[Social activist Bela Bhatia, whose house in Jagdalpur's Parpa village
was attacked by a mob on the intervening nights of January 21-22 and
again on the afternoon of January 23, had told Rediff.com on the
evening of January 23 that she has been provided a Suraksha Dal
comprising of a posse of 15 to 20 policemen, including "security
forces also."
However, there was not a single policeman stationed outside her home
on Wednesday morning when this correspondent called her.
As she stepped out of her house for better telephone connectivity,
Bhatia discovered that all the cops were missing.]


http://www.rediff.com/news/report/security-for-activist-bela-bhatia-vanishes/20170125.htm?sc_cid=fbshare

Last updated on: January 25, 2017 10:03 IST

The lawyer discovers disturbing development while speaking to
Rediff.com's Prasanna D Zore.

Bela Bhatia, lawyer

***Social activist Bela Bhatia, whose house in Jagdalpur's Parpa
village was attacked by a mob on the intervening nights of January
21-22 and again on the afternoon of January 23, had told Rediff.com on
the evening of January 23 that she has been provided a Suraksha Dal
comprising of a posse of 15 to 20 policemen, including "security
forces also."*** [Emphasis added.]

***However, there was not a single policeman stationed outside her
home on Wednesday morning when this correspondent called her.***
[Emphasis added.]

***As she stepped out of her house for better telephone connectivity,
Bhatia discovered that all the cops were missing.*** [Emphasis added.]

When asked if her security has been withdrawn she said she would be
able to respond only after speaking with the local thana in-charge and
the district collector.

At the time of writing this report, she sent a text message saying
that the local police in-charge, Mr Khan, told her he was looking into
the disappearance of the cops stationed outside her home since January
23.

Repeated calls to Mr Khan did not elicit any response.

"The collector had said he will find alternative accommodation for me,
but so far they haven't given me any. They are saying they are busy
because the chief minister (of Chhattisgarh, Dr Raman Singh) is
visiting and also because they are overseeing the arrangements for
January 26 (Republic Day). The understanding is once these are over
they will find something for me,: Bhatia said.

On January 23, a mob of 30 people had threatened Bhatia and her
Adivasi landlord with arson and physical harm if she did not leave
Parpa village by 6 pm on January 24.

Bhatia and her landlord had given in writing, under threats and
intimidation, that she would leave the village before the deadline.

But since Collector Amit Kataria was not able to find a suitable,
safe, accommodation for her outside Parpa village, she is still living
at the same place.

"The collector has instituted an independent inquiry and the
understanding was until they find me accommodation there will be
forces here. Till yesterday night they were here and now while
speaking to you as I came out for better signal there is not a single
cop here," a worried Bhatia said.

When asked if this sudden disappearance of the security personnel from
outside her home could be a precursor to another attack on her, Bhatia
said, "I am wondering what has happened because this is contrary to
what was understood and I don't know why this sudden withdrawal and
this is something I will be asking the local thanedar and the
collector and the journalists will have to investigate into."

Bhatia asked that the interview be terminated so that she could call
the local thana and find out what is going on.

"If I don't get a satisfactory reply I will then call the collector," she said.

Bhatia, who works for the Jagdalpur Legal Aid Group, had accompanied a
team of National Human Rights Commission officials to seek the
testimony of Adivasi women in Pedagallur and Bellam Lendra villages on
January 19-20.

Since then, she has been intimidated twice by a group of people who
could owe allegiance to the Samajik Ekta Manch, an organisation
supported covertly by the state administration, the activist had said
earlier.

Who is threatening Bela Bhatia? And why?
After she spoke with Khan, the thana in-charge of the Parpa police
station, he immediately rushed two unarmed policemen to find out if
her security guards had indeed vanished from the scene.

In the meanwhile, Bhatia sent a text message to the district
collector, appraising him about the disappearance of her security
personnel.

Khan told Bhatia that the police personnel who were stationed outside
her home since January 23 belonged to the District Reserved Group,
DRG, headed by an officer named Mandavi and they had their main post
in Jagdalpur, which is 13, 14 km away from Parpa village.

Khan promised Bhatia that he would find out about the missing
policemen. The two policemen that he had sent acknowledged the absence
of security personnel outside her house.

"The two policemen who had come here to inquire said that the DRG was
called back and another lot will be coming soon," Bhatia said.

"The two cops who came in the Parpa thana jeep are standing on the
road (some 200 metres away from Bhatia's home) and are unarmed. Their
being here is no protection as such," Bhatia said when asked if she
was satisfied with the security arrangement.

Bhatia said the collector has ordered an independent magisterial
enquiry into Sunday and Monday's incidents, which has already spoken
with Bhatia, her landlord and his wife.

Prasanna D Zore / Rediff.com


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