*Top Maoist leader Azad, who the Andhra Pradesh police claimed to have
killed in an encounter on July 1, was shot from very close range, according
to his post-mortem report accessed by Rediff.com'sKrishnakumar Padamanbhan.*

Top Maoist leader Azad, alias Cherukuri Rajkumar, who the Andhra Pradesh
police claimed to have killed in an encounter in the forests of Adilabad
district in Andhra Pradesh, was shot from very close range, probably from
less than one foot, according to his post mortem report, accessed by *
Rediff.com*

The post-mortem report stands in contradiction with the police version that
Azad was killed in a gun-battle between 11 pm and 11.30 pm on July 1 in
Sarkepally village, Wankedi, in Adilabad district.

After the Andhra Pradesh police claimed Azad, a member of the Communist
Party of India-Maoist central committee and politburo as well as its
national spokesman, was killed in the forests of Adilabad district, the
Maoists claimed that he had been picked up in Nagpur a day earlier, flown to
Adilabad by helicopter, and executed in cold blood along with a man named
Hemchandra Pandey.

In May, Home Minister P Chidambaram [
Images<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=p+chidambaram>
]
had invited Swami Agnivesh, who had led a peace march in Chhattisgarh in
April, to mediate with the Maoists and explore the possibility of a
cease-fire, which would likely result in peace talks with the central
government.

With Chidambaram's permission, Agnivesh met with senior Maoist leaders Kobad
Gandhy in Delhi's [
Images<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=delhi> ]
Tihar jail and Narayan Sanyal in Raipur jail in Chhattisgarh to begin the
peace process.

He also wrote to the Maoists, informing them about the government's interest
in a dialogue, to bring about a peaceful resolution to the Leftist
insurgency that has crippled life in many districts in the country.

Azad responded on the Maoists's behalf, expressing willingness in possible
talks with the Centre and indicating that his organisation could think of a
cease-fire.

One sticking point was Chidambaram's insistence on a date for a cease-fire,
which the home minister felt would indicate the Maoists's intentions.

Once a cease-fire -- the duration of which could extend for three days or
six months or longer -- was in place, Chidamabaram told Agnivesh talks could
begin.

In late June Agnivesh wrote again to Azad, suggesting three likely dates in
July when the cease-fire could go into effect.

Azad was carrying Agnivesh's letter with him the day he died.

There are other discrepancies in the police inquest and the First
Information Report, which too was accessed by*Rediff.com*

According to the post mortem report, the first bullet, which killed Azad
left 'a one centimetre oval-shaped wound with darkening burnt edges present
at the left second intercostal space'and exited 'at the 9th and 10th
intervertebral space, lateral to the spinal vertebrae on the left side'.

This raises two key aspects regarding the shot that killed Azad:

First, according to doctors and experts, such darkening edges in the entry
wound happens only due to burns caused by a bullet fired from very close
quarters, mostly from less than a foot.

Second, the intercostal space is the part between two ribs. The
intervertabral space is the part between two vertebrae. This means that the
bullet hit Azad high on the chest and exited through the middle of his back.

For this to happen the bullet must have been fired from above the victim at
close quarters.

But according to the first information report, the police was firing at
Azad, who they said was on a hilltop, from a distance and from below.

The FIR says Azad, accompanied by 20 to 25 Maoists, opened fire on the
police from the hilltop, after which the police retaliated, killing Azad and
Hemchandra Pandey.

The Andhra Pradesh police, however, denied the fake encounter theory and
maintained that it was a genuine gun-battle.

Regarding the darkening at the entry wound, they said burn marks happen in
case of firing from a distance also.

"We have also checked that aspect with forensic experts. They say it is
possible that shots fired from a distance can also cause burn marks," a
senior officer told *Rediff.com*

The police report has a lot of holes in it, and raises many questions:

The gist of the FIR (crime number 40/2010) filed by Station House Officer
Mansoor Ahmed at the Wankedi police station, Adilabad, at 9.30 am, July 2,
is:

Intelligence divisions informed them that a group of 20 CPI-Maoist members
had crossed into Andhra Pradesh from Maharashtra [
Images<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=maharashtra> ]
and were moving about in the forest area.

At 9 pm, personnel from the Asifabad police station and a special police
party launched a search operation in the forested and hilly region between
Sarkepally and Velgi.

At 11 pm, the police team -- equipped with night vision devices -- spotted
the Maoists on a hilltop and asked them to surrender.

As the Maoists opened fire, the police retaliated in self-defence.

The firing lasted for 30 minutes after which the police climbed the hilltop
and halted.

When they searched the area early in the morning, they found two
unidentified bodies -- a 50-year-old man, and a 30-year-old man wearing
sandals with an AK-47 and a 9 mm pistol lying by their respective sides.

1. If, according to the FIR, the Maoists were on a hilltop -- which
strategically means the Maoists had the terrain advantage -- how was Azad
killed by a bullet fired from such close quarters that it caused a burn?

2. The FIR is against 'unknown Maoist terrorists'.

But in their inquest, accessed by *Rediff.com*, the police have identified
the slain Maoist as Azad at 6 am, July 2.

In fact, local journalists said they got phone calls at 6 am from senior
Adilabad police officers informing them that Azad has been killed in an
encounter.

