Indian minister vows revenge after ambush

An injured Indian Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) member is taken to a hospital at Raipur in the eastern state of Chhattisgarh on March 11, 2014. Maoist rebels ambushed police on Tuesday.

An injured Indian Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) member is taken to a hospital at Raipur in the eastern state of Chhattisgarh on March 11, 2014. Maoist rebels ambushed police on Tuesday.

Published Mar 12, 2014

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New Delhi -

India's home minister on Wednesday vowed to exact revenge for a deadly ambush by Maoist rebels, as undercover agents tried to track down the attackers in their forest hideouts.

“The way our soldiers have lost their lives, we will definitely take revenge for this,” Sushilkumar Shinde told reporters on a visit to the central state of Chhattisgarh, a day after the attack which left 16 dead.

Shinde said members of India's National Investigation Agency (NIA) had already taken up positions inside the thick forests where the rebels are believed to have taken refuge.

On Tuesday morning, 200 rebels in the south of Chhattisgarh ambushed a security patrol which was on a mission to open a road in a heavily-forested area, sparking a gun battle that lasted for three hours.

Eleven members of the national paramilitary Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) were killed, along with four members of the state police force and a civilian.

The attack has heightened fears of unrest in the Maoists' stronghold in the build-up to the nationwide elections which begin in early April.

Chhattisgarh will vote in three phases, on April 10, 17 and 24.

Shinde said the Maoists had tried to disrupt elections to the state assembly in Chhattisgarh last year as well but failed.

“The way the state elections were held peacefully, the national elections will also take place peacefully,” he said.

“We will look at all the areas where Maoists have presence and make the security deployments accordingly,” he said, emphasising that polling would be held on the dates as scheduled.

The Maoists, who have been described by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as the country's most serious internal security threat, have been fighting since 1967 for a communist society by toppling what they call India's “semi-colonial, semi-feudal” form of rule.

The insurgency has cost tens of thousands of lives, with some of the deadliest violence focused around the insurgent-dominated, so-called “Red Corridor” stretching through central and eastern India. - Sapa-AFP

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