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Madhya Pradesh - India

The Fugitive Naxalite Killers of Likhiram Kawre

Wanted by the CBI for Murder

February 27, 2009

INDIA NEWS -- Currently, India's Central Bureau of Intelligence (CBI) is searching for six alleged members of the former People's War Group (PWG). These fugitives listed below are most wanted for the terrorist revenge killing of Madhya Pradesh Transport Minister Likhiram Kawre in Sonepur village, Balghat district, Madhya Pradesh, India:

Despite the fact there is some conflict to the type of actual weapon used to kill the Transport Minister Likhiram Kawre on December 16, 1999. We do know the body of the minister was found in front of the gate to his residence around 6:00 a.m., Thursday morning with a long knife running right through his neck, or with his head viciously severed off with a saw. It is also believed Kawre was dragged out of bed and killed while his personal guards sleep through the attack (go figure?). Additionally, soon after the murder of Likhiram Kawre, the state ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), sought the State's Chief minister Digvijay Singh's resignation due to the deteriorating situation of law and order in Andhra Pradesh. From 1992 through 1998 more than 10,000 women had been murdered, 20,000 had been raped, and about 38,000 dowry related complaints were recorded in Madhya Pradesh.

The Likhiram Kawre's assassins claimed to be members of the People's War Group by leaving behind a handwritten poster titled "Karimnagar ka badla" next to the minister's body. The poster claimed the killing of Kawre was in revenge for the kidnapping and killing of three PWG leaders in what was considered by the assassins as a "fake" police encounter at Karimnagar in Andhra Pradesh. PWG also considered the police killings of their leaders as revenge for previous actions committed by the PWG.

The PWG, which now is the Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) are Naxalites. The Maoist inspired "Naxalite" movement takes its name from an uprising in the village of Naxalbari, West Bengal in March 1967. Three share croppers, backed by 150 supporters of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), armed with sticks and bows and arrows, raided the rice granary of a jotedar (a wealthy farmer) in defiance against the landlords and jotedars this marked the beginning the Naxalite movement in India. From that time a bloody history evolved of rebellion and guerilla warfare skirmishes which grew from that first uprising. Furthermore, on October 14, 2004, the Maoist Communist Centre of India (MCC) and the PWG merged to form a new entity, the CPI-Maoist. The CPI-Maoist controls a vast stretch of India covering 165 to 225 districts from Bihar in the north to Kerala in the south, enveloping central India and the states of Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh and parts of Maharashtra known as the "Liberated Zone." In present, these revolutionaries, armed with weapons mostly stolen from India's security forces, run the schools, the electric, and even the tax system. Meanwhile, taxes are collected in the form of money, food, shelter, clothing and medicines. Families in this desperately poor area must also give their men and children to support the revolution as tax. From 2002 through 2006 more than three thousand people have been killed in Naxalite and government conflicts.

In 2007, the Naxalites based in Andhra Pradesh increasingly turned to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to learn techniques in training child soldiers and flying unmanned aircraft. LTTE is readily exchanging the information for sanctuary and a support system after receiving heavy losses to the Sri Lankan army. As late as December 2008, there have been reports that the CPI-Maoist has set up a special squad of children in Chhattisgarh. These child soldiers are forcibly recruited into Maoist ranks. While in Orissa, Naxalite child soldiers are known as "Baal Sangam." Moreover, it is reported that at least 300 children are being trained in the dense jungles in Jharkhand in the use of small arms. Lastly, in December 2003, it was believed there were more than 800 children within the PWG in Andhra Pradesh, but since the merger of PWG and MCC, it is believed that the group of child soldiers called the "Bala Sangham" has been disbanded.

So summarizing, these CBI fugitives are part of a larger group of leftist extremists, which condone domestic terrorism and the use of children to fight their revolution. They inflict unnecessary extreme pain in order to influence those who might oppose their ideology, and therefore need to found and prosecuted for their alleged crimes.

Anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of these most wanted fugitive Naxalite killers of Likhiram Kawre in India should contact Superintendent of Police,CBI, SIC-II, New Delhi at 011 - 4362002.

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