"The Adilabad SP (*superintendent of police*) called me and other
journalists at 6 am and told us Azad had been killed in an encounter in this
area. We reached the place immediately. We searched the area till 1 pm but
were unable to locate the bodies. Then, some local policemen came and guided
us to the location. We saw the bodies of Azad and another person," says a
local journalist.

Question: If the police had already identified Azad at 6 am, why did they
not name him in the FIR, which was filed three-and-a-half hours later?

3. The FIR says the police party, which was tipped off about the presence of
Maoists in the forest, reached there around 9 pm, July 1 and with the help
of night vision devices, spotted 20 to 25 Maoists.

The FIR also says that after the gun-battle ended at 11.30 pm, the policemen
reached the hilltop and halted. It says the police party found two bodies at
6 am when they began searching.

Question: If the police had night vision devices, as claimed in the FIR, and
if they had reached the hilltop occupied by the Maoists after the gun-battle
had ended, why did they not use the same devices to check for dead or hidden
Maoists at that time? Why did they have to wait for sunlight to spot the
bodies?

Outside of these discrepancies and questions arising out of the official
documentation, there are also some other pertinent questions:

4. In cases of encounters, the police are supposed to launch a magisterial
probe into the matter.

But in Azad's case, even 52 days after the encounter, the revenue district
officer, who is supposed to conduct the probe, has not even issued a
notification where witnesses from the general public, if any, are called to
present themselves before the magistrate.

The villagers in Sarkepally and Velgi -- the place where the police claim
that the encounter happened is between these two villages -- said they saw
police vehicles go to the spot on the night of July 1.

"We saw some vehicles go past our village. Then at about 11.30 I heard
gunshots," said a villager who did not want to be named. "We have seen
encounters here in 1997 and 2005. Those times, the police came during the
day and we could hear gun shots throughout the night. This time it was not
like that. They came in the night and we heard some shots and that was it."

They also said there has not been any Maoist movement in the region for at
least a year.

"After 2005, their movement thinned quiet a bit," a village elder said. "In
the last two years or so, there have not been any Maoists in the area."

Kranti Chaitanya, general secretary, Andhra Pradesh Civil Liberties
Committee, who has challenged the police in several fake encounter cases,
said the sizes of the entry and the exit wounds clearly show that Azad was
shot from close quarters, and that it raises critical doubts about the
police claim that he was killed in a gun-battle.

"Even dead bodies tell a lot of stories. In Azad's case, the entry wounds
are all narrow in diameter, meaning he was fired at from point blank range.
Had he been involved in the gun-battle and the police had fired from the
distance that they claim, the wounds would have been bigger in diameter,"
Chaitanya, who recently helped bring out a book on fake encounters, said.

Activists of the Co-ordination of Democratic Rights Organisations, who
visited the encounter spot and the Wankedi police station on a fact-finding
mission on August 21, said the encounter raised several larger and
disturbing questions.

"From our fact-finding, this is clearly a fake encounter," said Prashant
Bhushan, senior Supreme Court counsel. "But more than the incident itself,
it raises several significant issues. It is well known that the Union home
ministry was, through Swami Agnivesh, engaged in exploring the possibility
of a dialogue with the CPI-Maoist. Agnivesh was talking to the Maoists
through Azad."

"The alleged encounter in these circumstances and at such a time raises
important questions: How could the Andhra Pradesh police's special branch,
dedicated to combating Maoists, murder Azad in this manner without the
knowledge of the Union home minister and the state government, particularly
when the Union home ministry is said to be leading the joint offensive
against the Maoists?" Bhushan asked.

He said if the Union government was sincere in seeking dialogue, it would
have been "natural for Home Minister (*Palaniappan*) Chidambaram to express
concern about the execution of the key actor from the Maoist side with whom
he was exploring the peace dialogue."

"His explanation on the floor of Parliament was that the enquiry is a state
subject," Bhushan said. "This is unacceptable because the Andhra Pradesh
state government is run by the Congress party and had the Union home
minister sought an enquiry they could not have refused," he said.

The umbrella organisation's fact-finding team also raised some other
questions.

"How did the police pinpoint the Maoists' location in a forest several
hundred square kilometres along the Andhra-Maharashtra border? And despite
30 minutes of firing not a single police personal suffered any injury,
whereas only Azad and Hemachandra Pandey are killed -- this when the police
themselves say the Maoists were on a hilltop and they were on lower ground,"
asked Gautam Navalakha of the People's Union for Democratic Rights.

The activists demanded a judicial enquiry into the encounter.

"In any case, the central government is empowered to constitute an enquiry
under the Commission of Enquiries Act, 1952. In the light of the
significance of the assassination, which has scuttled the peace process, it
is imperative that the government institute a high level independent enquiry
headed by a sitting/retired Supreme Court judge nominated by the Chief
Justice of India [
Images<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=india> ],"
said activist Kavita Srivastava, who was part of the team as an independent
member.

It also demanded that an FIR be registered against the police and the case
be independently investigated in accordance with the National Human Rights
Commission guidelines.
http://news.rediff.com/special/2010/aug/23/exclusive-post-mortem-indicates-azad-shot-from-close-range.htm?invitekey=30ac2774e94e7e156d80d2aea7b5b8bb
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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