that Orissa police have an excellent human rights
track record.



*Statesman News Service, 22 JUNE 2009*

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