In a major breakthrough, a Bengaluru-based key CPI (Maoist) operative, who was allegedly acting as a spokesperson of the outlawed outfit and engaged in propaganda through social media, has been arrested by the Chhattisgarh Police, an official said today.
The Maoist operative, Abhay Devdas Nayak alias Lodda (34), was rounded up from the Delhi airport on June 1 and was later arrested, the official said.
He had links with senior Maoist leaders active in the country and abroad, and also with some Maoist sympathisers, including those recently arrested by the Pune Police in connection with the Bhima Koregaon violence, the police official said.
"Abhay, who was under the scanner of the Bastar police and the State Intelligence Branch (SIB) for the last one-and-a-half years, was rounded up from Delhi airport on June 1," Inspector General (IG) of Police (Bastar range) Vivekananda Sinha told PTI.
He was brought to Bastar district headquarter Jagdalpur on the same day. He will be in police custody till tomorrow and will be presented in court, the IG said.
"During a search of his residence in Bengaluru, police have seized laptops, pen drives, a hard disk, Maoist literature and several diaries which confirmed that Abhay was associated with some Maoist leaders and sympathisers overseas as well as in India," he said.
"He was in touch via e-mails with alleged over ground Maoist cadres such as JNU alumnus Rona Wilson and retired Nagpur University professor Soma Sen, who were recently arrested by the Pune Police in connection with the Bhima Koregaon violence that took place in January.
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"He was also in touch with former Delhi University Professor G N Saibaba and Maoist leaders like Gudsa Usendi, Vikalp (Dandakarnya Special Zonal Committee), Sashi Patnaik from Odisha and others," Sinha said.
The official said Abhay's name first surfaced as a Maoist spokesperson early last year after an IED was recovered in the Darbha region of Bastar along with some Maoist literature and pamphlets.
The recovered Maoist pamphlets were issued by Abhay along with another Maoist spokesperson Vikalp, following which police had launched a search for him, he said.
"Abhay, who is tech-savvy, was active on social media while keeping his identity confidential. He had been allegedly propagating the Maoist ideology through his writings, press releases and articles on the social media platforms," he said.
"He had been using social media platforms to attract the youth towards the outlawed outfit though his anti-national, anti-government and anti-police posts," Sinha claimed.
The SIB and Bastar police had been jointly keeping an eye on him for the last one-and-a-half years, during which it found that he had visited at least 15 foreign countries, such as Belgium, United Kingdom, France and Russia in February and May in 2017
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