Maoists getting help from insurgent groups beyond borders: DGP
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Maoists have been getting help, support and cooperation from insurgent groups operating on foreign soil, Jharkhand Police Chief G S Rath said today.
"The Maoists are getting help, cooperation and support
from the groups who are fighting against Indian government stationed in foreign soils, particularly Myanmar and Bangladesh," Rath said here.
"We have recently recovered foreign-made weapons in
Hazaribagh, which showed their link with foreign groups as far as arms and weapons are concerned," the DGP said.
Denying that he had ever said terrorists were behind the
gruesome incident Maoists perpetrated during Monday¿s
encounter in Latehar, Rath claimed he had only said that the recent recoveries made in the state by the police had showed the rebels link with foreign insurgents.
The rebels had stuffed IEDs in the stomach of two dead
police personnel with an aim to inflict heavy casualties on
the police in Latehar where 10 security men and four villagers died. While one body had blown up, IED in another body was found during post mortem yesterday.
"Recently, the police have recovered foreign weapons in
Hazaribagh," he said referring to the haul of foreign armoury on August 29 last year, which the National Investigation Agency has taken over to probe apparently Maoist links with
foreign insurgency.
In Hazaribagh the police had recovered Colt M-16 used by
the US army with 14 ammunition of 5.56 mm live cartridges, besides a Rs four lakh worth bullet-proof jacket, manufactured by Armour Speed Limited of Manchester in the United Kingdom and a 9mm Italian-made pistol.
The police had then suspected the weapons could have found their way through North-East from Myanmar, prompting NIA to take over the investigation.
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